As a kid he was my favorite player and to this day I can mimic his batting stance pretty much perfect. It is so fucking hard to hit with that waggle. The timing that you have to have the hand and wrist and forearm strength, the fact that he could have the bat pointing at the pitcher when the ball was coming out of their hand and then turn around a 95 + mile per hour fastball to leftfield field is unimaginable. He was a freak of nature and I would give anything to go back to being a kid watching him play again. I will never care about baseball the way I did as a kid watching him
Gary you are amazing,, I watched you play as a brewer in Yankees stadium when I was a kid,, during one inning you caught the 3rd out of the inning and as you ran by the sideline I yelled your name and you tipped your hat smiled and threw me the ball!! I’ll never forget that and I still have that ball to this day!! After that I was a fan for life
Man, that tells you the thinking of back then. Dude rakes 44 HRs in the minors and the Brewers staff was like, "let's make him a contact leadoff type hitter"
It was '89, the Bash Bros. A's offense was only just starting to supplant small ball, plus Sheff was a shortstop. Shortstops not named Cal Ripken Jr. were supposed to get on base and get moved around, or turn the order over. Really, Robin Yount was about the only other SS who hit for power.... and he was moved to CF, so there ya go.
the most he had in a minor league season was 28 in 134 games, where he also hit .327 with a .395 OBP. that tells the big league coaches (back then) that he has leadoff potential of 20ish homers and high on base rates with speed. it wasnt until 1992 (5th big league season) where he hit for homers, and still won a batting title
yea when Sheff was at bat, i remember the 3rd base coaches backing up a lot. they wanted no part of Sheff's foul balls. one of the hardest hitters Ive ever seen..
Gary Sheffield and Ken Griffey Jr were the first two athletes I grew up admiring. As much as i loved the smoothness of Jr's swing, I would always try to imitate Sheff's swing as a kid growing up in south florida in the mid to late 90s. His swing was akin to watching a cobra attack its prey. The way he was able to whip his bat thru the zone with that insane bat speed was hypnotic. God I miss watching him play.
He used "The Cream" for very little amount of time (2 to 3 months) and that is what is keeping him out of The Hall-Fame. To me it's bullshit he didn't shoot up steroids in his ass like Bonds and Clemens!
One of my favorite sluggers of all time!! His bat speed was so fast and violent!! Just awesome! Sheffield, Ruben Sierra and Canseco had such awesome swings. They never got cheated!!!
Sheffield was my favorite player during his run with my Braves. I had his Jersey and even mimicked that back and forth thing he does with the bat when at the plate.
I love hearing my favorite hitters talking about how they approach hitting. People see Willie Mays, Jimmy Wynn, or Gary Sheffield and think "he is such a gifted athlete". They are gifted, but what made them so much better is that their mental approach was as important to them as the physical part.
Man this channel is so dope all these guys just teaching us about the game if I was a young baseball player I would literally watch every video that comes out
I'll never forget how nice of a guy Sheffield was to me when I was spring training bat boy for the Brewers. Paul Molitor was the nicest pro I met. Sheffield and a close second. Opponent Andre Dawson seemed like a really good guy, though I only met him for a minute.
@TrailingSkies27 That's so cool. He was such an intense competitor, and I don't think I ever saw him smile on the field which I loved. Always like knowing big time players treat people kindly even when the cameras aren't on them.
Yea but Ken Griffey jr had the best swing , and I liked the high elbow of Edgar , that's what my stance though I I wildly waved the bat around out of nerves and my coaches were always 5elling me to stop my elbow despite me being the only player that hit line drives consistently on the teams, And the fundamentally soundest fielder on the teams
Same here. I've never met anyone that could mimic his stance as good as I could. I'm sure you can but no one that I've ever met in person. Most kids growing up in my most kids growing up in my area, Tampa Bay, were fans of Griffey or bonds or Sosa or McGuire, I was the only Sheffield fan. He retired on my birthday and that was the worst birthday ever haha. I always say and still agree with this statement that I will never love baseball the way I did when I was a Sheffield fan. When he retired a huge chunk of my love for the game died with him. As a kid you can love a player as your favorite and look up to them as an adult I find that you can follow certain people but you don't care as much as you used to. I Will Never care about baseball as much as I did and it sucks but I really miss watching him play
As a child, I met outside of a stadium in San Antonio, Tx when he was playing for the El Paso Diablos in Double AA... He shook my hand and autographed my ticket stub. He was a gracious 19 year old... I will never forget.
