My grandfather, a knuckleballer on a farm team in the 20s, pitched one inning of an exhibition game against Babe Ruth. He held him to a single. It was grandpa's best story, and his finest hour. It's bright and clear in my mind tonight. Thank you Simon. What wonderful memories you have brought me today.
There have been other RUclipsrs that talked like this and stopped apparently the number of people who can’t keep up, won out. Casual Geographics, I’m talking to you
I also noticed how quickly he started to speak on most of his videos now. I realize he has a bunch of other scripts to read and also I could slow down the video but that really isn't the point.
At 21:55 Ruth is shown wearing a NY Giants uniform and with the Giants manager ( and fellow baseball icon John McGraw ) . Ruth never played for the " Jints " but shared the Polo Grounds with them.This was from a charity game.Ruth was so popular because he almost ALWAYS played for free in charity games and especially those that benefited kids.Babe always has time for kids.Especially poor kids.He used to be one of them.
Would you guys review and make a video about Roberto Clemente next? One of the most slept on and forgotten greats of baseball! A humanitarian and much more.
Clemente is definitely not slept on or forgotten lol. Every year one of the biggest events is Roberto Clemente day and the Roberto Clemente Award. But I would love to see a biographics take on him
Best baseball movie ever. When I was a kid we played in a field near my house. If you hit a home run, you had to go get the ball but rather than a big dog, there was a mean ass goat on the other side that would run like crazy at us trying to headbutt us
The photo at 19:28, probably the most famous of Ruth, was that of his final appearance at Yankee Stadium, a tribute ceremony to him. It won a Pulitzer Prize.
An American Icon. An incredible video. As a life long baseball fan and native Marylander at a young age the Babe has always been a legend too everyone from Baltimore to the Bronx. But this video is a reminder that he was as human as you and me. Thank you for that reminder 🙏🏽
Don't go to where the puck is, go to where the puck will be. I think the most awesome Stat on Gretzky is: even if he had never scored a single goal, he would still be first for most points ever by a player. That's just absurd.
Thank you. This was done in a really classy way. I love Babe Ruth. I learned a lot from this short video on him. The final lines of the video were awesome and so true. He was just a fan and a ball player. Well said, and something that multiple documentaries and sportscasters have missed about the guy. Really, sports stars are just people that are playing boys games. It is the escapism, and the entertainment of the game that he helped bring to the game. Awesome channel! Keep up the great work!
2:40 - Chapter 1 - From the reformatory to the big leagues 4:55 - Chapter 2 - Pitcher to hitter, boston to new york 8:30 - Chapter 3 - Baseball renaissance 10:55 - Chapter 4 - Problem child , golden child 13:45 - Chapter 5 - The bellyache heard around the world 15:10 - Chapter 6 - The mountain top 17:25 - Chapter 7 - Strikeout 19:40 - Chapter 8 - Legacy
The story I heard was that The Babe was at St. Mary's and was heckling his own team's pitcher for pitching poorly. One of the brothers took the ball and said something like "OK, you wanna heckle him? Let's see YOU do better!" And he did.
Watching Simon "Brain Blaze Big Brain" Whistler torturously slog through 21 solid minutes of detailed baseball history and statistics is cracking me up. Allegedly.
I'm English and although not necessarily knowing his accomplishments he is talked about in American culture and on TV... I'd say 80% of people who grew up in the 80s/90s knows him
Babe was and still is an icon, his legend having greatly surpassed the era he defined, becoming one of the largest sports figures of not just the 20th century, but of all American history. His cultural impact still resonates today with many baseball players counting him among their influences, though he was been dead before many of them even were born.
@@dickhardpicard Man you are ignorant as heck. He dominate the sport when it was harder to hit you idiot plus he never took steroids like most players have done.
@@dickhardpicard why doesn't every team just field Blacks Hispanics and Asians then if they're so dominant? I say this as a Puerto Rican too. Clemente is closest to my heart as a player and a person, but Babe Ruth is the GOAT of baseball and the measuring stick for every player going forward.
