Mays was amazing,i met him once and he asked me to go get a newspaper from the stand since it was raining ,i went and he tipped me $1 ,that was alot in then days,i feasted,i got a pop,pretzel,candy,a bar,pizza and chips and i even got a nickle back..best day ever.i was 10.
You can, as I discovered two summers ago. The Cape Cod Baseball League is nearly 100 years old and still going strong. It's made up of top college players with the potential of making the majors. It's a developmental league affording the many scouts in the stands to see how players adjust to using wooden bats for the first time. Hundreds of players have made it to the majors: Kris Bryant, Frank Thomas, Carlton Fisk, Albert Belle, and Jeff Bagwell, to name a few. I didn't plan on attending any sporting event after covering games for nearly 40 years, but the CCBL changed all that. It was like going back in time. Admission is free (the guys in the bullpen pass the hat in the 5th inning). And, the games are played in a timely manner. There's nothing not to like. Check it out on Google.
I agree on Willie Mays. I think he was one of the few players who had ALL the tools on both offense and defense. Just great at everything you COULD be great at.
With Willie it’s a shame he played the bulk of his career in a park like Candlestick where the wind from the bay could rob him of hits that would be HR’s in any other park. And by the time he got back to NYC with the Mets he was no longer the hitter he’d been before
Great stuff, Mays or Ruth, and Williams, they all were Great and can make an argument for each as who was the best, all I know is my father see them all and loved watching each one preform, so history has been kind to all three and the game will never see the likes of them ever again. The Babe, the say hay kid, and the splendid splinter, will and for ever be my heros.
@@JoeKoOhNo ..... Had Mantle not blown his knee and maybe played more to his potential, you could say that, but Id say Bonds and Ruth were much more complete as players, than Mantle was..... maybe even DiMaggio too. The fact that Ruth woulda been a HoF pitcher, plus his hitting, base running etc... puts him in a league of his own.
I was born in Baltimore. My Dad worked for Bethlehem Steel. He was transferred to Indiana in 1969. I always , and to this day remained an Orioles fan. Although one lucky day , September 1 , 1971 my friends Dad took us to see The Cubs vs. The Expos at Wrigley Field. I saw Leo. Although I did not realize than I was witnessing a team mate of Ruth and Gehrig. I do now. Fergie Jenkins hit two home runs.
Sounds just like Fergie. He was one of the best hitting pitchers I ever saw, along with Bob Gibson and Don Drysdale. Gibson and Drysdale would knock you down or actually hit you. They then had the courage to step in the batters box. No one messed with them. Drysdale was usually biggest guy on the field(6'6"), and Gibson was a former Golden gloves boxer!.
As you can guess from my previous comment, I'm NO fan of the DH. If you're going to throw at batters, have the guts to step in the batters box yourself!
Fergie was a better hitter than any pinch hitter on Cubs bench. He threw complete games constantly, never walked anyone, but gave up a lot of home runs.
Great pitchers give up home runs, just like great hitters strike out a lot. However those homers come usually with no one on base. You live by the fast ball, you'll occasionally get beat by your fast ball, both the pitcher and hitter's favorite pitch.
Each generation has an opinion on who was best but I agree with Leo on Willie Mays. I was not yet 8 years old in1957 and my Dad took me to Wrigley Field to see the Cubs and the then-NY Giants. We always got there early to see outfield and infield practice and BP. I remember Willie catching flies with his basket catch and even catching some behind his back, very impressive. I remember the Giants taking BP and they all looked the same until Willie got to hit. On a 1 to 10 scale of intensity, Willie was a 12. He got in the box and started hitting shots into the outfield, some off the grass, some off the wall, and some into the seats, all line drives. It seemed to a kid like he was a superman, he was head and shoulders above anyone else. I've seen a lot of games and a lot of players since then but nobody, NOBODY as great as Willie Mays was. May the Almighty give him rest and eternal joy in heaven.
@terrymercury1372 Ah what? His pitching? 4 years of Mariano Revera numbers for complete games. Hit like Bonds best year for a career. There's only two offensive stats that count. Runs and RBI's All other offensive stats only explain HOW you touch home or drove in runs. Steal, hits, extra base hits, BB, hit by pitch, S.O.'s.... all point to runs and RBI's. That's a Ted Williams quote. You ain't arguing with me. You're argument is with Ted who was one dimensional defensive 1st baseman and a candidate for the greatest hitter. But... complete ball player. It's Babe. But, Otani is looking better.
@@terrymercury1372 Ruth, Gehrig, and Mantle came up big in world series' games...not so Mays aside from the one great catch. Look at his WS batting stats...
Remember when you're watching today though...in 50 years, some of these guys will have the same legendary status. I'm glad I got to watch a lot of guys from the 80's/90s play. Griffey, McGwire/Sosa home run chase, Cal Ripken...that's a pretty short list but you get the point.
@@joeg5414 Go to Baseball Almanac and look at Willie Keeler's stats. He does not have many homeruns, but his stats are incredible and not too many people talk about him.
@@ryanthompsonthompson820 Interesting. There are a few videos on him but not much. I've been fascinated with baseball from like 1930 and earlier lately.
@@ryanthompsonthompson820 Nobody had many HRs when Keeler played. And while he may not be talked about much today he is in the HOF. And his MLB career was from 1892-1910. He retired with a .341 lifetime BA. And it was his MLB record for longest hitting streak (45 games) that Joe DiMaggio broke in 1941 when he hit in 56 straight games.
Leo got into a argument with an umpire once and accidentally kicked the umpire in the shin while trying to kick dirt on the umpires shoes. The umpire kicked him back and Durocher kicked him back again. This went on for a while until Leo realized the ump was wearing shin guards.
I think the single biggest factor was he, rightly or wrongly, got on the bad side of Stan Musial. NOT blaming Mr. Musial, but I think that's what kept him out in his lifetime.
The reason he was NOT was he was hated by pretty much every player he ever managed and most of MLB. Leo was a notorious self centered, ego-centric, blowhard. Just repeating what I have studied about the guy.
