Cincinnati REDS at Chicago CUBS 8/19/65 Original WGN Broadcast (partial)

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  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
  • Great vintage color footage from the WGN archives and partial broadcast (8th-10th innings) of the Cincinnati Reds vs Chicago Cubs 8/19/65 Game one of the Doubleheader from Wrigley Field as Cincinnati's starter Jim Maloney no hits the Cubs through 10 complete innings and Reds Jose Cardenas HR in the Top of the 10 proved the Game winner.
    Taken from an original DVD (from VHS) and has been color corrected and audio corrections
    Boxscore
    www.retrosheet...

Комментарии • 674

  • @NoName-ge6wc
    @NoName-ge6wc Год назад +10

    I was at this game. A hot thursday afternoon with my dad ,,, rip.. and my 3 brothers. Right behind home plate, third base side, About 30 rows up. Never forget it. Got windy at the end.

  • @generalmorose3523
    @generalmorose3523 3 года назад +140

    I love baseball, I wish they still played it.

    • @ronnieciavarelli3968
      @ronnieciavarelli3968 3 года назад +11

      You said it !!!

    • @death2pc
      @death2pc 3 года назад +23

      Back then, clean shaven....., no filthy beards, disgusting tattoos, no 'roids. No ridiculous salaries and the like where a ticket was affordable.

    • @jtjurje357
      @jtjurje357 3 года назад +27

      @@death2pc I miss the days when guys would watch a game without complaining about superficial stuff like how clean the boys' shave is. We've grown soft as a culture apparently.

    • @veseyvonveitinghof7088
      @veseyvonveitinghof7088 3 года назад +3

      amen........

    • @charlesbird781
      @charlesbird781 3 года назад +6

      Nostalgia ain't what it used to be.

  • @musicman76enator
    @musicman76enator 3 года назад +100

    The good ole days of baseball. Someone needs to invent a time machine and take me back to this era.

    • @douglascarlson9006
      @douglascarlson9006 3 года назад +13

      A warning: if you take me back to this era I ain't coming back - I'm afraid of the federal govt.

    • @willard2729
      @willard2729 3 года назад +13

      The destruction of America was in its infancy here

    • @jrizzuti
      @jrizzuti 3 года назад +3

      Not just ⚾ either. The whole freakin' mess.

    • @jimmyb1559
      @jimmyb1559 3 года назад +4

      I’d go with ya.

    • @cjones3710
      @cjones3710 3 года назад +5

      Boy it was the 80s of clean ad free ball parks i loved. Now all junked up w stupid spray painted ads, and nets to protect ppl who lack focus. Cant keep eyes off thr mind control machine emitting radiation in thier pocket. Althought they overpaid to get in to most.mlb parks these days. The realjoke is the places like Camden Yards whete they want fans waering masks and tellingvendors no cash...?what a new world order joke. No cash Angelos boys are screwing over everyone, cheaped out on annoucers, and doing stupid shit like its baffling why they treat thier workers so poorly. No.outside food or bev allowed, please. No bp allowed one hour before game only. Ever since Selig of all ppl left, thing have gotten horruble in major league baseball. Ac man on 2nd base, 7 inn double headers, how cheap... learn to manage ones roster and bullpen its part of the game.... besides the gutting of Milb which sucks ....no carolina league, no international league, generic boring names for leagues....they destroyed so many milb franchises. So many.jobs...soany towns need milb, bad job Milb. Bad. Loose the goofy rules, and stupid nets. And an Orioles print real.tickets, i.dont have a cpu, i dont want a cpu? I am not printingy.own tix. Why will call is closed at oriole park...
      As it rhe box office...this is beyond any logic, but then again, thus is quickly becoming a nation of poorly educated who.ignore history. Am.done venting. Thanks for this game.😀⚾

  • @Fernando-tr7ki
    @Fernando-tr7ki Год назад +11

    The golden years of baseball...
    Ernie Banks Pete Rose and Frank Robinson on the same Field?? sounds like a Hall of Fame game!! Great quality upload

  • @JackSchytt
    @JackSchytt 3 года назад +97

    Born and raised in Chicago.
    Brings back some memories.
    Brickhouse, the old Baby Ruth sign in right, and Hamms beer.
    "From the land of sky blue waters."
    All day games. No night lights at Wrigley back then.

    • @polopopolo2197
      @polopopolo2197 3 года назад +6

      Don’t forget Murph and union 76 and Victory auto wreckers!

    • @thommichaels6593
      @thommichaels6593 3 года назад +2

      Lead off man and The tenth inning. People stomping on drink cups. Pat Pieper

    • @mossbrg5
      @mossbrg5 3 года назад +2

      Oscar Meyer hot dogs, cold Hamms, and don’t forget Ron Santo Pro Pizza

    • @timdowney6721
      @timdowney6721 3 года назад +4

      Day baseball is still the best. It always gives me that great feeling of playing hookey from something. 😄😄

    • @boydmccollum692
      @boydmccollum692 3 года назад +4

      Jack Brickhouse doesn't get the love he deserves. Grew up with him as the voice of the Cubs (back in the 70s).

  • @davekingman1271
    @davekingman1271 10 месяцев назад +3

    Jackson had a heck of a career. 194 wins and and ERA below 3.50. He won 24 games for Cubs the year prior to this one

  • @MrAitraining
    @MrAitraining 3 года назад +68

    Wow. This is what youtube is all about for old time baseball fans

    • @richardmorris7063
      @richardmorris7063 3 года назад

      I can't get the ice cold Balls beer out of my mind & I don't drink much!