Lou Gehrig would make for a great biographics video, especially if you dive into the later suggestions that he may not have have Lou Gehrig's disease (ALS) at all! Of course, more than likely he probably did have ALS, but it is interesting that there's some evidence that may suggest otherwise (something more along the lines of CTE (chronic traumatic encephelopathy), perhaps). Either way, his story is fairly incredible, and absolutely worth a biographics episode
My cat's name is Gehrig (his previous owner was from a family of baseball fans). I got really excited everytime Simon said his name, but the cat kept on sleeping :)
Simon, In case you didn't know, the saloon that Babe Ruth's father ran was located in roughly center field of Oriole Park at Camden Yards where the Orioles play (that area used to be an industrial area and the warehouse served the B&O Railroad station there. Nowadays, the warehouse houses Orioles team offices, as well as a restaurant and merchandise stores. And MARC commuter trains/Baltimore Light Rail still use Camden Station). And the St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys later became Cardinal Gibbons High School; and said school is now closed. But the field is still there .... named Babe Ruth Field at Cardinal Gibbons.
@@davidfrederick1971 Doubt it, otherwise there'd be a mention of it in the pinned comments; that the reply is to a telegram account and not the channel here also indicates fakery.
@@dtice69 imagine if he actually played against blacks,Hispanics and Asians. His numbers wouldn't been that high. Weak competition and didn't play against the best. He deserves an ✳ more than Barry bonds
The banning of pitchers applying substances to the baseball was actually changed prior to the 1920 season and that is when the offensive explosion begun. What did change after the death of Ray Chapman was the fact that a new ball should be used all the time. So there would be little or no dirt on it and the batter could see it much better. Thus making it much safer. Batting helmets did not come along until many years later. What I liked now is the batting helmets that have that protected piece that extends from the helmet and protects the jaw .
I still remember the 1992 movie starring John Goodman. It wasn't great, but I think Goodman did well with what he had, and I really liked that ending shot.
It would be really cool to see you cover some classical musicians like J.S Bach, Vivaldi, Tchaikovsky and Beethoven. Or maybe even some chess players, like Bobby Fischer. Some palaeontologists like Mary Anning, Georges Cuvier, Richard Owen, Othniel C. Marsh and Edward D. Cope would also be pretty cool.
Yeah, Brother Matthias Boutlier was his primary mentor in baseball, and something of a father figure to him. That being said, the limitations placed on the boys may have had a hand in Ruth becoming such a reckless hedonist later on.
Future Video suggestion - Eamon DeValera (1882-1975) - prominent political leader in 20th century Ireland who, after the Irish war of independence from 1919 to 1921, was in the public eye for over forty years from 1922 until his death were he served as head of government (Taoiseach) and head of state (president). He was nearly executed in the Easter Rising in 1916 and was key in putting into place the new constitution on 1937. A very prominent figure in Irish history.
The Babe and I share some coincidental connections. Babe Ruth hit his 714th home run on May 25th; my birthday is May 25th. The Babe's 714th home run was hit off of pitcher Guy Bush; my first name is also Guy. The Babe ended his career with the Boston Braves, who played at Braves Field. Today the site is home to Nickerson Field on the campus of Boston University. My dorm room at Boston University overlooked the former Braves Field. Finally, the last three digits of my ZIP Code are 714 - the number of home runs that The Babe hit. Eternal Memory, Babe Ruth!
During the Babe's career they didn't count walk-off home runs like they do today. If a player hit one out with runners on base who scored the winning run, the homer was scored simply as a base hit. There are no accurate records from that era of walk-off homers by the Babe, but baseball historians estimate that he likely hit about 50-60 in his career. If counted, that would take his total up to the 750's-760's or so. Absolutely amazing considering they didn't have all the health and fitness training back in those days. Also, the season was 154 games back then, so he probably would've hit 3-5 more homers per season.
My great uncle, Earle Combs played with Ruth on the Yankees. Supposedly, he was the sole person who could keep Ruth from getting too out of control when they went out together. Ruth once said of him "Combs was more than a good ballplayer; he was always a first-class gentleman." I doubt the whistleboy would ever do a biographics on Earle Combs, but I would be willing to pay for it.
