Rare Video of Hoyt Wilhelm and his Knuckleball

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  • Опубликовано: 4 сен 2024
  • Very rare footage of Hoyt Wilhelm and his knuckleball.

Комментарии • 357

  • @dizbang3073
    @dizbang3073 3 года назад +96

    Hoyt Wilhelm won 124 games in relief, still a ML record. He also hit a home run in his first ML at-bat, then never hit another one. One of his catchers, Gus Triandos, once called heaven "a place where nobody throws a knuckleball." As a rookie with the Giants in 1952 he won 15 games, posted an ERA of 2.43 and finished fourth in the MVP voting. Two years later he won a World Series. For five straight seasons in the 1960's his ERA was less than 2.00. His last appearance in 1972 with the Dodgers came two weeks before his 50th birthday. He finished his career with an ERA of 2.52.

    • @f.lloydwrong7127
      @f.lloydwrong7127 3 года назад +5

      Good stuff diz, absolute stud. I knew I'd seen him on tv as the dodgers were my childhood team. Also watched wilbur wood finish a postponed game and pitch a complete game right after. On tv, joe garigiola and tony kubek days.

    • @dirtyjohn6556
      @dirtyjohn6556 3 года назад +9

      My Dad was a softball player and when we would toss the ball he would throw a knuckle ball underhanded like a softball pitcher and then I could see why it was hard to hit, that softball actually moved around and you were almost guessing where it would go to catch it. Scary being a catcher.

    • @troysmith2599
      @troysmith2599 3 года назад

      ESPN.

    • @danielfronc4304
      @danielfronc4304 3 года назад +1

      @@dirtyjohn6556 Scary as a softball catcher, potentially deadly as a hardball catcher. I once played a pick-up game playing catcher, why I don't know as I had never played that position before. I got distracted as this was at my sister's all girl high school field. Next thing I knew I was picking myself up dusting myself off. Turned out the pitcher threw a mean fastball, which hit me half under my nose, half on my maxilla. No tooth damage although my dentist was knocked out of his dental operatory chair. Shades of Tony Conigliaro.

    • @kevinmadden1645
      @kevinmadden1645 Год назад +2

      In Wilhelm's second at-bat he hit a triple and never hit another triple in a 21 -year career(1952-1972)..

  • @robertjasso6673
    @robertjasso6673 3 года назад +17

    Hoyt was a legend in his own time never in his own mind, a humble guy you had to root for .

  • @jayritchie851
    @jayritchie851 3 года назад +55

    My dad was wounded in WWII and couldn't do much with his left arm. Because of that, his right arm became very strong. When I was a teenager and my dad was in his 40's, we would play catch in the backyard and he would throw a 3-knuckle "knuckleball." It must have been due to his arm being so strong, but that ball would move all over the place. It was pretty amazing. Sometimes, he would throw to my friends and they were also amazed. Judging by what I saw in this old footage, my dad's "knuckler" had a lot more movement than Wilhelm's did...and it was also a lot faster. He showed us how to throw it, but we could never come close to throwing it like he did. Crazy, the little things you remember from when you were a kid.......

    • @richerwin6397
      @richerwin6397 Год назад +1

      Be proud of your Dad, he was a part of our greatest generation.

    • @Elijahgavi
      @Elijahgavi Месяц назад

      What slot did he throw it at??? High or submarine

    • @jayritchie851
      @jayritchie851 Месяц назад +1

      @@Elijahgavi Thx for asking. Overhand, not submarine.

    • @Elijahgavi
      @Elijahgavi Месяц назад

      @@jayritchie851 wow nice did he have good comm? And overhand most likely means more movement

  • @garnetburgin2994
    @garnetburgin2994 3 года назад +20

    He was a class act, he gave me an autograft baseball in 1964 when I was 5 years old. I still have it still in the box! At 5 you don’t realize at the time what was going on.

    • @robertsprouse9282
      @robertsprouse9282 3 года назад +2

      It was grafted in a car?
      Meanwhile, I once got an autoGRAPH..

    • @edmundmcgrath213
      @edmundmcgrath213 3 года назад +1

      @@robertsprouse9282 I taught I saw a puddy cat

    • @robertsprouse9282
      @robertsprouse9282 Год назад

      @@edmundmcgrath213 , you did..you did!

  • @joetrapp9187
    @joetrapp9187 3 года назад +6

    JW Porter died last year, RIP. His Bonus Baby signing out of Oakland Technical HS brought three teammates at McClymonds HS to everyone's attention: Vada Pinson, Curt Flood, and Frank Robinson. Oh, and a guy named Bill Russell was the basketball team's center.

  • @realistindenial
    @realistindenial 3 года назад +6

    If you loved this video, don't forget to support the sponsor and buy some Rapid-Shave today.

  • @pennyfoley2434
    @pennyfoley2434 3 года назад +5

    Listening to players such as Hoyt and J.W. makes my heart feel good. I used to listen to Vin Scully, Don Drysdale and Jerry Doggett announce the Dodgers games as I went to sleep. You want to talk about going to sleep with a smile on ur face.

  • @WadeKawahara
    @WadeKawahara 3 года назад +20

    I remember when he was with the White Sox. JC Martin was usually his catcher and he started using an oversize mitt that was shaped more like a 1st baseman's mitt than a catcher's mitt.

    • @Xix1326
      @Xix1326 3 года назад +5

      JC Martin, a Mets hero!

    • @DemonKingBadger
      @DemonKingBadger 5 месяцев назад +1

      My dad when he was a kid actually saw JC Martin play as an amateur. He was still an infielder.
      With the White Sox, not only did he have to catch Wilhelm, but knuckleballer Wilbur Wood, and I think later on Eddie Fisher.