I was a humongous Sheffield fan growing up. Started watching him when he was on the Dodgers and was so upset when he got traded to the Braves but then quickly realize I would get to watch him play almost every day because there's games are on TBS but I was so mad when he went to the Yankees haha. I couldn't stand the Yankees. As an adult I respect what they've accomplished but that was my least favorite time watching him haha but he played really well for them
Thank you for having him on the show! Gary Sheffield was my favorite player all time growing up! still to this day! one of the most beautiful and unique swings that you don't hardly see anymore. Maybe Miguel Andujar could be close to it
When I first saw the movie The Sandlot it got me into baseball. And Benny the jet Rodriguez was a Dodgers fan so I decided to start watching the Dodgers and they would be my favorite team and I remember turning the All-Star Game On in 98 and seeing Gary Sheffield and writing down his name. Sometime in the next week or two I rode up the street on my bike to a card shop and pulled out a Dodgers card pack and he was the top card. I remember the first game besides the All-Star game that I ever watched him in and it was against the Giants and he hit a homerun but they lost. When I first started playing I got the number 10 and was put into left field and that was not my choice that's just how it happened and he was a left fielder and number 10 at the time. I saw him hit 2 homeruns in a spring training game against the Braves in Orlando I saw him hit two home runs at the Del Rey Stadium I watched every game that I could especially when he was on the Braves. I remember the day he was traded I woke up to go to the bathroom and ESPN happens to be on and they happen to be talking about him getting traded. Doesn't sound really that crazy, but I never woke up to go to the bathroom. Ever ever ever ever ever so me happening to wake up at that time was crazy. He retired on my birthday as well. I've talked about this already in comments on here but it can't be stressed enough how much my love for baseball died When he retired. I still love baseball and I still watch it a little bit but I will never care about a player or a team or baseball in general as much as I did Growing Up watching Gary Sheffield. He had an attitude at times but his playing ability was amazing. The bat speed that he generated, the sound does a ball made off his Bat, the sheer strength he had and watching him just annihilate the baseball was a thing of beauty. And I will forever miss the days of being able to watch him play
He played here in The pinstripes for only 2 seasons but he was one of my favorite yanks regardless. Dude was all business and such a fun hitter to watch. Miss ya sheff!
I knew no other kids growing up who's favored player was Gary Sheffield like mine. I found him in about 1998 when I was nine or 10 and he retired on my birthday. I absolutely loved watching him play. I Will Never Capture the love for watching baseball that I had when he played. You know how it is when you're a kid. But I wish every single day that he was around for statcast. Because I can't think of anyone who had a faster bat than him or hit the ball harder than him. I would love love love love love love love to have seen how fast the ball of coming off of his Bat.
I'm a little surprised that no one in this clip, not even Sheff himself, ...said anything about the incredible bat speed he had. He can do all that stuff with his hands before the pitch... but if not for his incredible bat speed, none of it woulda worked. Julio Franco was similar in his day. That being said, awesome vid to watch. His connections to BALCO (one of a few to admit to taking illegal substances, but his body didn't change as drastically as Bonds, Sosa, Mac, etc)...and his attitude towards reporters (during his career) have hurt his HOF induction chances. He'll make it in a few years. He deserves it.
I can't even imagine the strength and power generated during Sheffield's swing. People that never played baseball at a reasonably high level could never understand how unique and genius his entire hitting style is.
I LOVED watching Sheff! He and Vlad Guerrero were who I modeled my approach at the plate after. Not their swing so much but their mentality. I remember watching Sheff hit a homerun off of a ball thrown at him and I just thought that was the coolest freaking thing.