I remember as a kid, had a teacher that was a huge red sox fan and always talked about the curse of the great bambino. Heard all the theories on how it was some special number thing etc when they finally won again in the 2000s And of course the sandlot movie etc
In HS we tried playing with an ball like they used in the pre20s era. Once it gets hit it is no longer a round. So it would take football hops off the infield. It absorbed contact. The pitcher would have to reform it into a ball before throwing it. Super fun to play cause it was unpredictable with lots of running after crazy balls. But watching it would have been a slog.
Great video as always! But two interesting tidbits for ya…1.) Ruth hit more homers in a season than ANY team in the league multiple times and 2.) shortly before his death I believe he was the first American to receive a voice box, albeit a rather primitive one
Did you say Baltimore Oracles? That woud be an interesting team name, but better for one in, say, Delphi Indiana. The team in Baltimore at the time was - and still is - called the Baltimore Orioles, as in the name of an actual type of bird native to eastern North America.
Compared to the modern Dominican players, Babe Ruth would have never made the big leagues. Baseball was fun back then, but modern players could destroy those guys from hither and yon.
In 7th grade i took a sports history class, from the research we had to do on a project about the Sultan the pointing to the crowd really happened, but he was actually pointing as a wave to a woman in that part of the stands that he was flirting with before the game, although even that was contested by experts on Babe at the time we did the project. It was a weird class because it was full of the people that would bully me, but they were actually kind in that class.
Great episode. So many stories and legends that you couldn't cover them all. I love the story about little johnny in the hospital and how Ruth exclaimed "60! Let's see some other son of a bitch match that!"
Could you do Simo Häyhä the worlds best sniper(Im not 100% sure but definately one of the best). Really Would like to hear a biographics about him.😊 his story is legendary
It should be remembered that the Red Sox didn't just sell Babe to the Yankees; they traded them half their starting lineup from that last WS team. That's what really drove the team into a hole.
Go to nordvpn.com/bio to get a 2-year plan plus 4 months for free with a huge discount!
can you do one on Marcus Garvey...?!
@@donrebel1340 iiio0ii88
Please do Booker T. Washington next
My grandfather, a knuckleballer on a farm team in the 20s, pitched one inning of an exhibition game against Babe Ruth. He held him to a single. It was grandpa's best story, and his finest hour. It's bright and clear in my mind tonight. Thank you Simon. What wonderful memories you have brought me today.
Great story mate, made me smile reading it.
Make sure you text Simon on his reply, claim your prize 😉
That's an awesome story!
Great story... please don't let the scam bot trick you
Cool story, but I can't help but get mad at folks in the past (on account they were very racist, homophobic, conservative etc.)
What does "held to a single" mean?
He not only defines baseball, he defines an entire era in US History. Pretty impressive to think about dominant he was in the culture.
This video was well done.
He also inspired a movement of ppl like Coach K 🙏 anointed as a human ambassador thru the vehicle of baseball
@KMVS8686 babe Ruth was acquittal of murder charges just joking
This coulda been an hour, but dude talks quick and put out all the info so eloquently…what an icon.
There have been other RUclipsrs that talked like this and stopped apparently the number of people who can’t keep up, won out. Casual Geographics, I’m talking to you
I also noticed how quickly he started to speak on most of his videos now. I realize he has a bunch of other scripts to read and also I could slow down the video but that really isn't the point.
At 21:55 Ruth is shown wearing a NY Giants uniform and with the Giants manager ( and fellow baseball icon John McGraw ) . Ruth never played for the " Jints " but shared the Polo Grounds with them.This was from a charity game.Ruth was so popular because he almost ALWAYS played for free in charity games and especially those that benefited kids.Babe always has time for kids.Especially poor kids.He used to be one of them.
the even had a Babe Ruth day at yankee stadium
His role in The Sandlot although fictional made me become a big baseball fan. I was always curious about his story. Thanks Biographics👍
"Oh! I thought you said, 'The great Bambi.' "
Remember, there's heroes and there's legends. Heroes get remembered.... but legends NEVER die. Follow your heart kid, and you'll never go wrong.
Would you guys review and make a video about Roberto Clemente next? One of the most slept on and forgotten greats of baseball! A humanitarian and much more.
I grew up idolizing Clemente and today one of only two baseball cards I own is one of his.