  • @Diosprometheus
    @Diosprometheus 3 года назад +48

    When with the Orioles Hoyt shared pitching time with fellow knuckler Hal "Skinny" Brown. When he was traded to the White Sox, he shared pitching time with another knuckler Eddie Fisher and eventually Wilbur Wood. When with the Angels he was again paired with Eddie Fisher. When he played for the Braves he joined fellow HOF'er and knuckler Phil Niekro. When he finished out his career with the Dodgers he was again paired with a young aspiring knuckler Charlie Hough. How about that, fans?

    • @robertsprouse9282
      @robertsprouse9282 3 года назад +6

      Wilbur Wood once pitched both doubleheader games as a STARTER..WENT THE DISTANCE I believe, in both, or at least went 7 in both ..

    • @RalphSampson...
      @RalphSampson... 3 года назад +3

      @@robertsprouse9282
      Teams wouldn't even consider playing them in both games nowadays.

    • @Diosprometheus
      @Diosprometheus 3 года назад +4

      @@robertsprouse9282 That was against the Yankees on July 20, 1973, when Wood started both ends of a doubleheader.

    • @Diosprometheus
      @Diosprometheus 3 года назад +1

      @@robertsprouse9282 www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/NYA/NYA197307201.shtml The second game www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/NYA/NYA197307202.shtml

    • @alfeinberg4583
      @alfeinberg4583 3 года назад +2

      How about that? Love the Mel Allen reference!!!

  • @Steve52344
    @Steve52344 4 года назад +17

    Man, I love this video. As a kid with my father I saw Hoyt pitch many times at the Polo Grounds. Three teams in NY. What a time it was.

  • @jpsned
    @jpsned 3 года назад +7

    Watching Hoyt pitch in the early 70s, I was fascinated by the fact that he was close to 50 and still pitching.

  • @shannonwalker4098
    @shannonwalker4098 3 года назад +15

    The best part of this is reading the recollections of Old Timers! Thanks for sharing your stories!

  • @donalddingler1263
    @donalddingler1263 3 года назад +2

    Hoyt is from Huntersville, NC where I use to live, I did not know Hoyt but I did play ball with his brother Cooper, he also had a knuckle but was up in years when we played ball. He pitched to me one day in practice he was hard to hit even then.

  • @Baltimore1894
    @Baltimore1894 3 года назад +30

    Hoyt threw a no-hitter for the Orioles on September 20, 1958.

  • @BladeRunner-td8be
    @BladeRunner-td8be 3 года назад +14

    I'm 64, and this was a hair before my time. Nevertheless, the ambiance and flavor brought me back to a time long ago. The commercials are a real hoot from that era. Cheers

  • @benlopez9807
    @benlopez9807 10 лет назад +72

    Great video. I was a baseball fan when Wilhelm was pitching. I listened to Bob Wolf as the announce for the Washington Senator's games. Thanks for posting this, brings back a lot of memories.

    • @danielfronc4304
      @danielfronc4304 3 года назад

      *Warner Wolf did the play by play

    • @robertsprouse9282
      @robertsprouse9282 3 года назад +1

      @@danielfronc4304, WARNER on ABC, BOB WOLFF DID SENATORS GAMES AND LATER TWINS games after the move..

    • @gsjackson34
      @gsjackson34 3 года назад +4

      Funniest thing I've seen in baseball was big Frank Howard, when he played for the Senators, trying to hit Wilhelm's knuckler when it was really on. Couldn't come within a foot of it.

    • @tct84
      @tct84 Год назад

      @@gsjackson34 😂 Thank you for this comment it made me laugh thinking about it

  • @canoebelue
    @canoebelue 4 года назад +33

    Ted Williams had Hoyt on his list of the toughest pitchers he ever faced.

  • @SconnerStudios
    @SconnerStudios 10 лет назад +18

    Very cool. Hoyt Wilhelm was baseball's first true reliever. He pitched several innings at a time, unlike modern closers.

    • @DemonKingBadger
      @DemonKingBadger 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah, that was the tendency until about 1990. I remember Gossage would often come in and pitch the 8th and 9th after the starter went 7.

  • @willdrucker4291
    @willdrucker4291 8 лет назад +82

    This video of the legendary Hoyt Wilhelm was produced sometime in early 1958...later that season, he would be traded to the Baltimore Orioles and would play another 14 seasons in the majors; finishing his career in July 1972 when the Dodgers released him just five days short of his 50th birthday!!!...

    • @Diosprometheus
      @Diosprometheus 8 лет назад +43

      Hoyt fought in the Battle of the Bulge. He was wounded and awarded the Purple Heart. As a result of his injury; he played his entire career with a piece of shrapnel lodged in his back. Hoyt debuted with he New York Giants in 1952. He was 29. The first time he batted in the majors, he hit a home run, the only one in his story book career. Wilhelm finished in the top ten in Most Valuable Player Award voting that season, becoming the first relief pitcher to finish that high. In 1954, the Giants went to the World Series that year and that was the only time Wilhelm appeared in the fall classic The Giants beat the heavily favored Cleveland Indians in four straight. On August 23, 1958, the Cleveland Indians put Wilhelm on waviers. At the time, Wilhelm had a 2.49 ERA. The notorious Indian General Manager, Frank Lane, one of the most hated people in Cleveland baseball history, thought "Old Sarge" could not be caught by any of the Indians catchers so he packed him off. On September 20, 1958, Wilhelm pitched a no-hitter against; the eventual World Champion New York Yankees 1-0 at Memorial Stadium It was only his ninth career start. This game marked the first no-hitter in the Orioles history after their moved from St. Louis where they had played as the Browns. (The original American League franchise known as the Baltimore Orioles had moved to New York at the beginning of 1903 where they evenutally become known as the Yankees.)In 1959, Oriole catchers set a ML record for 49 passed balls. Oriole catcher Gus Triandos once said, "Heaven is a place where no one throws a knuckleball." Wilhelm was the first relief pitcher elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Many baseball players have said Hoyt had the best Knuckleball they have ever seen.

