You won't believe what Pete Rose had to say about Sandy Koufax and Don Sutton | THE HERD

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  • Опубликовано: 8 окт 2015
  • Pete Rose had some compelling things to say about Sandy Koufax, Don Sutton and more.
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    You won't believe what Pete Rose had to say about Sandy Koufax and Don Sutton | THE HERD
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @jacopman
    @jacopman 5 лет назад +208

    Willy Stargell said that hitting against Koufax was like trying to drink coffee with a fork.

    • @markwilliamson4414
      @markwilliamson4414 3 года назад +2

      @Jerry Cowley I thought it was "eat soup with a fork"

    • @MickeyThomas408
      @MickeyThomas408 3 года назад +13

      He also described facing Sandy as a “comfortable 0-4” 😂🤣

    • @michaelbarlow6610
      @michaelbarlow6610 Год назад +3

      Willie Mays described Sandy Koufax's curve ball as "a folding chair collapsing"!

    • @dennisbedard9850
      @dennisbedard9850 Год назад +1

      @Jerry Cowley I lived in Philly and followed the Phillies closely in that era. the quote was "like eating soup with a fork." He was describing Carlton's slider.

    • @georgevincent1834
      @georgevincent1834 Год назад

      @Jerry Cowley He said it about Seaver.

  • @finch45lear
    @finch45lear 7 лет назад +597

    I could listen to Pete Rose talk baseball all day and night.

    • @Luke-we7uf
      @Luke-we7uf 6 лет назад +6

      Jimmy King same

    • @2AForever-wi8yj
      @2AForever-wi8yj 6 лет назад +9

      go to vegas there is a memorabilia store in the connecting areas of mandalay and luxor he is always there

    • @WhisperingOaks118
      @WhisperingOaks118 6 лет назад +5

      I agree!

    • @theesweetscience2500
      @theesweetscience2500 6 лет назад +6

      True babeball man to the core. Write tons of books mr hustle.

    • @mrmike743
      @mrmike743 5 лет назад +7

      I hate it so bad that he's not coaching in some capacity. He should be a hitting coach. IDK about a head coach again,but definitely a hitting coach.

  • @aboxofbroken8tracks983
    @aboxofbroken8tracks983 8 лет назад +495

    Pete Rose is fun to listen to.

    • @Stewieboy1995
      @Stewieboy1995 7 лет назад +11

      ABoxOfBroken8Tracks happy and a good sense of humor. seems like a pretty nive guy

    • @GeeMann95
      @GeeMann95 6 лет назад +10

      Could listen to him all day

    • @clydeb7713
      @clydeb7713 3 года назад +6

      Yes, I heard a recent comment by him when he was asked who would win between the 1980 Phillies snd the 2009 Phillies? He said ez, the 2009 Phils! How come? Because most of us are close to 80yrs old now ! Lmao!

    • @Surfer041
      @Surfer041 3 года назад +2

      The hit king! Could listen to him all day!

    • @MrOrganicdude
      @MrOrganicdude 3 года назад

      Especially when he talks gambling 🎲🎰🔫

  • @rentslave
    @rentslave 6 лет назад +70

    When I met Pete at a car dealership in NJ in 2013,I brought up a 1963 game to him and he told me details about the game that I had forgotten.

    • @rickrick5041
      @rickrick5041 5 лет назад +1

      How does he do that and also he's old??

    • @TheJer1963
      @TheJer1963 3 года назад +1

      1963 was his rookie year, same year that I was born.

  • @moegerms
    @moegerms 8 лет назад +917

    I love how Pete knows these numbers like he knows his sons birthday.

    • @robertk2007
      @robertk2007 7 лет назад +69

      probably better, surprised if he knew his kids birthdays

    • @maxand.1462
      @maxand.1462 7 лет назад +59

      betting also involves numbers...

    • @PhantomofDB
      @PhantomofDB 7 лет назад +13

      His love for the game is unparalleled. Not talking about black Mark stuff just that it's obvious how much he loves the on-field sport of baseball

    • @WallyPost
      @WallyPost 7 лет назад +7

      Wally your claim was that he knew the consequences and accepted the ban. That's flat out wrong. He was told the consequences, he agreed to them, and then they were changed. The HOF changed their rules the year before he was eligible for the simple reason of keeping him out. And that's where the "moral police" question comes up. The only valid argument for changing your rules before he's eligible is from a morality standpoint but that's completely nixed when you have an admitted gambler who better...
      Reply
      ---
      Jonathan McCormick:
      Here is my reply. No, my claim is not "flat out wrong." Rose was a rookie in 1963. I saw him play then and until the end of his career. In EVERY clubhouse that Rose entered since 1963 was written the words "no betting on baseball games." He could read those words every day during the baseball season. Since the 1920s "Black Sox Scandal" MLB has instituted a "no betting on baseball policy" and the punishment for such activity is "lifetime ban" from MLB. THOSE are the consequences and Rose knew .... KNEW .... of those consequences. Rose accepted and agreed to his punishment which included a "lifetime ban."
      If you are talking "moral police" ... then the arrogance of Pete Rose to think he could flaunt those rules is "on" him. Don't make him out to be a victim and the HOF the "bad guy."
      The HOF Rules Committee can determine who it wants in the Hall of Fame as it is a separate entity from MLB. If the HOF doesn't want a person who has been placed on the "Ineligible List" (which is a consequence of betting on baseball games), then the HOF can make such a decision.
      This isn't a matter of the "moral police." This is a matter of the HOF making a decision regarding what it is able to do as a result of BEING the Hall of Fame. The "valid argument" is not "nixed" as morality DOES have it's place in our society, does it not?
      Or does someone's arrogance, selfish-ness, and inability to follow a moral code supercede that "morality" simply because that person happens to have more hits than anyone else in MLB and you happen to like that person?

    • @PhantomofDB
      @PhantomofDB 7 лет назад +3

      wally post it's absolutely a matter of moral police. As you said in your last sentence. But no the HOF does not have the right to play moral police with John McGraw enshrined. Look him up.

  • @TyTanium1294
    @TyTanium1294 10 месяцев назад +30

    I could listen to Pete all day! He’s the perfect example of having confidence but also being humble and giving credit when it’s due. He doesn’t hesitate to admit when a guy had his number. Love him!!!

    • @WilliamFlickinger-ex2sd
      @WilliamFlickinger-ex2sd 9 месяцев назад

      He lie to team mates the baseball commisnor everyone a know lier

    • @toddrunyon
      @toddrunyon 2 месяца назад

      @@WilliamFlickinger-ex2sd Your whining is irrelevant to this video.

  • @encinobalboa
    @encinobalboa 5 лет назад +51

    The respect players give Koufax says it all.

    • @victorblock3421
      @victorblock3421 17 дней назад +1

      There is no greater validation of this man's greatness.

  • @eddiemartinez8173
    @eddiemartinez8173 5 лет назад +160

    PETE ROSE should have his own talk show

    • @robertnunez5036
      @robertnunez5036 4 года назад +11

      No he needs to be in the H.O.F

    • @AverageLeagueHack
      @AverageLeagueHack 4 года назад +2

      @@robertnunez5036 It's sad but no, gambling compromises the integrity of competition.

    • @robertnunez5036
      @robertnunez5036 4 года назад +3

      @@AverageLeagueHack agree,but baseball i very dishonest,still think he should be pardoned,to forgive is divine,and its divine to forgive.jst saying president pardon people criminals all the time,this is only baseball,since when a game worth more the a human life,they dont evn hve the 3 strike law anymore,no pun intended.

