"Smoky" Joe Wood

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  • Опубликовано: 7 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 77

  • @Tomatohater64
    @Tomatohater64 3 месяца назад +6

    Sitting here in 2024 listening to a recording of Smoky Joe Wood talk about his career is astounding to me.

    • @GreyHorton-le1js
      @GreyHorton-le1js 2 месяца назад

      I was thinking the same thing! BTW…I hate tomatoes too.

  • @nbwall56
    @nbwall56 2 года назад +21

    This interview is absolutely priceless.

  • @danacoleman4007
    @danacoleman4007 2 года назад +5

    What an interesting conversation. He sounds like an honest man with a good memory.

    • @straycatttt2766
      @straycatttt2766 10 месяцев назад

      The interviewer stated that Wood was on the Yale “faculty” for 20 years. Wood corrected him. Wood replied that he (Wood) was the Yale baseball instructor but not truly on the faculty. That was honest of Wood to set that straight.

  • @kevinburke6055
    @kevinburke6055 Год назад +3

    Only know about him cause of Field of Dreams. Thank u young Moonlight Graham for bringing him to my attention.

  • @ke6nber
    @ke6nber Год назад +3

    I found this video four years after it was posted; late night, having trouble sleeping, cruising around YT...
    I'm real glad the algorithm fed me this video. Well done and thank you.

  • @cymaddux3131
    @cymaddux3131 10 месяцев назад +3

    Awesome interview, thank you

  • @marcoslaureano5562
    @marcoslaureano5562 2 года назад +8

    When I was a kid, I was a pretty good pitcher myself in Babe Ruth league and to inspire me my mom bought me an issue of (I THINK) Baseball Digest or Sports Illustrated - and the issue focused on the greatest seasons ever for a pitcher up to the year '87 or '88 - Smoky Joe Wood had one of those seasons - he won 34 games against only 5 losses and had an ERA of 1.91 He also struck out over 250 batters that year. In his age 31 season - he played 66 games and had 60 RBI batted .366 with a .562 SLG (while only hitting FOUR homers) and a 1.000 OPS and an OPS+ of about 150. To go from an elite pitcher to an elite hitter is, well, Ruth-like.

  • @jdunbar2995
    @jdunbar2995 3 года назад +18

    It's great hearing the stories of these legends of the game

  • @ogpigeon4431
    @ogpigeon4431 2 года назад +11

    This is amazing! Pure gold!

  • @redrebels24ify
    @redrebels24ify 6 месяцев назад +3

    This is part of an audio book called " The glory of their times" by Laurence Ritter, Many other audio clips including Rube Marquard. Look it up as it's an amazing listen.

  • @USMC-cv5sd
    @USMC-cv5sd 8 месяцев назад +2

    I could listen to him for hours, along with Satchel and Buck O'Neil.

  • @sdgakatbk
    @sdgakatbk 10 месяцев назад +2

    This is really good. Glad he mentioned how good Tris was in center. A lot of people don't know about Tris. I would have liked to have gotten his opinion about Mays though.

  • @tahoepoet
    @tahoepoet 2 года назад +5

    (Ty Cobb) "was one of my very best friends." 11:41

  • @paulconnor8334
    @paulconnor8334 3 года назад +7

    This is an amazing interview

  • @sanfernando2stories998
    @sanfernando2stories998 4 года назад +8

    Great stuff! Wish they would digitize all the other Interviews not featured on the cd set.

  • @dannywallace4905
    @dannywallace4905 Год назад +3

    Joe Wood was a stud. Really

  • @jnolette1030
    @jnolette1030 Год назад +2

    I saw him at Fenway when I was a kid he was about 90 at old timers game he didn't play but they announced him

  • @spcooper94
    @spcooper94 2 года назад +4

    5:46, 7:18, 11:43 Smoky Joe comparing his speed to Walter Johnson's. Respect

  • @tomvernon2123
    @tomvernon2123 3 года назад +12

    They had great nicknames, Babe, Big Six the Gray Eagle, Rube, Home Run, Chief. Big Train Prince Hal, Larrupping Lou, Bucketfoot Al. Yeah, great nicknames.

