The Smoothest Defender in Baseball History

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024
  • Creator: Mike
    Twitter: / srsmike
    RUclips: / srsmike
    Rey Ordoñez is mostly unknown outside of Mets fans or diehard MLB fans. But at his best, there truly was no one who played defense at a more exciting level...
    Thumbnail Artist - / torontogojays0g
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Комментарии • 333

  • @mariohnyc
    @mariohnyc Год назад +75

    Rey was also the master of the slide/pop up throw move. He would use it to stop his momentum which usually resulted in a strong, accurate, throw.

    • @trevorgoodyear2408
      @trevorgoodyear2408 Год назад

      Yes! It was such a good move, I’ve always wondered why more dudes don’t try it.

    • @chuckyspins1726
      @chuckyspins1726 11 месяцев назад

      The single best way to attack a ball in the hole yet it’s never taught

  • @pitoshighlights2443
    @pitoshighlights2443 Год назад +21

    We went to the same Sports Elementary school in Havana, Cuba ( Alfredo Sosa Morales) , he was 4 yrs. older than me but already a local legend for his glove work. In 1993 the Cuban Junior national team, which i was part of; played the Cuban National University team that was going to Buffalo where he later defected; I remember before the game he gave me a little smirk while saying my name, he was congratulating me for making the Junior national team since we both came from the same elementary school.

  • @joshuakramer9833
    @joshuakramer9833 Год назад +62

    As a fan of Cardinals baseball, growing up on Ozzie Smith highlights. Rey is the most amazing SS in that time since. I'm happy to see Rey get some love and recognition.

    • @lhamarurbina9549
      @lhamarurbina9549 Год назад +1

      Yea growing up playing short stop I definitely studied Ozzie Smith, Omar Vizquel and Rey any of them can make an argument for best defensive short stop.

    • @robertvillaume51
      @robertvillaume51 9 месяцев назад

      Agreed. Ozzie’s flips and making the game fun. Great to see both play

    • @drizzle452
      @drizzle452 4 месяца назад

      Andrelton Simmons should get a honorable mention as well

  • @samssportsshop
    @samssportsshop Год назад +157

    Finally some respect for my favorite player of all time

    • @guyincognito320
      @guyincognito320 Год назад +5

      Ventura, Ordonez, Alfonzo and Olerud is just about as good as there's ever been defensively. Maybe the '70 Orioles - Brooks Robinson, Mark Belanger, Davey Johnson, Boog Powell - is as good or slightly better, in spite of Powell being much worse than Olerud. But in my lifetime the 98-00 Mets are probably it.

    • @dno718
      @dno718 Год назад +1

      Same brother. Rey Rey is King King.

    • @libra3655
      @libra3655 Год назад +1

      If the Mets do lock down Correa and we have the best infield in baseball, they still look mediocre in comparison to Ordonez and the rest of them back then

    • @raishauntanner4206
      @raishauntanner4206 Год назад

      Can’t wait for the Colby Rasmus on the Astros video then if this is happening to people.

    • @joepadovano3745
      @joepadovano3745 Год назад +1

      facts mine to ahah

  • @moviescatsmargs
    @moviescatsmargs Год назад +24

    My brother and I would field grounders from my dad when we were kids and we were usually pretending to be some combo of Rey and Edgardo Alfonzo, aka the most iconic infield duo in Mets history

  • @brettt21
    @brettt21 Год назад +10

    I love that you made this video. Rey should be more appreciated. But I was pretty shocked that you didn't include ANY of his patented knee slide pop up going to his right. No other player has ever done it. It was art. On identical ground balls, it made Jeter's stupid jump throw look like beer league softball.

  • @dannylovessarah
    @dannylovessarah Год назад +6

    This was my grandpa's favorite baseball player. As a Cuban immigrant, my grandpa always wanted to show me Rey's defense. I grew up admiring the guy, because my grandpa loved him. I admired his defense, as I was a middle infielder as well.