    • @spirg
      @spirg 3 года назад +3

      I agree!!! He holds your attention, and there’s no wavering in his tone

    • @EnigmaticDecay
      @EnigmaticDecay 3 года назад +2

      @@robertnunez5036 Exactly. He has paid his dues and then some. What kind of world would this be if we never allowed people to live down the mistakes they've made?

  • @robertk2007
    @robertk2007 7 лет назад +383

    mickey mantle struck out on 3 straight pitches to koufax. he turned to the umpire and said "How the fuck I am supposed to hit that shit?"

    • @smokinjoe4684
      @smokinjoe4684 7 лет назад +3

      BAHAHA seriously?

    • @ernestleong476
      @ernestleong476 7 лет назад +22

      Mantle described Koufax's curveball as breaking like it fell off a table.

    • @richurro20
      @richurro20 7 лет назад +2

      Is there a book or something he said in?

    • @ErichLRuehs
      @ErichLRuehs 7 лет назад +10

      That's such a great baseball quote! Good work, Robert.

    • @anonymousinternetcowardmcq4967
      @anonymousinternetcowardmcq4967 7 лет назад +36

      robertk2007 the great Willie Stargell said "trying to hit Koufax is like trying to drink coffee with a fork"

  • @mrt1626
    @mrt1626 6 лет назад +235

    Yogi Berra, who played in the most World Series games with 75, was quoted after Koufax and the Dodgers beat the Yankees in Game #1 of the 1963 World Series.
    Berra said "I can see how he (Koufax) won 25 games. What I can't understand is how he lost 5."

    • @jacopman
      @jacopman 5 лет назад +35

      Willie Stargell said hitting off Koufax was like trying to drink coffee with a fork.

    • @williambrodala8144
      @williambrodala8144 4 года назад +15

      Koufax was undoubtedly one of the greatest pitchers ever. I was glad to see him pitch, there will never be another like him, Gibson and seaver and Ford are up there as well butm behind koufax

    • @username-zj9id
      @username-zj9id 3 года назад +22

      The response, from one of Sandy's teammates (can't remember which) was, "He didn't. We lost them for him".

    • @mikeforte7585
      @mikeforte7585 3 года назад +8

      @@username-zj9id that was Maury Wills

    • @username-zj9id
      @username-zj9id 3 года назад +2

      @@mikeforte7585 thanks!

  • @PoliticusRex632
    @PoliticusRex632 6 лет назад +221

    I don't care what Pete did or didn't do. I can listen to him talk baseball all day long.

    • @thsu8
      @thsu8 2 года назад +1

      Fancy seeing you here, bro. Didn't know you were a baseball fan.

    • @PoliticusRex632
      @PoliticusRex632 2 года назад +3

      @@thsu8 70s baseball fan. Once I started playing basketball I dropped everything else. Love old school football too.

    • @elvicare35
      @elvicare35 2 года назад +1

      It SURE was exciting and TOTALLY unexpected when he played for Montreal!!!!!!!

    • @daleschroeder5582
      @daleschroeder5582 Год назад +1

      needs to be in cooper town

    • @uncasunga1800
      @uncasunga1800 Год назад

      @@thsu8 are you still scared of clowns

  • @tslomka6272
    @tslomka6272 3 года назад +11

    Met him in Vegas...as soon as I told him I was from Detroit, he started talking about Sparky Anderson and started rattling off stats about my own team that I might have known once. Talked about Trammell and how it was criminal he and Whitaker are not in the Hall. It was remarkable

  • @jacobhearns9724
    @jacobhearns9724 7 лет назад +119

    I could listen to Pete talk baseball all day long.

    • @asterisk911
      @asterisk911 6 лет назад +2

      Well, yeah; he can give betting tips.

    • @kenbrickman4412
      @kenbrickman4412 2 года назад

      @@asterisk911 Probably because he is the all time hit leader...so what if he gambled

  • @jerrybrownell3633
    @jerrybrownell3633 3 года назад +89

    In his first 7 years( 1955-1961) Koufax was 36-40 with an e.r.a. of 4.40. He had that fast ball but hitters would sit on it
    because Sandy couldn't find home plate with his curve. He even thought of quitting but I forget who got him to change
    his pitching motion. His last 5 years (1962-1966) was the greatest stretch of pitching excellence ever. He won 129
    games-losing 47. Had an e.r.a. of 2.23. Won 3 Cy Young Awards, pitched 4 no hitters( 1 a perfect game ) Won
    The Pitching Triple Crown-wins, earned run average and strikeouts- 3 times. Struck out over 300 batters in a season
    3 times. When he did learn to get his curve ball over the plate that devastating fast ball became virtually unhittable.
    Koufax only won 165 games which only averages out to 12 per year. and struck out less than 3000 batters but he
    is in the Hall of Fame for that 5 year stretch between 1962-1966. Pete Rose shouldn't feel bad. Koufax made a lot
    of hitters look silly.

    • @kenbrickman4412
      @kenbrickman4412 2 года назад +11

      Norm Sherry

    • @kenbrickman4412
      @kenbrickman4412 2 года назад +14

      And Norm Sherry didn't get him to change his pitching motion..just got him to not throw as hard as he could on every pitch

    • @texascoinhunter
      @texascoinhunter 2 года назад +22

      Koufax was at a bar one night during spring training when his catcher Norm Sherry had him go through his windup in the bar. Norm told him he couldn't see what he was throwing at based on his windup and follow through. Sherry told him to try and not throw so hard. Next day Koufax threw a 2 hit complete game shutout in spring training. The rest is history.

    • @kevinmichael9482
      @kevinmichael9482 Год назад +12

      This is true. When a hitter understands a pitcher has a nasty off-speed pitch in their arsenal, a fastball becomes deadly. Pedro Martinez is a modern era pitcher with a three-year run of excellence similar to the great Koufax, imo (during the height of "The Steroid Era", no less).

    • @ricoz2016
      @ricoz2016 Год назад +6

      @@kenbrickman4412 "Take your foot off the gas pedal."

  • @Pandabearmadness
    @Pandabearmadness 7 лет назад +61

    I love Pete's stories

  • @Lee_Forre
    @Lee_Forre 8 лет назад +341

    Hey Colin, is it necessary to sit 6 feet above the guest you're interviewing?

    • @LACraig621
      @LACraig621 8 лет назад +27

      And he calls him a liar.

    • @billsmith5985
      @billsmith5985 8 лет назад +24

      Not to mention Cowherd being 10 feet above him, like GOD.......ridiculous.

    • @JustSayMilo
      @JustSayMilo 7 лет назад +12

      HE'S SITTING UP THERE LIKE A JUDGE,LIKE THAT EPISODE OF THE TWILIGHT ZONE "THE OBSOLETE MAN".."YOU ARE OBSOLETE!"

    • @MrStones1966
      @MrStones1966 7 лет назад +6

      Your prescription is ready Mr Rose

    • @alan30189
      @alan30189 7 лет назад +7

      Probably more like 12 feet. 1:12 - WTF is up with that interview set-up? He sits high up on a podium like God, talking down at least four feet to his guest, who is also sitting 12 feet away. Incredible!

  • @bennyvega100
    @bennyvega100 8 лет назад +246

    Sandy's curveball really did break that fast. He's not exaggerating.

    • @claudiacotner1638
      @claudiacotner1638 7 лет назад +10

      Yes, 85 mile an hour curveball made it so dominating. I don't think anyone outside of Blyleven can compare with his curveball. Both usually finish one and two in every survey for curveballs....