    • @grehhet161
      @grehhet161 5 лет назад +5

      @@Diosprometheus thanks for that in depth info. im scratching my head here wondering how in the world a knuckleballer can compile the numbers he did. he wasnt just a great knuckler, he was an amazing pitcher. period. i would love to go back and somehow see HD quality video of his appearances.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад +3

      He was with the Cubs for a short time before the Dodgers.

    • @kevinobrien9271
      @kevinobrien9271 3 года назад +7

      Wilhelm said at the time that he could have kept pitching. His knuckleball was still effective, but his reflexes had slowed too much for him to safely field his position.

    • @a_missippian
      @a_missippian 3 года назад +2

      @@Diosprometheus great post sir - many thanks for the inside baseball on this awesome pitcher - cheers from the Delta

  • @mc76
    @mc76 3 года назад +42

    Bob Uecker had the best line about knuckleballers: "I wasn't a catcher. I was a chaser. I waited until the ball stopped rolling and picked up and threw it back to the pitcher."

    • @robertsprouse9282
      @robertsprouse9282 3 года назад +4

      Yes, one weekend, he saw Phil Niekro's visiting parents sitting behind the screen behind the plate, more than Phil did.

    • @mikebradshaw6484
      @mikebradshaw6484 3 года назад +1

      Bob could've stopped after the first sentence.

    • @robertsprouse9282
      @robertsprouse9282 3 года назад +1

      @@mikebradshaw6484, he was a good defensive catcher. Otherwise, as poorly as he hit in MLB, he would never have stuck for 7 or 8 seasons, even in the hitless '60's. He was not a full-timer, a starter, except when Phil Niekro pitched.
      Bad defensive catchers don't catch knuckleballers.

    • @carlmorell567
      @carlmorell567 3 года назад

      Just a bit outside - Hoyt pitched for my favorite team the Cleveland Indians and they will always be the Indians to me no matter what you call them

    • @DemonKingBadger
      @DemonKingBadger 5 месяцев назад

      Actually, Uecker was one of the better knuckleball catchers. You just have to remember he also has a comedic flair.

  • @calfolk7381
    @calfolk7381 3 года назад +1

    I got his autograph near the bullpen at a Dodger game in 1971, along with pitching coach Red Adam’s. I was 8 years old lol

  • @JohnSmith-en8vx
    @JohnSmith-en8vx 3 года назад +6

    I met Bob in 1994 in Syosset NY at “the pier of oyster bay” restaurant he frequented. That was the year he went into the HOF. Great guy. RIP

  • @amram1017
    @amram1017 3 года назад +6

    A wonderful retro look at back in the days when baseball was fun. I remember when Wilhelm pitched for the Orioles and they had a catcher named Gus Triandos, who, it was said, used an over-sized catcher's mitt to catch Wilhelm.
    I love this video because Hoyt Wilhelm presents himself as a knowledgeable, articulate, guy eager to share his expertise, the kind of guy whom young boys idolize. And his "knuckleball" had a sense of mystery about it. I'm pretty sure he struck out Mickey Mantle more than once. I tried the pitch myself--using my knuckles--and of course it was worthless, couldn't control it. Wish I'd seen this interview some 60 years ago.
    Oh, and he fought in the Battle of the Bulge? A true American hero.

  • @pukulu
    @pukulu 3 года назад +5

    Wilhelm pitched until he was 49 years old. He was one of the greatest relief pitchers in baseball history. His lifetime ERA was around 2.52. Until Mariano Rivera came along, I might have ranked Wilhelm number 1.

  • @ronrobinson7812
    @ronrobinson7812 3 года назад +2

    Hoyt pitched forever .. in his first at bat he hit a home run and then he never hit another one.. mostly stuck out... saw him pitch many times with the orioles... good guy.

    • @seththomas9105
      @seththomas9105 День назад

      Dad always said he wa a "decent" htter... for a pitchr. LOL.

  • @bubblinbrownsugar616
    @bubblinbrownsugar616 7 лет назад +29

    My heart belongs to the Orioles. I remember watching 61* the movie about Mantle/Maris chasing Babe Ruth's HR record, they got to Memorial Stadium, they brought out Wilhelm specifically for Maris. I didn't know (and still don't know. That's the the era of my father and uncles) much about the O's at that time so when they showed in the movie the bat boy giving the catcher a bigger glove, to catch his knuckleballs, I remember going "oh sh*t! This dude must have been the real deal" immediately looked up his wikipedia page after the movie which led me to other links about him which turned me into a fan ever since! 😁

    • @felixmadison5736
      @felixmadison5736 3 года назад +4

      There was a specially made, oversized catchers mitt just for Wilhelm's knuckler. The man was something to see I'll tell you that. Back when baseball was the real deal and not a t.v. show.

    • @bobbrown5951
      @bobbrown5951 3 года назад +3

      I remember seeing that game live. I think it was a Monday night broadcast which was unusual at the time. My recollection was that they brought Wilhelm in as a reliever as Maris had a chance to either tie or break Ruth's record in the same number of games. The catchers did have a rough time handling the pitches including dropped third strikes.

    • @lencorben5573
      @lencorben5573 3 года назад +2

      @@bobbrown5951 It was actually a Wednesday (Sept. 20, 1961). You can find box scores and other data of just about every mlb game by Googling baseball-reference and looking up the appropriate season. Wilhelm relieved to start the 9th inning but Maris was the third batter in the inning.

    • @bobbrown5951
      @bobbrown5951 3 года назад +2

      @@lencorben5573 Thank you for that info. It's a fuzzy memory. I would be interested in looking up my first games that I saw in person. In July of '63 my dad took me to a Yankees/Twins doubleheader at Yankee Stadium. Quite a few big names on the field that day. Mantle, Maris, Berra, Ford, Killebrew, Oliva, Versalles. Somewhere I have photos I took of the teams on the field with a Brownie Hawkeye camera. So it's hard to make anyone out but the ads on the outfield walls are interesting.

