The best hitter these former MLB players ever saw (Did everyone say Barry Bonds?)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @SomebodyHadToSayIt99
    @SomebodyHadToSayIt99 Год назад +2874

    If you’re going to continue to profit from and praise Barry Bonds, induct him to the Hall of Fame.

    • @YSFmemories
      @YSFmemories Год назад +40

      I agree with bonds to hof, but theyre gonna profit like 10 bucks from this video lol

    • @spyroninja
      @spyroninja Год назад +70

      MLB does not decide who makes the hall

    • @Mundanesoup4
      @Mundanesoup4 Год назад +39

      The sports writers are the ones that vote for some reason and a few have openly said they won't vote for him because they hate him lol

    • @jasonmoyer
      @jasonmoyer Год назад +31

      That's up to the writers, and half of them are still in denial about how long players were taking PEDs and steroids specifically. The first person I'm aware of to have taken steroids with 100% certainty did so before Barry was even born.

    • @billytcat
      @billytcat Год назад

      ​@@jasonmoyerwho's that?

  • @jasonwiercinski5250
    @jasonwiercinski5250 Год назад +485

    The most underrated part of Barry Bonds greatness was how good he was at not swinging at bad pitches.

    • @richardyocum6053
      @richardyocum6053 Год назад +29

      He got that record with what 3 or 4 good pitches a night.....

    • @brandonenga
      @brandonenga Год назад +15

      His eyes man crazy

    • @Dayonetheone
      @Dayonetheone Год назад +3

      Yes. He walked alot.

    • @themilioxperience2427
      @themilioxperience2427 Год назад +1

      Yes!!!!!!

    • @genius179
      @genius179 Год назад +17

      I remember Rich Aurilia saying he was amazed at how Barry would get maybe one good pitch a week, but when he did he'd never miss it.

  • @radoverpink
    @radoverpink Год назад +1073

    Surely this bonds guy is in the hof

    • @Joel-bb6og
      @Joel-bb6og Год назад +153

      7 MVPS, 12 silver sluggers, 14 all star selections, most career home runs ever, most home runs in a single season ever, most career walks, 8 gold gloves, only member of the 500 500 club, and 2nd highest career WAR ever. This man is not hall of fame material apparently

    • @The_Gamer_91
      @The_Gamer_91 Год назад +30

      Nope and it's not a surprise why.

    • @Dalenumba3
      @Dalenumba3 Год назад +15

      Beat his girl and threatened to kill his side girl… ofc he not the only one but lol yall still going to bat for a POS. Very strange. Maybe yall see some of yourselves in him.

    • @Tagiau
      @Tagiau Год назад +39

      @@The_Gamer_91 Because the geriatrics in the contemporaries committee can't have it coming out that they also did steroids?

    • @rogerdat2884
      @rogerdat2884 Год назад +6

      @@The_Gamer_91 L

  • @doublem1975x
    @doublem1975x Год назад +1277

    MLB really has some balls. They colluded against Bonds in 2008 so he couldn’t get 800 hrs and 3000 hits and now they’re putting a tribute for him.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад

      Bud the snake selig is a vile man

    • @jamesolson7143
      @jamesolson7143 Год назад +34

      You are confusing team owners with MLB media employees lol

    • @doublem1975x
      @doublem1975x Год назад +101

      @@jamesolson7143 I’m talking about Selig, the owners and the players association. They collectively were the MLB. They colluded against Bonds so he couldn’t reach some legendary milestones. The MLB now giving tribute to a guy they blackballed and have openly maligned for years (Bonds even sued them for it) is ironic.

    • @themilioxperience2427
      @themilioxperience2427 Год назад +15

      @@doublem1975xwell said

    • @Nuschler22
      @Nuschler22 Год назад +4

      Just like Kaepernick, owners can choose not to hire people who create problems. It's not collusion, it's you're behaving so poorly, and being so disliked, that employers don't want to make the hire. Learn the difference.

  • @dannydevito2989
    @dannydevito2989 Год назад +455

    They all spoke very highly of this Bonds guy, I might go to the Hall of Fame to read up on him some more

    • @Dalenumba3
      @Dalenumba3 Год назад +6

      Ikr! Im sure his wife… i mean ex wife… and his mistress have nothing but great things to say about him! Probably not a violent guy at all!

    • @Uraclownmate
      @Uraclownmate Год назад +27

      @@Dalenumba3 imagine going on multiple comments and talking about this lmao this is purely a baseball topic no one cares what u do off the field it doesn’t mean ur not a great

    • @SlidinPonyCrew91
      @SlidinPonyCrew91 Год назад +22

      @@Dalenumba3 cope and seethe 🤣

    • @fandyllic1975
      @fandyllic1975 Год назад +18

      Haters gonna hate, but Bonds doesn’t need to go to HoF for real baseball fans to know how great he was. He has 350+ more career walks than #2. I’d like to see who even gets 2K walks in any of our lifetimes.

    • @pochen23
      @pochen23 Год назад +13

      The HOF museum still has him, he is just not a HOF but all his stuff are still there. So you will definitely be able to read alot about what he accomplished there. Whether he is a HOF or not it doesn't really matter to me, greatest hitter ever no doubt. The whole HOF stuff is honestly below him, players, not those writers, should be the one voting them in, and he would have gone in first ballot.

  • @richg4189
    @richg4189 Год назад +449

    In 2004, Barry Bonds had 28 more intentional walks than swings and misses (120 IBB, 92 swings and misses). This is the most insane stat ever in baseball.

    • @EricSmyth4Christ
      @EricSmyth4Christ Год назад +13

      Wow lol

    • @Real_Michael_Jordan
      @Real_Michael_Jordan Год назад +15

      That's crazy

    • @dmanatan
      @dmanatan Год назад +39

      He also had more homeruns than strikeouts

    • @EricSmyth4Christ
      @EricSmyth4Christ Год назад +9

      @@dmanatan true
      He is the only one
      It was 2001 or 2004

    • @dmanatan
      @dmanatan Год назад +8

      @@EricSmyth4Christ It was 2004. In '01 I wanna say he struck out around 90 times. '04 is also when he set the record for walks and IBB in a season (I believe, without looking it up).

  • @nathanmarchant2175
    @nathanmarchant2175 Год назад +27

    Bonds had the quickest swing & eye hand coordination ever! Dude belongs in the HOF!