    • @chrisring123
      @chrisring123 3 года назад +3

      Stirrups. Reds with the names below the numbers on the jersey backs. Pace to the game pretty fast. The field looking good but less than pristine. No stadium music or sound effects! The starting pitchers both pitching in the ninth, and no exact pitch counts given! Batting helmets exposing the ears. Catchers’ chest protectors stopping above the waist. Batters continuing their two-bat warmup swings while IN the batter’s box. Starting home pitcher batting in the ninth with two outs!

    • @chrisring123
      @chrisring123 3 года назад

      Spoke too soon - Reds pitcher announced at the top of the 10th to have tossed 173 pitches to that point!

    • @mattrammell3734
      @mattrammell3734 3 года назад

      Looking at the box score both starters pitched the whole game. You almost never see a game today where both starting pitchers go for 9 innings much less 10. I wonder if the Reds manager knew Maloney was sitting on 173 pitches going into the 10th inning or if he even cared about the pitch count of his pitchers. I love that this video was posted so people like me that weren't born yet can see what baseball was like in the 1960s and get a sense for just how much the game has changed.

    • @sonnycorleone2602
      @sonnycorleone2602 3 года назад

      @@chrisring123 Hi you are so correct. I was a 1970's kid and Yankees fan and double headers back then were the same audience not two different crowds for daylight twilight double headers ones like today. And often announcers would take turns with each other switching back and forth announcing on radio and tv. plus the Yankees were not always on tv. No cable back then. Maybe 3 telivised games and rest of the week you would have to catch it on radio. And like you mentioned the pitchers back then went way longer. No pitch count like today . And no millionaire players either. mike Schmidt was the first I think then catfish Hunter and Reggie Jackson back in 1976 or so. All the best.

  • @bobbysands6923
    @bobbysands6923 Год назад +4

    the guy threw almost 200 pitches...no problem. This a great post, thanks!

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 Год назад

      Almost 200 pitches, and not a single one hit safely.

  • @davemac5260
    @davemac5260 3 года назад +71

    Love this viewing angle behind the batters. No step outs, adjusting batting gloves or ridiculous body armor. Pure baseball.

    • @oldtimer794
      @oldtimer794 Год назад +2

      If they want to speed up the game, just ban batting gloves and that will take a half hour or more off the time of the game.

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 Год назад

      Anyone that thinks Ohtani is special (and he is) needs to look up Jim Maloney.

  • @CoolAce1
    @CoolAce1 3 года назад +7

    This is so much better than the game of baseball today in so many ways.

  • @bobstewart8032
    @bobstewart8032 3 года назад +22

    Pete Rose never changed his playing style from his rookie season in 1963 until he was out of baseball.
    Pete hustled on every single play!

    • @frederickgriffith7004
      @frederickgriffith7004 3 года назад +3

      Yeah.The man deserves to be in the Hall.And don't wait till the man dies to do it.Charlie hustle coming up on 80yrs old come April.My best memory of him and there were many was a bunt base hit.He stole second.Reached third on a sac fly.Came home on another sac fly.And if I remember,the Reds were getting blown out by the 7th inning.Baseball like it ought to be.

    • @jayrusnak
      @jayrusnak Год назад

      What's interesting is how different his batting stance is compared to what it became 10 years later.

  • @brucegauthier2003
    @brucegauthier2003 3 года назад +22

    A real treat. Love the uniforms and camera angles. All about the game, no frills and no mascots.

  • @timdowney6721
    @timdowney6721 3 года назад +13

    I was 12 when this game was played. Seeing the players, uniforms, announcers, and of course Wrigley Field is the nostalgia trip of the month. 👍

  • @Leadhsr
    @Leadhsr 4 года назад +72

    Ok, so I just devoured all 58 minutes of some of the finest television I've ever seen. Dude throws 190+ pitches, walks 10, and lives till the end. Baseball, right? Thanks for finding this. Hopefully you can discover more in whatever basement you found this one. Good on ya!!!

    • @RodericSpode
      @RodericSpode 3 года назад +10

      And he threw the ball hard. Not sure why guys like Malony could consistently throw serious heat, and a bunch of complete games every season year after year, but pitchers now won't stay in the game once they get to 100 pitches.

    • @written12
      @written12 3 года назад +5

      Yep, that’s my question. And without all the calls to the bullpen, the games were much shorter. Oh, that’s a good thing- no committing on nearly 4 hours to a game, a good deal of which you’ll zone out on.

    • @richardmorris7063
      @richardmorris7063 3 года назад +2

      I saw the cubs play the Phillies there in 68 or 9.set a record at the time for shortest game.

    • @AndrewPoopyPants
      @AndrewPoopyPants 3 года назад +2

      Amazing video

    • @mattbln91
      @mattbln91 3 года назад +4

      When men were men. Jim Maloney was a stud.

  • @philiptucci2458
    @philiptucci2458 3 года назад +11

    Wonderful baseball game, really brings back very fond memories, all my favorite players of the day including the great Pete Rose, only 24 years old

  • @davidhamburg7868
    @davidhamburg7868 3 года назад +90

    Just noticed: Names on Reds' uniforms are printed below the numbers. Also, Maloney throws hard, but we don't have to be bored with the MPH of every freakin' pitch. I'm old-fashioned, but baseball back then was much more enjoyable than today's dullsville.

    • @pavanatanaya
      @pavanatanaya 3 года назад +7

      Yeah, Moneyball changed the way players approach the game. Situational awareness is secondary now. Most guys are focused on pumping their numbers. And heaven forbid, someone actually back up a play now. This is fundamental baseball.