    • @lencorben5573
      @lencorben5573 3 года назад +2

      @@bobbrown5951 Don`t know if you`ve looked it up yet but the Twins won the first game 5-1 and the Yankees the second on a walk-off single. I`ve copied the bottom of the 9th for you.
      Bottom of the 9th, Yankees Batting, Behind 1-2, Twins' Dick Stigman facing 3-4-5
      b9 1-2 0 --- NYY Tom Tresh Dick Stigman 13% 32% Single to LF (Ground Ball)
      b9 1-2 0 1-- NYY Elston Howard Dick Stigman 19% 50% Walk; Tresh to 2B
      b9 1-2 0 12- NYY Harry Bright Dick Stigman 23% 73% Single to 3B/Bunt; Howard to 2B; Tresh to 3B
      Bill Dailey replaces Dick Stigman pitching and batting 9th
      Jack Reed pinch runs for Harry Bright (1B) batting 5th
      b9 1-2 0 123 RR NYY Hector Lopez Bill Dailey 27% 100% Single to CF; Howard Scores; Tresh Scores; Reed to 2B
      2 runs, 3 hits, 0 errors, 2 LOB. Twins 2, Yankees 3.

  • @MKIVWWI
    @MKIVWWI 7 лет назад +11

    I remember Hoyt Wilhelm pitching in the Big A for the Angels.... must have been 1969? As a kid he seemed real old to be pitching, but he did good. And he seemed like an old wizard with that crazy knuckleball!

  • @thomasmikita2358
    @thomasmikita2358 3 года назад +7

    Great video of a time gone by in baseball

  • @thomaswolf723
    @thomaswolf723 4 года назад +4

    A number of years ago the late Bob Wolf released a video, Conversations with Bob Wolf, containing many of his interviews with ball players from the 1950's when Wolf was broadcasting for the Senators. He had interviews with such players as Mickey Mantle, Ted Williams, Luis Aparicio, Nellie Fox, Whitey Ford, Whitey Herzog, and Early Wynn, and managers like Casey Stengel and Al Lopez. This conversation with Hoyt Wilhelm was one of the interviews.

    • @user-bx9dd7bd2t
      @user-bx9dd7bd2t 3 года назад

      I thought he was still alive on Long island?

    • @tomsmith5216
      @tomsmith5216 3 года назад +1

      Bob Wolff was a terrific sportscaster.

  • @rickallen8158
    @rickallen8158 3 года назад +43

    Back when athletes were gentlemen without the huge egos and arrogance so common today,,,

    • @ORagnar
      @ORagnar 3 года назад +3

      That's true. Less show boating.

    • @henrysmith5472
      @henrysmith5472 3 года назад +2

      amen brother

    • @mikekubacki782
      @mikekubacki782 3 года назад +1

      Hoyt wasn't very nice to young fans when he appeared at the Minas store in Hammond,IN in the 60s. Ken Berry and Floyd Robinson were very nice. Hoyt was a dick.

    • @robertsprouse9282
      @robertsprouse9282 3 года назад +1

      @@mikekubacki782, you were there?
      Did he not sign your stuff?
      Were the kids being nice and polite to him?
      I can only speak from experience.
      In my first minor league announcing gig, during the preseason/offseason, I put on a JEREMIAH THE BULLFROG costume and went to P.R. functions. When kids, boys of 7-12 would show up, they would take their hard plastic baseball bats and slap me around hard on my unpadded green legs with them also trying to hit me in the frog face or head, lol.
      So, I would give them a big ol' friendly Jeremiah hug, while surreptitiously squeezing and pinching their neck, lat. and shoulder muscles, with just enough pain employed to get them to back off, lol..
      Kids then and now can be brats..
      By the way, someone else wearing the FROG costume took the pain at the ballpark or at P.R. functions when I announced during the season..lol..
      Hoyt Wilhelm was from the deep South, and probably did not abide punky, impolite, bratty kids..

    • @jeffking887
      @jeffking887 3 года назад +1

      Not as much money either. Not sure if that makes any difference 🤔

  • @antoniofreire8471
    @antoniofreire8471 3 года назад +2

    I remember him when he played for the Havana Lions in Cuba, 1950 or 51.

  • @JohnHolton
    @JohnHolton 11 лет назад +10

    I remember Hoyt Wilhelm with the White Sox in the mid-60's, and at times he was the only thing going well for the Sox. The night he broke Cy Young appearances record (since broken by Dennis Eckersley and Jesse Orosco) was his 45th birthday. He was actually a year or two older than that, as it turns out.

    • @joep6592
      @joep6592 3 года назад +2

      I remember him with the Sox also. I think he taught Wilber Wood how to perfect the pitch.

    • @Kedziekid
      @Kedziekid 3 года назад

      @@joep6592 What really made him so effective with the Sox, was catcher J.C. Martin who could actually catch his knuckler. Hoyt was the closer, and when he came in, J.C. came in as well. Poor Gus Triandos used a mitt the size of a large pizza, and still had trouble. With J.C. no one could easily advance on passed balls, and it made Hoyt very effective. Check out his stats with the Sox, as opposed to other teams he played with.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад

      Then he went to the Cubs.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад

      @@Kedziekid That mitt was the "Big Bertha" made by Wilson specifically for catching the knuckleball.

  • @peterjeffery8495
    @peterjeffery8495 3 года назад +8

    I remember H.W. from a commercial that ran in the 60's for Bengay or A535, one of those creams for sore muscles. I think he carried it in the back pocket of his uniform pants. I think he holds/or held the record for the longest career in the majors. I remember he played for about 25 years.

