1968 Don Drysdale Los Angeles Dodgers Vitalis Commerical

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • Originally aired in 1968, this commerical features future Hall of Famer Don Drysdale of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
    San Francisco Giants manager Herman Franks makes a cameo in this commerical, accusing Drysdale of throwing a greaseball.

Комментарии • 64

  • @lesliemonaghan5035
    @lesliemonaghan5035 12 лет назад +45

    The umpire is my father, John Vick from San Francisco. He's a paid actor in this commercial but he was in the minors back in the 50's. It's great to see him again through the magic of modern technology.This was a big deal for him. And my 5 sisters and I loved seeing him on TV!
    He looks good. He was in a few other commercials, TV shows(LIne-up,Lassie, Streets of San Francisco) and some movies(Take the Money and Run,The Towering Inferno,Bullitt) later on.

    • @davewanamaker3690
      @davewanamaker3690 3 года назад +2

      I hope you can save the footage for your family. That is a great commercial, What a great legacy your father left.

  • @jimgardner1569
    @jimgardner1569 4 года назад +4

    I remember this well. It came out shortly before Drysdale retired. Willie Davis also appeared in the commercial. The catcher was Tom Haller.

  • @toastnjam7384
    @toastnjam7384 3 года назад +5

    Earlier in the season the SF manager, Herman Franks got into a big dust up with the umps, accusing Drysdale of doctoring the ball and I believe he was throw out.
    Some ad executive was on the ball.
    This was the first season I started to follow baseball.

    • @ThekiBoran
      @ThekiBoran 2 года назад

      Who was thrown out? Franks or Drysdale?

    • @toastnjam7384
      @toastnjam7384 2 года назад

      @@ThekiBoran
      I'm not super positive if Franks was thrown out but he did go off on the Ump after he cleared Drysdale. Like in the ad he thought Drysdale was using something in his hair or cap. I saw this game on TV. I thought it was awesome that it was turned into a commercial when I saw this later in the season. Like I said some AD Man saw a great opportunity for a commercial.

  • @CarlDuke
    @CarlDuke 11 лет назад +10

    Thanks for posting this. I remember their slogan that Vitalis had No Greasy Kid Stuff. and always happy to see the Big D who passed away much too soon.

    • @richardvalleau7254
      @richardvalleau7254 4 года назад +2

      CarlDuke drydale would have all these home run posers and bat flippers on their back

    • @soaringvulture
      @soaringvulture 4 года назад +2

      @@richardvalleau7254 I didn't think Drysdale made that distinction. He put everyone on their back.

  • @iceman4408
    @iceman4408 6 лет назад +3

    I remember this commercial.

  • @CaribouDataScience
    @CaribouDataScience 2 месяца назад

    I remember this ad from when I was a kid, and I am 69 now.

  • @Eddie_Schantz
    @Eddie_Schantz 4 года назад +2

    According to a 1968 Giants roster, the player in the batters box is Frank Johnson.

  • @OeditpusRex
    @OeditpusRex 11 лет назад +3

    Yup - Bill Haller.
    Tommy Haller caught a lotta games for the Giants in the mid-'60s. He had one great offensive year - '66, maybe - with something like 30 homers. Had an arm, too; in one game against the Dodgers, he twice threw out Maury Wills stealing second.

  • @wilrobles9824
    @wilrobles9824 5 лет назад +1

    I forgot about this commercial.

  • @imapaine-diaz4451
    @imapaine-diaz4451 2 года назад +1

    Yep...Vitalis! you'll find it in the lockers of most pitchers in major league baseball. Just great for keeping the hair in order during those long extra inning games.......among other things😅😅

  • @OeditpusRex
    @OeditpusRex 11 лет назад +2

    He had the voice and mannerisms of an ump. Good job. :)

  • @jamesanthony5681
    @jamesanthony5681 2 месяца назад

    I remember a commercial with Mets manager Gil Hodges inspecting the hair of his starters before a game, and ordering Gary Gentry, " Gentry, to the showers!

  • @1985OldSkool
    @1985OldSkool Год назад +1

    0:29 Home Plate Umpire: Drysdale, where do you think you're going? Drysdale.

  • @soapbxprod
    @soapbxprod 10 лет назад +2

    Thanks for uploading! Memory lane! It's Gil Hodges' B-Day... :) Go Big D!

  • @larry930legend
    @larry930legend 9 лет назад +2

    Love those classic commercials No cheaters here

  • @bobtrapp6218
    @bobtrapp6218 9 лет назад +3

    Great find.
    #14 was Len Gabrielson and #7 was Bob Bailey. Gabrielson I recognized Bailey I had to look up.