@mkhanman12345 Gwynn was my guy for swing. I grew up in San Diego in the 90s. I was more aggressive at the plate than him though. 3 pitches I was either on or out. Rarely struck out.
I remember when he played for the Stockton Ports in the California League back in 1987. I got his autograph back then at Billy Hebert Field where he played ball. Great player!
When I first saw Gary Sheffield back in '03 as a baby his batting stance was so dope and sometimes weird by the time he joined the Yankees in 2004 he got that real swing.
More than 2,600 hits, 1,600 runs and RBI’s, 500 bombs, 250 steals, almost 500 doubles, almost 1,500 walks and under 1,200 strikeouts. Sheffield was a total savage at the plate. Imagine what those numbers would be if he didn’t miss almost 500 games to injuries in his 20’s.
I was in Gary's 6th grade class at Lockhart Middle school in Belmont Heights, he would hit a red kickball out of our playing field at just about every bat, our teacher wouldn't let him play much after the first week because we kept losing so many balls! He already had amazing bat speed at a young age, so gifted, so fun to watch, when he was allowed to play!
My favorite swing in baseball ball by a country mile. None of that pure beautiful finess bullshit. Just PURE rage, aggression and unrelenting POWER. LOVED it!
This is good stuff. See, I'm already too old to play baseball competitively, but if I were working my way to play professional, I would safe this video and study it as many times as possible. The guy is giving away his trade secrets!
As a fan I loved Sheff. I watched him mostly when he was in Florida playing for the Marlins. seemed as though he didnt get media coverage like he should have. I wonder why he was traded around so much. he was solid
Lesser hitter are always so much more philosophical as coaches. Look how practical Gary is. "Forget his third pitch,' "Use the dimensions of the particular field you're playing at." Great advice.
Watching him on the field never gave me the impression he was a charismatic person. Looked mean. Great to see he was a great teammate. His apologizing in the middle of a sentence here shows how nice of a man he is. He was a great player!
One of the greatest batting stances of all time lol. Had a pretty swing too, hit for average AND power. Loved seeing him play.
Agreed.
As a kid he was my favorite player and to this day I can mimic his batting stance pretty much perfect. It is so fucking hard to hit with that waggle. The timing that you have to have the hand and wrist and forearm strength, the fact that he could have the bat pointing at the pitcher when the ball was coming out of their hand and then turn around a 95 + mile per hour fastball to leftfield field is unimaginable. He was a freak of nature and I would give anything to go back to being a kid watching him play again. I will never care about baseball the way I did as a kid watching him
@@thickerconstrictor9037 same here i own lots of his game used bats and other stuff
It really was. I used to mimic the way he would move the bat around in little league all the time. The guy was an absolute powerhouse at the plate.
And he rarely struck out, which is apparently something no one gives a damn about anymore.
Good to see Gary Sheffield looking happy and smiling. A great player.
Gary you are amazing,, I watched you play as a brewer in Yankees stadium when I was a kid,, during one inning you caught the 3rd out of the inning and as you ran by the sideline I yelled your name and you tipped your hat smiled and threw me the ball!! I’ll never forget that and I still have that ball to this day!! After that I was a fan for life
He’s still that dude, I have friendship with him. He’s still the man. Absolutely amazing personality!
Wow 😮 that's an awesome story 👍
Great memory. He was one of the best hitters very clutch and lots of power plus hit for average
"When I get here, then I'm turnin it on-FINNA GET VIOLENT" lmao Sheff is the man 10:55
7:52 - “Dubba digits homeruns”.
I speak fluent Finna!!!
this man is a genius when it comes to hitting and you can tell he loves it
he's so good that his advice is utter trash. you can see it on their faces. it's like God explaining how to make a star.
Maxwell Buhler what makes you so qualified to think you know more about hitting
L Rob the 2k god maybe try rereading. im agreeing with you
Maxwell Buhler I should probably stay off the phone when I drive lmao all I read was trash
@@maxwellbuhler8493 his advice is far from trash kid
Man, that tells you the thinking of back then. Dude rakes 44 HRs in the minors and the Brewers staff was like, "let's make him a contact leadoff type hitter"
And that's why the Brewers are a big joke and haven't won a chip lol
@@jonathanrecinos5894
Exactly!!!