    • @DemonKingBadger
      @DemonKingBadger 5 месяцев назад

      21 seasons, but he was 29 when he made his debut, so definitely impressive.

  • @bugsb70
    @bugsb70 8 лет назад +9

    Thanks for the video. I actually saw Wilhelm pitch when I was a kid. From the second deck of Yankee Stadium I really got to see the ball perform. Have never seen anything like it since.

  • @henrykonkel5065
    @henrykonkel5065 3 года назад +4

    i remember as a young boy see Hoyt pitch for the White Sox.
    If he came into relieve it was game over!

  • @dunkee19
    @dunkee19 6 лет назад +13

    Makin a cameo appearance in the background (#8) was Indians 1B Mickey Vernon, who was one of the few players in Major League history to play in four different decades (1939-1960).

  • @baclightning
    @baclightning 11 лет назад +36

    This was shot in 1958 - the only year that both Wilhelm and Porter played for Cleveland.

    • @bipolarvortex
      @bipolarvortex 3 года назад +5

      Funny… I was curious about when this was shot, so I paused the video and researched and reached the same conclusion. Then when I finished the video, I saw your comment.

    • @bobegan2121
      @bobegan2121 3 года назад +3

      And wilhelm had a no-hitter that year

    • @robertsprouse9282
      @robertsprouse9282 3 года назад +1

      @@bobegan2121, he was 34 or 35 then, and later, hung it up in 1972!!..

    • @gynandroidhead
      @gynandroidhead 3 года назад +1

      It was against the Yankees.
      That was the last time a single pitcher would ever throw a no-hitter against the Yankees in a 9-inning game.

  • @bobwarzin5492
    @bobwarzin5492 3 года назад +9

    Based on personal experience it looked like he was throwing from less than 60' 6".

  • @felixmadison5736
    @felixmadison5736 3 года назад +1

    I watched Hoyt Wilhelm pitch in the 1960s for the White Sox and Orioles and he was the best knuckleball pitcher ever in my opinion.

  • @exchequerguy4037
    @exchequerguy4037 3 года назад +22

    Of those who pitched at least a thousand innings in the 1960's, who had the lowest overall ERA? Koufax? Good guess, but it was actually Hoyt Wilhelm.

    • @Rob96778
      @Rob96778 3 года назад +4

      And he was 47 years old when the decade ended. He continued to play major league baseball until he was released by LA Dodgers less than a week before his 50th birthday. I can remember an interview with a Dodger executive not long after where he said, to the effect, that Wilhelm could still pitch but his reflexes had slowed to where they were concerned that he could not react to a line drive up the middle. They released him more out of concern for his safety than his ability to pitch.

    • @paulseano5100
      @paulseano5100 3 года назад +1

      I have Sandy Koufax Dodgers cards for sale.

    • @thewolfdoctor761
      @thewolfdoctor761 3 года назад

      @@paulseano5100 I have one on ebay right now.

    • @steveham2622
      @steveham2622 3 года назад

      @@paulseano5100 I read a long time ago where Pete Rose said Koufax was one of the toughest he ever faced.... said Koufax could throw a fastball thru a carwash and it wouldn't even get wet. Classic.

  • @maxventana
    @maxventana 6 лет назад +51

    Personal Hoyt Wilhelm story
    I was always told growing up that he and his wife lived across the street from us at our rowhome on Wicklow Rd., behind Edmondson Village. My father told me you knew when he returned from a ball game because you could hear him walk up the front walk in his cleats.
    As an adult I thought this was probably a tall tale from dad...who would wear cleats that long after a game? So I asked my mother about it a few years back. She told me not only was it true, but that Mr. and Mrs. Wilhelm had a habit of sunbathing in the front yard, apparently considered a bit bold by the block's housewives.

    • @davidsacco3853
      @davidsacco3853 3 года назад +2

      very interesting, thanks

    • @mistertee5503
      @mistertee5503 3 года назад +27

      Another personal Hoyt Wilhelm story... I as a retired home inspector and had a call to do an insurance inspection for a Mrs. Wilhelm in Sarasota, Florida. I didn't put two and two together and met this nice old lady before performing the inspection. I noticed some baseball mementos on the living room wall. One was a replica of his Hall of Fame plaque. Suddenly I asked if she was Hoyt's wife...to which she replied "yes". I proceeded to tell her that Hoyt was one of my heroes as a Baltimore Oriole (my hometown back then). I must have asked her a million questions. She told me that you could never tell if Hoyt had won or lost a game...he had the same calm demeanor. She also said one of Hoyt's biggest thrills was getting a home run (his only home run) with his first at-bat in the major leagues. Sweet lady...and I think I made her day.

    • @tinfoilsombrero1439
      @tinfoilsombrero1439 3 года назад +1

      @@mistertee5503
      That’s cool. How long ago was that experience?

    • @mistertee5503
      @mistertee5503 3 года назад +9

      @@tinfoilsombrero1439 It was back in 2012. Hoyt's wife was Peggy Wilhelm...and I did not know then that he had died in a Sarasota nursing home of heart failure. She has since passed away in 2015. Sweet lady and wife of a heck of a guy!

    • @tinfoilsombrero1439
      @tinfoilsombrero1439 3 года назад +6

      @@mistertee5503
      Cool story. It’s nice to know there are some unassuming people out there. Compare that to some of the athletes of today who believe they are kings and treat people like garbage. I’ve met a few. Met a few others who couldn’t be nicer. Will Clark from the Giants is a superbly nice guy.

  • @douglasmcclure
    @douglasmcclure 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for posting this! I found myself totally transported back to those days.

  • @Equalizer5
    @Equalizer5 2 месяца назад

    What a pitcher, career era of 2.52, and he pitched till he was 49 years old. A magnificent career.