Yes!! Roberto Clemente needs his own video!
Clemente is definitely not slept on or forgotten lol. Every year one of the biggest events is Roberto Clemente day and the Roberto Clemente Award. But I would love to see a biographics take on him
What do You mean forgotten?
Clemente has never been forgotten
“Heroes get remembered but legends never die.”
-- Babe Ruth, The Sandlot(1993)
Love that movie
My own quote: *While some people are entering the legend, other are making history*
Best baseball movie ever. When I was a kid we played in a field near my house. If you hit a home run, you had to go get the ball but rather than a big dog, there was a mean ass goat on the other side that would run like crazy at us trying to headbutt us
“Never let the fear of striking out get in your way”
Babe Ruth
That's a baseball terminology but can also be applied as a life lesson.
The photo at 19:28, probably the most famous of Ruth, was that of his final appearance at Yankee Stadium, a tribute ceremony to him. It won a Pulitzer Prize.
Loved the respectful way you presented the Babe! Thank you from a life long baseball fan!
"Babe" Ruth will always be the greatest baseball player of all time!!!! 😊
An American Icon. An incredible video. As a life long baseball fan and native Marylander at a young age the Babe has always been a legend too everyone from Baltimore to the Bronx. But this video is a reminder that he was as human as you and me. Thank you for that reminder 🙏🏽
Brings back memories of what baseball was like for me back in the 60's.
I think there definitely needs to be a biographics done about the great one, Wayne Gretzky!! :)
You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.
Absolutely agree! I really like the way Simon lays out the life of his subject - good, bad, ugly and humourous. A Gretzky bio would be awesome!
Don't go to where the puck is, go to where the puck will be. I think the most awesome Stat on Gretzky is: even if he had never scored a single goal, he would still be first for most points ever by a player. That's just absurd.
Thank you. This was done in a really classy way. I love Babe Ruth. I learned a lot from this short video on him. The final lines of the video were awesome and so true. He was just a fan and a ball player. Well said, and something that multiple documentaries and sportscasters have missed about the guy. Really, sports stars are just people that are playing boys games. It is the escapism, and the entertainment of the game that he helped bring to the game. Awesome channel! Keep up the great work!
Thank you Simon and team!
2:40 - Chapter 1 - From the reformatory to the big leagues
4:55 - Chapter 2 - Pitcher to hitter, boston to new york
8:30 - Chapter 3 - Baseball renaissance
10:55 - Chapter 4 - Problem child , golden child
13:45 - Chapter 5 - The bellyache heard around the world
15:10 - Chapter 6 - The mountain top
17:25 - Chapter 7 - Strikeout
19:40 - Chapter 8 - Legacy
I'm a Bostonian and you can't even imagine what it was like to be a Red Sox fan in 2004. I can't even describe it.
Like being an Eagles fan in 2018.
Same cubs fan in 2016 knowing people have lived and died without seeing them win
The movie Fever Pitch was made around that season. It's a cute movie.
I find listening to this British guy talking about baseball & Ruth really adds entertainment to the information!
The story I heard was that The Babe was at St. Mary's and was heckling his own team's pitcher for pitching poorly. One of the brothers took the ball and said something like "OK, you wanna heckle him? Let's see YOU do better!"
And he did.
Heroes get remembered, but Legends never die.
Follow your heart kid, and you'll never go wrong.
Beautiful. Thank you for making this. Learned so much about a legend and also felt moved by his impact.
Thanks Simmon I really appreciated how you wrapped this episode with that closing comment
He signed with the Baltimore Orioles, not Oracles lol. Maybe I just misunderstood his "English" English
You didn’t. I even checked, just to make sure they weren’t called the Oracles for a year or two, back in the day, lol. They weren’t.
Agreed. It absolutely sounded like Oracles the first time….I figured it was a minor league predecessor. But the second time it was clearly Orioles.
Watching Simon "Brain Blaze Big Brain" Whistler torturously slog through 21 solid minutes of detailed baseball history and statistics is cracking me up. Allegedly.