  • @haroldlipschitz9301
    @haroldlipschitz9301 Год назад +627

    Muscles didn't give Bonds better hand-eye coordination, patience, or bat control through the zone. Watch him in side view in 1992 or 2002, his head never moves, shoulders stay solid, the technique is just flawless. We were all lucky to see him play.

    • @ricksikora7270
      @ricksikora7270 Год назад +30

      Perfectly said.

    • @toxicmoldmedia
      @toxicmoldmedia Год назад +23

      Either did illegal bats LOL any advantage to help a swing is helping everything you mentioned. Gotta love all these people defending steriods.

    • @chrislewis5069
      @chrislewis5069 Год назад +26

      That’s a great point. Fact is steroids made him better, any way you look at it.

    • @dustinhotard9634
      @dustinhotard9634 Год назад +44

      Everyone in the 90’s and early Aughts were doing steroids. Barry was better in the pre-steroids era and he was better in the steroids era. Split him in twain pre-2000 and post and you literally get 2 HoF careers. MLB is just mad that Bonds made a fool of the sport by being the best damn baseball player who ever lived.

    • @haroldlipschitz9301
      @haroldlipschitz9301 Год назад +41

      @@toxicmoldmedia Nope, plain wrong. Strength has nothing to do with the technique points I mentioned. Easier to just say you never played the game.

  • @MrMixItup
    @MrMixItup Год назад +111

    Barry Bonds was an experience. If you ever had an opportunity to watch him hit the ball, it was simply A+ entertainment!

  • @tammymatt9186
    @tammymatt9186 Год назад +226

    When I went to ASU in the 80s, their sport science lab had figured out that the more times per second your eyes could refocus the better the chance you had of hitting the baseball. If your eyes could focus 7 or 8 times per second, they figured you could hit college pitching. 9 or 10 times per second and you might catch up to pro pitching. Bonds set their all time testing record at thirteen focuses per second. That was his superpower. He could see the ball better than anyone else. Probably looked like a beach ball to him. Dan

    • @zacharyradford5552
      @zacharyradford5552 Год назад +11

      Sad he had to tarnish his legacy.

    • @axe2grind244
      @axe2grind244 Год назад +72

      @@zacharyradford5552 Hitting against pitchers who were also juicing btw.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +10

      I never knew this, thanks for sharing. Very interesting, as that kind of anomoly would likely be an inherited trait.

    • @erikjon8432
      @erikjon8432 Год назад +6

      Never knew this .. makes sense. MJ had something similar trait in the NBA

    • @tammymatt9186
      @tammymatt9186 Год назад +16

      @Ryan Crawford that inheritance factor was very much discussed. They also theorized that you could train a real young kids eyes to follow moving objects and that the earlier you taught them to catch an object coming at them the better. And that was a given in the Bonds household. Dan

  • @philb.1502
    @philb.1502 Год назад +78

    Bonds hit 28 home runs, .480 on base % , 132 walks, and a .565 slugging % his last season in 2007 and baseball colluded to keep him from playing in 2008. He would have gotten 800 homers and 3,000 hits if baseball hadn't sadistically decided to end his career. He could have played another 2 or 3 seasons at a high level!

    • @iamjp1
      @iamjp1 5 месяцев назад +4

      this always saddens me. mvp caliber numbers but nobody will sign him. unbelievable

    • @cliffjones8809
      @cliffjones8809 Месяц назад

      How much of a steroid raging jerk would you have to be in order to be "the best hitter ever", and still no one wants you.

    • @chazzx1018
      @chazzx1018 Месяц назад

      The juice rep got alot of players. Bonds isn't the only victim. Rose still isn't in for gambling. Bonds isn't even thinking about the hof. He knows how good he was.

  • @sailexw6414
    @sailexw6414 Год назад +116

    For the people that are super confused after looking up Barry's on base, slugging, and OPS for the first time.. no, it is not a typo🤣😂

    • @tomw485
      @tomw485 Год назад +10

      I’m confused how a guy from age 36-39 had far and away the best seasons of his career when just about every other ball player peaks in their late 20’s to early 30’s. I wonder if there was some outside factor impacting those numbers…

    • @sailexw6414
      @sailexw6414 Год назад +9

      @@tomw485 I watched Barry play nearly every-single-one of those games... the man's eye was SPECIAL. like he had a time machine and knew what pitch was coming...

    • @jimclaus1576
      @jimclaus1576 Год назад +6

      Remember… steroids weren’t the only ‘supplements’ Bonds took. He also used concentration pills that only US fighter pilots were supposed to be prescribed :)
      Look it up

    • @jackstephens6642
      @jackstephens6642 Год назад +3

      Barry just ate a good breakfast and wanted it more than other players.

    • @jimclaus1576
      @jimclaus1576 Год назад +4

      @Tomw485… Lol 😂 EXACTLY
      THEY desperately want people to forget about barry’s comically insane steroid regimen. How does a 37 year old man all the sudden need a size 13 shoe from 10 and a half??!!!! Lol Also a hat size two sizes bigger. Yeah the equipment manager spilled those beans a while back.
      I don’t think Mickey Mantle or Babe Ruth had that problem!! Or Mike Trout today ;)

  • @kevinmckay6456
    @kevinmckay6456 Год назад +173

    An MLB tribute video for Bonds is…interesting.

    • @Ares14
      @Ares14 Год назад +4

      I think as much as everyone loves to hate him, His era was definitely a time when baseball was very exciting with many narratives and legendary players.

    • @aaronstark1776
      @aaronstark1776 Год назад +2

      I thought the same thing. Love the video, but doesn't quite make sense for MLB to spend money to make it 🤔

    • @loualbino5536
      @loualbino5536 Год назад +2

      Deserving

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад

      Selig allowed them to use illegal substances....mlb profited.....Selig pretended to 'ban' something that was literally illegal anywat....Selig goes to HoF......the entire thing is bullshit.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +3

      ​@@aaronstark1776 roids made MLB billions of dollars. That is why they turned a blind eye the entire time.

  • @EE-bg1de
    @EE-bg1de Год назад +95

    2 Guys with the most confidence i've ever seen hitting a baseball: Bonds and Griffey. Griffey said he never felt overwhelmed by a fastball, like never. Bonds, forget the steriods, he had the greatest eye/patience in history. Like a computer. There are 2 guys if you strike them out, you really did something that was Bonds and Gwynn.