Who cares about a hunk of metal anyway.
It was '89, the Bash Bros. A's offense was only just starting to supplant small ball, plus Sheff was a shortstop. Shortstops not named Cal Ripken Jr. were supposed to get on base and get moved around, or turn the order over. Really, Robin Yount was about the only other SS who hit for power.... and he was moved to CF, so there ya go.
the most he had in a minor league season was 28 in 134 games, where he also hit .327 with a .395 OBP. that tells the big league coaches (back then) that he has leadoff potential of 20ish homers and high on base rates with speed. it wasnt until 1992 (5th big league season) where he hit for homers, and still won a batting title
I can listen to sheffield all day! That was awesome!
Yea and all mlb players should be watching this video to learn how to HIT and STOP STRIKING OUT SO DAMN MUCH!
him talking about adjusting to different stadiums just blew me away, what a hitting genius.
Loved watching Gary Sheffield hit. Even more awesome to hear him talk it out.
Sheff and Bonds were the two most intimidating players to see at the plate. Scary stances and scary good talent. Sheffield’s Bat wave was hypnotizing
yea when Sheff was at bat, i remember the 3rd base coaches backing up a lot. they wanted no part of Sheff's foul balls. one of the hardest hitters Ive ever seen..
Manny Ramirez as well.
Neumberto Mejia Manny was great and his swing was smooth as silk, but Sheff’s swing just looked flat out violent.
Add Griffey Jr to that mix
Vlad Guerrero also
Gary Sheffield and Ken Griffey Jr were the first two athletes I grew up admiring. As much as i loved the smoothness of Jr's swing, I would always try to imitate Sheff's swing as a kid growing up in south florida in the mid to late 90s. His swing was akin to watching a cobra attack its prey. The way he was able to whip his bat thru the zone with that insane bat speed was hypnotic. God I miss watching him play.
No matter what sport I love when ppl just sit & listen in awe when a legend explains his mind sight going into different situations
He should be in the Hall of fame.
even after the steroids?
@@jbonillaguitar yes
@@Jaime16921 I agree, and so should Barry and Roger
He used "The Cream" for very little amount of time (2 to 3 months) and that is what is keeping him out of The Hall-Fame. To me it's bullshit he didn't shoot up steroids in his ass like Bonds and Clemens!
He wasn't a good player
One of my favorite sluggers of all time!! His bat speed was so fast and violent!! Just awesome! Sheffield, Ruben Sierra and Canseco had such awesome swings. They never got cheated!!!
That brought a smile to my face. "Shef" was always one of my favorite players.
Sheffield was my favorite player during his run with my Braves. I had his Jersey and even mimicked that back and forth thing he does with the bat when at the plate.
We all did, we all did. Seems happy to be on TV as much as we are happy to see him!
Sheff had insane bat speed. I didn't know he showed out in mink. A true player in every sense of the word.
That bat waggle loaded the bat like no other waggle that i've ever seen! Incredible power from that move!
Loved when he’s playing at Bronx. I wished him to play few more seasons.
Growing up in the 90's and a lifelong Yankee fan, Shef was always the man. My favorite: Griffey, Shef, and Jeter.
I'm a Dodgers fan. Griff and Shef were my favorite.
@@jessealexander886 Shef was a Dodger at least.
Hard to beat those days!
I love hearing my favorite hitters talking about how they approach hitting. People see Willie Mays, Jimmy Wynn, or Gary Sheffield and think "he is such a gifted athlete". They are gifted, but what made them so much better is that their mental approach was as important to them as the physical part.
Man this channel is so dope all these guys just teaching us about the game if I was a young baseball player I would literally watch every video that comes out
I'll never forget how nice of a guy Sheffield was to me when I was spring training bat boy for the Brewers. Paul Molitor was the nicest pro I met. Sheffield and a close second. Opponent Andre Dawson seemed like a really good guy, though I only met him for a minute.