He's a Brit, cut him some slack
It was great, he started the segment saying, “everyone knows who babe Ruth is”. And I would bet a thousand dollars he has never heard of him😊
Haha yeah I know. He got through it like a pro though
I'm English and although not necessarily knowing his accomplishments he is talked about in American culture and on TV... I'd say 80% of people who grew up in the 80s/90s knows him
He should take on a Hulk Hogan Biographics. We all know how much he likes that sport entertainment.
Babe was and still is an icon, his legend having greatly surpassed the era he defined, becoming one of the largest sports figures of not just the 20th century, but of all American history. His cultural impact still resonates today with many baseball players counting him among their influences, though he was been dead before many of them even were born.
What cultural influence? He ain't play against no black, Hispanic or Asian players. He played in an Era of weak competition
@@dickhardpicard Man you are ignorant as heck. He dominate the sport when it was harder to hit you idiot plus he never took steroids like most players have done.
@@dickhardpicard The dude absolutely had an influence on the culture of the time. And his legend still stands.
This is one of the best videos I’ve seen on any of the Simon Whistler Network.
It's difficult to overstate how famous Babe Ruth was during his time, or how good he was at baseball.
He played against weak competition. No blacks,Hispanics or Asians
@@dickhardpicard LOL. Sure.
@@dickhardpicard why doesn't every team just field Blacks Hispanics and Asians then if they're so dominant? I say this as a Puerto Rican too. Clemente is closest to my heart as a player and a person, but Babe Ruth is the GOAT of baseball and the measuring stick for every player going forward.
@@matrinezkevin11492 well most the top players are blacks who speak Spanish and Asian.
@@dickhardpicard most?
YOOOOOO, been waiting for this one. Biographics you awesome
Lou Gehrig would make for a great biographics video, especially if you dive into the later suggestions that he may not have have Lou Gehrig's disease (ALS) at all! Of course, more than likely he probably did have ALS, but it is interesting that there's some evidence that may suggest otherwise (something more along the lines of CTE (chronic traumatic encephelopathy), perhaps).
Either way, his story is fairly incredible, and absolutely worth a biographics episode
My cat's name is Gehrig (his previous owner was from a family of baseball fans). I got really excited everytime Simon said his name, but the cat kept on sleeping :)
21:00 that would have to be during his radiation treatment. Excellent conclusion and the audio guy knocked it out of the park.
All while drinking 12 beers, 15 hot dogs and absolutely no steroids!!!
Simon,
In case you didn't know, the saloon that Babe Ruth's father ran was located in roughly center field of Oriole Park at Camden Yards where the Orioles play (that area used to be an industrial area and the warehouse served the B&O Railroad station there. Nowadays, the warehouse houses Orioles team offices, as well as a restaurant and merchandise stores. And MARC commuter trains/Baltimore Light Rail still use Camden Station).
And the St. Mary's Industrial School for Boys later became Cardinal Gibbons High School; and said school is now closed. But the field is still there .... named Babe Ruth Field at Cardinal Gibbons.
Yup. St. Agnes Hospital bought the entire land but has kept the school (possibly for a future school for medicine) and field
Babe Ruth: I run the game of baseball
Jackie Robinson: *Hold my bat*
Dang right!
Bill Russell: A pioneer of the game and civil rights
Kobe Bryant: The Black Mamba
Larry Bird and Magic Johnson: When The League Was Ours
Actor John Goodman did an OUTSTANDING performance in the 1992 film "The Babe". No one else could have done it better
is that message below real?
@@davidfrederick1971 , of course it is
@@davidfrederick1971 Doubt it, otherwise there'd be a mention of it in the pinned comments; that the reply is to a telegram account and not the channel here also indicates fakery.
@@davidfrederick1971 No a scam. Report it.
@4:03 I didn't know that there was a Baltimore Oracles 😁
Well done video. Babe Ruth is an all time great baseball player.
No he is not. He never played against blacks, Hispanics or asians
@@dickhardpicard Still the GOAT regardless of who he played against.
@@dickhardpicard ok we get it.
@@dickhardpicard Imagine thinking that's an argument lmfao.
@@dtice69 imagine if he actually played against blacks,Hispanics and Asians. His numbers wouldn't been that high. Weak competition and didn't play against the best. He deserves an ✳ more than Barry bonds
This is your best sports episode
Love the video Simon! Just wanted to shout out an idea for Jackie Robinson. Keep up the great work
Good video, Simon.