    • @jdk3
      @jdk3 Год назад +4

      have to agree , the only thing separating Griffey from Bonds was Bonds superior batting average

    • @bmdecker93
      @bmdecker93 Год назад +3

      Griffey was the best player I have ever seen

    • @bmdecker93
      @bmdecker93 Год назад +3

      @JDK One aged gracefully, and the other didn't.

    • @Tonyconstanza
      @Tonyconstanza Год назад +1

      Pedro Martinez struck out bonds and owned griffey jr. Griffey said Pedro was the toughest pitcher he ever faced

    • @blackmamba1261
      @blackmamba1261 Год назад +5

      I mean it’s not exactly a stretch to say Pedro really did something.

  • @bobvylan7215
    @bobvylan7215 Год назад +126

    When Bonds was a skinny kid in Pittsburgh, he was dropping 35 homers and 50 stolen bases. To this day he is the only player to have 500 of each of those career wise.
    Once the steroids era took hold, his bat just became more powerful. As a younger player, by choking up, his bat speed through the zone was top 1% in the MLB.
    When you were able to add power to an already powerful swing, the ball goes 500 and out of the stadium, instead of 435 and 8 rows into the bleachers.
    He was a perennial All Star, Gold Glove OF, and consistent top 3 in MVP voting long before he ever took the juice.
    There was a summer when Sosa and McGwire chased Maris, and it got ALL the attention. Playing each of those players at bats live on ESPN, it was the entire seasons only story it seemed like.
    Bonds had a great season, and never got his name mentioned. The media created the need for steroids, or they wouldn’t talk about you.
    He did what the media wanted, to a T, and they still hated him.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +10

      Selig created the need for steroids

    • @joel8692
      @joel8692 Год назад +10

      They definitely hated bonds remember when they did the all century team in like 93 and the MLB selected Griffey Jr over bonds when he only had like 4 MLB seasons at that point and Barry was the much better player and also had a linger time in the league

    • @jamiealexander7065
      @jamiealexander7065 Год назад +1

      @@joel8692 the century team was at the turn of the century, not 1993 (such a random year to choose lol)

    • @MF-Rell
      @MF-Rell Год назад +1

      He wasn't on steroids he was taking pro-hormones.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +2

      And MLB went from losing fans to printing money. Anyone who ever watched baseball knew it was going on. .

  • @littlelogan
    @littlelogan 2 месяца назад +3

    The way Peavy talks about Bonds and how it was a special night for him and his kids to look back on really puts it in perspective (for me at least) on how great this guy was at baseball.

  • @Izarcø-66
    @Izarcø-66 Год назад +14

    Truly a Giant, we didn't give a dam what he did off that field when he was on , he was on!

  • @leroyapplegate5049
    @leroyapplegate5049 Год назад +14

    its funny how big leaguers have the same opinion, but people on the internet would whole heartedly disagree lol sorry guys

  • @allainangcao28
    @allainangcao28 Год назад +45

    If you only took his numbers for when he was on the Pirates, he was already a HOFer. The Roids in San Francisco made his already great numbers video game metrics.

    • @morecowbell235
      @morecowbell235 6 месяцев назад

      7 seasons of good baseball doesn't get anyone in the HOF

  • @rickdiaz3657
    @rickdiaz3657 Год назад +31

    Is this video some attempt by the MLB to show that they forgive Barry Bonds?😮

  • @TheSpadre
    @TheSpadre Год назад +15

    We went to Minute Maid Park in Houston to watch him tie the season homerun record and Dierker (Hou manager) intentionally walked him 4 times. 5th at bat they pitched to him and he lost it in deep right field. I'll never forget it.

    • @jameswalker7420
      @jameswalker7420 9 месяцев назад +1

      Intentionally walking him the way teams did should've been fixed. MLB actually failed the fans by allowing that to rob us of the opportunity to watch the greatest hitter in modern baseball.

    • @TheSpadre
      @TheSpadre 9 месяцев назад

      @@jameswalker7420 I wholeheartedly agree. How many home runs could he have hit. He was easily the best player in MLB during my lifetime. Steroids may have helped him with power, but they did nothing for his feat of having more home runs than strikeouts.

  • @UKFanatic97
    @UKFanatic97 Год назад +28

    Blackballed him, and now they're out here posting love stories.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +1

      Blackballed after his use of roids made MLB billions. He is a jerk, but MLB knew what was going on. I was 12ish at the time McGwire was juicing and we knew it was obvious as pre-teens. We talked about it daily.

    • @potentially__9445
      @potentially__9445 Год назад +2

      @@ryancrawford8042yet, MOST fans, reporters, and the media didn’t vilify McGwire like they did with Barry.

    • @jimclaus1576
      @jimclaus1576 Год назад

      Uhhhhh… yeah they didn’t vilify McGwire because McGwire was a good role model, carried himself with respect, had multiple foundations he donated to and wasn’t a nasty individual like bonds. Maybe… you think MAYBE that was a reason bonds was “vilified” or…
      Does that not register with YA’LL???? Lol

    • @chazzx1018
      @chazzx1018 Месяц назад

      ​@@jimclaus1576thank you. Had a Mcgwire bobblehead shirt in the late 80s. What a time for baseball the juice era was?

  • @craigbrindle108
    @craigbrindle108 Год назад +44

    What percentage of players were using steroids during that era? Bonds isn’t the Lone Ranger.

    • @frisky_dart7273
      @frisky_dart7273 Год назад +9

      Doesn’t make it ok.

    • @craigbrindle108
      @craigbrindle108 Год назад +7

      Didn’t say it does.

    • @omegacroc2928
      @omegacroc2928 Год назад +4

      Agreed. There were many players using steroids in both the majors and minors, but there was only one Barry Bonds.

    • @JG-fx8jm
      @JG-fx8jm Год назад +3

      @@craigbrindle108 yeh you did.

    • @craigbrindle108
      @craigbrindle108 Год назад +4

      @@JG-fx8jm No I didn’t.