    • @exmaj5040
      @exmaj5040 3 года назад +5

      @@pavanatanaya base stealing and bunting...two more fundamentals that are missing today. What ever happened to putting pressure on the defense to make a perfect play? Moneyball. Good enough for a book and a movie but not good enough for a pennant, let alone a championship (not for Beane's team, the Athletics).

    • @kellerrobert80
      @kellerrobert80 3 года назад +9

      Yep, and you had to pay attention. No replays.

    • @davanmani556
      @davanmani556 3 года назад

      I think allowing players free agency sooner is better. More competition and can’t hide bad players.

    • @jeffbandle2916
      @jeffbandle2916 3 года назад +4

      @@exmaj5040 That is what made the Royals successful in their 2 World Series years. The batters were told that putting the ball in play was vital to take advantage of team speed and as you say, put pressure on the defense. "Keep the line moving" was their motto.

  • @Dahaas2003
    @Dahaas2003 3 года назад +24

    This is just fantastic! Love the camera angles (example: 2:30 mark with Harper at bat). Agree with David Hamburg - so refreshing, the absence of all the nonsense that suffocates today's game.

    • @Steveross2851
      @Steveross2851 3 года назад +1

      @ William Willer, yes many baseball changes are for the worse, I agree. But "too much" information is not one of them. You can look or you can ignore it. But I have a few pet peeves of my own. Owners often use announcers to "sell" rule changes they want. If I had a dime for every time I heard Howie Rose complain about the old 40 man September roster rule etc. I'd have $100. You can be sure he did not do that on his own. I'm pretty sure he did that on instructions from the Mets. It's fine if he can tell me something about players that I don't know. But agree or not, I don't care about his personal opinions on rule changes. I especially don't want to hear them on a daily basis.
      It seems most GMs now lack sufficient baseball background. There were always successful GMs who never played pro baseball. George Weiss for example was a below average player evaluator, a luxury the Yankees could afford because his manager Casey Stengel was a baseball genius. Weiss's value was as a financial genius. He bought players from minor league teams before they were affiliated with parent clubs. Then he sold them to other minor league teams at a huge profit. But now most GMs are corporate types who never played pro baseball. It seems GMs now are more valued for never saying anything controversial than for baseball knowledge.
      GMs rely on scouts and computer analytics now and that is backwards. It should be the other way around. Computer analytics are fine. But a GM who never played pro ball may miss things that aren't in the computer. There's value in knowing which prospects will be able to lay off MLB pitches just out of the zone. And I think that comes from playing against great future players and flashes in the pan at least in the minor leagues

    • @mehuldoshi486
      @mehuldoshi486 2 года назад

      @@Steveross2851 all of that is true but at the same time the modern day TV presentation could be a LOT better.
      For example, nowadays the camera bounces around every 2 seconds, whereas this presentation holds the camera angles for long durations of time - sometimes for minutes. It gives you a better feel for the pace of the game. The announcers aren't trying to fill every second of air time, they let the game play out
      With the ubiquity of widescreen TVs, one thing they could easily do today - and I'm unsure why they don't - is a split screen. The middle half the screen could be a presentation like this - uncluttered, no/minimal graphics, with sidebars for stats/info. Would be the best of both worlds

  • @thedoors1388
    @thedoors1388 3 года назад +6

    What a great game! I wish there was video of the whole game. I also wish baseball was still played like this today. If Rob Manfred and the other people in charge of improving the current game of baseball would watch this video, they would get a good idea of what baseball should look like.

  • @billbarnette6708
    @billbarnette6708 3 года назад +11

    This is a religious experience watching pure baseball.

  • @edwardcasper5231
    @edwardcasper5231 3 года назад +28

    I saw much of this game live when it was broadcast. Note how much faster the pitchers worked back then. Lots less wasted time. Larry Jackson was a very good pitcher. But Maloney didn't allow a hit although he walked 10 Cubs. It was a frustrating game to watch if you were a Cubs fan. Nice quality video.

    • @balrog322
      @balrog322 3 года назад

      I recall Larry Jackson has won more big league games than any right handed pitcher that never pitched on a pennant winning team. Probably would have won the Cy Young in ‘64 with 24 wins, but the honor was given to only one pitcher back then.

    • @sgnmath1234
      @sgnmath1234 3 года назад

      Every game a Cubs fan watched was depressing !!

    • @jayrusnak
      @jayrusnak Год назад +1

      Pitchers worked faster mostly because batters didn't go on a hike outside of the box fiddling with their batting gloves after every single pitch. Makes all the difference.

  • @currypablo
    @currypablo 3 года назад +27

    You feel you're at the game with this video. Amazing 👏

  • @gregoryevans8179
    @gregoryevans8179 3 года назад +39

    Oh man Frank Robinson before he was traded to the O’s, and Rose when he played 2nd base. This is great.

    • @billbarnette6708
      @billbarnette6708 3 года назад +1

      Agreed!

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 3 года назад +2

      Worst trade in the history of baseball for the Reds best trade for the Orioles

    • @michaelstearnesstearnes1498
      @michaelstearnesstearnes1498 3 года назад

      @@michaelleroy9281 untill the Dodgers traded Pedro Martinez to the Expos for Delino Dishields

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 3 года назад

      @@michaelstearnesstearnes1498 The other guy said "for the Reds", not necessarily of all trades ever. (FWIW)

  • @joeylatino510
    @joeylatino510 3 года назад +17

    Wow....the great Ernie Banks goes 0-5 and hits into game-ending DP. I’ll bet that didn’t happen very often.