Well done.
Well done 👏
Even when I think that the bio is not relevant to me, I remember that I have never once not been blown away and interested in the video.
The banning of pitchers applying substances to the baseball was actually changed prior to the 1920 season and that is when the offensive explosion begun.
What did change after the death of Ray Chapman was the fact that a new ball should be used all the time. So there would be little or no dirt on it and the batter could see it much better. Thus making it much safer.
Batting helmets did not come along until many years later.
What I liked now is the batting helmets that have that protected piece that extends from the helmet and protects the jaw .
"Even my mom, a grown-up girl, knew who the Babe was." -Scotty Smalls
I went to the Birthplace/Museum in Baltimore this summer. Wonderful exhibits and memorabilia!
You knocked this out the park!
I still remember the 1992 movie starring John Goodman. It wasn't great, but I think Goodman did well with what he had, and I really liked that ending shot.
It would be really cool to see you cover some classical musicians like J.S Bach, Vivaldi, Tchaikovsky and Beethoven. Or maybe even some chess players, like Bobby Fischer. Some palaeontologists like Mary Anning, Georges Cuvier, Richard Owen, Othniel C. Marsh and Edward D. Cope would also be pretty cool.
He already has a few but idk which ones he's done, ik Wagner he's done and it was reaaally cool 😎
Yes particularly musicians & composers... I am a music aficionado...
@Bernardo Lacerda I vote for Mary Anning!!! Thanks Bernardo!
I wonder if the explanations of pitchers/hitters was actually for Simon? He's not a fan of sports. Yet, as always, he delivers a great video.
New glasses. Rockin that Wayfarer style.
One record that will never be broken. Most pitching Wins by a player with at least 714 home runs.
Loved this episode. Huge baseball fan❤️
Being sent to that reform school was the best thing that I get happened to Babe.
However he never truly got himself under control.
Well Until he married Claire
Yeah, Brother Matthias Boutlier was his primary mentor in baseball, and something of a father figure to him. That being said, the limitations placed on the boys may have had a hand in Ruth becoming such a reckless hedonist later on.
i'm a cardinal fan myself but there are a few players who are legend no matter what team you like and babe ruth is at the top of that list
I love cricket. This is a brilliant episode about baseball. I love that game more because of it.
I appreciate the content learnt a lot of things historically from your platform 💪👈
Really love the recent athletes video, I would love to see Maurice Richard soon.
Perfectly timed release, all things considered.
Future Video suggestion -
Eamon DeValera (1882-1975) - prominent political leader in 20th century Ireland who, after the Irish war of independence from 1919 to 1921, was in the public eye for over forty years from 1922 until his death were he served as head of government (Taoiseach) and head of state (president). He was nearly executed in the Easter Rising in 1916 and was key in putting into place the new constitution on 1937. A very prominent figure in Irish history.
Good suggestion, I'd rather the big fella first though meself 😉
"Who is this Baby Ruth, and what does she do?"
- George Bernard Shaw
The Babe and I share some coincidental connections.
Babe Ruth hit his 714th home run on May 25th; my birthday is May 25th.
The Babe's 714th home run was hit off of pitcher Guy Bush; my first name is also Guy.
The Babe ended his career with the Boston Braves, who played at Braves Field. Today the site is home to Nickerson Field on the campus of Boston University. My dorm room at Boston University overlooked the former Braves Field.
Finally, the last three digits of my ZIP Code are 714 - the number of home runs that The Babe hit.
Eternal Memory, Babe Ruth!
Wonderful biography Simon
Nicely done.
the rocket richard of baseball;
He still holds the record for highest slugging percentage
Georgia Tann and her "adoption agency" would make an interesting video. She was a truly evil woman
Well done my man. Dang you can talk fast. The Babe was my idol as a kid. One of my grandpas saw him hit a homer in Chicago. Not the pointed one.
4:05 - The Baltimore Oracles????!!!!
We'll be talking about The Babe and comparing current players to him forever. That says a lot about the man and the myth.