  • @LoJahn
    @LoJahn 11 месяцев назад +2

    I saw Barry Bonds play 3 times at Dodger stadium growing up…he was constantly booed throughout the entire game unlike anything I’ve heard at a baseball game and it didn’t even matter..he still hit a homer in every game I was at and even hit 2 one night…me and my family were sat a row in front of his dad Bobby Bonds one night and he gave me and my brother a special Barry bonds card in a little case…pretty surreal looking back

  • @thedude3065
    @thedude3065 Год назад +53

    steroids do not create talent
    Barry Bonds will always have a place in this game and he'll always deserve one

    • @Mundanesoup4
      @Mundanesoup4 Год назад +5

      Right, there's tons of people juicing still and no one is touching Barry

    • @billcephus
      @billcephus Год назад

      riiiiight, going from average 25 HRs a year to hitting 73 in 2001 was natural. delusional.

    • @kingdinodragonite3470
      @kingdinodragonite3470 Год назад +1

      ​@@billcephus he was averaging 40 homers from his previous 8 years. In his 4peat years, he averaged 50. Stop the cap. He is already GOATED before the roids

    • @morecowbell235
      @morecowbell235 6 месяцев назад

      If steroids don't help, then don't take them.

  • @MoHassanTV
    @MoHassanTV Месяц назад +1

    I use to stay up late into the evening early morning watching Bonds and Giants on Channel 5 in London. This guy was truly a beast 🔥

  • @jasonlommen4769
    @jasonlommen4769 Год назад +28

    Listen man, i’ve been a baseball fan for over 40 years and seen a lot of great players, and of course footage of the past greats. Whether you love bonds or loathe him, there is no doubt that he is the most feared and potent hitter that’s ever played the game. The guy had no weakness, if a pitcher made one little mistake, the ball was crushed. The guy was just born to hit a BB. He may not have been the best hitter of all time, but certainly the most feared.

    • @billcephus
      @billcephus Год назад

      his pre balco stats clearly show that's not the case.

    • @rockbigfoot5531
      @rockbigfoot5531 Год назад +2

      @@billcephus he was a hall of fameer before steroids, how old are you , if you watch him plsy, he was clearly in a different league, the steroids helped him hit further , but he still would have had 25 to 30 Homers every year, I watched the phillies walk him every time one year. He was spectacular

    • @imoorzy
      @imoorzy Год назад +3

      @@billcephusfirst and only ever play to be in the 400 400 club, he did it in 98’ before he was juicing. His lowest home run season in SF when he was natural was 33. Never had an OPS less than .746 and spent most of his career with an ops higher than 1.000, even before roids. I could go on and on. He was a great hitter before juicing, stop lying to yourself.

  • @Brandonmichaelc
    @Brandonmichaelc Год назад +4

    I grew up in Kansas and am a Cardinals fan but the SatDish we had in 90s had the Giants channel on so I watched Barry! I've never seen anyone get the treatment Barry Bonds did. And we probably never will. Nobody would pitch to him. Everything he came to the plate, the only question was? Are they going to pitch to him? Bonds is the best ever in my book.

  • @jonnya3425
    @jonnya3425 7 месяцев назад +3

    I love that interraction between Bonds and Peavey. Two men with genuine respect for each other.

  • @dctuss21
    @dctuss21 Год назад +2

    dude swung a little league bat as well like 32 inches and he choked up. guy was amazing. like amazing amazing

  • @Roysorb
    @Roysorb Год назад +38

    Truly Barry Bonds has Darth Vader energy.

  • @RussellMills1877
    @RussellMills1877 3 месяца назад +1

    This man was a beast as a player and the way he hit home runs was out of this world and the way they would walk him so they didn't have to pitch to him was insane which goes to show you how scared they were of him. And on a side note I have a you tube channel type in Russell Mills May 22, 2017 to find me.

  • @Ares14
    @Ares14 Год назад +46

    Barry Bonds was the ONLY player I ever saw where I knew the outcome was either going to be a homer or a walk. Not Griffey, Sosa, McGwire, Thome, Thomas, Manny or any other home run hitter of that era was like this guy when it came to plate discipline or presence. Was better than everybody. Even before his roid years, he imo was the best pure offensive threat of his generation. Could steal a ton of bases, always was an on base machine.. Complete as you could get on offense.

    • @potentially__9445
      @potentially__9445 Год назад +4

      I’d say Barry was the greatest offensive threat EVER.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +1

      You know what? You are right. I never thought about it, but the big bat guys usually HR or K.

    • @satoshisata3409
      @satoshisata3409 Год назад +7

      Not only offensively but also defensively.
      His eight Gold Glove Awards are the most as a leftfielder, even though most of them go to centerfielders or rightfielders as outfielders.

    • @tenthavenue
      @tenthavenue Год назад

      Pujols is up there I ain’t gone lie.

  • @dennesey
    @dennesey Год назад +20

    Bonds was magic every single night. Perfect time to release this vid to remind us of pure greatness in the current age of mediocrity. 2500+ career walks and he still managed to rack up almost 3000 hits AND become HR King. His stats page on baseball almanac reads like fiction.

  • @christianjames92
    @christianjames92 Год назад +19

    People do not understand how good Bonds was. His ability to turn on pitches is legendary. There's no one else that could turn on inside pitches or pitche that beat him and still make loud contact on them.

    • @potentially__9445
      @potentially__9445 Год назад

      I’ll NEVER forget the one he hit against the Cardinals in the 2002 playoffs.

  • @jimgray3346
    @jimgray3346 Год назад +2

    Wow, from the way they talk about him Bonds must be a really likeable guy...

  • @gregorycampbell9386
    @gregorycampbell9386 Год назад +4

    I met a guy on a flight one time who played MLB during Bonds career and he said that it got to a point that if Bonds didnt swing the umps unquestionably called it a ball. He said he had the greatest eye ever.

  • @SOC-1
    @SOC-1 5 месяцев назад +2

    Bonds was a great hitter no doubt about it. back in the 1920s and early 30s there was a player named joe sewell for those who dont know who he was (hall of famer by the way) he was without question the toughest batter to strikeout in mlb history. In 8333 PA (7132 AB) he struckout 114 times during his 14 seasons as a mlb player in 1929 he had 672 PA (578 AB) he struckout 4 times thats 1 SO for every 145 ABs

  • @tayeeddings7501
    @tayeeddings7501 Год назад +3

    Ive never seen a better swinger or hitter in my life either what Bonds use to do was unbelievable every swing could be a homer that was crazy

  • @oceaser6977
    @oceaser6977 6 месяцев назад +1

    His swing, IMO, is the best I’ve seen
    Powerful, compact, smooth and picturesque
    Ik everyone says Griffey but for me Bonds swing was perfect

  • @johnpastore7685
    @johnpastore7685 Год назад +5

    I saw Tony Gynn play against the Mets. He hit a ball that whistled, through the infield.