  • @alartandy
    @alartandy 3 года назад +8

    Brings back memories of Mel Allen calling his name during a Yankees telecast: "Hoyt Will-hellmmmm."

  • @johncameron6351
    @johncameron6351 4 года назад +17

    "Hoyt Wilhelm and his dancing medicine show" ....that's how Bob Elson used to refer to him while calling the radio games for the White Sox in the 60's

  • @joedon1706
    @joedon1706 3 года назад +2

    Bob has one of the greatest voices in history.

  • @azbdizzy4176
    @azbdizzy4176 3 года назад +1

    I saw him pitch once for the braves vs the cardinals in St Louis late in his career. He was still getting people out.

  • @bigtalk2598
    @bigtalk2598 Год назад +1

    I grew up in Cleveland and remember paying 3$ to sit in the bleachers in the 70s and early 80s, when they were in last place by 40 games. We got to walk on the field on a field trip as a child. Walked right where he was throwing. One of my childhood highlights.

  • @opel47
    @opel47 3 года назад +1

    Un f#@$ing believable. I feel like I'm catching a knuckleballer from the greatest pastime known to man. Thank you sir and God Bless You

  • @joyceocone4535
    @joyceocone4535 2 года назад

    I began my love of baseball when I was about 12 years old. I was a devout Brooklyn Dodgers fan back then but now follow the Yankees. Anyway I never forgot Hoyt Wilhelm and his infamous knuckleball pitch. I wish some pitchers today could use it but I am sure that the catchers wouldn't agree. A damn good pitcher Hoyt. R.I.P.
    .

  • @beavercleaver7848
    @beavercleaver7848 3 года назад +3

    "My first love has always been to catch." It takes all kinds.

    • @iamozzman990
      @iamozzman990 3 года назад +1

      Not if he had to catch his knuckle ball, lol

  • @jokrmidnite
    @jokrmidnite 3 года назад +1

    I have an autograph baseball of Mr Wilhelm, he was managing an Appalachian League team (Class D rookie) and coaching 3rd base, between innings I asked him to sign a ball for me and he obliged. (1974)

  • @joerufo6778
    @joerufo6778 3 года назад +14

    It has to be a Sunday morning. You can hear the church bells!

    • @stevenattanasso2003
      @stevenattanasso2003 3 года назад +1

      Those bells in the 50's would ring to tell people to bring out Their dead ......

  • @brandonwilliams5144
    @brandonwilliams5144 4 года назад +34

    It’s unfortunate that baseball doesn’t have this aesthetic anymore /:

    • @experimenttryingtouploadst1204
      @experimenttryingtouploadst1204 3 года назад +1

      @Mitch Qumstein For me it's the sense the analytics controls everything like it's some StratOMatic simulation. 2020 was so unusual it almost had me coming back till they removed Snell in Game 6 when they did. It's why I devote my energy to writing - I have a whole universe of baseball integrated from the start, for instance. (If curious, www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/doug-fowler/the-greatest-games-never-played/paperback/product-1vgmwwy2.html?page=1&pageSize=4 is one, they're at other sites,too)

    • @neilm.greenberg4173
      @neilm.greenberg4173 3 года назад +1

      @@experimenttryingtouploadst1204 actually, stratomatic simulations are more fun...there's still stolen bases, bunting and hit and runs...and no exploding scoreboards, screaming announcers, etc, etc...🤔

    • @bobanderson6656
      @bobanderson6656 3 года назад +1

      @@scooter2163 No. In a country of 320 million people, there are proportionally very few incidences that can be remotely attributed to racism. It's been ginned up to raise money and gain political influence.

  • @TexTom1981
    @TexTom1981 3 года назад +2

    Cool video...surprisingly good quality based on the fact it was shot on film.

  • @bwanadave76
    @bwanadave76 3 года назад +11

    Early Wynn had a pretty good one, too.

  • @tomservo5347
    @tomservo5347 Год назад +1

    Nevermind Wilhelm pitched all of those years with a piece a German shrapnel in his back, courtesy of the Battle of the Bulge. He was known as 'Old Sarge' in MLB circles.

  • @larryloveless2967
    @larryloveless2967 3 года назад +3

    Born in 1953 I of course remember him well as an STL Cards fan as I looked up and saw he was in the majors for 21 seasons. I play Strat-o-matic Baseball and only have around 30 teams from the past. He's the closer on my 1954 New York Giants and 1964 White Sox teams. Great seeing him for real. He pitched so well for so long but for some reason his one season with the 1957 Cardinals I saw was not one of his better years.

    • @howieduin915
      @howieduin915 3 года назад

      Born in 52 I also remember him well. I heard a story about him, but can't verify it. He pitched for 21 yrs. His 1st ever at bat, he hit a triple. His 2nd time at bat he hit a triple. Played more than 20 years and never hit another one

    • @larryloveless2967
      @larryloveless2967 3 года назад

      @@howieduin915 Interesting. You could search internet using "New York Giants 1952" which was his first year and look at box scores under "Schedule and Results". It's tedious but a fun site of box scores.

    • @larryloveless2967
      @larryloveless2967 3 года назад

      @@howieduin915 Forgot to mention in my comment the site you look for is Baseball-Reference. com with the the New York Giants name first and select it after the search and then click Schedule and Results within it. First, just search by New York Giants 1952 and you will see BaseballReference.com as a site to select.

    • @wolfwinners
      @wolfwinners 3 года назад

      I've played Strat-o-Matic since 1968!!!

  • @craigmooring2091
    @craigmooring2091 3 года назад +4

    "Nothing helps you there [catching the knuckleball] but God, I guess." 😂🤣😂

  • @lsmftymf
    @lsmftymf 3 года назад +2

    Note that Wilhelm's arm motion is a relaxed sidearm.