    • @dniemi150
      @dniemi150 7 лет назад +4

      B.J. Funk saw him pitch and there really aren't words to describe him, also saw Mantle, McClain, all the greats from 60"s and Koufax was #2 (after Mantle)

    • @JustSayMilo
      @JustSayMilo 7 лет назад +4

      B.J. Funk DOC GOODEN AND BARRY ZITO HAD THE BEST CURVEBALLS I'VE EVER SEEN IN MY LIFETIME...BUT I'M ONLY 36

    • @thirdlantern
      @thirdlantern 7 лет назад +3

      Milo Tucker Bingo! 80's kid here, and Gooden's hook was no mere Uncle Charlie. It got the name "Lord Charles" for good reason.

    • @Shadow3XX
      @Shadow3XX 7 лет назад +7

      Milo Tucker correct Milo..im 43 Goodens curveball was filthy and im a Phiiles fan lol. wasted talent..loved Doc

  • @huskyjerk
    @huskyjerk 8 лет назад +178

    What an absolute dork Cowherd is as an interviewer. He refuses to allow the guy to give great insight by interrupting the guy time and time again. Here, Pete starts to give insight and Cowherd interrupts and asks a different question. Damnit, let Pete ramble on about Koufax or whoever and let us enjoy the stories he may have to give.

    • @dougdavis8986
      @dougdavis8986 7 лет назад +9

      huskyjerk I agree

    • @blackstonpoetrymusic8744
      @blackstonpoetrymusic8744 7 лет назад +6

      How can he be paid to do this? If I sucked at my job this bad I'd be fired.

    • @MrMakemyday3
      @MrMakemyday3 6 лет назад +7

      just another prettyboy that only knows what he reads about sports

    • @SoloMojo222
      @SoloMojo222 6 лет назад

      There are breaks in the show so he has a limited time to ask these questions.

    • @axelfoley608
      @axelfoley608 6 лет назад +2

      Joseph Ortiz, then you ask less questions and invite him to come on again. Even if he says, “no” to coming on again, at least you got something from him that no one else has heard.

  • @MrDeadsurfer
    @MrDeadsurfer 6 лет назад +33

    I was at Dodger stadium in 65 when Koufax broke the season strikeout record. He did it against...Pete Rose.

    • @robertnunez5036
      @robertnunez5036 4 года назад +5

      Vry good information.

    • @dustinkfc6633
      @dustinkfc6633 3 года назад

      Wow

    • @DMR4736
      @DMR4736 2 года назад

      That must have been exciting; I had been, at Shea stadium, in '70, when Tom Seaver struck out the last ten batters in a row to end the game against San Diego; moments like that in baseball, is what its all about

  • @bnegs521
    @bnegs521 8 лет назад +44

    Cowherd is so annoying. He does not even know how to ask questions. Just babble.

  • @Droogs
    @Droogs 2 года назад +55

    I started following MLB in 1969, when guys like Mays, Mantle, Clemente were past their primes. I've always said if I had the first pick in a MLB draft, and you could use only guys from 1969 on, I'd pick Pete Rose. He could play any position; he was a great hitter; and he would run through a brick wall to win games. The most passionate player I've ever watched.

    • @gregengel1616
      @gregengel1616 Год назад +5

      I think a lot of people will disagree that Roberto Clemente was passed his prime in 1969. In 1971, he was world series MVP. A year after that, he was tragically killed. I personally think he had a lot of good years ahead of him. But that's just my opinion.

    • @Droogs
      @Droogs Год назад +5

      @@gregengel1616 You're right, Greg. My mistake.

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yes and no, he was a singles hitter, if a good one. The modern era Ty Cobb and the white Rod Carew. Robert at 68.

    • @Droogs
      @Droogs 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@bobmalack481But because Pete could play any position well, he was much more valuable.
      Also, I would contend that Pete's attitude ... his intense desire and hustle ... had a greater impact on his teammates.
      Athletes love playing with winners. They thrive around passionate people. Pete made his teammates better.

    • @tommyrawlings3046
      @tommyrawlings3046 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah I love Pete he was fantastic
      But a guy very comparable to him, Paul Molitor was a better player!
      Stole a lot more bases had more power
      And was a better hitter.
      Molitor was vastly underrated! Joe DiMaggio said nobody reminded him more of himself as a hitter than Molitor!

  • @johnr8309
    @johnr8309 4 года назад +49

    Sandy Koufax at the top of his game was the best pitcher I ever saw. Great fastball, great curve, and just enough effective wildness that you didn't dig in.

    • @gkprivate433
      @gkprivate433 3 года назад +1

      yes. Kind of like Roger Clemens in a way. One never quite knew where the ball was going

    • @robertl.fallin7062
      @robertl.fallin7062 3 года назад +4

      Koufax pitched on two days rest in the final World Series game with the Minneapolis Twins. He could not get his curve ball over the plate, threw 90% fastballs and won the game on guts and a less than best fastball.

    • @americandreamer6092
      @americandreamer6092 Год назад +1

      @@gkprivate433 Without the roids

    • @philtheheaterguy951
      @philtheheaterguy951 10 месяцев назад +2

      Two absolute facts. 1: Pete Rose colors his hair himself. 2: Pete Rose will never get into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

    • @BST-lm4po
      @BST-lm4po 10 месяцев назад +1

      Koufax sucked until MLB expanded the strike zone after the 1961 season. Then all-of-a-sudden Koufax could throw strikes! After Koufax retired, MLB shrunk the strike zone back down!

  • @sananto6896
    @sananto6896 6 лет назад +6

    Pete says he got lot of hits off Warren Spahn, and the dumb interviewer questions whether Pete played against Spahn. Totally ridiculous.

  • @sevelatula
    @sevelatula 3 года назад +68

    Met Rose once. Great honor. Love his knowledge and memory of baseball, especially his own great career. He should have been in the Hall Of Fame years ago.

    • @kennetheginton1182
      @kennetheginton1182 Год назад +2

      He was a cheater!!!!!!!!

    • @misterb604
      @misterb604 Год назад

      Pete knew the rules. They're in every major league clubhouse. He placed bets anyway. Poor Peter Edward, his nose forever pressed against the glass.

    • @sevelatula
      @sevelatula Год назад +3

      He did his time. His numbers speak for themselves.

    • @jimii2294
      @jimii2294 Год назад +3

      @@kennetheginton1182 cheater?... because he bet on the game. Give me a break - what did he ever, ever do on the field that would constitute cheating? He would run through a brick wall for his team. He would find a way to get a hit or get on base - hands down drive in the tying or winning run with 2 outs in the 9th. Sparky was desperate to light a fire under the Reds and get Foster in the line up in '75... so he goes to Rose and asks him to play 3rd base.. the hot corner - "sure coach"... 2nd, left, 1st, 3rd... he could play anything, would do anything for the Reds - thus one of the best teams ever in baseball... 1975, 76!

    • @kennetheginton1182
      @kennetheginton1182 Год назад

      @@jimii2294 Listen to what you're saying! Yes, he bet on the game and that destroys its integrity. It is written in every clubhouse in major and minor league baseball, if you bet you are gone forever! Baseball players gambling on baseball is 'the' mortal sin!!!!

  • @roccowalsh7271
    @roccowalsh7271 5 лет назад +12

    Pete's baseball stories are top notch. I had no idea Koufax had a season with 382 ks...that is incredible.

    • @toddrunyon
      @toddrunyon 2 месяца назад

      For the last four years of his career, Koufax may have been the best pitcher EVER in MLB.