Who was an a**hole? Lol
@@HueyPPLong barry bonds lol
@TrailingSkies27 That's so cool. He was such an intense competitor, and I don't think I ever saw him smile on the field which I loved. Always like knowing big time players treat people kindly even when the cameras aren't on them.
Love hearing true legends break it down. Nice inside perspective.
One of the best right handed hitters I have ever seen. Gary Sheffield is definitely Hall of Fame worthy.
By far Gary was one of my favorite to watch swing the bat
One of the main reason I fell in love with Baseball a true legend for sure
That is a professional hitter speaking man.
This is why steroids are irrelevant imo, not everyone can do what sheff did . Steroids or not
That was awesome. I love these type of videos.
The most mean stance in history....the great pedro Martinez said it
Yea but Ken Griffey jr had the best swing , and I liked the high elbow of Edgar , that's what my stance though I I wildly waved the bat around out of nerves and my coaches were always 5elling me to stop my elbow despite me being the only player that hit line drives consistently on the teams,
And the fundamentally soundest fielder on the teams
@@joeinreallife6293 well both are better then sheff objectively
mean stance for sure but albert belle had a mean stance too.
@@captmorgan2063 Albert was just mean all the time
Favorite player growing up with. As a kid I'd mimic his stance in little league. Haha, He was the best.
Exactly, I hated when the Padres traded him.
Same here. I've never met anyone that could mimic his stance as good as I could. I'm sure you can but no one that I've ever met in person. Most kids growing up in my most kids growing up in my area, Tampa Bay, were fans of Griffey or bonds or Sosa or McGuire, I was the only Sheffield fan. He retired on my birthday and that was the worst birthday ever haha. I always say and still agree with this statement that I will never love baseball the way I did when I was a Sheffield fan. When he retired a huge chunk of my love for the game died with him. As a kid you can love a player as your favorite and look up to them as an adult I find that you can follow certain people but you don't care as much as you used to. I Will Never care about baseball as much as I did and it sucks but I really miss watching him play
As a child, I met outside of a stadium in San Antonio, Tx when he was playing for the El Paso Diablos in Double AA... He shook my hand and autographed my ticket stub. He was a gracious 19 year old... I will never forget.
Always love and appreciate the times Sheff spent in the pinstripes. Was fun to watch, wish we could of seen him win a ring with the Yanks.
I was a humongous Sheffield fan growing up. Started watching him when he was on the Dodgers and was so upset when he got traded to the Braves but then quickly realize I would get to watch him play almost every day because there's games are on TBS but I was so mad when he went to the Yankees haha. I couldn't stand the Yankees. As an adult I respect what they've accomplished but that was my least favorite time watching him haha but he played really well for them
My absolute favorite batting stance of all time. I mirrored it and adapted it to become my stance. It worked extremely well for me.
my favorite batting stances of all time.
one of my favorite player of all time
MLB Central. a+ on this one . next albert bell or more gary sheffield
Thank you for having him on the show! Gary Sheffield was my favorite player all time growing up! still to this day! one of the most beautiful and unique swings that you don't hardly see anymore. Maybe Miguel Andujar could be close to it
My two favorite players were Rickey Henderson and Gary Sheffield
~~ Right On ~~ Love Rickey and Gary (and his uncle Dwight Gooden)..
Rickey Gary and JR
One of my favorite!