  • @BobG127
    @BobG127 21 день назад +1

    The best hitter I ever saw who didn't use ped's, going back to the mid 60's, was Frank Thomas, hands down. The rise of ped use, soured me on the game I loved from the time I was a little boy -- and Barry Bonds was one of the culprits. We'll never know if he was even as good as his father, Bobby, who was a heck of an all-around player in his own right. Sad.

  • @midrangetorque
    @midrangetorque Год назад +6

    The G.O.A.T. Technically, he never tested positive and was never suspended for PEDs. I'm not saying he didn't use, I'm just sayin', know what umsayin'? Haha.

  • @InvestBetter.
    @InvestBetter. Год назад +2

    On an average night, towards the end of his career, he'd have 4 ABs
    He's be walked intentionally once, he'd be pitched around once, for another walk
    In his 3rd AB, he'd get one pitch to hit, just miss it, and sky to RF.
    The final AB, he'd get one more good pitch and he'd crush it, for a double or HR. So 2 pitches, 2 bases

  • @Grillinnap
    @Grillinnap Год назад +19

    MLB office themselves campaigning for Bonds to get him into the HOF

    • @gerrybonds
      @gerrybonds Год назад

      Yeah that’s pretty much what this video is lol

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +2

      They let Selig in, he was the ring leader through it all. He is far more to blame than anyone.

  • @RickLaFlaR3e
    @RickLaFlaR3e Год назад +2

    The only thing that could stop Bonds is the MLB editing crew 3:38 mark😂😂😂

  • @RonFleischhacker-bi7gt
    @RonFleischhacker-bi7gt Год назад +7

    Very obvious to see the game was easy for him. Vision and Power and confidence . Confidence being #1

    • @SSNESS
      @SSNESS Год назад

      Ken Griffey Jr. was better

    • @RonFleischhacker-bi7gt
      @RonFleischhacker-bi7gt Год назад

      @@SSNESS nah he underachieved Bonds blew the Top off of Baseball. They need another steroid season Baseball is losing to soccer

  • @randyrobey5643
    @randyrobey5643 7 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up watching Mantle, Maris and Mays live on TV. I watched Hank Aaron. As a young adult, I watched Reggie Jackson hit three homers in a World Series game. I have see most of the great hitters since them too. The deadliest hitter I've ever seen was Barry Bonds. He almost never swung at balls out of the strike zone. He had an extremely quick and compact swing that sent balls that would have been strikes a very long way.

  • @treybear8174
    @treybear8174 Год назад +5

    It’s funny watching them talk about how tough he was to face when one of the greats Greg Maddox said he was the easiest hitter he’s ever faced
    “It didn’t matter , you just walked him”
    😂😂😂😂

    • @jimclaus1576
      @jimclaus1576 Год назад

      Maddux was also being humble. ;) He held Barry to a .260 average and struck him out 16 times. Yeah Greg did OK against balco barry. Lol

  • @Matt-xv2cp
    @Matt-xv2cp Год назад +2

    Been a Dodger fan since 1975, and BB is the greatest hitter I've ever seen, not even close.
    Tony Gwynn and Pete Rose a distant second.

  • @UKWildcats11997
    @UKWildcats11997 Год назад +23

    Man, this Bonds guy seems like he was the best hitter the game has ever seen. I can’t wait to read about him the next time I visit Cooperstown!

    • @dfcintron
      @dfcintron Год назад +2

      Hitter & player

    • @dme1016
      @dme1016 Год назад

      Your attempt at sarcasm is weakened by the fact that ya' can read about Bonds The Great without going to a place that doesn't recognize his brilliance. Fuc* the HOF!

    • @simpleanswer8954
      @simpleanswer8954 Год назад +2

      Wow. What a creative comment. I think this was only said ten or twelve times already.

    • @dme1016
      @dme1016 Год назад +1

      @@simpleanswer8954 Yeah, really. So creative, we've only seen it 200 times.

  • @lukekuykendall6366
    @lukekuykendall6366 7 месяцев назад +1

    What is amazing is that Barry actually struck out fewer times over the last 10 years of his career than the first 10. So many power hitters will often hit a lot of home runs, but also consistently strikeout 150-200 times, but you accept the trade off for their raw power. Barry not only hit 40+ home runs consistently year after year, he only struck out more than 100 times a single time in his career, his rookie season.

    • @morecowbell235
      @morecowbell235 6 месяцев назад

      Bonds struck out more times in one season than Gwynn did in an 8 year span lol

  • @MrAitraining
    @MrAitraining Год назад +4

    Some of his years you just couldn't pitch to him. Dude would go 1 for 1 with a HR and 3 walks in games.

  • @ozzieoz1
    @ozzieoz1 Год назад +7

    Barry Bonds deserves to be in the HOF and even a legit movie done. Bonds is one of the greatest power hitters of all time! most perfect swing every pitcher feared. I believe he could of passed 800 hrs

    • @slee2695
      @slee2695 Год назад +1

      The whole steroid era in baseball was a joke..fake numbers

    • @troylee4196
      @troylee4196 Год назад

      ​@@slee2695do you feel currently with juiced balls it's the same?

  • @CYMotorsport
    @CYMotorsport Год назад +1

    The hall of fame is an ENTIRELY separate entity from the mlb and the writers association is separate from the hall.

  • @marcusg1021
    @marcusg1021 Год назад +39

    Even without a substance. I believe mostly all his homers would still be homers. Those bombs he hit would 100%still get over the fence without juice. So I never bought into the juice made him great. He was just the greatest hitter, with the greatest eyes, greatest hand speed to catch any pitch that came his way, and greatest IQ to know what was coming. To me he is the greatest hitter. Every time, everyone knew he was gonna hit it right on the head, and it was gonna be hit hard. But best contact hitter may be Tony Gwynn.

    • @SPICY_BEAR
      @SPICY_BEAR Год назад +3

      Very well said and agree 100%! 🙂

    • @philobeddoe8342
      @philobeddoe8342 Год назад +1

      I don't think the juice helped too much with the hitting aspect, I think it prolonged his career. If you look at the steroid era, dudes were playing and excelling later in their careers when in the past most players were done.