    • @zerubbablestranger6970
      @zerubbablestranger6970 3 года назад

      Don’t forget “Biscuit Pants” aka Lou Gehrig……

    • @tomvernon2123
      @tomvernon2123 3 года назад

      @@zerubbablestranger6970 I don't think I ever heard that one. Thanks.

    • @jamie49868
      @jamie49868 2 года назад +1

      "High Pockets", "Dummy", "Hippo", "Gettysburg Eddie", the list is long and very interesting. Nobody has a good one anymore. "Oil Can" and "Space Man" are about it, and even those are 40yrs ago.

    • @terencemccarthy3744
      @terencemccarthy3744 2 года назад

      Now a days- woke idiots would lose their Sht..

  • @robertoconnor3683
    @robertoconnor3683 3 месяца назад +1

    Willie Mays was a good center fielder too.

  • @stubie1456
    @stubie1456 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for sharing this!

  • @ASDF84.0
    @ASDF84.0 7 месяцев назад

    that man said, what locker rooms?" haha tells you right there that we have been separated from the world our great-grandparents lived in. imagine ball players doing all this now.. it just blows my mind on our different this world is now. like leaving there fielding gloves on the field... thats just such a holdy type of baseball.. gotta love it man.

  • @donschmidt8203
    @donschmidt8203 3 года назад +15

    It's too bad that we have no way of knowing how fast Walter johnson or joe wood actually were. Radar guns didn't exist in those days. Unfailingly modest johnson was asked if he was faster than bob feller as he watched him pitch. His honesty won out. No, he said. Yet, the greatest arm ever for power and durability had to be nolan ryan. Ryan could throw into the mid nineties in his mid forties. Never a hint of arm trouble in his entire career. The most gifted pitching arm ever.

    • @primetime798
      @primetime798  3 года назад +1

      There is a documentary called “Fastball” narrated by Kevin Costner and it showed in 1910 or 1911 they used the U.S. Army equipment that was used to clock bullets, which stated he threw in high 90’s. But in my opinion Walter Johnson and Bob Feller were the hardest throwers in history before Chapman. It is hard to believe Johnson threw over 90 mph with that easy motion. Feller was easy 100 or but over. Great comment Don.

    • @danacoleman4007
      @danacoleman4007 2 года назад

      @@primetime798 lol. ever hear of a fella named Nolan Ryan?

    • @primetime798
      @primetime798  2 года назад

      @@danacoleman4007 Of course, how fast do you think Rube W.?

    • @michaelterry4394
      @michaelterry4394 2 года назад

      Earl Weaver said Steve Dalkowski from conn was faster than NOLAN Ryan. Also Paul Blair. He was the character who was based on in Kevin Costner movie Bull Duram. .

    • @michaelterry4394
      @michaelterry4394 2 года назад

      How about Sandy Koufax or Satchel Paige

  • @chrisnussbaumer9516
    @chrisnussbaumer9516 7 месяцев назад +1

    Words that will never be said again, "I never saw a big league game until I broke into the big leagues"

  • @Bigstooler0
    @Bigstooler0 3 года назад +4

    I love this! Thank you.

  • @dougmcelroy3780
    @dougmcelroy3780 2 года назад +3

    "Can I throw harder than Joe Wood? Listen, my friend, there's no man alive can throw harder than Smoky Joe Wood!"

    • @dougmcelroy3780
      @dougmcelroy3780 2 года назад +1

      Sorry, I forgot crediting the quote. This was said by Walter Johnson.

  • @danielleary9265
    @danielleary9265 3 года назад +4

    love that pic with Cy Young in the dugout wearing the Old Timers jeresey

  • @tomitstube
    @tomitstube 3 года назад +5

    great interview... just checked, walter johnson vs smoky joe wood would face each other twice that year, 1912, the inaugural year of fenway park. wood shut out johnson and the senators twice. the first 3 series they didn't meet, then joe would beat walter 3-0 on june 26, 1912, 2nd game of a double header. tris speaker hit a 2 run triple in the 6th. wood struck out 9, walter 10, wood gave up 3 hits, walter 4.
    the big game joe talks about happened on sept. 6, 1912. walter johnson came into the game at 29-10, smoky joe wood was 29-4, joe beat walter 1-0 for his 30th win . doubles by speaker and duffy lewis accounted for the only run in the 6th. 29,000 announced. fenway held 35,000.
    i think joe might be getting the "crowd on the 3rd base line" game mixed up with a world series game against the giants, game 7, (it would go 8 because game 2 ended in a tie due to darkness) but the "royal rooters" caused a big commotion after their normal seats were sold, and were lined up along the left field line.
    the senators had a good year in 1912, they finished 30 games over .500. unfortunately for walter and the senators they were 14 games back of the red sox who would beat the john mcgraw/christy mathewson giants.