    • @illmerica322
      @illmerica322 3 месяца назад

      Mine too!!! Gpa knows his baseball.

  • @jamesfontana4850
    @jamesfontana4850 Год назад +3

    As a Mets fan, I've always tried to find highlight videos and people paying homage to Ordonez but never found much. Thank you for making this vid, Rey O was truly one of a kind.

  • @jdutra296
    @jdutra296 Год назад +8

    Thank you for doing a Rey Ordonez vid! Never see this dude getting any respect but he was immensely important to those great mets teams in 99 and 2000. Luis Guillorme has always felt like the second coming of Ordonez to me

  • @mypal1990
    @mypal1990 Год назад +35

    Growing up as a Mets fan, I've never seen such a smooth defender in the outfield than Rey Ordonez. That cannon of an arm can get people out!

  • @zlinedavid
    @zlinedavid Год назад +2

    My dad grew up a Sox fan in Chicago in the late 50s/early 60s. After seeing some Ordonez highlights one time, he said “I’ve never said this in 40 years, but that kid is a better defender than Luis Aparicio. Seen some equal, he’s the first that’s better.” And, that is about as high of a baseball-related compliment he could ever give.

  • @RyBegz44
    @RyBegz44 Год назад +2

    There isn't that much material for how truly great Ordonez is. Much like most of the comments a lot of people appreciated his defensive prowess and was one of my favorite players. You did a great job with encapsulating how truly great he was. Even the YT thumbnail was well done. Truly appreciate your efforts for making this. Took a trip back down memory lane a la Rey Ordonez and his craftsman on the diamond.

  • @allenarena4936
    @allenarena4936 Год назад +7

    I’ve been saying it for 20 years , for that short three year span he was the best defensive shortstop in the history of baseball !!!

  • @mrmet5
    @mrmet5 Год назад +8

    Ordonez is so underappreciated. Yes he couldn't hit but boy he could catch baseball all day!! Great defensive plays always put a smile on my face.

  • @mavensbaseball
    @mavensbaseball Год назад +6

    Favorite quote about Ray. Ralph Kiner called him a bible hitter. Thou shall not pass. As in he swung at everything. Also, I wish you included my favorite Ordonez play. It was against to Cubs. A pop-up in the infield just behind the mound created a triangle play and the ball was going to fall in but at the last second Ordonez comes out of nowhere to dive in and catch the ball just before it hits the ground.

  • @carlosrosales4577
    @carlosrosales4577 Год назад +2

    Finally. A video of Ordoñez. I remember he’d always be on the highlight reels in TWIB.

  • @TheJohnharple
    @TheJohnharple Год назад +5

    As a Cleveland Indians / Guardians fan I will always put Omar Vizquel at number one and the Omar/Robbie Alomar ss/2nd base years as the best defensive combo basically ever but Ray was always my shortstop pick in ken Griffey Jr. Major league baseball on N64. He was a REALLY good defensive shortstop that was on par with almost anyone.

  • @jgray2718
    @jgray2718 Год назад +10

    I'm not a Mets fan nor particularly a baseball fan, but Rey Ordonez was always one of my favorites to watch. I'd never seen anyone else do his pre-emptive slide into a stop so he could pop up early for the throw. He may not have stuck around in the zeitgeist of baseball for as long as I expected, but that one move really expanded my idea of what defense could be in baseball.

    • @CRS-fe2zj
      @CRS-fe2zj Год назад

      Dope comment. I can sense the respect for the game.

  • @gripken08
    @gripken08 Год назад +6

    In high school all of my boys loved Rey Rey! One of my jv soccer teammates and i used to turn our soccer warmups into Rey Ordonez highlight practices lol. Yeah we got benched a lot.

  • @davescozz
    @davescozz Год назад +45

    I played shortstop in high school from 98-20 and loved Rey. I tried copying all of his moves. Best defensive SS ever.