Ken Jr, Sheff, Frank Thomas, Pujols, Sosa
When I first saw the movie The Sandlot it got me into baseball. And Benny the jet Rodriguez was a Dodgers fan so I decided to start watching the Dodgers and they would be my favorite team and I remember turning the All-Star Game On in 98 and seeing Gary Sheffield and writing down his name. Sometime in the next week or two I rode up the street on my bike to a card shop and pulled out a Dodgers card pack and he was the top card. I remember the first game besides the All-Star game that I ever watched him in and it was against the Giants and he hit a homerun but they lost. When I first started playing I got the number 10 and was put into left field and that was not my choice that's just how it happened and he was a left fielder and number 10 at the time. I saw him hit 2 homeruns in a spring training game against the Braves in Orlando I saw him hit two home runs at the Del Rey Stadium I watched every game that I could especially when he was on the Braves. I remember the day he was traded I woke up to go to the bathroom and ESPN happens to be on and they happen to be talking about him getting traded. Doesn't sound really that crazy, but I never woke up to go to the bathroom. Ever ever ever ever ever so me happening to wake up at that time was crazy. He retired on my birthday as well. I've talked about this already in comments on here but it can't be stressed enough how much my love for baseball died When he retired. I still love baseball and I still watch it a little bit but I will never care about a player or a team or baseball in general as much as I did Growing Up watching Gary Sheffield. He had an attitude at times but his playing ability was amazing. The bat speed that he generated, the sound does a ball made off his Bat, the sheer strength he had and watching him just annihilate the baseball was a thing of beauty. And I will forever miss the days of being able to watch him play
Awesome story man!
I love how loose Gary played. Really loved the swag he brought to baseball
Sheffield had the fastest bat speed in MLB. Very kool analysis. I wished I would have seen these tips when I was younger⚾️⚾️.
You n me both man
The Marlins have literally had some of the greatest players ever since entering the mlb. Sheffield is considered top 3 in Marlins history
He played here in The pinstripes for only 2 seasons but he was one of my favorite yanks regardless. Dude was all business and such a fun hitter to watch. Miss ya sheff!
To me, Sheffield was like the marvin hagler of baseball..loved watchin him hit
Great analogy.
Man i wish i could talk hitting with him this was awsome.
I just read Sheffield's autobiography. It was cool! Good video.
I knew no other kids growing up who's favored player was Gary Sheffield like mine. I found him in about 1998 when I was nine or 10 and he retired on my birthday. I absolutely loved watching him play. I Will Never Capture the love for watching baseball that I had when he played. You know how it is when you're a kid. But I wish every single day that he was around for statcast. Because I can't think of anyone who had a faster bat than him or hit the ball harder than him. I would love love love love love love love to have seen how fast the ball of coming off of his Bat.
Stuff like this is invaluable information for a kid looking to get better. The strategy and everything behind his hitting....just awesome.
Love it! Sheff dropping knowledge.
I'm a little surprised that no one in this clip, not even Sheff himself, ...said anything about the incredible bat speed he had. He can do all that stuff with his hands before the pitch... but if not for his incredible bat speed, none of it woulda worked. Julio Franco was similar in his day. That being said, awesome vid to watch. His connections to BALCO (one of a few to admit to taking illegal substances, but his body didn't change as drastically as Bonds, Sosa, Mac, etc)...and his attitude towards reporters (during his career) have hurt his HOF induction chances. He'll make it in a few years. He deserves it.
Favorite player of all time. I loved what he stood for. And a beast! ‘93 season
I can't even imagine the strength and power generated during Sheffield's swing. People that never played baseball at a reasonably high level could never understand how unique and genius his entire hitting style is.
WOW, what a pleasure listening to this, thanx Sheff
I could hear shef talk about baseball for hours. The way he breaks down hitting is incredible.
Sheffield just hit ya'll wit that " go in the batters box sideways" pro tip. The .400 club is about to get bigger.
I LOVED watching Sheff! He and Vlad Guerrero were who I modeled my approach at the plate after. Not their swing so much but their mentality. I remember watching Sheff hit a homerun off of a ball thrown at him and I just thought that was the coolest freaking thing.
i modeled their swing and mentality
@mkhanman12345 Gwynn was my guy for swing. I grew up in San Diego in the 90s. I was more aggressive at the plate than him though. 3 pitches I was either on or out. Rarely struck out.
I remember when he played for the Stockton Ports in the California League back in 1987. I got his autograph back then at Billy Hebert Field where he played ball. Great player!
One of my favorite players to watch, was really happy when the Yanks signed him.
gt hi
Thank you for the lesson. Please bring him back on.
When I first saw Gary Sheffield back in '03 as a baby his batting stance was so dope and sometimes weird by the time he joined the Yankees in 2004 he got that real swing.