One of the greatest managers of all time, Leo "the lip" Durocher and arguably the greatest baseball player of all-time, the "Say Hey Kid", Willie Mays.
+Will Drucker ~> Leo once asked why he always argued with umps even tho they'd never change their decisions he replied that "Because next time he'll be more careful in his decision." Really?!?!? ☺
+WytZox1 of course, it's a head game. it happens in all sports, in different ways. players, coaches and managers try to get any edge they can and many believe that chirping or arguing with the officials will give them some type of advantage. there are some who go the other way and are very polite and respectful to the officials. either way, sports officials are human beings and it is possible to influence them either way. just take a look at former umpire joe west. worst umpire I have ever seen, and he would deliberately antagonize players and coaches.
Steve Swangler ~> Casey Stengel as Yankees and later Mets mgr would be seen on the field holding his arms up with hands far apart as he appeared to be arguing with umpire yet he was never thrown out of the game. He later explained to media that he was just telling the umpire how after the game he knew where they could catch some fish "this big." ☺
@@bobbysands6923 Yes Leo managed the Astros the last month of 1971 and all of 1972. He thought Cesar Cedeno could be the next Willie Mays. But he was not the only one who thought that.
Grew up near Wrigley Field in the ‘60’s when Durocher was the Cubs manager . Couple of us kids would hang around the lot where the players parked their cars and try to get to know the guys . Banks and Williams and Kessinger were always really nice , but Leo ....sometimes he was sorta pleasant , but most of the time he waved us away and told us to ‘ get the Hell away from me ‘ . Very moody guy , of course , we were kinda pests , looking back on it . Cubs playing nothing but day games , summertime , 12 years old and living a mile from Wrigley - what a great childhood !
Leo was not only hated by his fellow players.....he was despised by coaches too. A genuinely unpleasant person. I saw hundreds of Cub games at Wrigley in the '60's and even saw the Bears play there a couple times.
When I was little there was an old man in the neighborhood who'd lost his legs to diabetes. I was scared of him. Then I found out he ACTUALLY SAW COBB AND RUTH PLAY and I was his best friend.
My mom won a autographed baseball in a raffle at one of our grocery stores in town.Its all of the baseball players of the chicago cubs baseball team back in the early seventies.Leo's name is right on the front.Along with BANK'S,WILLIAM"S,SANTO,JENKIN'S.KISSINGER,HOLTSMAN!
Interesting how memories fade. He said 1929 for Cobb's last year, but his last year was 1928. Also, I looked at Retrosheet for every game against the Yankees that Cobb played with Speaker in the game, and he was never thrown out at third on a ground ball by Speaker. It might have been spring training, though.
You can hear that there's an edit after he says, "first base" at 0:49. It might be that some pertinent info was cut out. @fntime You win The 2019 Dick-head Award.
Willie Mays was the best all around everyday player I and most people think, but the fact that Babe Ruth was also an outstanding pitcher clearly puts him in a class by himself as the greatest ever. Ruth might have made the Hall of Fame just as a hurler.
I agree. But I don't fault Durocher for his obvious bias. Here's an interview I did with Mays long after he retired. Willie was both honest and humble. th-cam.com/video/dDyHmqf0hwc/w-d-xo.html
❤️ to see the negro league baseball players vs oldies major league baseball ⚾️ players f from early 1900/ 1930s like satchel paige & Josh Gilson etc etc
Sure he could, but you'd have to admit he wasn't nearly the threat on bases and in the field that Mays was. The Babe, though, was the most dominant player of all time.
THe only thing missing from WIllie`s career is 2 full seasons in his prime...due to military service...wonder what his numbers would have ended up at had he not missed them...baseball history is a fantastic subject for those of us who love it...
At the age of 40 Mays batted .271. Despite only playing 136 games he lead the league in walks with over 100 and OB%. Batting averages only tell half the story. Willie was a complete player.
My grandma died of this, she made it to 2yrs after being diagnosed. We feed her with a tube and she kept her since of humor. Always went to church with us, with a hanky, since she couldn't swallow. We loved her, proud of her and miss her dearly. I was only 13, when our dear Lord took her.
You have to hand it to Leo and anyone who could brush racism aside, especially in the 50s, like how good he was with Willie Mays, backing him wholeheartedly slump or not. This PC stuff now has gone way too far IMO though. Judge by content and character, and treat people how you would expect to be treated, it's that easy!
@MANCHESTER UNITED That may be so, but here in the US I think most people view soccer as a good starter sport where 5 and 6 yr old boys can kick a ball around, prepping themselves to play "real sports" in the future.
@M much easier sport to play.anyone can run and kick...catch a screaming liner...hit a 95mph fastball...throw a 95mph fastball?..this is for elite athletes..jus not enough in other countries
Sorry, this is all the video I have and I doubt the halftime show was ever aired by the network. They always go back to the studio during halftime in the NFL, unlike some college games of days gone by.
Barry Thomas only for a short time in spring training. Durocher was suspended for the year by Commissioner Happy Chandler. Clyde Sukeforth was Jackie Robinson's first mlb manager, for two games, before Burt Shotton took over.
seriously? a made up story about Ty Cobb, when asked about Lou Gehrig, "quiet, he smoked a pipe. went to bed early" there was nothing here that baseball fans didn't already know.
I'm 50, and as a young kid in the mid 70s my best friend was 2 yrs older and his brother was a great athlete and 5 yrs older than I, and he and his friends taught me so much and were always riding me like I was supposed to be at their level in baseball/football, whatever, even though I was younger & smaller, but it sure elevated my play. I lived outside of Dallas and it was an awesome time! Earl Campbell at UT, The Big Red Machine, and the Cowboys. I moved to So CA in Jan of 78' and have been here since, but sometimes wished I had stayed there in Plano TX. People were just a little more down to earth, and sports, especially football and baseball are everything there!
I agree. I also recommend "Lords of the Realm", a history of the game and how Marvin Miller turned the tables on the owners by torpedoing the reserve clause and bringing about free agency.