  • @chrisozzy56
    @chrisozzy56 3 года назад +17

    Grew up about 2 miles from Wrigley Field . Would go with my friends to the game around the 6th or 7th inning and you could just walk in , nobody cared . If lucky , the game would go extra innings and what a treat . Saw all the great NL players at no cost . And the Bears used Wrigley. Field for home games . Great times !!

    • @evoman1776
      @evoman1776 3 года назад

      I grew up about 2 miles from Wrigley as well.

    • @wrigleyman100
      @wrigleyman100 3 года назад +1

      That's right! Just 500 days earlier the Bears beat the Giants in Wrigley Field 14-10 in the NFL championship game on a day when the temperature wasn't much above zero! Coach Halas, Doug Atkins, Bill George, Joe Fortunato - great times indeed!

  • @2095yourstruly
    @2095yourstruly Год назад +5

    This is a true treasure to watch! Plus, the unique and effective camera angles from slightly behind the catcher and the upper deck angle from the 3rd base line really enhance viewing the game. Can't believe these camera angles weren't deployed more often since then. Thanks for posting this great game!

  • @nycsongman9758
    @nycsongman9758 3 года назад +55

    Thank you, for this upload. It's fascinating to see the Wrig, and all of the stars for the Cubs and Reds in very clear color ! Thanks again for this extremely-rare treat !

  • @michaelleroy9281
    @michaelleroy9281 3 года назад +19

    Lloyd Pettit the best hockey announcer of all time doing baseball

    • @JackSchytt
      @JackSchytt 3 года назад +1

      Bobby Hull, Stan Makita, Kenny Wharram, Pierre Pilot, Glenn Hall, just to name a few...

    • @marblox9300
      @marblox9300 5 дней назад +1

      Shot - And A Goal.!!!

  • @jimirwin5623
    @jimirwin5623 3 года назад +5

    This is awesome! Love that Hamm's beer ad with Jack Brickhouse and Lloyd Pettit.
    Pettit also announced the Chicago Blackhawks hockey games.

    • @JahBronee
      @JahBronee 3 года назад

      Definitely made me thirsty 🍺

  • @larryloveless2967
    @larryloveless2967 3 года назад +10

    Thanks for placing on RUclips. Born in 1953 in STL and Cards fan I sure remember these teams well. This was during the prime of my Baseball card collecting.

  • @stevea6816
    @stevea6816 3 года назад +8

    some great players in this game. On Reds---Rose, Robinson, Pinson. I saw Perez in dugout. Deron Johnson led league in RBI that season. Cubs---Banks, Billy Williams, Santo. Kessinger and Beckert were pretty good too.

  • @leroyproud294
    @leroyproud294 3 года назад +24

    It's neat watching the pitchers with the old style wind ups.

    • @brianruyack7632
      @brianruyack7632 3 года назад +1

      The way Maloney barely stopped from the stretch would be hard to time up. Maloney was a 22 game winner that year, and Jackson was 14-21 but only a 3.85 ERA!

  • @tomsmith5216
    @tomsmith5216 3 года назад +7

    Love games from the 50s and 60s. Great players. great baseball.

  • @xstyle1
    @xstyle1 3 года назад +9

    The sound quality is sensational here and what a joy to hear the great voice of Lloyd Pettit. Now if only we could get a hefty amount of footage from WGNs broadcast of opening day 1969, which would be the find of finds.

    • @pheniafilmsthemlbarchiveso9229
      @pheniafilmsthemlbarchiveso9229  3 года назад +1

      sound was coming out of one speaker L just adjusted corrected sound quality with surround (front/center) 👌

    • @marlonelliot8943
      @marlonelliot8943 3 года назад +5

      Lloyd Pettit Blackhawks announcer-
      "A shot....and a GOAL!"

    • @billyhollister8768
      @billyhollister8768 3 года назад +4

      @@marlonelliot8943 The greatest hockey voice of all time. We were blessed to have him for HAWKS games here in CHICAGO for a lot of years.

    • @krezzykrezz
      @krezzykrezz 3 года назад +1

      @@billyhollister8768 Agreed, the best hockey voice of all time. Until I saw this I didn't realize he ever did Cub games!

  • @christopheralbino5343
    @christopheralbino5343 3 года назад +16

    These are great! Keep them coming...1960's is the best...

    • @stephenharper4440
      @stephenharper4440 3 года назад

      Christopher Albino@ My favorites are the 1930's (one partial from 1931 [one inning]) and the 1950's. I haven't found any from the 1940's, except highlights. 1960-1964 are also great and very rare.

  • @mshelnutt275
    @mshelnutt275 3 года назад +4

    I'm a die hard Cubs fan, and even I love this!!!

  • @romelovesdan
    @romelovesdan 3 года назад +18

    Wish there were some more color treasures from 1960's MLB.

  • @jamesd2128
    @jamesd2128 3 года назад +18

    The great Frank Robinson's last year in Cincinnati. His trade to the Orioles in the offseason turned out to be an absolute debacle for the Reds, and absolute genius for the Orioles.

    • @davidcase1286
      @davidcase1286 3 года назад +4

      if he had stayed with the Big Red machine we may have 2 more world series.

    • @littlejohnny9439
      @littlejohnny9439 3 года назад +2

      Gotta be one of the 5 worst trades in MLB history.