    • @doublestrokeroll
      @doublestrokeroll Год назад

      He's only 7 homers ahead of Aaron. Sorry but the roids helped at least 8 of those clear a fence when they probably shouldn't have. The guy was amazing for sure and a huge talent. No doubt about it. But his numbers are deservedly tainted.

    • @doublestrokeroll
      @doublestrokeroll Год назад +1

      @@philobeddoe8342 Of course it did. That strength gets some of those homers over the fence when they should have been warning track outs. Some of those lazy fly balls or worm burners enough juice to become squibs. There is just no denying strength matters. Look the guy is obviously one of the greatest players ever, but his numbers ARE tainted.

    • @philobeddoe8342
      @philobeddoe8342 Год назад +1

      @@doublestrokeroll yeah, and Fulton County stadium helped about 200 of Aaron's HRer's.
      That place was a band box.
      Also, you do realize Hank had about 2500 more at bats than Bonds, right?

  • @cesarquint256
    @cesarquint256 Год назад +1

    I have a good friend that was a scary hitter, I as a catcher when he come to bat could feel he ate all the plate, the only good throw against him was below and outside ( no one was throwing fast enough to punish him being so close and “in front “ ) the pitchers got intimidate and give him the base or miss the signal and see the ball disappear, I cant imagine how scary and overwhelming Barry was, he owns the plate.

  • @backgoesupton4553
    @backgoesupton4553 Год назад +22

    Surely the greatest hitter of all time is a 1st ballot HOFer right?

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +2

      Nope, bc the commish at the time is the real crook

    • @morecowbell235
      @morecowbell235 6 месяцев назад

      No and don't call me surely

  • @matthewsdonnelly
    @matthewsdonnelly Год назад +1

    2:10 when you have the opposing pitcher smiling you know you're fun to watch haha

  • @thepiecreamer
    @thepiecreamer Год назад +6

    mlb actually acknowledging barry’s existence???

  • @georgerodriguez2987
    @georgerodriguez2987 Год назад

    I tell you I was the biggest Bonds fan on the East Coast I always loved the guy as a player his confidence and his presence in the batters box I’ve never seen anything like that watching baseball 30 years

  • @JulianWyllie
    @JulianWyllie Год назад +13

    Respect to Peavy for giving Barry a chance to hit something. The baseball gods would be proud.

  • @sdzielinski
    @sdzielinski 3 месяца назад +1

    A Yinzer here. I concluded that Barry Bonds had the best stroke when I first saw him hit. His second peak did not surprise me at all. I wondered why it took him so long. Only an idiot would claim that PEDs gave him his second peak. What gave him his second peak was strong mental discipline, elite pitch recognition, elite bat-to-ball skills, elite bat speed, the willingness to take a walk. He did all of this when players from around the world came to the USA to play baseball. The level of competition was far greater than it was during the 1920s to 1960s. He wasn't a generational player; he defined his sport in the way that Babe Ruth defined it. But the quality of the competition was so much greater for Bonds.
    To my limited knowledge, there are no rigorous studies demonstrating the causal efficacy of PEDs on hitting a baseball by a ML player. There are correlational studies, but those do not demonstrate the presence of a cause. Nor do they account for an alternative explanation: Juiced balls. Bonds is the best.

  • @jeremyheyman8952
    @jeremyheyman8952 Год назад +6

    Ill say this with pride and confidence that Barry Bonds belongs in the HOF his numbers dont lie

  • @ozzyozzy2207
    @ozzyozzy2207 2 месяца назад

    I saw Barry bat live at least 500 times in Pittsburgh he had the best swing I ever saw this man belongs in the Hall of Fame

  • @greicorolle344
    @greicorolle344 Год назад +15

    The best to ever do it, 🐐 Bonds

    • @billcephus
      @billcephus Год назад

      stick to football, but looks like you don't know about that either.

  • @BozColorado
    @BozColorado 7 месяцев назад +1

    I’m honored to have watched him play as a kid. Going to Giants games was a blast back then. The Bonds and Lincecum eras just hit different!

  • @infiniteuniverse9528
    @infiniteuniverse9528 Год назад +8

    When Bonds was in his prime and hitting all those HR's, he didn't miss a hit-able pitch. At one point he became so intimidating, he was being intentionally walked with a runner on 1st and nobody out. Whenever a pitcher would challenge Bonds, they paid a terrible price and decided it's best to walk him on 4 pitches. How do you set the record for most HR's and Walks in the same year?

  • @harrymiram5562
    @harrymiram5562 Год назад +1

    From what am able to recall, some of the best hitters eye have seen, includes but not limited to...
    Tony Gwynn, Don Mattingly, Wade Boggs, Rod Carew, Joe Morgan, Dale Murphy, Will Clark, Pete Rose....

  • @HereForAStorm
    @HereForAStorm Год назад +8

    I still can't get over that Barry was intentionally walked with the bases loaded... and that was before his Super Bonds seasons.

    • @cchan9186
      @cchan9186 Год назад +2

      And honestly that was the right move lol

    • @joel8692
      @joel8692 Год назад +1

      Another crazy thing is that bonds probably got one good pitch to hit the whole game and he was still able to hit that much bombs

  • @Vjl5280
    @Vjl5280 2 месяца назад +1

    The best hitter ever. Period. I’m sure Lou and Ted were good but Barry is the goat. Barry vs Randy Johnson was amazing to watch.

  • @yoda101
    @yoda101 Год назад +10

    Posting this from the official channel is almost insulting. Barry Bonds is the best player to every play the game and its the establishment that both created him and is preventing him from being enshrined in Cooperstown. This will be a stain on baseballs legacy. I hope Barry makes it in his lifetime.

  • @michaelgrattan6181
    @michaelgrattan6181 4 месяца назад

    Barry Bonds … The BEST player to play Baseball .. and led mlb history with most walks… extremely discipline at the plate !! Either the smallest bat I mlb at his time … So good 💯💯💯

  • @EatUpBoise
    @EatUpBoise Год назад +6

    They must have never played with Tony Gwynn. Tony had nearly the same amount of Strike outs in the entire decade of the 90’s as Barry had in 1998 alone. And Bonds is an absolute legend still….says a lot about Tony.