Babe Ruth was sold for $125,000 so Frazee could make "No No Nanette".
Ah yes the Baltimore Oracles! 😂
During the Babe's career they didn't count walk-off home runs like they do today. If a player hit one out with runners on base who scored the winning run, the homer was scored simply as a base hit. There are no accurate records from that era of walk-off homers by the Babe, but baseball historians estimate that he likely hit about 50-60 in his career. If counted, that would take his total up to the 750's-760's or so. Absolutely amazing considering they didn't have all the health and fitness training back in those days. Also, the season was 154 games back then, so he probably would've hit 3-5 more homers per season.
My great uncle, Earle Combs played with Ruth on the Yankees. Supposedly, he was the sole person who could keep Ruth from getting too out of control when they went out together. Ruth once said of him "Combs was more than a good ballplayer; he was always a first-class gentleman." I doubt the whistleboy would ever do a biographics on Earle Combs, but I would be willing to pay for it.
the Kentucky Colonel. Nice player in his own right.
🔥
I remember as a kid, had a teacher that was a huge red sox fan and always talked about the curse of the great bambino.
Heard all the theories on how it was some special number thing etc when they finally won again in the 2000s
And of course the sandlot movie etc
1:43 what about Pele, Ronaldo, Messi or Maradona?
In HS we tried playing with an ball like they used in the pre20s era. Once it gets hit it is no longer a round. So it would take football hops off the infield. It absorbed contact. The pitcher would have to reform it into a ball before throwing it. Super fun to play cause it was unpredictable with lots of running after crazy balls. But watching it would have been a slog.
13:37 those sweaters were so sick
Great video as always! But two interesting tidbits for ya…1.) Ruth hit more homers in a season than ANY team in the league multiple times and 2.) shortly before his death I believe he was the first American to receive a voice box, albeit a rather primitive one
Biggest mistake in sports history: The Red Sox giving up Ruth to the Yankees. 🤣🤣
We still regret it to this day.
Baltimore Oracles. It is sooooooo cool listing to a Brit teach Americans about baseball.
One my favorites ya done yet Simon. ⚾️🦾😎🤘🏻
Thank you.
8:57 ooh yeah do one on joe Jackson
Did you say Baltimore Oracles? That woud be an interesting team name, but better for one in, say, Delphi Indiana. The team in Baltimore at the time was - and still is - called the Baltimore Orioles, as in the name of an actual type of bird native to eastern North America.
I was looking specifically to see if someone pointed that out.
Never watched baseball a day in life but babe is a very interesting person!
My grandfather is Mike Boddicker and played for some of those teams !!😃
an iconic figure in American popular culture ..
Compared to the modern Dominican players, Babe Ruth would have never made the big leagues. Baseball was fun back then, but modern players could destroy those guys from hither and yon.
In 7th grade i took a sports history class, from the research we had to do on a project about the Sultan the pointing to the crowd really happened, but he was actually pointing as a wave to a woman in that part of the stands that he was flirting with before the game, although even that was contested by experts on Babe at the time we did the project. It was a weird class because it was full of the people that would bully me, but they were actually kind in that class.
Simon, at 4:03 you mistakenly say The Baltimore Oricles. That is incorrect, it is The Baltimore Orioles.
Perfect timing
Babe Ruth was the Bradman of Baseball
Bradman was the Dave Brown of Cricket.They,of course,played next to each other at the SCG.
Any chance of doing a video on Kenesaw Mountain Landis?
Great episode. So many stories and legends that you couldn't cover them all. I love the story about little johnny in the hospital and how Ruth exclaimed "60! Let's see some other son of a bitch match that!"
Could you do Simo Häyhä the worlds best sniper(Im not 100% sure but definately one of the best). Really Would like to hear a biographics about him.😊 his story is legendary
Rest in peace to those that passed away.
Me as a child: This team is really good. They might win the World Series!
My grandfather: They're not the 27 Yankees...
Haa , A Rounder's player .
I can’t wait for the “Tom Brady: Greatest of All Time” two part epic.
It should be remembered that the Red Sox didn't just sell Babe to the Yankees; they traded them half their starting lineup from that last WS team. That's what really drove the team into a hole.