    • @littlejohnny9439
      @littlejohnny9439 3 года назад +2

      Maybe I should say "one sided trades", because obviously it was a great trade for the Orioles

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 3 года назад +1

      It was for Milt Pappas and others Pappas would later be with the Cubs and he threw a no hitter for them in 1972

    • @robertmurdock1848
      @robertmurdock1848 3 года назад

      The Reds had their most successful era after that trade , they recovered just fine .
      A debacle would be the Reds after the Griffey Jr trade.

  • @mortimerzilch9437
    @mortimerzilch9437 3 года назад +5

    How great is this! Better video than modern games now. Thanks! That was a thrill.

  • @drfunk1986
    @drfunk1986 3 года назад +6

    This is insane quality for 1965. Thank you for this. Love how the ad is commemorating 100 years earlier and to me 1965 is so long ago.

  • @miketheyunggod2534
    @miketheyunggod2534 3 года назад +19

    Cool having their names UNDER the number and the sleeveless jerseys.

  • @danejurus69
    @danejurus69 3 года назад +3

    Wow. Just wow. As a baseball fan, this is awesome. As a Reds fan, this is precious.

  • @TheXeniaman
    @TheXeniaman 3 года назад +7

    No hitter going or not, hard to believe the manager Sisler left Maloney in to throw that many pitches. His 9th inning at bat he was still hustling down the line on his ground ball to short. Thanks for putting up this video. Very enjoyable to watch.

    • @jayrusnak
      @jayrusnak Год назад +1

      Back then you didn't pull a guy who was going for a no-hitter even if he was throwing it underhand at the end. Sisler was an old-timer anyhow who probably didn't even like 4-man rotations. 😀 What's crazier was leaving Larry Jackson in to start the 10th and then not pulling him after the Cardenas homer. He'd thrown the same crazy high number of pitches that Maloney had. Gotta love the way managers actually let guys pitch, instead push-button robot managing like they do today.

  • @BernDiggityDog
    @BernDiggityDog 3 года назад +2

    187 pitches...absolute gutsy performance by one of baseball's most underrated, forgotten stud pitchers. I used to pretend I was Maloney when I played rubberball "strikeouts" against school walls with friends back in the 1960's as a kid in Detroit.

  • @kevinpyne5808
    @kevinpyne5808 3 года назад +10

    Amazing video telecast. Look at those huge names and numbers on the Reds uniforms!

  • @danabaker596
    @danabaker596 3 года назад +8

    Just....beautiful to watch!! Felt like I was there!! Thanks!!

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 3 года назад +7

    WGN in those days was still using the RCA TK-41 series of cameras. They wouldn't switch to TK-44A till about 1970 . . . meanwhile when then-WBKB Channel 7 went color in 1967, they went with General Electric PE-250 cameras, and WBBM Channel 2 got Marconi Mark VII's. WTTW in their early years in color would have GE PE-350's, WFLD when they went live studio color also got Mark VII's, and WSNS was the only U.S. outlet to have the EMI 2001 color cameras which were a staple of UK outlets such as BBC and the ITV companies.

  • @jasong428
    @jasong428 3 года назад +1

    Hamm's Beer makes me feel like I'm drowning in someone's swimming pool too haha. Awesome video!!!

  • @earth2006
    @earth2006 3 года назад +6

    I think this was the first year I went to Wrigley, my first memory, being amazed that it wasn't in Black and white (back in 65 only rich folks had color TV'S) so when the four years old saw Wrigley color he was simply amazed.

  • @paultuke5110
    @paultuke5110 3 года назад +7

    "remember back in '55 when Sam "toothpick" Jones had a no-hitter late in the game..." You go, Mr Brickhouse.

    • @timdowney6721
      @timdowney6721 3 года назад

      The old references used to drive my dad crazy.

    • @tomsmith5216
      @tomsmith5216 3 года назад

      Toothpick Sam, won 21 games, and 18 games for the Giants. I got to see 2 of those wins.

    • @krezzykrezz
      @krezzykrezz 3 года назад

      That's Mr. Petit

  • @varasano
    @varasano 3 года назад +1

    The video quality for 1965 is very good. Probably the best I've seen. I've seen a lot of 1980s broadcasts transferred from VHS that were much worse than this

  • @NCC-1700
    @NCC-1700 3 года назад +6

    Love the way baseball used to be played and broadcast, no hype just baseball.

  • @electrolytics
    @electrolytics 3 года назад +29

    Yup. That's that. That was the America I remember.

    • @dlowfresh
      @dlowfresh 3 года назад +1

      I wish I was old enough to see it. However, being 30 I am still old enough to see the unfortunate changes.

    • @the406seadonkey6
      @the406seadonkey6 3 года назад

      Well you won't have to worry about remembering it much longer then, it seems. Too bad so sad.

    • @rogerwilliams5366
      @rogerwilliams5366 9 месяцев назад

      👍🇺🇸⚾️🥲

  • @WaltGekko
    @WaltGekko 3 года назад +11

    Even in 1965 you had ads on the rooftops across from Wrigley!

    • @larrysproul9424
      @larrysproul9424 3 года назад

      Yes and I remember a Old Style beer sign out there for a few years .

  • @hitdawg64
    @hitdawg64 3 года назад +5

    That Cubs logo on the Jersey is actually better than the current one.

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 2 месяца назад

      Nah, I like the bigger blue circle, first worn in 1979

  • @smokefree08
    @smokefree08 3 года назад +2

    Ron Santo is my family from Ranier Beach in Seattle, WA. Incredible upload!