  • @haroldgillette7157
    @haroldgillette7157 3 года назад +1

    Great age of baseball,my childhood years.Man ,was it fun....I was a Reds fan.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 3 года назад +1

    James Hoyt Wilhelm (July 26, 1922 - August 23, 2002), nicknamed "Old Sarge", was an American Major League Baseball pitcher with the New York Giants, St. Louis Cardinals, Cleveland Indians, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago White Sox, California Angels, Atlanta Braves, Chicago Cubs, and Los Angeles Dodgers between 1952 and 1972. Wilhelm was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1985, and is one of 83 pitchers enshrined in the Hall.

  • @dangelo1369
    @dangelo1369 3 года назад +5

    Legendary announcer Bob Wolff(1920-2017) Voice of the Knicks, Pistons, NY Rangers, Baltimore Colts, Washington (Redskins), and Cleveland Browns.

    • @enniswhalen2428
      @enniswhalen2428 3 года назад +1

      @ DA 136 - I saw Hoyt Wilhelm in street clothes, walking into the ballpark in 1970, and I thought that he was a coach.

    • @dangelo1369
      @dangelo1369 3 года назад

      @@enniswhalen2428 J.W. (Jay) Porter passed away last year at the age of 87. Here's an article about him in the Palm Beach Post: www.palmbeachpost.com/story/sports/2020/10/13/j-w-porter-former-major-league-baseball-player-dies-jupiter/3640974001/
      And today I found out that RHP Mike Marshall died at age 78.

    • @enniswhalen2428
      @enniswhalen2428 3 года назад

      @@dangelo1369 - Thank You!

    • @haledwards4642
      @haledwards4642 3 года назад

      Bob Wolff also teamed up with Joe Garagiola in the early 60's for the NBC Game of the Week.

  • @jamesmorrison7847
    @jamesmorrison7847 3 года назад +4

    I was about 5 years old when my grandpa took me to see him play against the Yankees in Yankee Stadium in 1958. I think he was with the White Sox at the time.

  • @geoffroi-le-Hook
    @geoffroi-le-Hook Год назад +1

    Bob Uecker once said the easiest way to catch a knuckleball was to wait until it stopped rolling

  • @gnryushi
    @gnryushi 12 лет назад +12

    This was awesome footage. Would love to go back in time and see a game during that era where there were no such things as collective bargaining agreements or multi-million dollar contracts or PEDs or...well you know what I mean.

    • @edfulginiti8798
      @edfulginiti8798 4 года назад +3

      ...or millionaire politically correct kneelers...

    • @gnryushi
      @gnryushi 4 года назад +2

      @@edfulginiti8798 Especially that.

    • @gnielsen07
      @gnielsen07 4 года назад +2

      Oh there were PED’s! They were called greenies. A massive portion of the players took speed

    • @oldmanballer5088
      @oldmanballer5088 3 года назад

      @@gnielsen07 not the same quality of today’s PEDs

  • @normansilver905
    @normansilver905 3 года назад +1

    Hoyt baffled many big time batters. And they all respected him too.

  • @bobbrown5951
    @bobbrown5951 3 года назад +2

    Last guy Isaw throw a knuckleball was RA Dickey with the Bluejays. What seems even more rare is a screwball. Last one I remember seeing was Fernando Valenzuela mostly with the Dodgers. He retired in 1997 with the Cardinals.

    • @kmslegal7808
      @kmslegal7808 3 года назад

      The pitch takes a lot out of your arm to corkscrew it that way. Mike Cuellar had a good one

  • @Celluloidwatcher
    @Celluloidwatcher 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for the above video featuring HOF'er Hoyt Wilhelm and his trademark knuckleball that baffled many a batter in his long major league career. Including, in this case, the Cleveland Indians, one of his numerous stops along the way to Cooperstown.

    • @martinpulvers8602
      @martinpulvers8602 3 года назад

      I was at the Polo Grounds in NYC when Wilhelm came back to town with the Cardinals, to whom he had recently been traded. When the Cards had Hoyt warm up in the outfield bullpen (which was on the actual field, in deep left or right centerfield) it took two catchers to contain Wilhelm...one regular catcher, of course, and one 20 or so feet behind him to retrieve what the first warm-up catcher couldn't contain. J.W. Porter was not exaggerating the difficulty of catching a knuckleballer like Wilhelm.

  • @waltwilliams7063
    @waltwilliams7063 3 года назад +2

    the best thing about knuckleballers is that they're fast workers.

  • @rstefanie2622
    @rstefanie2622 3 года назад +5

    Must have been a Sunday morning when this was taped, as you can hear church bells in the background.

    • @danielfronc4304
      @danielfronc4304 3 года назад

      Or a day time game as there was a rather large parochial school close by RFK.

  • @wall171717
    @wall171717 11 лет назад +6

    1958 - only year Wilhelm and Porter were on the Cleveland club together.

  • @CaptainKirk007
    @CaptainKirk007 3 года назад +3

    Funny how the pentagon “plane” footage looks older than this.

  • @jimmykeefe2503
    @jimmykeefe2503 11 лет назад +8

    thanks for uploading this

  • @danielfronc4304
    @danielfronc4304 3 года назад +1

    Nuckleballer brothers Phil and his brother Joe hold aTON of records to this day, including Phil being the only knuckleballer to win 300 (actually 318) games, most combined wins by brothers (539), Phil's 142 wins after age 40 the most ever, and 5,404 &1/3 innings pitched by any pitcher after the live ball 1920 season began. Those are just a few unbelievable records. Forget DiMaggio's 56 game streak, we'll never see the likes of another Phil Niekro.
    P.S. : Phil relied on the nuckleball more to get the third strike, setting up the batter with a number of pitches he could throw. The guy's dad taught them the knuckleball, called the "Rodney Dangerfield" of pitches as it topped out at 60 mph. Imagine being able to hit a 90 mph fastball but wiffing on a 60 mph knuckleball!