    • @supergoose5142
      @supergoose5142 Год назад +19

      98-20? wow you were in high school a long time lol

    • @owlhater270
      @owlhater270 Год назад +1

      ​@@supergoose5142 LOl, I am sure he ment 98-00

    • @davescozz
      @davescozz Год назад +2

      @@supergoose5142 LOL. 98-2000

    • @lhamarurbina9549
      @lhamarurbina9549 Год назад

      I think Ozzie Smith and Omar Vizquel might have something to say about that but yea those 3 are in the conversation.

    • @owlhater270
      @owlhater270 Год назад +1

      @@lhamarurbina9549 I will take Ozzy Smith, the man was a wizard.

  • @vidowatcher91
    @vidowatcher91 Год назад +4

    Thank you for this. Forgot how good he was, criminally underrated defensively

  • @myquest666420
    @myquest666420 Год назад +4

    YES!! Rey Ordonez and Omar Vizquel were my favorite short stops growing up.
    I remember Ordonez hitting a grand slam for the Mets. He didn’t hit many bombs, he hit for solid contact. But he had that one haha

  • @saulsals3570
    @saulsals3570 Год назад +6

    He had a very short career but he’s the greatest SS I’ve ever known !

  • @MH3GL
    @MH3GL Год назад

    Thank you for proving that Stat Cast is not only unnecessary, but has taken the wonder and amazement out of the spectacularness of plays.

  • @Jay.91k
    @Jay.91k Год назад +4

    This guy leaves me speechless with his insane plays

  • @juancabreu11
    @juancabreu11 Год назад +4

    Thanks for the video! Ordóñez was one of the greatest!! He played in Cuba for Metropolitanos which is the second team in Havana, just because in the first team there was a shortstop named German Mesa which is the greatest period, Rey was very good defensively but German was insane, you can look for highlights by German Mesa and second base Juan Padilla for Industriales ( El Duke, Kendrys Morales etc also play here) which is the first team of Havana, and the one that has won the most championships in my country Cuba 🇨🇺

  • @frankanon4450
    @frankanon4450 Год назад +1

    I didn't even have to watch your video to know he's the best shortstop I've ever seen. I'm a die hard Mets fan since '77. I watched most of all of Rey's games so I've seen him as much as anyone. I also watched Ozzie Smith's career and it's still a no brainer for me. Most of Rey's error's were on routine plays ironically

  • @illmerica322
    @illmerica322 3 месяца назад

    Best SS in history. My hero as a kid. Met him a couple times. Thank you for the nostalgia.

  • @dmacmsu
    @dmacmsu Год назад +3

    I miss watching him. on any given play. a jaw dropping highlight could happen

  • @markusluukko
    @markusluukko Год назад +2

    Never knew he existed, reminds me of Jose Iglesias as a Red Sox fan. I’ve always liked light hitting defensive wizards at SS.

    • @alwillk
      @alwillk Год назад

      Iglesias at least hit around .300 a few times.

  • @lorimeyers3839
    @lorimeyers3839 Год назад +2

    Grew up in upstate NY in Orange County. My earliest memories of baseball involved Rey Ordonez at short. The best defender I’ve ever watched. Too bad he couldn’t but worth a lick.

  • @ryanpeters167
    @ryanpeters167 Год назад +1

    I’ve seen him play so many games, thanks for making this video. Really underrated.

  • @RussPaladino
    @RussPaladino Год назад +1

    Rey was a very me man shift. Loved watching him play. Truly the greatest infielder I’ve ever seen.

  • @Banannaise
    @Banannaise Год назад

    Gotta love the Dave Stieb cameo at 10:51

  • @cannonballwound
    @cannonballwound Год назад +2

    Part of (arguably) the greatest infield defense ever. If Rey could hit a lick (which he couldn’t) he’d be an all time great. Still breathtaking defense.

  • @garrettwente3478
    @garrettwente3478 Год назад

    I love this account, man. You hear about the best players that are not talked enough in the mainstream.