    • @thegoose0m1
      @thegoose0m1 3 года назад

      I grew up in the same town, Glenview Illinois, that Ron Santo lived in back in the mid 60's to 1970. My family then moved to central NJ and I eventually became a Phillies fan, but then again, once a Cubs' fan, always a Cubs fan. I can still recall the heartbreak of the '69 late season collapse...

  • @mikedunham8481
    @mikedunham8481 3 года назад +4

    Love watching this eventhough I was only 2 but most players played into the 1970s. Love the Reds names below the uniform number.

  • @TeranRealtor
    @TeranRealtor 3 года назад +1

    I was too young in 1965 - my Tio Mike introduced me to WGN Cubs baseball in the summer of '69. I got to see Santo, Kessinger, Beckert, Banks, Williams..... for years.
    At first, watching this, I thought "Wow those Cubs greats were not so great in '65 - then it dawned on me the Reds pitcher, Maloney was having a great game. With that many walks, he was probably burning the edges of the plate, forcing the Cubs to swing at pitches very hard to hit.
    It was REAL great getting to see this game. (We had a black and white TV in the 60's - so I don't know when the games were televised in color - this was a bit of a surprise.)
    Thank you for posting this - Great to hear Jack Brickhouse again.

  • @miketheyunggod2534
    @miketheyunggod2534 3 года назад +27

    With the behind the plate angle, it feels like you’re sitting right there.

    • @tommarck4296
      @tommarck4296 3 года назад +4

      Wrigley as it should be

    • @sdowns172
      @sdowns172 3 года назад +5

      I was thinking the same thing, love the behind the plate camera angle! 👍

    • @sdowns172
      @sdowns172 3 года назад +4

      And the old scoreboard!

    • @hitdawg64
      @hitdawg64 3 года назад +4

      It's a great angle. How come broadcasts dont do that anymore?

    • @ebf1957
      @ebf1957 3 года назад

      Best camera angle.

  • @cv5916
    @cv5916 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for sharing. Really enjoyed this. Maloney battled big time.

  • @brucegauthier2003
    @brucegauthier2003 3 года назад +4

    Just realized while watching, no replays. Reminded me of watching sports as a kid, you had to wait until the end of the inning to get your snacks and drink. Lol

  • @morleysobol6656
    @morleysobol6656 3 года назад +3

    Glad to hear that Mincher and Rollins homered for the Twins against Detroit for a 6-0 lead. Twins were on their way to their first pennant.

  • @flame-sky7148
    @flame-sky7148 3 года назад +11

    Amazing, like a color time machine turning back the clock.

  • @GeorgeThomopoulos-p7r
    @GeorgeThomopoulos-p7r 3 месяца назад +1

    No pitch clock, no appeals, no annoying light shows, no high fives and backslapping, no lousy tv screen clutter, no overbearing announcers mouthing statistics that nobody cares about. This WAS baseball. Pure and professional.

  • @billymatthews7346
    @billymatthews7346 3 года назад +7

    This is so wonderful, thank you ⚾️

  • @jduff59
    @jduff59 3 года назад +3

    I was 6 years old when this game happened, but I was already a rabid baseball fan, and remember a lot of these players.
    There were some great players on both sides of this game - how could anyone forget Ernie Banks?

  • @nicklarson2762
    @nicklarson2762 2 года назад +1

    My Twins were on the way to the World Series for the first time this year. My dad was 15 on this day.

  • @glennhavinoviski8128
    @glennhavinoviski8128 3 года назад +1

    Fascinating the camera angles WGN used at that time. For right-handed hitters, it looked like they used a camera to the left of home plate on occasion (interesting especially when you saw Ernie Banks at the plate), along with the left center field camera as we usually see today. The production values were excellent.

  • @JDAbelRN
    @JDAbelRN 3 года назад +5

    How is RED'S pitcher, Jim Maloney, not totally gassed, and still pitches a no hitter? Throws over 200 pitches on a hot Chicago August day, and hustles down the line in the tenth after ss Stewart booted his ground ball? Totally Amazing 😲! Incredible performance!

  • @sald7917
    @sald7917 3 года назад

    Fantastic video thanks so much. All of my Strat~o~Matic heroes in living color.
    Jim Maloney looking exhausted in those nice Reds sleeveless uniforms.

  • @sirqitous
    @sirqitous 3 года назад

    Wonderful picture -- it looks just like they looked through my binoculars as a kid in 1965 at Candlestick Park! So many memorable and great players and coaches shown here.

  • @martinlehfeldt6916
    @martinlehfeldt6916 3 года назад +111

    Older baseball is more fun to watch. Its more real. If that makes sense.

    • @polopopolo2197
      @polopopolo2197 3 года назад +7

      I agree. It feels more Natural and innocent

    • @willmack5909
      @willmack5909 3 года назад +11

      Totally! Fewer teams, much less watered down. No wild cards, no regular season interleague play. That was the one thing that really set MLB apart from the other major sports. Now it's just one hybrid league and makes me sad anymore.

    • @matta3968
      @matta3968 3 года назад +6

      I do know what you mean. Today's game looks like a video game.

    • @timdowney6721
      @timdowney6721 3 года назад +6

      Games under 2 hours.....not 3-4 with forever between pitches.

    • @jimmyb1559
      @jimmyb1559 3 года назад +3

      It makes a ton of sense.

  • @keithkarlinsky6632
    @keithkarlinsky6632 3 года назад +1

    I like how the broadcast actually shows the infield tossing the ball around after a groundout. Priceless.