    • @willdrucker4291
      @willdrucker4291 2 года назад

      And #3 was Willie Davis and the catcher was Tom Haller…1968…Drysdale’s last full season in the majors…also the year he threw SIX STRAIGHT SHUTOUTS

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 9 месяцев назад

    Those fans have sharp vision to recognize the label on the bottle Don is holding up.

  • @willdrucker4291
    @willdrucker4291 2 года назад

    Other ball players in this classic commercial…
    DODGERS
    Willie Davis
    Tom Haller
    Len Gabrielson
    Bob Bailey
    GIANTS
    Frank Johnson (at bat)
    Ray Sadecki and Mike McCormick (dugout)
    Herman Franks (manager)

  • @peanutsmcgonnagle2458
    @peanutsmcgonnagle2458 Год назад

    Herman Franks was "famous" for managing the powerful San Francisco Giants to 5-straight, 2nd place finishes in the National League, back in the 60's. They couldn't overcome the pitching of Koufax & Drysdale and Bob Gibson.

  • @KAIJUG
    @KAIJUG 8 лет назад +1

    Used to see this all the time

  • @TreyMeans3
    @TreyMeans3 6 лет назад +1

    Rest assured Drysdale would have put the next pitch in the hitter’s ear hole

  • @rayjr62
    @rayjr62 11 лет назад +1

    Peanuts Lowrie was probably on the phone with his bookie. But all kidding aside, this is a cool commercial and a look at what Candlestick looked like before they enclosed the entire ballpark.

  • @rayjr62
    @rayjr62 11 лет назад +2

    Had they traded Cepeda to the Indians for say, Luis Tiant, or even a younger, less inebriated Sam McDowell, their fortunes might have been a whole lot different back then. The inclusion of a McDowell or a Tiant to a rotation already including Marichal, Perry and McCormick might have been enough to catch the Cardinals.
    Oh well, I guess we'll never know.

  • @OeditpusRex
    @OeditpusRex 11 лет назад +1

    I'd forgotten all about the McDowell trade rumblings. Cepeda for Sadeki turned out to be as spectacularly bad as Robinson for Pappas.
    Footnote: As a small-town sportswriter in the '90s, Cepeda was my biggest interview when he was master of ceremonies one year at the PONY Bronco League World Series in Monterey. I asked him if it was true that he got the "Baby Bull" nickname when he ran through a stop sign and was thrown out at the plate. He laughed.

  • @YGTC2012
    @YGTC2012 3 года назад

    It sounds like famed Giant announcer Russ Hodges doing the voice-over.

  • @Eddie_Schantz
    @Eddie_Schantz 12 лет назад

    According to the 1968 Dodger roster: #3 is Willie Davis, #5 is Jim Lefebre, #17 is Hank Aguirre, #21 is Jim Brewer. One of the players in the dugout is #?4, but you cannot make out the first number on his uniform for certain. I don't recognize the umpire either.

  • @rwaggs62
    @rwaggs62 12 лет назад +1

    also looks like #21 Jim Brewer too...

  • @MrTommyg024
    @MrTommyg024 11 лет назад

    Great color!

  • @donaldcasalone4243
    @donaldcasalone4243 7 лет назад +1

    Sounds like John Sterling on the voice-over

  • @pbrickley6247
    @pbrickley6247 7 лет назад +1

    Herman Franks was an intense competitor & this outburst does not surprise me. Moreover the umpire should never have let Drysdale leave his sight.

  • @taco2k3
    @taco2k3 Год назад

    What’s funny is it looks like it was filmed at Candlestick Park. No way that real crowd would cheer Drysdale.

  • @willdrucker4291
    @willdrucker4291 2 года назад +1

    Hahahaaaa…sorry Herman…(the Giants manager)…Vitalis has no grease…

  • @RRaquello
    @RRaquello 11 лет назад

    I recognize tha catcher as Tom Haller from his baseball cards. He's one of those guys who was around a long time who I remember getting on a lot of baseball cards but don't actually ever remember seeing him play in a game. I believe his brother was an umpire in the American League.

    • @richardgerlach5156
      @richardgerlach5156 3 года назад

      Bill Haller was his brother. Bill was in fact an AL ump.

  • @swami1
    @swami1 8 лет назад +4

    Steve Garvey did a Vitalis commercial when he was a rookie.

    • @jimgardner1569
      @jimgardner1569 4 года назад

      I remember that but I can't find it. Pete Rose was also in the commercial, as was Maury Wills.