  • @cpguy99ify
    @cpguy99ify Год назад +2

    I loved that man, by far the best defensive player ever in MLB

  • @alcidesrios7222
    @alcidesrios7222 Год назад +1

    Awesome. I remember being 17 yrs old as a yankee fan loving his shortstop skills.

  • @Luke_Skyraptor
    @Luke_Skyraptor Год назад +5

    Rey-O was my idol as a young ballplayer growing up. Yeah, he was hard to watch at the plate, but times were different.

  • @captainpercy4369
    @captainpercy4369 Год назад

    When I was in High School and Rey was doing this nightly were were blown away watching Sportscenter, and you better believe we were trying to be like Rey before practice. Looking back on him now, I think he may be an alien, my guy was unreal!

  • @pdple9476
    @pdple9476 Год назад +1

    As someone already pointed out in the comments: he was not the best Cuban SS of his time!!! That merit goes to Germán "The Magnet" Mesa, which was another out-of-this-world defender and furthermore coincided with a great defensive second baseman (Juan Padilla) which formed the best SS-2B pair I have ever seen. One could argue that Ordóñez had more range and was more explosive. Mesa on the other hand was smoother and way more fluid (I kid you not). Mesa was also a decent hitter and one known to show up in big moments.
    That being said: great video, and thanks for bringing attention to an overall underrated player like Rey Ordóñez.

  • @ajenning85
    @ajenning85 Год назад +1

    You had to see him play to understand how great he was, beyond just the highlights. I'm in St. Louis. We had Ozzie. Defensively I think Rey was the closest thing to Ozzie that we've seen since prime Ozzie. And when coupled with Ventura, Alfonzo and Olerud that Mets infield was ridiculous. Very underappreciated player, and great choice for a video.

    • @chazzx1018
      @chazzx1018 Год назад

      One of the best infields in history. Too bad there pitching wasn't better.

  • @uranderson
    @uranderson 4 месяца назад

    One of the most amazing things about Rey's 100 games without an error is just how ridiculous his range was. There's a lot of guys who handled what was hit right at them but Rey was able to avoid errors even when the degree of difficulty was extreme.
    His double play partner Alfonzo was the opposite, very reliable fielder, one of the best ever in terms of fielding percentage but he was distinctly average moving laterally or coming in.
    That 99 Mets infield is usually talked about in terms of the best ever. It was the best I ever saw at any rate. Ventura at third was an incredible fielder. Olerud was the best receiving first baseman I've ever seen and a big part of why Rey and the rest of that infield committed so few errors. He turned so many off target throws into outs. And Alfonzo was a machine at 2b, if it was in his range it was an out.
    A lot of it comes down to whether you count the catcher in that conversation. Piazza wasn't a great defensive catcher.

  • @matthewandress1229
    @matthewandress1229 Год назад +1

    Always admired this cut of middle infielder. Sadly, they wouldn’t even get a second look from a scout today. Guys like Rey, Omar Vizquel, Jose Lind, Rafael Belliard were merely contact hitters that had gloves that doubled as vacuum cleaners. They had one job, and they did it better than anyone else did their job on a team.

  • @robertoswald4861
    @robertoswald4861 Год назад

    Looks like I took that guy for granted; more of a Mets fan than a baseball fan, and now in context, I can see that he was sublime.

  • @RM-45
    @RM-45 Год назад

    Ordoñez+Vizquel= the greatest I have ever seen defensively at shortstop.

  • @michaelbiondolillo6805
    @michaelbiondolillo6805 Год назад +2

    I wore #10 my whole life for every sport I played because of Rey Ordonez.