  • @patearly9492
    @patearly9492 3 года назад +1

    Very cool! Thank you so much for sharing! God bless everyone!

  • @davidthomas8260
    @davidthomas8260 3 года назад +2

    The view of the game from a center field camera was a rarity in those days. I grew up a Pirates fan in the 1960s and I remember back then that the only televised Pirates games that showed this view was their away games at Wrigley Field. All their other games were televised with a view from behind home plate and it was an elevated view as if you were watching the game from the press box. Watching games from Wrigley Field was a novelty, even back before the trend toward cookie-cutter ballparks. Those ivy covered walls were always considered a unique feature.

  • @Scotsgrey13
    @Scotsgrey13 3 года назад +3

    My favorite era in baseball history. Just great!

  • @JJJBRICE
    @JJJBRICE 3 года назад +32

    The names below the numbers on the backs of the Cincinnati player uniforms are very strange looking . The home team Cubs broadcasters celebrating the opponents no hitter , that is class of true baseball men .

    • @pauljojo6855
      @pauljojo6855 3 года назад +1

      With the vests there wasn't enough room above the number.

    • @billscheftyoutube
      @billscheftyoutube 3 года назад +2

      Reds were first to do name under the number, followed by NBA Cincinnati Royals

    • @kmslegal7808
      @kmslegal7808 3 года назад

      would never happen today

    • @SoulFireCandlesNYC
      @SoulFireCandlesNYC 3 года назад

      @@billscheftyoutube that's something I had no idea myself. And speaking of NBA teams i was under the impression the Kings were the first to do so. Great to know this info

    • @glennhavinoviski8128
      @glennhavinoviski8128 3 года назад +1

      Vin Scully did the same when Dennis Martinez threw a perfect game against the Dodgers in '91. "El Presidente, el perfecto!" Class act.

  • @jaybarak1548
    @jaybarak1548 3 года назад +5

    Before my time, but fun to see some hall of famers in their prime. I was surprised to see how far from the plate Ernie Banks stood, yet he could still cover the outside. No wonder he was so good.

  • @jimmyb1559
    @jimmyb1559 3 года назад

    Thank you for the video. I can visualize being at a Cubs game and hoping my dad would buy me that miniature baseball bat after the game. Takes me back to the day when I didn’t really have a care in the world.But it was another depressing Cubs loss!

  • @MrBlinkee
    @MrBlinkee 3 года назад +7

    I know starting pitchers regularly stayed in the game longer than the 5 inning guys of today but am amazed at the Cubs letting The pitcher Jackson bat (even though he walked) bottom of the ninth with two runners on base after pinch hitting for Kessinger just before him.

    • @davidhamburg7868
      @davidhamburg7868 3 года назад

      Jackson was a good-hitting pitcher--a better hitter than Kessinger.

    • @pauljojo6855
      @pauljojo6855 3 года назад

      @@davidhamburg7868 the Pirates once used a pitcher to pinch hit back then.

  • @kilgoretrout6421
    @kilgoretrout6421 3 года назад +1

    It’s fun and interesting to watch a game from this era. As a kid I had the 1966 version of the “Be A Manager” baseball game. The game was played with three dice and cards representing every player. I can still name most of the players from the mid 1960s.

  • @brianthomas2434
    @brianthomas2434 3 года назад +10

    Random notes: Tommy Harper five years later would have a 30- 30 season for the Brewers, only the fifth in MLB history. Deron Johnson did nothing in this game but led the league in RBI for the year. Al Dark is a coach here, three years after managing the Giants to the seventh game of the World Series. In NINE more years he would become the third man to win pennants in both Major Leagues. Cardenas, Rose's keystone partner in his early years with the Reds, won the game with a homer. In neither of Pete's autobiographies is Cardenas mentioned.

    • @tomsmith5216
      @tomsmith5216 3 года назад

      Harperveent to the other high school in my town. Pinson and Frank Robinson went to McClymonds High in Oakland, Ca. One of my baseball coaches said he struck out Robinson 3 times, and Pinson hit one that still hasn't landed.

  • @chickey333
    @chickey333 10 месяцев назад

    I was soon to be a freshman in high school and lots of memorable names as well. Thanks..!

  • @raulmacias1311
    @raulmacias1311 3 года назад

    I was born in '57 and the '60's is the greatest era in baseball history!
    Look at those uniforms. clean shaven faces, no batting gloves, those camera angles!
    My favorite is the camera angle from behind the catcher and umpire!
    Simply, these were men!
    My heroes in '65 were Sandy Koufax and Maury Wills!
    I saw Koufax pitch at Los Angeles Dodger Stadium in '65. It was practically a religious experience!
    I wish I could go back!
    I can't believe these precious games have been wiped!

  • @helios1912
    @helios1912 3 года назад

    I loved the sleeveless Reds uniforms. Player name was under the number, the sleeves were cut in so close. Thanks for the post and the good stream of comments.

  • @patrickkealy4387
    @patrickkealy4387 3 года назад +13

    Ah the good old days of baseball when a batter stayed in the box after each pitch. Not like these modern day Tossers who back out and readjust everything they are wearing. Can you imagine what a Don Drysdale or a Bob Gibson would have done if they did that B. S. after every pitch?? Chin music to get their attention would be served up.

    • @pheniafilmsthemlbarchiveso9229
      @pheniafilmsthemlbarchiveso9229  3 года назад +8

      Perfect summary Pat too funny was thinking the same thing..today’s game is just a shit show

    • @orbyfan
      @orbyfan 3 года назад +1

      They'd have thrown at hitters in the on deck circle if they'd pulled stuff like that.