He's such a bad ass. Loved watching his intensity.
One of the best hitters I’ve ever seen as a Dodger fan. 🐐 Sheff!
I could watch Sheff hit all day long. Amazing strength and bat speed. Also very well spoken. You can really tell he is enjoying himself on the show!
Sheff is my all time fav. Used to try to emulate his stance/swing as a kid. Still use his stance on my rtts player every year in the show.
Every single AB by Gary was must watch.
That was great!!! Could hear him talk hitting all day
More than 2,600 hits, 1,600 runs and RBI’s, 500 bombs, 250 steals, almost 500 doubles, almost 1,500 walks and under 1,200 strikeouts. Sheffield was a total savage at the plate. Imagine what those numbers would be if he didn’t miss almost 500 games to injuries in his 20’s.
One of my favorite sluggers
Always imitated his stance growing up. Could listen to him talk hitting for ages
I was in Gary's 6th grade class at Lockhart Middle school in Belmont Heights, he would hit a red kickball out of our playing field at just about every bat, our teacher wouldn't let him play much after the first week because we kept losing so many balls! He already had amazing bat speed at a young age, so gifted, so fun to watch, when he was allowed to play!
I love Sheff! Fav LF of all time
Really compelling and interesting. Love the stuff about keeping his hands loose and adjusting to parks.
As a jiu jitsu athlete this is super insightful, thank you sir , from Boston .
I could listen to baseball talk all day
I love that Gary Sheffield is one of the greatest hitters of all time but he still dresses like he's in the Original Kings of Comedy
I don't know what that means. He's sporting a very nice suit.
stop being an hater clown and go and shave that ugly ass beard
@Marvin Santana What joke?
Lol!
LMAOOOOOO
I seen Gary last week in same suit her in NYC. Very strong man.
My favorite swing in baseball ball by a country mile. None of that pure beautiful finess bullshit. Just PURE rage, aggression and unrelenting POWER. LOVED it!
I doubt you could find anyone who doesn't respect Gary Sheffield. What a fearsome hitter he was.
This is good stuff. See, I'm already too old to play baseball competitively, but if I were working my way to play professional, I would safe this video and study it as many times as possible. The guy is giving away his trade secrets!
As a fan I loved Sheff. I watched him mostly when he was in Florida playing for the Marlins. seemed as though he didnt get media coverage like he should have. I wonder why he was traded around so much. he was solid
i still can't believe he got such little love from the hall. seriously? my man deserves a plaque.
I'm disappointed they didn't talk about Sheffield when he was with Detroit
Lesser hitter are always so much more philosophical as coaches. Look how practical Gary is. "Forget his third pitch,' "Use the dimensions of the particular field you're playing at." Great advice.
I ust to swing like this man for every summer camp baseball game I played as a kid
Masterclass from a Legend of the game. Get him in the Hall!
mark derosa- a most under appreciated/undervalued player in his day.. so solid.
Sheff! It was so fun to watch him play...was said to see him go to FL...
Absolutely incredible.
I never understood why he waved the bat like he did but now that he explained it it makes so much more sense to me
He has so much wisdom about batting
Watching him on the field never gave me the impression he was a charismatic person. Looked mean. Great to see he was a great teammate. His apologizing in the middle of a sentence here shows how nice of a man he is. He was a great player!
Love these. With Pete Rose and A Rod. U can learn alot from these guys.
Let’s not forget that Sheff had a canon for an arm. Saw him at a game once short hop the catcher from 325 feet. I’m still in awe of that throw.
That was a hell of a master class on hitting.
One of my favorite batting stances to mimic when I was young
Definitely one of the guys I always wanted to watch hit no matter what team he played for.
Awesome video, he was an amazing player. 👍
DAAAAAMN THAT WAS AMAZING TO LISTEN TO
Why is no one talking about his .456 obp in 670+ ab’s in 1996. He’s underrated
The guy in the blue shirt is me. Baffled with GREATNESS! as a kid I liked to mimic Sheffield and Pujols batting stances.