    • @nathanchildress5596
      @nathanchildress5596 6 месяцев назад

      Dude Tony Gwynn was a great hitter, I remember, but he didn’t even have 200 hits more than Bonds while having 620 fewer home runs, 200 fewer stolen bases, and 3 fewer gold gloves. So no, they don’t compare at all.

  • @way2kool876
    @way2kool876 Год назад +1

    Still my favorite player ever. There's time when barry wasn't in the line up I wouldn't want to watch the game.

  • @feynmanschwingere_mc2270
    @feynmanschwingere_mc2270 Год назад +7

    Anybody who's unbiased and doesn't have a personal gripe against the guy knows what we ALL deep down know: Barry Bonds is the GOAT.
    The only player that made hitting look easy. If he didn't care about homeruns, I genuinely believe he could've hit .400 multiple times.
    Used to hate him as a kid but I grew up. The best I've ever seen. Him and Clemens and ARod and Manny all should be in the HOF.
    I refuse to visit Cooperstown until he's in there. Puritan rubbish 😑.

    • @simpleanswer8954
      @simpleanswer8954 Год назад +1

      I loved him. He was my favorite player when he was active. I have a hard time being upset about the steroids because the league was aware of it at the time, and they rode the excitement players like Bonds and McGwire created. Bonds was an unreal hitter, but so many idiots in these comments act like he was Sosa or McGwire, and they act like he'd have been nothing without steroids. The league was fine with it at the time, and people are still doing it. They're just better at hiding it now. Except for Tatis jr.

    • @jonlanier_
      @jonlanier_ Год назад

      I disagree with your biased premise.

    • @jimclaus1576
      @jimclaus1576 Год назад

      LooooL!!! Nice try.
      Bonds is a PED abuser. End of story. And a horrible ambassador for the sport. And yes… PED’s DO help you hit home runs far easier. You don’t just magically start hitting 30 more home runs than you ever did in your late 30’s. LOL
      Bonds in his all natural seasons never topped 50. Not once.

    • @morecowbell235
      @morecowbell235 6 месяцев назад

      Nah. Out of the guys I've seen in person, Gwynn, Griffey and Ichiro and were the best. Mind you, I went to a LOT of Giants games during the Bonds years because my sister had season tickets.

  • @josephdunn3757
    @josephdunn3757 Год назад +2

    I''ve NEVER seen somebody that's NOT even a lifetime .300 hitter be spoken of so highly?!!!
    😮‍💨

  • @kilgoretrout4461
    @kilgoretrout4461 8 месяцев назад +3

    The most insane thing about his accomplishments is the fact that he NEVER got pitched at. No one else in the league could have done half what he did with the minuscule number of hittable pitches he saw. His feat is absolutely enormous when that is calculated into his numbers.

  • @jesseGfragrance
    @jesseGfragrance 6 месяцев назад

    He’s the goat we will never see a player, do what Barry did in the major leagues

  • @eddielopez4698
    @eddielopez4698 Год назад +16

    GOAT with or without juice

  • @ASPextra
    @ASPextra 9 месяцев назад

    I think you can make a case for Tony Gwynn, but Barry was ELECTRIC.

    • @no-bozos
      @no-bozos 8 месяцев назад

      Ken Griffey Jr. too.

    • @morecowbell235
      @morecowbell235 6 месяцев назад

      It's the fans that create the electricity

  • @noahmcdaniel4920
    @noahmcdaniel4920 Год назад +14

    People don't talk enough about the career Bonds had back when he still weighed about 170 lbs soaking wet. Most people don't know he set the career record in MVP's, led the NL in HR's for a decade, became the only member of the 400/400 club and won 8 gold gloves before there was any doubt he was juicing... Give that guy a needle and you can see now why he made a mockery of an already roided out league. He's top 3 EASY.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +2

      I was at the Pirates kids camp in 1987. Bonds and Merced were instructors. Let me tell you. even though I was young his greatness was obvious. He was about 165-170 and could flat out crush the ball.

    • @Bones12x2
      @Bones12x2 Год назад

      Its Bond's fault people don't talk about that.

    • @noahmcdaniel4920
      @noahmcdaniel4920 Год назад +2

      @Bones12x2 no, it's the fault of casuals who don't recognize greatness.

    • @geoffhampton9155
      @geoffhampton9155 Год назад +1

      I couldn't agree with you more. He was already an unanimous vote for the hall before there was any suspicion of him using PEDs, and we know why he did that. He's better than all of these players getting inducted into hall right now. People can like him or hate him, but when he came to bat, everybody was watching. He was an amazing talent. He was also a threat to steal bases too, something that's not talked about enough. He accomplished a 40/40 season clean. And he was already leading the league in walks and intentional walks. He's the best I ever saw and deserves to be in Cooperstown.

    • @joel8692
      @joel8692 Год назад

      ​@@geoffhampton9155yup I agree he and I think he was actually a better all around player before the roids because he ran the Basses and played the outfield better. the only weakness he had was that he didnt have a strong throwing arm like Griffey Jr did and that's why he played in left field instead of right or center

  • @BlazingShackles
    @BlazingShackles Год назад +2

    The best hitter I ever saw was Bonds in San Francisco. The best player I ever saw was Bonds in Pittsburgh.

  • @samusbayonetta2491
    @samusbayonetta2491 Год назад +14

    Barry Bonds it's the Goat 🐐

    • @trevxr51
      @trevxr51 Год назад

      Even though he's juiced, he is still the best of all time

    • @JohnSmith-nj4zq
      @JohnSmith-nj4zq Год назад +1

      GOAT of steroid players.

    • @22deeboi
      @22deeboi Год назад

      ​@@JohnSmith-nj4zq first ever to get 400/400, 8 GG, 3 MVPS, multiple all stars before steroids. Dude is the GOAT

    • @JohnSmith-nj4zq
      @JohnSmith-nj4zq Год назад

      @@22deeboi Not before steroids, it's before he got caught for steroids. There's a difference. He is nowhere near being the GOAT, especially not being the face of PED.

    • @geddoe316
      @geddoe316 Год назад

      not even close.

  • @topkek8045
    @topkek8045 3 месяца назад +1

    There is so much more to being a great hitter than steroids make me strong. His plate discipline was amazing

    • @abancwele
      @abancwele 3 месяца назад

      He has unbelievable eyesight. That the most important for a hitter. Steroids cankt do anything for that.