  • @thomasbroking7943
    @thomasbroking7943 5 лет назад +22

    Here's a guy that can tell you what he batted against who 50 years later and we're going to miss it because it was easier to catch Pete than the guys who took the bets. Thanks I could watch Pete for hours.

  • @budbrown607
    @budbrown607 4 года назад +14

    I saw him in Dodger Stadium in 1964 two days after getting out of the Marine Corps, he was the best baseball player I’d ever seen!!!!!

  • @beatlejim64
    @beatlejim64 8 лет назад +49

    Love Koufax. Between 1961 and 1966 he was AMAZING!!!

    • @bennyvega100
      @bennyvega100 8 лет назад +8

      Not just amazing but purely dominating.

    • @taxitalknyc7600
      @taxitalknyc7600 7 лет назад +3

      Lights out. Epic.

    • @beatlejim64
      @beatlejim64 7 лет назад +3

      That was Don Larson of the Yankees in 1956. That was a perfect game. Koufax had 4 no hitters.... and a perfect game in 1965.

    • @coreyzimmerman9782
      @coreyzimmerman9782 5 лет назад

      He held out for $125,000 his final season!

    • @yrh1gs
      @yrh1gs 4 года назад +1

      @@coreyzimmerman9782 Yes he and Drysdale held out. Good for them. Wilt Chamberlain made $100k. Bill Russell asked for $101k just to be one up and compete with Wilt.

  • @johnr8309
    @johnr8309 5 лет назад +46

    I'm an old man and Sandy Koufax was the best pitcher in his prime that I ever saw. Mid-90's fastball, a curve like Rose described, and just enough wildness that no hitter ever dug in.

    • @elvicare35
      @elvicare35 2 года назад +3

      I saw Nolan Ryan pitch live in a day game in and against Seattle in 1991, he blew Griffey Jr away twice, and his other at-bat was a weak pop up at the plate, it was like watching, or it had the FEELING of what a no-hitter game would be like, oh, he was 43, and when he SO cooly walked around and about the mound area, it was like he was John Wayne kind of, what a swagger!!!!!!!

    • @thebookdoc.writing.and.editing
      @thebookdoc.writing.and.editing 2 года назад

      Do you think Koufax was wild? or was hejust keeping batterson their toes?

    • @charleshall7355
      @charleshall7355 2 года назад

      The stats answer that. For the first half of his career, yes. But then something changed. His walks dropped from 96 in 1961 to 57 in 1962. And he didn't throw high and inside the way Gibson and Drysdale did.

    • @-sensibleChris
      @-sensibleChris 2 года назад

      My dad said the same about Koufax. He saw him and Drysdale in person several times.

    • @DMR4736
      @DMR4736 2 года назад

      @@-sensibleChris Koufax/ Drysdale was the number one in the game; i'd say Schilling/ Randy Johnson a close second

  • @louaceace3467
    @louaceace3467 8 лет назад +48

    The Herd said Pete Rose didn't face Warren Spahn. Spahn retired in 1965 Rose Debut was in !963. You gotta tighten up Herd he did play with Warren Spahn Herd Sorry to tell ya.

    • @willdrucker4291
      @willdrucker4291 4 года назад +5

      Yah...but sadly, Spahn was in his early FORTIES when Pete hit against him....Spahn in his twenties is a whole other thing...

    • @mikeforte7585
      @mikeforte7585 4 года назад +6

      Warren Spahn was 23-7 as a 42 year old in 1963....but he was overshadowed by Sandy Koufax...who was lights out at 25-5 with a no hitter over the giants...

    • @emergencyexitonly5951
      @emergencyexitonly5951 3 года назад +3

      @@mikeforte7585 also won his last cy young in 61' and he was almost 41y.o

    • @KTF0
      @KTF0 3 года назад

      Warren Spahn won 363 games, he had a late start because of military service. He was good from age 26 til his 40s. Good young and old.

  • @dantheman5907
    @dantheman5907 7 лет назад +63

    Pete Rose for the hall!!

    • @cpmenninga
      @cpmenninga 5 лет назад +1

      It was terrible he didn’t admit to his gambling problems when it could have helped him.

  • @chrisj197438
    @chrisj197438 5 лет назад +9

    The thing about Rose is that the way he is talking in this interview is the way he would talk about baseball to anyone. I got to know him for a few months at Marion. He didn’t think he was better than anyone there at least that’s how I took him. The few times he talked about baseball and told stories you could see in his eyes the love he had for it. When they banned him I’m sure it took away part of his soul. I’m glad he has moved on with his life and shows the determination he has within himself that made him the great player he was. I’m going to Vegas in May and I hope I get the opportunity to see him again and chat for a few.

  • @frankpalancio8471
    @frankpalancio8471 3 года назад +5

    I could listen to Pete's stories all day.

  • @josephjakubec3171
    @josephjakubec3171 3 года назад +13

    What a great ball player who absolutely loved the game. Saw all of his career and NOBODY played all out like he did.

  • @dombrunelli5082
    @dombrunelli5082 4 года назад +14

    I've been a baseball fan since 1955..Koufax is the greatest pitcher I've ever seen. You can argue about second best.

    • @shihyuchu6753
      @shihyuchu6753 2 года назад +2

      This Giants fan agrees

    • @victorblock3421
      @victorblock3421 17 дней назад

      Koufax stands head and shoulders above #2, Tom Seaver.

  • @willdrucker4291
    @willdrucker4291 8 лет назад +75

    just think how great Koufax would have been had he not developed arthritis in that elbow at age 30 which forced his early retirement....he'd have ALL the records period

    • @bnegs521
      @bnegs521 8 лет назад +2

      +Will Drucker He also pitched off the higher mound.

    • @Mryrhodesian
      @Mryrhodesian 8 лет назад +13

      He also usually was given only a run or two to work with.

    • @ryan49er1
      @ryan49er1 8 лет назад +4

      He also pitched every four games with some going the full game.

    • @Mryrhodesian
      @Mryrhodesian 8 лет назад +7

      54 complete games I think in 2 years.

    • @bnegs521
      @bnegs521 8 лет назад +2

      Higher mound made it easier to do. Must be noted.

  • @jpcfit
    @jpcfit 7 лет назад +26

    As a Twins' fan during the 60s and 70s, the 1965 World Series is a special memory. Game 7; most fans had an ominous feeling when Alston revealed Koufax as the starting pitcher. Not much of a curve that day, but he really didn't need it. That fastball was nearly unhittable. Killebrew got a single in the ninth inning, and with the score 2-0, a buzz went through the Met Stadium crowd as we had some power coming up...poor guys didn't stand a chance against Koufax.

    • @dancooper5714
      @dancooper5714 6 лет назад +4

      heres a great trivia q: who hit the most homeruns in the 1960s? (Hint: you just named him)

    • @calguy3838
      @calguy3838 10 месяцев назад

      @@dancooper5714 "who hit the most homeruns in the 1960s? (Hint: you just named him)"
      Koufax?...No, that doesn't make sense. Must be Walt Alston. 😉

    • @dandyer2616
      @dandyer2616 7 месяцев назад +2

      I had the opportunity to speak with Harmon Killebrew (a great thrill). He said that game 7 was the best pitched game he had ever seen.

    • @jpcfit
      @jpcfit 7 месяцев назад

      @@dancooper5714 Harmon Killebrew...394?

  • @thejrodshow7679
    @thejrodshow7679 4 года назад +8

    Pete is such a sharp guy and absolutely hilarious I could listen to him talk baseball anytime.

  • @saludanite
    @saludanite Год назад +1

    Wonderful, joyous, happy moments with the Sweet Rose!