  • @kenhall5070
    @kenhall5070 7 месяцев назад

    This is fantastic analysis of such a unicorn player that is certainly among the worst hitters in baseball history while being a must watch player and possibly the best fielding human in Earth's history

  • @Extinguisher10
    @Extinguisher10 Год назад +1

    Rey swung a pool noodle, and yet was a starting shortstop for many years. That's how good at Defense he was

  • @liffjm
    @liffjm Год назад +1

    Pop up slide in the hole, rocket arm to first. Never replicated.

  • @alltruthmatters4395
    @alltruthmatters4395 Год назад +1

    I like the underrated defensive guys. Would love to see a video on Jose Lind 2B for Pirates he was filthy also.

  • @juncruz6266
    @juncruz6266 Месяц назад

    i watched rey played in puerto rico before hes started in the mlb and the man was pure magic

  • @nyy776
    @nyy776 Год назад

    The anchor of the 1999 Mets, the best defensive infield I've ever seen.

  • @MannyMonchy
    @MannyMonchy Год назад +1

    I saw a lot of these highlights live at Shea Stadium unbelievable to say the least …. Rey O 👑

  • @erikh246
    @erikh246 Год назад

    Thank you for this. Rey was incredible in the field, but man he couldn't hit for nothing! Nowadays shortstops are hitters and incredible fielders but Rey was on another level with his fielding. Jose Iglesias, another Cuban, is very similar tho he's had some good hitting years recently. Man Rey was good--SO good!!

  • @Only1doza
    @Only1doza Год назад

    Glad you made this video about Rey Ordonez & kept it real. Dawg definitely was the truth with the glove just couldn’t hit to save his life tho.

  • @jrodriguez37s
    @jrodriguez37s Год назад

    I was a huge fan of rey. My favorite met of the time. There was basically a daily ordonez highlight on baseball tonight. Early in his career he would make a lot of errors on the easy plays. But when it was all said and done he was one of tje best ss of all time

  • @Karmy.
    @Karmy. Год назад +4

    Reminds me a little of Brandon Inge (a third baseman) who would sometimes run into LF to catch a flyball right in front of the left fielder
    There was a play in the top of the first in the 2009 Home Opener where he ran halfway into LF and caught the ball while he was still running and facing away from home plate

    • @Eibarwoman
      @Eibarwoman Год назад +1

      Given that Inge's original collegiate position, he could have easily been an offensively more gifted and versatile version of Rey Ordonez. The thing is the offensively gifted but weaker armed shortstop Carlos Guillen, Inge's strong accurate arm, and lack of depth at 3rd base when Pudge was signed forced him out to 3rd base as Inge's glove and arm were too good to keep benched.

  • @Roysorb
    @Roysorb Год назад

    Andrelton Simmons channeled this energy for a while. I don't think there's an active SS on this level.

  • @thatsaprettygoodfish6342
    @thatsaprettygoodfish6342 Год назад

    One of my all-time favorite shortstops! ⚾️

  • @chichoalannahmedina9375
    @chichoalannahmedina9375 Год назад

    Loved it! I had the honor to meet him, great peraon, and i caught ground balls with im , in miami when he got there, his hands are out of this world

  • @kimfalleiro
    @kimfalleiro Год назад +2

    hey i love Andrelton Simmons

  • @tedsandalakis4780
    @tedsandalakis4780 Год назад +1

    I am glad he is finally getting credit for his play . I always liked his style. Mets had a great team then.

  • @seanq2306
    @seanq2306 Год назад

    Definitely remember Rey, he was a beast on the field!

  • @saltesta2562
    @saltesta2562 Год назад

    Best defensive short stop ever. Hand down.

  • @chrislewis5069
    @chrislewis5069 Год назад

    Footwork around the bag is huge, it’s something that was more important back then than it is now just cause guys are so athletic they do things like field slow ground balls off their right foot so ball is closer their throwing hand and pivots around the bag

  • @antonioprensa2964
    @antonioprensa2964 Год назад

    He had great Baseball instincts.