@@bradpalmer7944 I was about 12 years old when that happened but I was a massive baseball fan from birth. Curt Flood is the name I will never forget I'm from Chicago. I've been a big fan of yours for many years. I will definitely check out that recommendation. Another good baseball book I read was about baseball during the Ragtime era. But Leo's book is my favorite
If Leo confirms what my grandfather-in-law says about Mays - that he was the best, then that's all the information I need to pass down to anyone who asks me my opinion of who was the best all around player of all time. My wife's grandfather actually caddied for Ruth a few times in the 30's in Queens, New York along Bayside on the courses there and saw all the great New York teams.
@@ShunyamNiketana You know Ruth grew up in a kids home. He was picked on because of his looks. This drove him to become one of the greatest, if not the greatest of all time.
The Hall of Fame broadcaster Ernie Harwell said that he asked Babe Ruth for his autograph. There was no paper around so Babe Ruth signed the sole of Ernie's shoe.
Yes, Mays was on a record-breaking HR terror by mid summer, when Durocher told him to favor base hits. I don't know the numbers off hand, but after July he hit only about one quarter of his season's HR total, though he ended up with a BA of .345.
@@robgeorgia8801 Agreed. Ruth was a better peak player. I would compare Ruth/Aaron to Chamberlain/Jabbar. Along with Williams, Aaron was the most consistent power hitter for the longest. Mays fizzled out at the very end. I really know little of post 80s players
The interviewer should have asked Leo Durocher about Herman Munster, before asking about Willie Mays. Munster no question had more power than anyone, maybe more feared than Ruth.
Funny how nobody ever mentions Rogers Hornsby, especially from a purely statistical aspect; here's a ten-year stretch- 5451AB 2080 H 405 doubles 115 triples 250 HR .382 average. For six straight years he led the league in batting average, OB%, slugging, and won 2 triple crowns (hitting .395 during those 6 years.) While playing, he also managed(!!!) the Cardinals to a world series championship over the Yankees in 1926.
I read nice guys finish last when I was a fifth grader. Not many inside story's, but it was an unspoken rule back then that ball players did not talk about "private matters". Sounds kind of naive today.
great story by willie about leo, once willie relaxed he became a superstar, many a great have had their doubts in the early years, young and unsure of themselves, if you see the talent you give them the confidence they need.
There was one story I heard about Durocher was when he came to the Yankees. Babe Ruth came up to him in the locker room, put his arm around Durocher's shoulder, and said something like, "Kid, I know it was you who stole my watch. Now give it back or else we'll step outside." Durocher was supposed to have replied, "Why go outside? Why not settle this here?" And with one punch, Leo laid Ruth out on the floor. He was supposed to have been traded shortly after. Durocher always denied the story.
Bob Shawkey managed the Yankees around the time that Durocher was with them. Shawkey said that someone was stealing money from the other players. Some of the players marked some money and had Babe Ruth leave the money where anyone could take it. The players felt that Ruth had a reputation of being careless with his money so the thief would not suspect a set-up. After the money was stolen, the players found that Durocher had the marked money, and they beat him up, according to Shawkey.
He did not hit for average and he did not dominate. He is 188th on the all time B.A. list. He broke no offensive records, and did not finish first in any offensive category.
ANYBODY with a lifetime average of over .300 for 20 years or more, hits for average! He is the only player in MLB history with 7,000 outfield putouts! Your RACISM and JEALOUSY is front and center!
@@keithleverette8235 Ruth and Cobb both have more records than Mays.A lot more. By the by, just because a black fellow is not selected, does not make one a racist. Just look in your mirror if you want to see one.
@MANCHESTER UNITED F.C soccer is popular because it's an easy game that almost anyone can play. You don't need to. E able to catch, throw, strike, or tackle anyone. Don't get me wrong it's a great game because of those things, but it doesn't take the same level of skill as baseball, football, basketball, tennis, Rugby, etc.
@M And the majority of Americans can give a rats azz about soccer. The only kids in America that play soccer are the ones not good enough for the big 3 sports. Baseball, Basketball and Football.
ask leo about pete reiser. he did manage pete when he came up in '40. could do everything, hit for power, run like a deer. in his first full year, '41, pete was the NL batting champ, led the league in homers. in '42, pete was hitting .352 when he ran into the wall in , i think, august. if he only had padded walls, there's no telling what a fab career he would have had. and he continued running into walls, when he came back from mil service in '46. was given the last rites, in one bang-up. one more thing, the cards could have had him, but kept him "hidden" as an up and comer. imagine if he and stan musial were on the same team!!
If Willie Mays came along today, he would never play one game in the Majors. He'd be an All-American football player for Alabama and then a 1st round draft pick in the NFL, where he'd be a starting quarterback and put up Russell Wilson numbers, or he'd have been an All-American basketball player at Alabama or Auburn and then a 1st round pick in the NBA where he'd put up Russell Westbrook numbers. It would be fantastic if he became the first hall of famer to make it to 100.
They once asked the great Dizzy Dean the hardest ball ever hit off him, he said Mize hit a line drive between his legs and the centerfielder caught it on a fly😅
I read a story about former hall of fame manager dick williams; Williams mentioned the rumor about Leo stealing The Babe's watch when they were teammates on the Yankees. Apparently, Williams was a hall of fame bench jockey as a player, and when Brooklyn was playing the giants, dodgers manager burt shotten would tell Williams, "ask leo about The Babe's watch". So, all game long, Leo would have to listen to dick williams, standing on the top step of the dugout, accusing him of stealing The Babe's watch. And if Williams did play in a game against the giants, Leo would fine any pitcher who didn't hit Williams with a pitch. Gotta love old school baseball
willie was indeed great, so was mantle, who had the same talent as the former, if only he had kept himself on the straight & narrow, like mays and aaron. another name he could have brought up was pete reiser. same as mantle and mays, he could run like a deer, hit ( led the NL in his first full year, in his second, was leading the league again by mid year, then started running into fences). nearly died after one crash. for my $$, ruth has to be THE greatest, great pitcher, greatest hitter. pat bonner
Mantle was really set back early in his career by a torn ACL. The surgery, and rehab was archaic compared to today's. He tripped on a sprinkler in the outfield,and tore his knee up. He still had a great career, but he had almost unlimited potential before that Injury. He wasn't hyped up much early in his career in New York because he took over centerfield for Joe DiMaggio who was beloved in Bew York because he was a great Italian American Yankee. Mantle was a country kid from Oklahoma, and New Yorkers didn't warm to him till he was just too good to ignore, and started playing ball with the media. Probably the most talented 5 tool baseball player ever though. His speed was off the charts before the knee injury. He was easily the fastest player in baseball, and strong as an ox.