  • @themilioxperience2427
    @themilioxperience2427 Год назад +4

    The best player to ever play the game! Hands down. Barry Bonds with or without steroids Barry had the best eyes in the game. To lead the league in home runs and walks. That’s absolutely impossible! GOAT! 5 tools.

  • @CalvinHikes
    @CalvinHikes Год назад

    Starts at 1:00

  • @edwardanthony7283
    @edwardanthony7283 Год назад +13

    How often was he walked because they were afraid to pitch to him??

    • @rickdiaz3657
      @rickdiaz3657 Год назад +7

      one season he was intentionally walked 120 times 😁 in 2004 so you can see how exaggerated this is, aaron judge was intentionally walked 18 times in 2022 and was the most dangerous slugger past year

    • @edwardanthony7283
      @edwardanthony7283 Год назад

      @@rickdiaz3657 They were petrified of him & he should be in the Hall!

    • @edwardanthony7283
      @edwardanthony7283 Год назад +2

      @@rickdiaz3657 If the 120 were 18 Barry would have hit 80 homers!

    • @99bimmer
      @99bimmer Год назад +3

      Those 120 walks in 2004 were his INTENTIONAL walks (including one with the bases loaded), his total walks that year were 232. And most of those were likely 4 pitch walks

    • @edwardanthony7283
      @edwardanthony7283 Год назад

      @@99bimmer Imagine what he would have done! no Hall? Now that's sick.

  • @chad3452
    @chad3452 Год назад +1

    yeah his hand eye was so ridiculous that pitchers walked him w bases loaded... if a guy threw a strike bonds was honna hit it you jus didnt know how far . it was absolutely insane.. didn't like him or his teams really but man dude was as close to a machine as possible

  • @nolansmith64
    @nolansmith64 Год назад +8

    He should be in mlb the show and the hall

    • @99bimmer
      @99bimmer Год назад +4

      Well, as far as MLB The Show, that might be a bit more tough because Bonds isn't in the MLBPA, and I believe it's by choice. So the game devs would actually have to negotiate with Bonds himself to get him in the game

    • @Shamir725
      @Shamir725 Год назад

      contact 150 power 200 vision 175 lmao

    • @99bimmer
      @99bimmer Год назад +3

      @@Shamir725 But somehow only 97 overall

    • @steroidsR4losers
      @steroidsR4losers Год назад

      STEROIDS!

  • @flame-sky7148
    @flame-sky7148 Год назад

    One of the few guys in baseball history that didn’t receive protection ( a slugger hitting behind him in the lineup), and still produced.

  • @joshgonzalez1807
    @joshgonzalez1807 Год назад +3

    Barry is the MJ of baseball, the guy was a special talent.

    • @morecowbell235
      @morecowbell235 6 месяцев назад

      Except for you know...that whole cheating thing.

  • @NickEdgar
    @NickEdgar Год назад +1

    Can’t be in the HOF but we sure love profiting off him.

  • @SPICY_BEAR
    @SPICY_BEAR Год назад +6

    Pete Rose and Barry Bonds should both be in the Hall of Fame! 😠😤

    • @lee-kikmong
      @lee-kikmong Год назад +1

      they are not?
      what a surprise 😮

    • @wvusmc
      @wvusmc Год назад +1

      Also, McGwire, Clemens, Palmero, and Ivan Rodriguez.

    • @ericmonaco4509
      @ericmonaco4509 Год назад

      ​@@lee-kikmong Because Bonds took steroids and Rose did illegal gambiling

    • @dfcintron
      @dfcintron Год назад

      ​@@wvusmc ivan rodriguez got in already, thankfully.

    • @potentially__9445
      @potentially__9445 Год назад

      @@wvusmcHELL NO McGwire shouldn’t, he did NOT have a Hall of Fame career. Because he hit juiced home runs in 1998 and 1999???? GTFOH

  • @tacotom3492
    @tacotom3492 Год назад +1

    Barry Lamar Bonds was the best I ever saw..
    Ironically. I would send out tons of cards for players to sign for team addresses to Becket. 3 came back authentic, Wayne Gretzky, Brett Hull and Barry Bonds ...

    • @billcephus
      @billcephus Год назад +1

      then you didn't see much

    • @tacotom3492
      @tacotom3492 Год назад

      ​@@billcephusright .. you don't know or youd have listed anyone but you can't . JAG who probably was never good at anything.. 😂

  • @whalecove1283
    @whalecove1283 Год назад +4

    Nothing found in a needle gives you the gifts Barry had. You could see the it in the pitchers eyes when he got in the box. They knew.

    • @dfcintron
      @dfcintron Год назад +1

      People equate what Barry did to Popeye eating spinach. It's ridiculous.

    • @vivsavagex
      @vivsavagex 6 месяцев назад

      i dont think you realize just how much better these athletes are than anyone else. if you did you would understand that even a 1% advantage at the pro level is HUGE. especially in a game like hitting a baseball where a 33% success rate is literally elite level. he cheated. no one could ever say with certainty what he woulda done if he hadnt and thats the end of the story

  • @bruceirby2033
    @bruceirby2033 Год назад

    That commentator at 1:25 and Barry murdering that ball.LEGENDARY

  • @fmlog5968
    @fmlog5968 Год назад +9

    PIRATES should push this guy to the HOF because He was an HOF player before PED, you can't use steroids for talent, his pitch recognition, his perfect and violent swing, VETERAN COMMITTEE, GET HIM IN

    • @cadon35
      @cadon35 Год назад +2

      He should be in the Braves HOF for playing so deep in left field.

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад

      He had HoF potential in Pitt, but he was not there as long as many think.

    • @fmlog5968
      @fmlog5968 Год назад

      @@ryancrawford8042 yk, after I checked his stats on statmuse, you were right

    • @ryancrawford8042
      @ryancrawford8042 Год назад +1

      @@fmlog5968 oddly a friend and I attended a Pirates baseball camp for kids in the early 90s. Bonds and Merced were there quite a bit. Merced was a great guy and had a nice career. The difference watching them hit BP was crazy though. Both guys were playing at the highest level in the world and it was obvious Bonds was on another level.

  • @OJTheBLAK
    @OJTheBLAK Год назад +1

    If Bud Selig’s in the Hall, Barry should get in too. No questions

  • @mrdoubleu8016
    @mrdoubleu8016 Год назад +5

    bonds on a mlb youtube thumbnail? hopefully this is progression towards a HOF