  • @oliverpeeters1967
    @oliverpeeters1967 Год назад

    He is the definitipn of making the diving play

  • @shawnreap
    @shawnreap Год назад

    FINALLY Rey is getting some love. Ordonez is the best defensive SS I've ever seen or even heard about - period. He was so electric in the field - as you can hear in these clips - that his name was hardly ever said without an exclamation point behind it. If he could have just batted league-average I say he'd have been much more well-known and respected. But for that brief, glorious time we got to enjoy the show and jumping up to just shout "ORDONEZ!?" at mind-boggling plays night after night. I mean, just LOOK AT 2:12 again! 🤯
    Give some credit to his double-play partners Fonzie and Olerud, too. Combined with Ventura at third, that 1999 Mets infield was where groundballs went to die.

  • @bandesj
    @bandesj Год назад

    Big Mets fan here. I used to call Rey Ordonez "The Golden Retriever" because he'd literally get every ball on the infield. Couldn't hit for anything...unless it was Al Leiter at the plate.

  • @malanga5133
    @malanga5133 Год назад +1

    If John olerud would have been on that 2000 Mets team they would have given the Yankees more of a challenge in that world series

  • @rickparadise3186
    @rickparadise3186 Год назад

    This dude is the master of telling his audience why they should be impressed by something; pointing out the obvious just in case you have no clue what you're seeing.

  • @joepadovano3745
    @joepadovano3745 Год назад

    my favorite player ever thank you for this !!!

  • @ARodriguez0989
    @ARodriguez0989 Год назад

    Been waiting for this one!

  • @SpudSpudoni
    @SpudSpudoni Год назад

    The Peggy gif took me out lmao. Great video. Mets are at their best to watch when they have magicians at SS. Ordóñez and Guillorme come from the same stock as far as defense.

  • @bobsinclair8215
    @bobsinclair8215 Год назад

    what is craziest is that he called off the left fielder coming in on that final play. He had the wherewithal to know the left fielder couldn't get it

  • @BallparkHunter
    @BallparkHunter 5 месяцев назад

    I wish his bat was half as good as his glove! I remember hearing about his glove when he was in AAA.

  • @MetalDetectingNYC
    @MetalDetectingNYC Год назад +1

    Oh man! This is coming from a Mets fan..... Great defender? Oh heck yes! But if we're talking G.O.A.T. here....How could it not be Ozzie Smith? I enjoyed the video!

  • @rogeliofernandezjimenez3053
    @rogeliofernandezjimenez3053 Год назад

    Spectaculay SS Rey, i love him.

  • @543prado10
    @543prado10 Год назад

    I idolized this guy growing up in the 90s. Weekly web gem. I liked him WAY better than AROD, Jeter, or Nomar.

  • @eazypeazy33
    @eazypeazy33 Год назад

    Loved how you showed yourself in right field lol 😂

  • @scott2533
    @scott2533 Год назад

    Part of the best defensive infield of all time. Ventura, Alfonzo, Olerud, Ordonez.

  • @CharmCityGamer
    @CharmCityGamer Год назад

    Ah Rey-Rey, I loved that guy! Thanks for reminding me of him SRS!

  • @akd3ntguymattST
    @akd3ntguymattST Год назад +1

    Are you ducking high ??? Omar & Robbie.
    The end.

  • @zachansen8293
    @zachansen8293 Год назад

    I can't wait until AI can skip over the "like and subscribe" bits in youtube videos automatically. It will be the best thing literally ever. LITERALLY FUCKING EVER.

  • @Chize41
    @Chize41 Год назад

    Had elite, ELITE body control…no one made defense in baseball must watch TV like he did

  • @Rico.Arod3
    @Rico.Arod3 Год назад

    My favorite mets infielders of alltime are rey ordoñez, carlos baerga, edgardo alfonzo, robin ventura, john olerud, mo vaughn, roberto alomar, jeff kent, jose reyes, david wright, jose vizcaino, todd zeile, carlos delgado and now i add francisco lindor and pete alonzo.