some guy named stone must be drunk saying mays was overated.mays could do it all, a true 5 point player, had he not done 2 years in the army in his prime he would have re-set all the records that even aaron and bonds wouldn;t be able to break.simply the greatest, said dimaggio, durocher, lasorda, cosell, ect. ect. ect...
+Bill Flower ~> The "reason" for Mays' greatness was mentioned on an episode of Bewitched AND he was mentioned in the song Centerfield by that Creedence Clearwater guy. ☺
I believe what you say may be true,Bill.There was a baseball stats keeper who said 45 balls of willies were blown back into play in a single season at candlestick...and with the 2 seasons missed you can be sure the records would have fallen.I wonder what would have happened if Ted Williams had not missed because of military service.
Bill Flower mays could not do it all,he was overrated-how is hitting .302(good for 177th on the all time list)hitting for average?.300 is a good average,not great.he was not great at everything. .302?no.
Sounds like Cobb talked trash like so many star players. The job one hack reporter did to his reputation, as documented in the Prager University video, is unjust. Great video.
GEORGE HALAS has a great anecdote on Ty Cobb about a run-in he had with Cobb during Halas' short stint with the Yankees. It begins at 13:10. th-cam.com/video/insS_NE_f6k/w-d-xo.html
@@ourvaluesarewhoweareinadem4093 Stealing signs is as old as life itself. Steroids is in a different category entirely. So is high tech cheating. AI will create a whole new dimension.
@@anonymike8280 So it was totally cool back when teams had guys in the stands stealing signs and using hand signals to get the signs to the batter? But if you use a cell phone it is somehow total moral bankruptcy? And steroids is somehow different from the meth they used in the 50s, 60s, and 70s and the cocaine they used before that? Idiot.
The famous picture of Rose ploughing into Fosse has Leo in the background yelling at Rose to go in hard, he was the 3rd Base coach in that game. howtheyplay.com/team-sports/Redemption-The-Ray-Fosse-Story
The only ballplayer you repeatedly hear being the absolute best all-around was Mays: seems he was superlative at every aspect--hitting, running, and fielding. Sounds like Mantle was his peer before the injuries got him.
Mantle definitely was, and probably a little better even. A torn ACL was career ending for most players in the 50s, and 60s, but Mantle kept playing well.
Mays was amazing,i met him once and he asked me to go get a newspaper from the stand since it was raining ,i went and he tipped me $1 ,that was alot in then days,i feasted,i got a pop,pretzel,candy,a bar,pizza and chips and i even got a nickle back..best day ever.i was 10.
If he'd signed that paper... and given it to you... 😀😃😁
Awesome story!
That is awesome. I met Rickey Henderson at a baseball card show in Louisville, Kentucky in 1990.
I really envy you. Mays is my favorite ball player of all time. I have bragging rights to have met Ferguson Jenkins, Juan Marichal and Bob Feller.
cool story
HOW I WISH I COULD TRAVEL BACK IN TIME TO SEE THESE GREATS WHEN THE GAME WAS TRULY JUST A GAME!!!!
You can, as I discovered two summers ago. The Cape Cod Baseball League is nearly 100 years old and still going strong. It's made up of top college players with the potential of making the majors. It's a developmental league affording the many scouts in the stands to see how players adjust to using wooden bats for the first time. Hundreds of players have made it to the majors: Kris Bryant, Frank Thomas, Carlton Fisk, Albert Belle, and Jeff Bagwell, to name a few. I didn't plan on attending any sporting event after covering games for nearly 40 years, but the CCBL changed all that. It was like going back in time. Admission is free (the guys in the bullpen pass the hat in the 5th inning). And, the games are played in a timely manner. There's nothing not to like. Check it out on Google.
I agree on Willie Mays. I think he was one of the few players who had ALL the tools on both offense and defense. Just great at everything you COULD be great at.
With Willie it’s a shame he played the bulk of his career in a park like Candlestick where the wind from the bay could rob him of hits that would be HR’s in any other park. And by the time he got back to NYC with the Mets he was no longer the hitter he’d been before
Aaron, Clemente, Mantle, just three off the top of my head from Mays' era that possessed all the tools.
Between he and Ruth, the GOAT.
Great stuff, Mays or Ruth, and Williams, they all were Great and can make an argument for each as who was the best, all I know is my father see them all and loved watching each one preform, so history has been kind to all three and the game will never see the likes of them ever again. The Babe, the say hay kid, and the splendid splinter, will and for ever be my heros.
I've heard by so many of the greats in this wonderful game of ours that Willie Mays was the most complete ball player they ever saw.
Mays or Mantle.
All the tools, and a great heart
@@JoeKoOhNo ..... Had Mantle not blown his knee and maybe played more to his potential, you could say that, but Id say Bonds and Ruth were much more complete as players, than Mantle was..... maybe even DiMaggio too. The fact that Ruth woulda been a HoF pitcher, plus his hitting, base running etc... puts him in a league of his own.
i've also heard from many that Aaron was just as good as Mays, except his hat didn't fly off his head.
I was born in Baltimore. My Dad worked for Bethlehem Steel. He was transferred to Indiana in 1969. I always , and to this day remained an Orioles fan. Although one lucky day , September 1 , 1971 my friends Dad took us to see The Cubs vs. The Expos at Wrigley Field. I saw Leo. Although I did not realize than I was witnessing a team mate of Ruth and Gehrig. I do now. Fergie Jenkins hit two home runs.