  • @tomitstube
    @tomitstube 3 года назад +3

    1957 and hoyt is already 35, he didn't get to the majors until he was 29 and would retire at 49. many baseball people didn't think his knuckler was practical, and he was even told to give it up after being let go in class d. but hoyt changed the game, he became the first full time knuckle ball pitcher and was part of the newest trend to use relievers strategically rather than taking over for someone struggling.
    he gives out some good tips here, he would also pass on his wisdom to wilbur wood and charlie hough, hough in turn teaching r.a. dickey the pitch.

  • @gianinni2002
    @gianinni2002 8 месяцев назад

    Hoyt hit a home run in his first major league at bat. It was his only homer in his entire career!

  • @144Donn
    @144Donn 3 года назад

    Goodness, Bob Wolf! I remember him doing Knick games back in the early 70's with Kal Ramsey!

  • @chestermicek
    @chestermicek 3 года назад +2

    What a talent & he's smart too.

  • @scottlink183
    @scottlink183 3 года назад +3

    Tremendous! Thank you!

  • @thesweetspottv8282
    @thesweetspottv8282 8 лет назад +7

    This is fantastic!

  • @dalethelander3781
    @dalethelander3781 3 года назад +2

    When Wilbur Wood was pitching for the White Sox, and since practically every pitch he threw was a knuckleball, the catcher used a glove made by Wilson called the "Big Bertha" to help catch that unpredictable pitch.

    • @jameswarnecke2483
      @jameswarnecke2483 3 года назад

      Do you remember him throwing both ends of a doubleheader? I wasn't even a teen then

    • @pigmeatmarkham898
      @pigmeatmarkham898 3 года назад

      @@jameswarnecke2483 It wasn’t him. It was his protege, Wilbur Wood, to whom he taught the pitch. Thanks to learning the pitch from Wilhelm, he played for many seasons afterwards.

    • @jameswarnecke2483
      @jameswarnecke2483 3 года назад

      I was replying to Dale

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 3 года назад

      @@jameswarnecke2483 There's a lot about the 70s I don't recall. I DO remember WLUP Disco Demolition. Admission was $1.98 and two disco albums. Then, hilarity ensued.
      I think Steve Dahl slunk out the back.

    • @pigmeatmarkham898
      @pigmeatmarkham898 3 года назад

      @@jameswarnecke2483 Sorry, totally missed that. I’m getting old, I guess.

  • @jamesswartz9396
    @jamesswartz9396 3 года назад +1

    as i recall wilhelm and porter only played one year together at cleveland. porter was primarily a bullpen catcher due to his weak hitting.

  • @HHIto
    @HHIto 3 года назад +6

    I remember my dad noting Hoyt Wilhelm’s unique “head tilt”..... he enjoyed him, a unique baseball HOF’er.

    • @bobpadrick7718
      @bobpadrick7718 3 года назад +1

      In fact, in his later years his nick name was Old Tilt.

  • @mikephalen3162
    @mikephalen3162 3 года назад +2

    "...nothing helps you there but God, I guess."

  • @jordandimarzio6322
    @jordandimarzio6322 2 года назад

    Knuckleballs are a rare sight today but they are a thing of beauty and a lost art when everybody throws 100 miles an hour now good luck hitting 65 and submarine dying arts

  • @bodensick
    @bodensick 3 года назад +2

    Paul Richards the Orioles Manager had a special enlarged catchers glove made for Gus Triandos to catch Hoyt.

  • @mcedd54
    @mcedd54 3 года назад

    Hoyt Wilhelm and Gus Triandos, what a pitching/catching combination for the Baltimore Orioles.
    Anyone remember the oversized catcher's mitt Triandos used?
    Some great baseball days!

  • @richardcarden4161
    @richardcarden4161 3 года назад +1

    My dad told me this guy had a great knuckle ball.

  • @b.j.n.g.354
    @b.j.n.g.354 4 года назад +4

    I MYSELF AM FORTUNATE ENOUGH TO HAVE SEEN THE GREAT HOYT WILHELM
    LIVE , PITCHING THAT VERY FAMOUS AND UNIQUE "HOYT WILHELM KNUCKLEBALL".
    -SENIOR EMERITUS
    PROFESSOR BJNG
    TANGIMOANA.

  • @andrewlewis3486
    @andrewlewis3486 3 года назад

    Not to parrot the previous writer, but I noticed first the clarity of the film. Awesome!

  • @nathanclinard1470
    @nathanclinard1470 3 года назад

    I saw him pitch in an old timers game in the late 1980s. Still untouchable.

  • @Playbyplaymedia
    @Playbyplaymedia 3 года назад +2

    This film was probably shot at Griffith Stadium in Washington, D.C.

  • @berniecohen5289
    @berniecohen5289 3 года назад +1

    As a Sox fan, I remember my radio at 2AM. Bob Elson:" Milo, I cannot understand it. We cannot touch the voodoo man

  • @dizbang3073
    @dizbang3073 2 года назад

    "All you can do is stab at it and hope you get enough glove on it to keep it close by."
    Hilarious.

  • @ChEkAlOtIcH3
    @ChEkAlOtIcH3 10 лет назад +30

    I want a rapid shave lol

    • @jrvapor
      @jrvapor 3 года назад

      It also softens hands while you do dishes!!! Lmao!!!

  • @seanremington1735
    @seanremington1735 3 года назад

    Don't see many side arm knuckle. Love the church bells in the background!

  • @turnthree5617
    @turnthree5617 3 года назад +1

    Better camera work than today.

  • @phmoffett
    @phmoffett Год назад

    Music of "The Lord's Prayer" in the background when Hoyt is giving his pitching demonstration.

  • @domingofernandez789
    @domingofernandez789 3 года назад

    I remember Wilhelm pitch for the Yankees in his late years. I was just a 10 year old kid. The ball really moved.