  • @victorscarpulla2478
    @victorscarpulla2478 Год назад

    The Best Defensive shortstop of all time!!!

  • @aguynamedguy309
    @aguynamedguy309 Год назад

    I played SS growing up and am a huge mets fan, and I would always try to look this cool... it rarely worked and my coach aka my dad... was always pissed

  • @deifor
    @deifor Год назад

    In Cuba we always had this argument of who was the best Cuban SS ever if him or German Mesa.

  • @EndScene
    @EndScene Год назад

    What might get missed in the left field catch is that Rey actually waives the left fielder off at 9:27. He had no doubt that it was his ball. Every time I hear his name, I hear Bob Murphy saying it "Rey Or-don-ez!" (as well as John Olerud's name "Johnny Olerud!" )

  • @MikhelBL
    @MikhelBL Год назад

    2:41 that play illustrates how bad defensive metrics were before modern statcast, and I mean modern like from 2-4 years ago. Before that there were people judging every play to determine wheter a play was good or not, when a SS like Rey played charged to 2B or 3B because their team's defensive coach told him to play there then those SS were qualified as extremely good while a normal SS was punished by not doing that. Defensive metrics included the eye test and a play like that one at 2:41 was deemed to be way above average as if the SS had begun to sprint from a neutral SS position. Up until very recently that was still the case.
    Rey was extraordinarily good, but playing there also created a scenario where he didn't get to quite a lot of routine grounders because he was not playing where a SS is supposed to be. Other contemporary SS who did and were better at it were deemed to be inferior even though they made more plays and recorded more outs and assists.

  • @ratso8860
    @ratso8860 Год назад +1

    As a long time Mets fan, I can confirm that Mets fans are indeed quite stupid. Loved watching Rey. Btw, in his best offensive year, '99, he had 134 hits, 24 doubles & drove in 60 runs. And of course, he won a GG. Not too bad.

  • @mystery_guest
    @mystery_guest Год назад

    wow, that was a joy watching him operate

  • @syu_ra
    @syu_ra 11 месяцев назад

    completely forgot about this guy, great video

  • @J.C...
    @J.C... Год назад

    Middle infielders are almost always great at off-footed and/or off-weight throws like those. He makes that throw because we make those kinds of throws ALLLLL the time. Practice makes permanent.

  • @nykia31
    @nykia31 6 месяцев назад

    Couldn’t do much else, but man could he flash that leather.

  • @jcece5270
    @jcece5270 Год назад +2

    you are taught as an infielder moving towards first to cut the ball off from a stationary infielder. You shorten the time the ball is on the ground and utilize that momentum towards first on the throw. Not only are those plays impressive, but they are also the fundamentally correct baseball play

    • @m.o.5291
      @m.o.5291 Год назад

      Sure but that wasnt what happened that play, the video also got it wrong. It was a simple but impressive play on grounder up the middle, both 2b and ss should go after that ball. Your logic is correct when the 3b cuts in front of the shortstop to get it quicker and with momentum and a better angle. In this case rey was moving to the right centerfield gap

    • @jcece5270
      @jcece5270 Год назад

      @@m.o.5291 so you’re saying that the second basemen had a better angle than rey going to first on a ball up the middle?

    • @m.o.5291
      @m.o.5291 Год назад

      @@jcece5270 no not at all. Im saying you both go after it.

    • @jcece5270
      @jcece5270 Год назад

      Look at the play at 1:50, he cuts in front of the 2B. There are multiple plays he does this. Yes, this is more common when a 3B cuts off the SS, but this is a testimony to ordonez range, that he was cutting off the 2B. Something you rarely see. The same concept still applies

  • @skiprockjr.6881
    @skiprockjr.6881 Год назад

    My brother's friend caught one of Rey's HR's at Shea.

  • @elmascavidal1797
    @elmascavidal1797 Год назад

    Ordoñez definitely gets overlooked… when mentioned with great 90’s SS….