  • @clydeb7713
    @clydeb7713 5 лет назад +6

    You gotta love Pete being Pete. I think he should go to the hall of fame. He never bet against his team and nobody played the game with more passion. He served his time, before he leaves us make it happen.

    • @cpmenninga
      @cpmenninga 5 лет назад

      Yes. They should allow betting on games by players, managers and coaches.

  • @leafyutube
    @leafyutube 6 лет назад +12

    I could listen to Pete Rose all day.

  • @flyerscum
    @flyerscum 7 лет назад +31

    IDGAF what the baseball writers and 'experts' say or think. This man belongs in the HOF

    • @justafanintexas7913
      @justafanintexas7913 5 лет назад +2

      Relax, they'll let him in - after he dies, so he can't see or enjoy it. That's his punishment, and I think he knows it, too.

    • @garyfortenberry5829
      @garyfortenberry5829 3 года назад +1

      Writers shouldn’t get to vote on HoF ballots.

  • @Daisyno2
    @Daisyno2 6 лет назад +11

    Cowpie, spahn retired in 1965, rose started in 1963

  • @shrapnel77
    @shrapnel77 8 лет назад +88

    Colin - insecure much? How high could your desk get?

  • @sealife12
    @sealife12 3 года назад +5

    I love his memory. Met him a few years ago and after detailing what state I was from (rather small middle America) he proceeded to quiz me on every player born in my state.

    • @frankmelkert9503
      @frankmelkert9503 3 года назад

      Rose is amazing. Little kid growing up in Cincinnati and actually playing for them. He is all baseball and still like him. Just wished he would have signed that agreement

  • @bfee20021
    @bfee20021 7 лет назад +10

    Let Pete talk! Less of you and more of the guests!

  • @thomas8794
    @thomas8794 Год назад +1

    been down the rabbit hole of just listening to pete rose talk about baseball. incredible.

  • @ghytgb
    @ghytgb 6 лет назад +4

    He’s proud of his numbers and he should be. He was great and he’s not gonna let you forget that.

  • @marklandreth2197
    @marklandreth2197 2 года назад +9

    I saw Pete play several times in the 70's, including his 44th consecutive hit game down in Atlanta. I saw him steal three bases in one inning while playing for the Phillies (ironically, that game was in Cincinnati). Nobody ever hustled like Pete - every inning of ever game.

  • @buffalopatriot
    @buffalopatriot 5 лет назад +7

    I watched Sandy Koufax pitch as a kid. He was absolutely amazing. All of those pitchers he mentioned were. Interesting to ponder but they all had high kicks in their windups. Including Don Drysdale.

  • @eiland369
    @eiland369 6 лет назад +4

    Love Pete’s interviews, he gives it to you full blast.

  • @paul_devos
    @paul_devos 10 месяцев назад +1

    Man, I looked up all these stats. Pete Rose knows them stat!! Wow!
    What an incredibly intelligent nuanced interview. This guy needs to be interviewed a lot more. This is amazing.

  • @butchkerley
    @butchkerley 2 года назад +11

    Sandy Koufax was my favorite player of all - time . Great pitcher and a real gentleman to boot . From 61 through 66 seasons I doubt there's ever been a more dominant span by a pitcher , In 1962 and 1964 he had his seasons shortened because of arthritic flareups . In 1962 at all-star break he was 14-4 with over 200 strikeouts and 1964 he was 19-6 in August and missed the rest of both seasons . In 1963 he was 25-5 1965 26-8 and 1966 27-9 . In that span there was another pitcher nearly as good with similar stats . Juan Marichal IMO is the best Right Handed Pitcher of my lifetime . It's a shame he was always in Koufax's shadow . Both of those guys were incredible pitchers .

    • @josephvanhorn5347
      @josephvanhorn5347 2 года назад +1

      Without offering an opinion on whether these pitchers were better at their peaks I present to you 3 who have a solid claim to being such. They were all amazing. This might be your starting pitcher Mount Rushmore. If not, who are you taking out?
      Pedro Martinez (1997-2003)
      3 Cy Young Awards (2nd twice)
      Record 118-36 (17-5*)
      ERA 2.20
      ERA+ 213
      CG 34
      Innings 1408.0 (201.0*)
      Walks 315 (45*)
      Strikeouts 1761 (252*)
      FIP 2.26
      WHIP 0.940
      H/9 6.4
      HR/9 0.6
      BB/9 2.0
      K/9 11.3
      SO/W 5.59
      WAR 57.3 (8.2)
      Randy Johnson (1997-2002)
      4 Cy Young Awards (2nd in 1997)
      Record 120-42 (20-7*)
      ERA 2.58
      ERA+ 177
      CG 46
      Innings 1487.1 (248*)
      Walks 451 (75*)
      Strikeouts 2037 (340*)
      FIP 2.63
      WHIP 1.068
      H/9 6.9
      HR/9 0.9
      BB/9 2.7
      K/9 12.3
      SO/W 4.5
      WAR 51.8 (8.6)
      Greg Maddux (1992-1998)
      4 Cy Young Awards (2nd in 1997)
      Record 127-53 (18-7.5*)
      ERA 2.15
      ERA+ 190
      CG 56
      Innings 1675.1 (252*)
      Walks 269 (39*)
      Strikeouts 1286 (184*)
      FIP 2.59
      WHIP 0.968
      H/9 7.3
      HR/9 0.4
      BB/9 1.4
      K/9 6.9
      SO/W 4.78
      WAR 54.7 (7.8*)
      Sandy Koufax (1961-1966)
      3 Cy Young Awards
      Record 129-47 (21.5-8*)
      ERA 2.19
      ERA+ 156
      CG 115
      Innings 1632.2 (272*)
      Walks 412 (69*)
      Strikeouts 1713 (286*)
      FIP 2.16
      WHIP 0.970
      H/9 6.5
      HR/9 0.6
      BB/9 2.3
      K/9 9.4
      SO/W 4.16
      WAR 46.4 (7.7*)
      *Season average

    • @BST-lm4po
      @BST-lm4po 10 месяцев назад +1

      Koufax had his best seasons after MLB expanded the strike zone in the 1962 season. It was so ridiculous that MLB had to shrink it back down after the 1968 season!

    • @Crunkboy415
      @Crunkboy415 8 месяцев назад

      Not arthritis but a suspected stretched UCL that could have been fixed if Tommy John surgery existed at the time.

  • @NathanHermelin
    @NathanHermelin 8 лет назад +21

    love pete talk baseball. wish i could hang out with him all day

  • @zenodotusofathens2122
    @zenodotusofathens2122 6 лет назад +4

    This guy needs to be in the Hall of Fame already

  • @driverdad71
    @driverdad71 3 года назад +5

    When the subject is purely baseball, Pete Rose is the absolute best at talking about it. He can keep it simple for dopes like me, and get as intricate as anybody

  • @mosescordovero5959
    @mosescordovero5959 7 лет назад +21

    for this alone, Pete Rose so much deserves to be in the Baseball Hall of Fame. who the heck is that attached to baseball even while they are playing, let alone decades after they were forced to retire?

    • @misterb604
      @misterb604 Год назад

      Selling autographs anywhere they'll let him set up a table. Believe me, it's all he's got.

  • @mikepayne3154
    @mikepayne3154 3 года назад +8

    It was nice to see Pete again laughing and having fun. I miss Pete’s humor and hustle plays. He had star power, I still wear Aqua Velva after shave. Hope he’s still getting a cut.