  • @rwaggs62
    @rwaggs62 12 лет назад +1

    This doesn't look like Candlestick Park's OF, was this filmed there? Thanks...Yeah, TOM HALLER, WILLIE DAVIS & JIM LEFEBVRE are all in the commercial! Along with the BIG 'D"!

    • @richardgerlach5156
      @richardgerlach5156 3 года назад

      This is definitely Candlestick Park. That is what it looked like from 1960 to 1970. It was enclosed in 1971. It even had Astro-Turf for much of the 1970's.

  • @OeditpusRex
    @OeditpusRex 12 лет назад

    I totally remember this. I was 12 and a hard-core Dodgers fan.
    A bit of irony: Drysdale's catcher is Tommy Haller, and that was his first year with LA. He'd come from the Giants with some minor-leaguer in a trade for Ron Hunt and Nate Oliver.
    The batter is Frank Johnson, a backup third baseman. When Drysdale tosses the ball in the dugout, second baseman Jimmy Lefebvre catches it, and when he comes out, 3 is center fielder Willie Davis. Anyone know who the umpire is?

    • @ThekiBoran
      @ThekiBoran 2 года назад

      See Leslie monahan's comment.

  • @kylebook
    @kylebook 13 лет назад +1

    And in the next inning, Walrer Alston accuses Giants pitcher Gaylord Perry of throwing a greaseball....busted!

  • @OeditpusRex
    @OeditpusRex 11 лет назад

    They could sure hit baseballs. Didn't score a ton of runs, but it seemed like there wasn't a game when Mays or McCovey or Hart or Haller didn't hit a homer. But, pitching usually wins, and aside from Marichal with occasional help from Perry, Bolin, Shaw or Herbel, they weren't known for that.
    Mays also said the '54 Giants were the best ball club that ever took the field. Kinda hard to argue with someone like him.

  • @blank77
    @blank77 13 лет назад

    Chicago ties in this ad.
    Drysdale:Future White Sox announcer.
    Herman Franks:Future Cubs manager.

  • @elucio98
    @elucio98 13 лет назад

    Don then proceded to throw a brushback pitch....at Franks in the dugout.

  • @andyr1313
    @andyr1313 12 лет назад +2

    Haven't seen this in years! Boy, did I hate Drysdale, with the white-hot hatred only a pre-teen Giants fan could have...
    Giants announcer Russ Hodges doing the voice-over...

  • @russs7574
    @russs7574 3 года назад

    The only way this commercial could have been any better would have been if Vin Scully had done the voice over....not that Russ Hodges wasn't good here, but Scully was just, well Scully.

  • @DanielArreola
    @DanielArreola 12 лет назад

    Umpire appears to be Harry Wendelstedt.

  • @rayjr62
    @rayjr62 11 лет назад

    That '66 team was good. I've often heard McCovey and Mays both claim that their '66 team was better overall than the '62 team that won the pennant. But after what happened in 2010 and last year, I guess none of that really matters.

    • @loyaldude10
      @loyaldude10 6 лет назад

      65 and 66 Giants were both very good, and came close to winning, but were a little short on pitching. Dodgers had great pitching but prob one of the worst hitting attacks of any pennant winner.

  • @rayjr62
    @rayjr62 11 лет назад

    Well, the Giants DID get around to trading for Sam McDowell. But that was at the end of the 1971 season, and they traded him for Gaylord Perry. McDowell turned out to be a bust (he would be out of baseball a few years later) and Perry went on to pitch another 10 + seasons and win 300 games. Recently it had been revealed to Giants fans that by the late 1960s owner Horace Stoneham had run into some serious money problems and was looking to dump some of his higher salaried players.

  • @OeditpusRex
    @OeditpusRex 11 лет назад

    Coaching third? Or was it first?

  • @ceemills9460
    @ceemills9460 11 лет назад

    Well, Perry did approach Vaseline once about doing an endorsement, so that probably wasn't too far from being a reality...

  • @Jiltedin2007
    @Jiltedin2007 11 лет назад

    I'm not sure either.

  • @irish89055
    @irish89055 10 лет назад

    Where do you like you're goin...? No greasy kid stuff huh lol

  • @manutd316
    @manutd316 12 лет назад

    @kylebook LOL

  • @rwaggs62
    @rwaggs62 12 лет назад

    and most likely Walter Alston was right!

  • @ked4
    @ked4 5 лет назад

    It has alcohol though, so it dries your hair

  • @Jiltedin2007
    @Jiltedin2007 11 лет назад

    And where was Peanuts Lowrie? Another Giants Cry Baby then.