  • @Bigstooler0
    @Bigstooler0 3 года назад +7

    I sounds like he tore his rotator cuff.

  • @brianwells456comcast
    @brianwells456comcast 3 года назад +3

    Interesting fact,in 1918,with the Indians Joe Wood hit more homers (5) than the rest of his teammates combined!

  • @jimbeam4140
    @jimbeam4140 3 года назад +3

    Well done Yale

  • @willruelas3529
    @willruelas3529 4 года назад +11

    Walter Johnson is the greatest pitcher of all time

    • @acousticshadow4032
      @acousticshadow4032 3 года назад +5

      Certainly the Big Train is up there, but you've missed the point here. Smoky Joe Wood is the real life Roy Hobbs. Started out as a pitcher, hurt his arm (without benefit of a pistol-packing Harriet Bird), and reinvented himself as an everyday player. His last season was 1922, when Smoky Joe hit .297. Career BA was .283. Not too shabby.

    • @lloydkline6946
      @lloydkline6946 3 года назад

      Walter big train 🚆Johnson,original 95plus fastball

    • @areguapiri
      @areguapiri 3 года назад

      Satchel Paige.

    • @gators-rock-tim-t9247
      @gators-rock-tim-t9247 2 года назад

      @@areguapiri lol

  • @FerdinandCesarano
    @FerdinandCesarano Год назад +1

    This is wonderful. May I ask who the interviewer is, and when this conversation took place?

    • @FerdinandCesarano
      @FerdinandCesarano Год назад +2

      Is it Lawrence Ritter from the interviews for "Glory of their Times" in the mid-1960s?

  • @dougmcelroy3780
    @dougmcelroy3780 2 года назад +1

    Ok, the gentleman being interviewed IS Smoky Joe Wood. I wish that had been made clear from the beginning! He died in 1985.

  • @SteveGee1986
    @SteveGee1986 2 года назад +2

    I wonder what was wrong with his arm?

  • @joemarshall4226
    @joemarshall4226 Год назад +1

    Cobb and Speaker were both accused of throwing games. The evidence was strong. It was covered up. The owners were notorious for not paying the players. They had it coming.

  • @Jimmycardcollector
    @Jimmycardcollector Год назад +1

    Baseball fans that dont explore baseball history are missing out!

  • @TR-yi8up
    @TR-yi8up 3 года назад +1

    Anyone know the year of the interview or who the guys are who are conducting it? Sounds really good for what I assume is the late 70’s/early 80’s

    • @primetime798
      @primetime798  3 года назад +1

      It is 1960’s when Lawrence Ritter interviewed these players. Check out the audiobook or book.

    • @TR-yi8up
      @TR-yi8up 3 года назад

      @@primetime798 got it. Been listening to the other interviews all night. Thanks

    • @TR-yi8up
      @TR-yi8up 3 года назад +3

      Just ordered the book for my father, who pitched against Satchel Paige in the late 50’s. He’s going to love it. Thanks for the info

  • @scallywag4978
    @scallywag4978 2 года назад

    Nobody throws faster than Smokey Joe - Walter Johnson

  • @davidahlstrom7533
    @davidahlstrom7533 Год назад

    Why so many non-Joe Wood pictures?

    • @primetime798
      @primetime798  Год назад +3

      I just put a feel of that era of baseball into it

  • @7294smk
    @7294smk 25 дней назад

    Why do the pictures never match the players. They are just a variety of players of the time. They ruin the production.

  • @pamelasullivan9732
    @pamelasullivan9732 3 года назад

    Hi. Who owns the rights to this interview?

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 11 месяцев назад

      Me.

    • @redrebels24ify
      @redrebels24ify 6 месяцев назад

      Laurence Ritter, His audio book " The glory of their times "

  • @joemarshall4226
    @joemarshall4226 Год назад

    Speaker had a higher career OBP than Cobb. Both of them very poor base stealing percentages.