Sounds just like Fergie. He was one of the best hitting pitchers I ever saw, along with Bob Gibson and Don Drysdale. Gibson and Drysdale would knock you down or actually hit you. They then had the courage to step in the batters box. No one messed with them. Drysdale was usually biggest guy on the field(6'6"), and Gibson was a former Golden gloves boxer!.
As you can guess from my previous comment, I'm NO fan of the DH. If you're going to throw at batters, have the guts to step in the batters box yourself!
Fergie was a better hitter than any pinch hitter on Cubs bench. He threw complete games constantly, never walked anyone, but gave up a lot of home runs.
Great pitchers give up home runs, just like great hitters strike out a lot. However those homers come usually with no one on base. You live by the fast ball, you'll occasionally get beat by your fast ball, both the pitcher and hitter's favorite pitch.
I am old enough to remember Dizzy Dean calling TV games, man had a great voice for broadcasting baseball.
Priceless recollections from LEO a multi generational player / manager during the "GOLDEN AGE" of baseball....
What a great interview...I could listen to that all night. Sounds like I should take a peek at his book.
My favorite saying from Dizzy Dean is "It ain't braggin' if you can do it".
its still bragging
@@jimmymags6516 no it not
@@JK-Alabama11k
YesItIs.
@@TheBatugan77 no it not
Yes it is no its not
That was fantastic!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for commenting.
Each generation has an opinion on who was best but I agree with Leo on Willie Mays. I was not yet 8 years old in1957 and my Dad took me to Wrigley Field to see the Cubs and the then-NY Giants. We always got there early to see outfield and infield practice and BP. I remember Willie catching flies with his basket catch and even catching some behind his back, very impressive. I remember the Giants taking BP and they all looked the same until Willie got to hit. On a 1 to 10 scale of intensity, Willie was a 12. He got in the box and started hitting shots into the outfield, some off the grass, some off the wall, and some into the seats, all line drives. It seemed to a kid like he was a superman, he was head and shoulders above anyone else. I've seen a lot of games and a lot of players since then but nobody, NOBODY as great as Willie Mays was. May the Almighty give him rest and eternal joy in heaven.
Seems like a real nice personable guy, I may have to read his book someday
No one touches Babe! #1
Not even #2. Babe Ruth never saw the day he had all the tools and could do it all like
Willie Mays.
@terrymercury1372
Ah what? His pitching? 4 years of Mariano Revera numbers for complete games. Hit like Bonds best year for a career.
There's only two offensive stats that count.
Runs and RBI's All other offensive stats only explain HOW you touch home or drove in runs.
Steal, hits, extra base hits, BB, hit by pitch, S.O.'s.... all point to runs and RBI's. That's a Ted Williams quote. You ain't arguing with me. You're argument is with Ted who was one dimensional defensive 1st baseman and a candidate for the greatest hitter. But... complete ball player. It's Babe. But, Otani is looking better.
@@terrymercury1372 Ruth, Gehrig, and Mantle came up big in world series' games...not so Mays aside from the one great catch. Look at his WS batting stats...
I wish I could have watched Babe Ruth play.
Remember when you're watching today though...in 50 years, some of these guys will have the same legendary status. I'm glad I got to watch a lot of guys from the 80's/90s play. Griffey, McGwire/Sosa home run chase, Cal Ripken...that's a pretty short list but you get the point.
@@joeg5414 Go to Baseball Almanac and look at Willie Keeler's stats. He does not have many homeruns, but his stats are incredible and not too many people talk about him.
@@ryanthompsonthompson820 Interesting. There are a few videos on him but not much. I've been fascinated with baseball from like 1930 and earlier lately.
@@joeg5414 Willie Keeler played in the late 1800's.
@@ryanthompsonthompson820 Nobody had many HRs when Keeler played. And while he may not be talked about much today he is in the HOF. And his MLB career was from 1892-1910. He retired with a .341 lifetime BA. And it was his MLB record for longest hitting streak (45 games) that Joe DiMaggio broke in 1941 when he hit in 56 straight games.
Leo got into a argument with an umpire once and accidentally kicked the umpire in the shin while trying to kick dirt on the umpires shoes. The umpire kicked him back and Durocher kicked him back again. This went on for a while until Leo realized the ump was wearing shin guards.
LMAO!!
Leo got in arguments with Umps more than once.
He was the Billy Martin of his era
Leo was a great baseball institution--should have been elected to HOF while he was alive.
john list ~> He was a guest star on both Munsters and Beverly Hillbillies ☺
+WytZox1 and Mr. Ed too
I think the single biggest factor was he, rightly or wrongly, got on the bad side of Stan Musial. NOT blaming Mr. Musial, but I think that's what kept him out in his lifetime.
The reason he was NOT was he was hated by pretty much every player he ever managed and most of MLB. Leo was a notorious self centered, ego-centric, blowhard. Just repeating what I have studied about the guy.
One of the greatest managers of all time, Leo "the lip" Durocher and arguably the greatest baseball player of all-time, the "Say Hey Kid", Willie Mays.
+Will Drucker ~> Leo once asked why he always argued with umps even tho they'd never change their decisions he replied that "Because next time he'll be more careful in his decision." Really?!?!? ☺
+WytZox1 of course, it's a head game. it happens in all sports, in different ways. players, coaches and managers try to get any edge they can and many believe that chirping or arguing with the officials will give them some type of advantage. there are some who go the other way and are very polite and respectful to the officials. either way, sports officials are human beings and it is possible to influence them either way. just take a look at former umpire joe west. worst umpire I have ever seen, and he would deliberately antagonize players and coaches.
Steve Swangler ~> Casey Stengel as Yankees and later Mets mgr would be seen on the field holding his arms up with hands far apart as he appeared to be arguing with umpire yet he was never thrown out of the game. He later explained to media that he was just telling the umpire how after the game he knew where they could catch some fish "this big." ☺
yup
Don't believe that. Most of his former players hated him. Proof ??.....even Ernie Banks could not stand him, and Ernie liked everyone.