  • @claudiacotner1638
    @claudiacotner1638 7 лет назад +28

    With all the talk about Clemens and Pedro being better than Koufax let us remember Koufax three two shutouts in 4 days in the 1965 series. He also clinched the pennant on two days rest for the Dodgers in 65 and 66 beating Milwaukee and Philly. Can anyone remember either Clemens or Pedro doing that? Not a chance.

    • @genebull3837
      @genebull3837 5 лет назад +3

      Koufax had better stuff than Clemens and Pedro dreamed of. Like Rose said, his curveballs broke quickly downward and was almost impossible to hit.

    • @stephengrahn9361
      @stephengrahn9361 4 года назад +4

      Plus the rocket was on the juice.

    • @johncirillo9544
      @johncirillo9544 Год назад

      Pedro pitched in an era with juiced baseballs, juiced batters, and he faced a lineup with a designated hitter. Martinez has supreme command of THREE pitches, compared to Koufax and Clemens having two pitches that they commanded. I watched the careers of all three of these great pitchers. Pedro is #1, Koufax and Clemens fall in behind him.

  • @cef8156
    @cef8156 5 лет назад +3

    I sat next to Pete on a flight from Philly to Ft. Lauderdale. Talked baseball, his fight with Bud Harrelson, etc. It was great. He signs his autograph - "Hit King, 4256". No ego there eh?

    • @TheAzmountaineer
      @TheAzmountaineer Год назад +1

      You know what they say - if it's true, it ain't bragging.

  • @davecassady7468
    @davecassady7468 3 года назад +3

    You never hear Pete say, "Let me think for a second..."

  • @rbbrown2106
    @rbbrown2106 8 лет назад +141

    I can understand Pete not being in MLB. But, he deserves to be in the Hall of Fame.

    • @WallyPost
      @WallyPost 8 лет назад +8

      Rose bet on baseball games. He violated the "no betting on baseball" rule which carries with it Lifetime suspension from MLB. To be on the Eligible List for the HOF, one needs to be on the Eligible List. Rose knew the consequences of betting on baseball and STILL bet on games ... lied about it ... and came clean when attempting to sell a book. He bet on baseball games while an employee of MLB. Recent information points to Rose betting as a player as well.
      Would you go to a baseball game knowing the game was fixed? Where does the betting stop ... with the umpires betting ... with managers betting ... players betting ... front office personnel betting? People do not seem to understand the ramifications of Rose betting on baseball games.
      MLB has a lot of money at stake. For games to questioned in terms of being "on the level" would cause MLB to make certain personnel do not bet on games.
      Rose in the MLB Hall of Fame? No.

    • @Andy-hb3zp
      @Andy-hb3zp 8 лет назад +6

      +wally post No Bonds, Clemens, McGwire, Sosa, Palmiero, Rodriguez, or Canseco either.

    • @WallyPost
      @WallyPost 8 лет назад +3

      Those names you mentioned have different issues than Rose. Rose' betting on baseball games violated a specific rule that was "in place" at the time of his betting. Comparing betting on baseball to PED use is comparing apples to oranges. They are two separate and exclusive issues.
      For the names you listed, in using PEDs, as unseemly as using PEDs might be to the baseball fan, didn't violate any known rule of baseball at the time of their "alleged" use. For example: McGwire confessed to taking androstenedione. At the time, however, use of that substance was not prohibited by Major League Baseball and, in addition, it was not federally classified as an anabolic steroid in the United States until 2004.
      Therefore, his "future" as a HOFamer is to be decided by sportswriters and the HOF itself.

    • @rbbrown2106
      @rbbrown2106 8 лет назад +4

      The rule regarding being on the eligible list came after Rose was handed the lifetime suspension. That's like driving 70 miles an hour on an interstate and the speed limit sign is changed to 65 after you pass it. MLB also said Pete would be able to apply for reinstatement after 1 year and that they would issue no finding that he bet on baseball. Of course the commissioner promptly went to a press conference and said that Pete bet on baseball. MLB hasn't been exactly above board in this matter.

    • @WallyPost
      @WallyPost 8 лет назад +1

      Rule 21 d) BETTING ON BALL GAMES. Any player, umpire, or club official or
      employee, who shall bet any sum whatsoever upon any baseball game in
      connection with which the bettor has no duty to perform shall be declared
      ineligible for one year.
      Any player, umpire, or club or league official or employee, who shall
      bet any sum whatsoever upon any baseball game in connection with which
      the bettor has a duty to perform shall be declared permanently ineligible.
      -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Rose bet on baseball games. He was placed on the MLB "Ineligble List." If the HOF chooses to keep from induction any player on the "Ineligible List" that is their prerogative. Rose could apply for reinstatement after one year. That does not mean his application would have been approved even at the time he made the "deal" in AGREEING to the lifetime ban.
      Don't make this issue into one where Rose is the victim. He bet on baseball games. He lied about it. Then, to sell a book, he admitted it. Further evidence indicates that Rose bet as a player. Because he has more hits than any MLB player does not absolve him from the violation he knowingly committed. If Giamatti openly stated that Rose could apply for reinstatement after one year and that MLB would "issue no finding that he bet on baseball" ... which is what Rose agreed to in his "deal" ... then, why did he agree to the deal in the first place ... KNOWING that he DID bet on baseball games? This is all on Rose ... not MLB ... not Giamatti ... not the HOF.
      -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      "The banishment for life of Pete Rose from baseball is the sad end of a sorry episode. One of the game's greatest players has engaged in a variety of acts which have stained the game, and he must now live with the consequences of those acts. By choosing not to come to a hearing before me, and by choosing not to proffer any testimony or evidence contrary to the evidence and information contained in the report of the Special Counsel to the Commissioner, Mr. Rose has accepted baseball's ultimate sanction, lifetime ineligibility."
      Statement by then Commissioner
      of Baseball, A. Bartlett Giamatti,
      August 24, 1989

  • @briangoldy8784
    @briangoldy8784 Год назад +1

    Heard Pete Rose say the ball would Just Drop.......with Koufax,,,,Your Knees would buckle at the Plate,,,,,,,,....LOL..We loved Pete Rose in Philly........he, among others , gave us the 1980 World Series,,,,,,,,,Love You. Pete.........

  • @ppnc7332
    @ppnc7332 Год назад +1

    Pete needs to be put on the ballot. Let the voters have a chance to say yes or no.

  • @mattx1875
    @mattx1875 8 лет назад +24

    hahahahahahaha that's fucked up about Sutton. But damn, I wish I could've seen Koufax pitch.

    • @spcooper94
      @spcooper94 8 лет назад +1

      +Matt X You can watch him in the 1965 World Series. It's the entire game but he was on 2 days rest so who knows if he had better stuff on regular rest

    • @alfredcalzadillas3881
      @alfredcalzadillas3881 7 лет назад +4

      Matt X
      Yup Koufax was the baddest pitcher , no question!!! I was lucky to have seen him several times including my very first game in Dodger stadium in 65'. Remember it well against Pittsburgh. The greatest I've ever since.

    • @russscott552
      @russscott552 3 года назад

      Go to you tube type hid Name there are some games he pitched at 80 years old I have see all most all the record holders..sandy was without a doubt the greatest I ever saw and there will never be another like him
      Like secretariat
      Like Jordan, like Gayle sayers, like ....I still watch those you tubes videos
      I was lucky to see him pitch and lucky to pat secretariat's muzzle my greatest sports thrills.

  • @frankdiaz9783
    @frankdiaz9783 6 лет назад +8

    Give Pete Rose his dues. He deserved regardles.