    • @Silvereagledude
      @Silvereagledude 3 года назад +1

      I notice that Pete Rose doesn’t crouch as low in the batter’s box at this point in his career.....and he’s also a nobody at this point.....

    • @balrog322
      @balrog322 3 года назад

      @@Silvereagledude You may be right about Rose & the crouch, but it’s still Charlie Hustle, no mistaking him. ‘65 was his breakthrough season, the first of his 18 All-Star selections and 10 200-hit seasons.

  • @ralphus44
    @ralphus44 3 года назад +8

    Final numbers for Maloney on this day: 12 strikeouts, 10 walks, 1 wild pitch, 187 pitches.

    • @gregoryevans8179
      @gregoryevans8179 3 года назад +1

      All them pitches and he probably would have been starting again 4 days later. The game has really changed

    • @brucegauthier2003
      @brucegauthier2003 3 года назад +1

      He still had some heat on his fastball in the 9th inning.

    • @mikevanriel7573
      @mikevanriel7573 3 года назад

      If Jim Maloney was so durable, why he wasn’t on the 1970 World Series?

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@mikevanriel7573😆
      If Ted Williams was so durable, why didn't he play till he was 55?
      Keep quiet, mikey.

  • @christopherblack7342
    @christopherblack7342 3 года назад

    That was dramatic and exciting. Excellent quality video!

  • @richardmorris7063
    @richardmorris7063 3 года назад +1

    To 8 yr old boys in Chicago this was a big part of my summer.cubs games w/ jack brick house,stick ball & finding a fishing hole! Hey Hey ..Ernie Banks!!

  • @irishmike519
    @irishmike519 3 года назад

    I probably watched that game! Nine years old and glued to Cubs baseball on Chicago’s very own, WGN9!!!

  • @Psilanderfan1884
    @Psilanderfan1884 3 года назад

    What fantastic play by play baseball footage! ⚾️ Back in the days when pitchers wound up before throwing!

  • @jamesm.3967
    @jamesm.3967 3 года назад

    Thank you for posting this this is so awesome. Rare to hear Jack Brickhouse.😅

  • @michaelsemmijr2095
    @michaelsemmijr2095 3 года назад +5

    Wow. Jackson & Maloney both 160 plus pitches. This was good game to watch. Williams .Santo . Banks . Robinson & Rose if you want to count it , 5 HOF. Johnny Edwards, catcher. Only a few more years before the Bench & Big Red Machine & their regime.

    • @evoman1776
      @evoman1776 3 года назад

      Pete Rose just 24. Led the league in hits for the first of his 7 times he's do that.

    • @timothywells4719
      @timothywells4719 3 года назад +1

      And a 6th on the bench that day: Tony Pérez!

  • @BrianSmith-op2ds
    @BrianSmith-op2ds 3 года назад +2

    Loves the reds old unis!

  • @cmacdhon
    @cmacdhon 3 года назад

    Wow! This is amazing. Thank you so much!!

  • @evoman1776
    @evoman1776 3 года назад +29

    I'd say the game has changed somewhat. Playing, managing, camera work. No replays. No 5,000 shots of the dugout. Cubs manager lets starting pitcher bat in bottom of 9th with two outs and winning run on 2nd - when he's already thrown 150 pitches? Reds pitcher had ANOTHER game earlier that season with a no hitter through 9 and loses it in the 10th? Double digits walks AND strikeouts in same game? Almost 190 pitches? ...and remember 4 man rotations then, only 3 days rest.

    • @counterstriving
      @counterstriving 3 года назад +1

      There was no DH then -- if you sent somebody out to hit for your pitcher, he was out of the game.

    • @bobpriddy5196
      @bobpriddy5196 3 года назад +1

      You summed it up evoman. Also, the commentary. You can hear the game and no endless talking in between pitches.

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 3 года назад

      Did they actually keep track of pitch counts then (for whatever reason), or was that figured out a long time afterward? They obviously weren't worried about the pitcher's arm back then...I'm sure that for every Jim Maloney or Fergie Jenkins, there were 10 (or maybe 100) burned-out arms from overuse.

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@not-so-smartaleck8987
      I'm sure you're wrong.
      You're sure about nothing.

  • @JP-wx6uh
    @JP-wx6uh 6 месяцев назад +1

    Pete Rose was so damn good. He got robbed of a hit. That wasn't an error on Banks at First Base on Rose's grounder.

  • @davidmatthews5962
    @davidmatthews5962 3 года назад

    Awesome to see the all time HIT KING on that video Pete Rose!!!!

  • @johnconway6976
    @johnconway6976 3 года назад +1

    Harry Caray (Carabina) was in his hometown, St. Louis, broadcasting for the previous year's World Series champions. He would broadcast there for the Cardinals (and Browns during the War years) for 25 seasons (1945-1969) before broadcasting for the A's (1 season), White Sox (11 seasons), and Cubs (16 seasons).
    The Cubs' pitcher for this game, Larry Jackson, spent his first 8 seasons with the Cardinals before joining the Cubs (4 seasons), and Phillies (3 seasons).
    This game was played in August of 1965. The Cubs would finish 25 games behind the LA Dodgers.

  • @bwayne40004
    @bwayne40004 3 года назад +1

    As soon as I saw the score board early on and "Maloney" I kind of had a feeling fished out of my Reds history. Great to see familiar names and faces.

  • @jellison7
    @jellison7 3 года назад +2

    WOW! Thank you for posting!