Wonderful 👏 video ...guests speaking ...tremendous
Just amazing! Thank you
Thank you too!
This is awesome. I want to read his book
Wow! What a video…. Thanks
Thank you too!
Wish Leo was around now. He went from messing with Ty Cobb to managing in the Astrodome in 1970-71.
Been following baseball since 1970 but I do not remember Durocher managing the Astros...
@@bobbysands6923 Yes Leo managed the Astros the last month of 1971 and all of 1972. He thought Cesar Cedeno could be the next Willie Mays. But he was not the only one who thought that.
Grew up near Wrigley Field in the ‘60’s when Durocher was the Cubs manager . Couple of us kids would hang around the lot where the players parked their cars and try to get to know the guys . Banks and Williams and Kessinger were always really nice , but Leo ....sometimes he was sorta pleasant , but most of the time he waved us away and told us to ‘ get the Hell away from me ‘ . Very moody guy , of course , we were kinda pests , looking back on it . Cubs playing nothing but day games , summertime , 12 years old and living a mile from Wrigley - what a great childhood !
Some of the best days of my youth was watching the Cubs on WGN in the afternoon. Then the Braves at night on TBS. Both networks now suck.
Leo was not only hated by his fellow players.....he was despised by coaches too. A genuinely unpleasant person. I saw hundreds of Cub games at Wrigley in the '60's and even saw the Bears play there a couple times.
When I was little there was an old man in the neighborhood who'd lost his legs to diabetes. I was scared of him. Then I found out he ACTUALLY SAW COBB AND RUTH PLAY and I was his best friend.
I'll bet you Cobb got rid of his legs and not the diabeetus
@@r3tr0actiongamer24 I don't know whether I should disapprove cuz I'm laughing. 😏
It’s always the scary neighbors who have the best stories
My mom won a autographed baseball in a raffle at one of our grocery stores in town.Its all of the baseball players of the chicago cubs baseball team back in the early seventies.Leo's name is right on the front.Along with BANK'S,WILLIAM"S,SANTO,JENKIN'S.KISSINGER,HOLTSMAN!
That's got to be worth a fortune today!
Great one thx
Thank you too!
Interesting how memories fade. He said 1929 for Cobb's last year, but his last year was 1928. Also, I looked at Retrosheet for every game against the Yankees that Cobb played with Speaker in the game, and he was never thrown out at third on a ground ball by Speaker. It might have been spring training, though.
You win the 2018 Meaningless Shit Award. :)
beakt you have to look at who's telling the story.
You can hear that there's an edit after he says, "first base" at 0:49. It might be that some pertinent info was cut out. @fntime You win The 2019 Dick-head Award.
@@fntime If you love baseball ( and it seems you don't) then this information is not meaningless.
Ty Cobb, the best baseball player, ever.
Except that Cobb was just as big a butcher in the OF as Teddy Ballgame. Best lefty hitter ever? Well he's in the top three with Ruth and Williams.
Not even close
Ty Cobb hitting magician 🎩
The truly great Willie Mays. The overall best player ever, and the most fun to watch.
wow, great video thanks
Willie Mays was the best all around everyday player I and most people think, but the fact that Babe Ruth was also an outstanding pitcher clearly puts him in a class by himself as the greatest ever. Ruth might have made the Hall of Fame just as a hurler.
I agree. But I don't fault Durocher for his obvious bias. Here's an interview I did with Mays long after he retired. Willie was both honest and humble.
th-cam.com/video/dDyHmqf0hwc/w-d-xo.html
Thank you!
I wish to have had to chance to see all these great names play baseball.
❤️ to see the negro league baseball players vs oldies major league baseball ⚾️ players f from early 1900/ 1930s like satchel paige & Josh Gilson etc etc
Mays could do it all. Run, throw, hit, field.
+Scott Reed And Ruth could not? He pitched, hit home runs, hit triples, stole bases, stole home once, and had a hell of an arm from the outfield.
Sure he could, but you'd have to admit he wasn't nearly the threat on bases and in the field that Mays was. The Babe, though, was the most dominant player of all time.
Scott Reed Indeed, and of course, it's hard to argue against Willie Mays.
THe only thing missing from WIllie`s career is 2 full seasons in his prime...due to military service...wonder what his numbers would have ended up at had he not missed them...baseball history is a fantastic subject for those of us who love it...
At the age of 40 Mays batted .271. Despite only playing 136 games he lead the league in walks with over 100 and OB%. Batting averages only tell half the story. Willie was a complete player.
My grandma died of this, she made it to 2yrs after being diagnosed. We feed her with a tube and she kept her since of humor. Always went to church with us, with a hanky, since she couldn't swallow. We loved her, proud of her and miss her dearly. I was only 13, when our dear Lord took her.
Leo was my all time favorite manager. Just sorry he is gone now.
Growing up in the 70s I was asked if I was related to Leo Durocher
Met Durocher once when I was in the Boys Club as a kid. He was a genuinely nice man to the kids, despite his tough reputation in baseball.
Leo could be a charmer when he wanted to. Much like his friend, Frank Sinatra.
wow truly great
Brilliant interview. Loved the bit about the Babe
Great raconteur 👍
You have to hand it to Leo and anyone who could brush racism aside, especially in the 50s, like how good he was with Willie Mays, backing him wholeheartedly slump or not. This PC stuff now has gone way too far IMO though. Judge by content and character, and treat people how you would expect to be treated, it's that easy!
@MANCHESTER UNITED That may be so, but here in the US I think most people view soccer as a good starter sport where 5 and 6 yr old boys can kick a ball around, prepping themselves to play "real sports" in the future.
That's a great point and insight.
I loved how Leo was portrayed in "42," even though I didn't believe it. Hahahaha
@M much easier sport to play.anyone can run and kick...catch a screaming liner...hit a 95mph fastball...throw a 95mph fastball?..this is for elite athletes..jus not enough in other countries
Sorry, this is all the video I have and I doubt the halftime show was ever aired by the network. They always go back to the studio during halftime in the NFL, unlike some college games of days gone by.
leo was one helluva guy. Read his book
leo was blacklisted from the American league in 1929 for stealing from his teammates.