    • @bigverybadtom
      @bigverybadtom 2 года назад

      They did when they banned him from baseball for gambling on the games he played, a very big rules violation.

  • @josh4106
    @josh4106 Год назад +2

    this guy should be in the hall of fame simply for his post career analysis of baseball.

  • @mmcneil777
    @mmcneil777 6 лет назад +4

    Crazy...I saw Pete Rose at Candlestick. Pete was probably the most dominant player I ever saw. He could dominate a game getting a walk and a hit. He really gave the Reds a winning attitude. Sad Rose isn’t in the HOF. He was a REALLY GREAT bball player. I remember he got a walk and him hustling down the first place line and the entire stadium gasped...knowing the game was over.

  • @alonsolopez3541
    @alonsolopez3541 4 года назад +3

    Petes career gets more and more impressive when you think of the pitchers he had to face, Marichal, Ryan, Koufax, Spahn, Sutton, Gibson, Carlton, Seaver, Niekro, Perry, Blyleven, Drysdale, Eckersley, Sutter, Jenkins

    • @Lawomenshoops
      @Lawomenshoops 3 года назад

      Rose retired in 86. And Eck came to the NL in 84-87. The Cubs and Reds were in different divisions back then. So it would be interesting to see exactly how many times they faced each other.

  • @ErichLRuehs
    @ErichLRuehs 7 лет назад +24

    Love Pete or hate him, he can tell a baseball story! So fun to listen to. Koufax was off the charts amazing. He's inspiring also. Didn't become great till a couple years of being in MLB. And, he wasn't a big guy; not that one has to be big to play baseball extremely well. And, he was a shooting star. Only had, and correct me if I'm wrong, 5 great seasons. It was Casey Stengal (SP?) that said: "Forget all those other guys, (talking about the other great pitcher's of all time), the Jewish kid from Brooklyn beats 'um all." That said, I think Satchel Paige was the best. But, Sandy, in his prime, was arguable just as good. He threw every pitch with not regard for his arm. If it fell off, hey, that's life. LOVE YOU SANDY AND SATCHEL

  • @graftedbranch7246
    @graftedbranch7246 4 года назад +2

    Love Pete’s candid approach to commentary

  • @yaakw
    @yaakw Год назад +2

    Pete made himself laugh when he repeated “I’m not gonna lie to ya!”

  • @downtownbobbybrown6237
    @downtownbobbybrown6237 3 года назад +5

    Pete remembers his hits and averages off pitchers a hundred years ago ,that alone should get him in the hall !

  • @COLETHORN10
    @COLETHORN10 5 лет назад +6

    Pete is Reason #1 why a team that was formed in 1883 and still is the losingest team in baseball, a team that lost 23 games in a row in 1961 and orchestrated the greatest collapse in 1964, blowing a seven game lead with only ten games to go, won its first World Series in 1980. The Philadelphia Phillies who Pete played for for five years (1979 - 1983). Pete and Nick Foles are gods in Philly sports history.

    • @Lawomenshoops
      @Lawomenshoops 3 года назад

      Yeah Mike Schmidt or Carlton had nothing to do with that championship!!

    • @mackydog99
      @mackydog99 10 месяцев назад

      Outta the university of Arizona..........Nick Foles!

  • @cowboysfan782008
    @cowboysfan782008 6 лет назад +1

    1976 was my 1st yr in BB, and it was the yr Bad News Bears came out and the Big Red Machine was in full force and that was my team, and I loved Rose! And Pete Rose had as much love for the game as anyone, and helped teams win because of it!

  • @pdogone1
    @pdogone1 3 года назад +1

    growing up on Long Island back in the sixties i loved my Dodgers and Sandy.. all the others drysdale wills davis davis gilliam lefebrve parker johnson fairly osteen perranonski so many others..listen to the radio when mets went out to the coast and whenever channel 9 wor put them on against the mets..sure do love the memories..tks for great vid..ill never forget his performace against yanks in 63//

  • @WesleyAPEX
    @WesleyAPEX 8 лет назад +121

    Ray Charles couldn't see the ball well LMAO

    • @punchline43
      @punchline43 8 лет назад +3

      No he said "Ray Charles coulda seen the ball" noting his opinion of Sutton's pitching as poor since Rose did so well against him etc. The way you say it there's no irony, no real impact made. Sorry if I over-stressed the point.

    • @Ken4Pyro
      @Ken4Pyro 6 лет назад +3

      No, Sean, he said "Ray Charles coulda hit Don Sutton and Ray had a hard time seeing the ball." To me, Wesley's comment is fairly accurate.

    • @jamiemalokas3693
      @jamiemalokas3693 6 лет назад

      Wow. You agree that the statement 'Ray Charles couldn't see the ball well' is 'fairly accurate ??? lol Thanks for the comment Mr. Obvious.

    • @davidharrison7014
      @davidharrison7014 2 года назад +1

      Jamie Foxx might agree with Pete's assessment regarding Ray Charles.

    • @davidharrison7014
      @davidharrison7014 2 года назад +1

      I'D like to know his current opinion of former MLB umpire Dave Pallone, and of Nolan Ryan's infamous "six-hitter" against Robin Ventura.

  • @AmericanFlag2012
    @AmericanFlag2012 8 лет назад +42

    Pete Rose got shit on again, one of the greats, I would like to know how long he must pay, they are killers out of prison in less time.

    • @WallyPost
      @WallyPost 8 лет назад +6

      "I would like to know how long he must pay,..."
      ---
      Usually, a lifetime ban means exactly that ... a lifetime.

    • @mikethebike2456
      @mikethebike2456 6 лет назад

      they are killers

    • @acershund1
      @acershund1 5 лет назад

      The commissioners of MLB will never put him in- Never! He gambled on the games and that is strictly forbidden. The commissioners front office has documented proof that Rose did that. MLB will not have anyone in the HOF that tarnishes the achievements of those who achieved through hard work and honesty.

    • @68air
      @68air 5 лет назад +1

      HOFer if there ever was one.

    • @acershund1
      @acershund1 4 года назад

      @mksrookies I thought they were all filtered out

  • @jackstone1154
    @jackstone1154 8 лет назад +73

    Rose is awesome!
    cowherd is a weasel.

  • @robertyancey4867
    @robertyancey4867 7 лет назад +3

    I miss the 60's, 70s Era of baseball...Pitchers pitched complete games, they still had drag bunts, batters didn't show up pitchers when they hit home runs, no warnings after hitting batters. The good old days!!!

  • @ARIZJOE
    @ARIZJOE Год назад +3

    You know, Pete has done some bad things. But Pete Rose is a tough guy, a smart guy, and has an outstanding sense of humor. He could also be kind to people.

  • @robertsmit9872
    @robertsmit9872 3 года назад +35

    Koufax curve ball was basically untouchable, let alone unhittable! It was like watching a magician. The greatest pitcher of all time!

    • @gabrielbotsford791
      @gabrielbotsford791 Год назад +1

      I bleed Orange and Black. Sandy Koufax is my favorite pitcher of all time.

    • @ceebee8042
      @ceebee8042 Год назад

      My dad told us, “listen to the catcher’s glove pop,” when Koufax pitched. You’d actually go to the Dodgers game with Koufax pitching with that being the highlight. Dodgers usually won, few hits in his game. It was all about the pure art of pitching.