@2:32 look how “cut” Willie was ⭐️💪🏼⚾️
That was an impressive “pack”
Pretty good for back in the days when strength training wasn't a thing.
Leo was also Jackie Robinson's first manager in the major leagues.
Barry Thomas only for a short time in spring training. Durocher was suspended for the year by Commissioner Happy Chandler. Clyde Sukeforth was Jackie Robinson's first mlb manager, for two games, before Burt Shotton took over.
Priceless set of recollections. This is one for the time capsule.
seriously? a made up story about Ty Cobb, when asked about Lou Gehrig, "quiet, he smoked a pipe. went to bed early" there was nothing here that baseball fans didn't already know.
I'm 50, and as a young kid in the mid 70s my best friend was 2 yrs older and his brother was a great athlete and 5 yrs older than I, and he and his friends taught me so much and were always riding me like I was supposed to be at their level in baseball/football, whatever, even though I was younger & smaller, but it sure elevated my play. I lived outside of Dallas and it was an awesome time! Earl Campbell at UT, The Big Red Machine, and the Cowboys. I moved to So CA in Jan of 78' and have been here since, but sometimes wished I had stayed there in Plano TX. People were just a little more down to earth, and sports, especially football and baseball are everything there!
Leo's book is an awesome read. One of the better baseball books
I agree. I also recommend "Lords of the Realm", a history of the game and how Marvin Miller turned the tables on the owners by torpedoing the reserve clause and bringing about free agency.
@@bradpalmer7944
I was about 12 years old when that happened but I was a massive baseball fan from birth. Curt Flood is the name I will never forget I'm from Chicago. I've been a big fan of yours for many years. I will definitely check out that recommendation. Another good baseball book I read was about baseball during the Ragtime era. But Leo's book is my favorite
This is great.
Great memories.
If Leo confirms what my grandfather-in-law says about Mays - that he was the best, then that's all the information I need to pass down to anyone who asks me my opinion of who was the best all around player of all time. My wife's grandfather actually caddied for Ruth a few times in the 30's in Queens, New York along Bayside on the courses there and saw all the great New York teams.
What was Ruth like? Did she say?
@@ShunyamNiketana You know Ruth grew up in a kids home. He was picked on because of his looks. This drove him to become one of the greatest, if not the greatest of all time.
Cool video. Interesting
Babe-#1
The Hall of Fame broadcaster Ernie Harwell said that he asked Babe Ruth for his autograph. There was no paper around so Babe Ruth signed the sole of Ernie's shoe.
Wow ❤️ that story & funny
I went to a book signing with Ernie not long before he passed and he told that story@@loydkline
Is it true that Durocher advised Mays to focus on the batting crown instead of the homer record?
If he did, I never heard about it, but it seems like the most logical approach to me considering Mays' speed on the base paths.
I believe he did.What he told Mays was to shorten his stride at the plate and to only think of hitting the ball "solid".
This was in 1954 in a tight pennant race. Leo felt Willie could help the team more by hitting for average and getting on base.
Yes, Mays was on a record-breaking HR terror by mid summer, when Durocher told him to favor base hits. I don't know the numbers off hand, but after July he hit only about one quarter of his season's HR total, though he ended up with a BA of .345.
Ruth and Cobb are the best ever.No one else was as dominant,or as record breaking.
Leo actually saw all those guys play.....not that his opinion counts....
I tend to agree. You measure an athlete by how they competed, and no two reigned over their eras like those two.
Ruth mays Aaron teddy mantle Cobb bonds Gehrig Johnson robinson
@@nicholasschroeder3678
Aaron hit 755 home runs versus 714 for Babe Ruth..... The difference is Hank Aaron had about 4000 more at bats than Ruth.
@@robgeorgia8801 Agreed. Ruth was a better peak player. I would compare Ruth/Aaron to Chamberlain/Jabbar. Along with Williams, Aaron was the most consistent power hitter for the longest. Mays fizzled out at the very end. I really know little of post 80s players
The interviewer should have asked Leo Durocher about Herman Munster, before asking about Willie Mays. Munster no question had more power than anyone, maybe more feared than Ruth.
msw600 He hit the ball 8 blocks and off his head
Thank you, for all those who did and didn't see that episode of the Munsters. Brings back memories of my childhood. Lol
what would Herman's nickname have been, if they had signed him up?
wilson blauheuer Monster Mash(er)..... and he would have his own walk up music.
Don't forget Jethro Bodine.
Tris speaker didn’t play in 1929. He retired in 1928
So did Cobb.
It's been a long time.
He loved the young Cesar Cedeno too.
Funny how nobody ever mentions Rogers Hornsby, especially from a purely statistical aspect; here's a ten-year stretch-
5451AB 2080 H 405 doubles 115 triples 250 HR .382 average. For six straight years he led the league in batting average, OB%, slugging, and won 2 triple crowns (hitting .395 during those 6 years.) While playing, he also managed(!!!) the Cardinals to a world series championship over the Yankees in 1926.
Hornsby is top 5 five all time.
Hornsby Bend, a small community just southeast of Austin, is named after his family.
Rogers is one of the all time best.
Hornsby is the greatest righthand hitter and N.L. ballplayer ever.
Who's the interviewer, Stanley Kubrick.
I read nice guys finish last when I was a fifth grader. Not many inside story's, but it was an unspoken rule back then that ball players did not talk about "private matters". Sounds kind of naive today.
Back when it was a man's game.
great story by willie about leo, once willie relaxed he became a superstar, many a great have had their doubts in the early years, young and unsure of themselves, if you see the talent you give them the confidence they need.
i saw mays, on tv, get that first hit, off warren spahn, over the polo grounds roof
There was one story I heard about Durocher was when he came to the Yankees. Babe Ruth came up to him in the locker room, put his arm around Durocher's shoulder, and said something like, "Kid, I know it was you who stole my watch. Now give it back or else we'll step outside." Durocher was supposed to have replied, "Why go outside? Why not settle this here?" And with one punch, Leo laid Ruth out on the floor. He was supposed to have been traded shortly after.