  • @JuanVilorio
    @JuanVilorio 3 года назад

    I love listening to this from time to time

  • @justthink5854
    @justthink5854 3 года назад

    GREAT STUFF

  • @loyaldude10
    @loyaldude10 8 лет назад +24

    NL had awesome pitchers in the 1960s---totally dominated AL in All Star games that decade

    • @willdrucker4291
      @willdrucker4291 8 лет назад +6

      +loyaldude10 arguably the greatest decade in major league history...not just pitchers either...Rose, Mays, Aaron, Mantle, Frank Robinson, Kaline, Killebrew...on and on and on....today's players are bush league compared to those true legends

    • @spcooper94
      @spcooper94 8 лет назад +1

      +Will Drucker The game was not as balanced back then, probably lol. Now, everyone is throwing 95+ with their fastball and i'm sure it's much harder for the batters these days

    • @thezdbailey
      @thezdbailey 7 лет назад +3

      And they were the faster league to integrate, getting the best Black players. Although, by 1960, even the Red Sox had integrated.

  • @bubhub64
    @bubhub64 7 лет назад +35

    Just for those of you who don't know, pitcher Don Sutton was a 324 game winner, with 58 shutouts, and is 7th on the all time strike out list, with 3574 strikeouts! When Pete Rose talks about how he dominated Don Sutton, that tells you what a pure hitting machine Charlie Hustle actually was!

    • @johnsrous1616
      @johnsrous1616 6 лет назад

      bubhub64 that's the truth. Sutton had a fantastic career. He was one of the most dominant right-handers of his era. What made DS so good was that he had that screwball plus his changeup. He wasn't a flame-thrower so he never blew you away with a 100mph heater. He just beat you.

    • @captainbaseball1099
      @captainbaseball1099 6 лет назад +3

      Fosse played for like 10 more seasons after that hit.

    • @jamesmac8424
      @jamesmac8424 6 лет назад +2

      Well what was Fosse doing blocking the plate if it was an exhibition game? Can't have it both ways. In those days, if you blocked the plate (without the ball by the way), you got hit - as it should be.

    • @xinasdfghjklyatzee5204
      @xinasdfghjklyatzee5204 5 лет назад +2

      Bob welch wasn't bad either.. So was warren spahn.. The best lefty pitcher in mlb history.. Inarguably.

    • @justafanintexas7913
      @justafanintexas7913 5 лет назад +1

      And Pete was a switch hitter.

  • @watchman1178
    @watchman1178 9 месяцев назад +1

    I was glad to hear Pete Rose talk so highly of the great Juan Marichal. As soon as I saw Marichal pitch, he became my favorite player even though I was a New York Yankee fan as a kid. I was a pitcher in Little League baseball, and I copied Marichal's pitching style with the high leg kick.

  • @ManciniFamilyFriends
    @ManciniFamilyFriends 3 года назад

    This is literally the best thing I seen on RUclips in months

  • @ericday4505
    @ericday4505 3 года назад +14

    I love listening to Pete talk baseball. And there is no such thing as a rising fastball. And from the late 60s thru the 70s until the early 80s was a great time to be a fan of great starting pitching. An era that will not be duplicated, because the sport has changed and will probably never go back to the dominant starting pitcher who ate up innings and completed games. That grand era saw such greats as Koufax, Drysdale, Seaver, Gibson, Marichale, Carlton, Ryan, Spahn, and so many more. Great time for the sport. Now we are stuck with five inning guys, who look to bring themselves out of games, guys being brought out of shutouts, and no hitters. Ridiculous.

    • @sludge8506
      @sludge8506 2 года назад +1

      It just doesn’t sink as much.

    • @ericday4505
      @ericday4505 2 года назад +2

      @@sludge8506 That is right,it is thrown so hard that it basically stays on the same line or plain if you will, when most every pitch sinks by the time it reaches the hitter.

    • @boffo63
      @boffo63 Год назад

      Tell that to a former Umpire like me. Lol All sorts of pitches do funny stuff. Koufax had a very low release so his fastball rose. Not all the time though

  • @Mryrhodesian
    @Mryrhodesian 8 лет назад +47

    Always said, give me Koufax, Gibson, & Marichal and they will shut down any of the so called big offenses of today.

    • @loyaldude10
      @loyaldude10 8 лет назад

      +Mryrhodesian dont forget Seaver and Carlton also. but strike zone different from 1960s, as are stadium dimensions. not to mention roids

    • @Mryrhodesian
      @Mryrhodesian 8 лет назад +3

      +loyaldude10 Still, they were going nine not five or six innings and had about 8-10 more starts a year.

    • @ilikepie19921
      @ilikepie19921 8 лет назад

      Kershaw>Koufax.
      You can't really decide yet, but if he keeps it up until he's 30 (age Koufax retired at) he will objectively be a better pitcher

    • @Mryrhodesian
      @Mryrhodesian 8 лет назад +5

      +Moffett's Solution Kershaw has had his problems in post season.

    • @ilikepie19921
      @ilikepie19921 8 лет назад

      +Mryrhodesian the point stands

  • @michaelbarlow6610
    @michaelbarlow6610 Год назад +2

    Great line by Pete Rose when he said that Ray Charles could have gotten a hit off of Don Sutton!😂😂

  • @nickmanning8330
    @nickmanning8330 Год назад +1

    Just love Pete Rose. Should be in the HOF for sure.

  • @betadatadigitaljohn312
    @betadatadigitaljohn312 7 лет назад +16

    Koufax - The left hand of God.

  • @onetwothree257
    @onetwothree257 7 лет назад +3

    I laughed when he spiked the melon.

  • @dzanier
    @dzanier 3 года назад +1

    Colin doesn’t realize how long Warren Spahn played.

  • @laserluver1
    @laserluver1 5 лет назад +1

    Loved Charlie Hustle since I first saw him at Crosley in '63.

  • @bfee20021
    @bfee20021 7 лет назад +10

    Colin is talking about something other than the NBA and LeBron?

  • @moboutmen
    @moboutmen 4 года назад +10

    I think Mantle said of Koufax in the 63 Series that "there's no sense in me going up there (to bat)."

    • @JayManne62
      @JayManne62 4 года назад +3

      There was a quote from Mantle, who did hit a HR against Koufax in the '63 Series, that the ump heard clearly. When Mantle struck out late in Game 4 against Koufax, Mantle is quoted as saying.... "How the F**K are you supposed to hit that S**T!!!"

    • @landmansid
      @landmansid 3 года назад

      Some rumors say that the Dodgers' mound was nearly 20 inches high when Sandy Koufax pitched. Guys like Koufax were the reason the height of the mound was lowered to 10 inches in 1969.

    • @jimschranz6542
      @jimschranz6542 3 года назад +1

      @@landmansid Gibson too. Colfax was the best of that era but Gibson was the most feared by batters. When Gibson & Jenkins faced off at Wrigley it was like a heavyweight bout. My parents would let me cut School to see those matchups. That was baseball.

    • @gkprivate433
      @gkprivate433 3 года назад +1

      @@landmansid yeah. Fields were not always set up the same way and checked and double checked with templates and measuring tapes

  • @rm-jl8wy
    @rm-jl8wy 2 года назад +2

    Pete's a really funny guy!😄He needs to be in the HOF and with the MLB. Right now it's their loss!

  • @markdierking9347
    @markdierking9347 4 года назад +1

    good stuff. I wore #14 in LL in the mid 60's because of mr. hustle. I remember when my best friend, a dodger fan, and I used to camp out in a tent in his back yard listening on radio to Dodger v Giant games on some summer fri-saturday nights where both the LA (KTLA?) and SF (KMJ0 broadcasts could be dialed in) I was a Giants, Mays, McCovey, Cepeda, &Marichal fan. fun memories that later generations of players/fans will never know, unfortunately. Koufax was feared and, I think, was the best ever