Durocher always denied the story.
Bob Shawkey managed the Yankees around the time that Durocher was with them. Shawkey said that someone was stealing money from the other players. Some of the players marked some money and had Babe Ruth leave the money where anyone could take it. The players felt that Ruth had a reputation of being careless with his money so the thief would not suspect a set-up. After the money was stolen, the players found that Durocher had the marked money, and they beat him up, according to Shawkey.
Probably true.
Now this was baseball!!!
Leo's opinion of Mays matches mine.
Mays = Hit for average, hit with power, speed, baserunning extraordinare, exceptional fielder, accurate and strong throwing arm! Anybody else?
He did not hit for average and he did not dominate. He is 188th on the all time B.A. list. He broke no offensive records, and did not finish first in any offensive category.
ANYBODY with a lifetime average of over .300 for 20 years or more, hits for average! He is the only player in MLB history with 7,000 outfield putouts! Your RACISM and JEALOUSY is front and center!
@@williamhendershot54951st in most homeruns hit in extra innings, ALL-TIME! 1st to steal 300 bases and hit 300, 400, 500, and 600 plus homeruns!
@@keithleverette8235 Ruth and Cobb both have more records than Mays.A lot more. By the by, just because a black fellow is not selected, does not make one a racist. Just look in your mirror if you want to see one.
Ruth and Cobb played against some of the weakest athletes in sports history! Records are as tainted as they were! 😄😂😝😅
the babe hit the ball 500 feet in the 20's "regularly"
wow, I didn't think any of the older players had 6 packs.
Ruth had a keg...
Modern day players didn't invent muscles,lol
Gehrig was ripped, a strong son of a bitch. It takes alot of strength to knock in 185 RBI in one season.
@MANCHESTER UNITED F.C soccer is popular because it's an easy game that almost anyone can play. You don't need to. E able to catch, throw, strike, or tackle anyone. Don't get me wrong it's a great game because of those things, but it doesn't take the same level of skill as baseball, football, basketball, tennis, Rugby, etc.
@M And the majority of Americans can give a rats azz about soccer. The only kids in America that play soccer are the ones not good enough for the big 3 sports. Baseball, Basketball and Football.
ask leo about pete reiser. he did manage pete when he came up in '40. could do everything, hit for power, run like a deer. in his first full year, '41, pete was the NL batting champ, led the league in homers. in '42, pete was hitting .352 when he ran into the wall in , i think, august. if he only had padded walls, there's no telling what a fab career he would have had. and he continued running into walls, when he came back from mil service in '46. was given the last rites, in one bang-up. one more thing, the cards could have had him, but kept him "hidden" as an up and comer. imagine if he and stan musial were on the same team!!
Mays hit his first major league home run against Braves star Warren Spahn in 1951.
i saw it...over the left field roof. (on tv) PAT BONNER
Willie Mays ???
Many have said the same. Sparky Anderson comes to mind.
Check Mays' World Series' stats. I always say that great players come up big in big games...Mays was great in the regular season like Arod.
Great trivia. Mickey Mantle was the last Yankee to wear #7 for the Yankees. Leo was the first!
If Willie Mays came along today, he would never play one game in the Majors. He'd be an All-American football player for Alabama and then a 1st round draft pick in the NFL, where he'd be a starting quarterback and put up Russell Wilson numbers, or he'd have been an All-American basketball player at Alabama or Auburn and then a 1st round pick in the NBA where he'd put up Russell Westbrook numbers. It would be fantastic if he became the first hall of famer to make it to 100.
They once asked the great Dizzy Dean the hardest ball ever hit off him, he said Mize hit a line drive between his legs and the centerfielder caught it on a fly😅
I read a story about former hall of fame manager dick williams; Williams mentioned the rumor about Leo stealing The Babe's watch when they were teammates on the Yankees. Apparently, Williams was a hall of fame bench jockey as a player, and when Brooklyn was playing the giants, dodgers manager burt shotten would tell Williams, "ask leo about The Babe's watch". So, all game long, Leo would have to listen to dick williams, standing on the top step of the dugout, accusing him of stealing The Babe's watch. And if Williams did play in a game against the giants, Leo would fine any pitcher who didn't hit Williams with a pitch. Gotta love old school baseball
In his book 'Nice Guys Finish Last', Durocher said "Willie Mays is the greatest player I ever saw except for maybe Pete Reiser".
Ray Mond Reiser was said to be one helluva ballplayer.
Reiser was the fastest base-runner in the Majors while he was playing healthy.
He thought Mays was better than all of them and he saw them all from the 20s to the 80s
He was correct.
Not better than Ken Griffey, Jr!
He was and is a moron,like you.
That’s baseball logic, thank you for that comment. Mays greatest ever, that he ever saw
@@johncraftenworth7847 Jr was great, but he wasn't the Say Hey Kid.
Cobb retired in '28 not '29.
Babe is better than all.
willie was indeed great, so was mantle, who had the same talent as the former, if only he had kept himself on the straight & narrow, like mays and aaron. another name he could have brought up was pete reiser. same as mantle and mays, he could run like a deer, hit ( led the NL in his first full year, in his second, was leading the league again by mid year, then started running into fences). nearly died after one crash. for my $$, ruth has to be THE greatest, great pitcher, greatest hitter. pat bonner
Mantle was really set back early in his career by a torn ACL. The surgery, and rehab was archaic compared to today's. He tripped on a sprinkler in the outfield,and tore his knee up. He still had a great career, but he had almost unlimited potential before that Injury. He wasn't hyped up much early in his career in New York because he took over centerfield for Joe DiMaggio who was beloved in Bew York because he was a great Italian American Yankee. Mantle was a country kid from Oklahoma, and New Yorkers didn't warm to him till he was just too good to ignore, and started playing ball with the media. Probably the most talented 5 tool baseball player ever though. His speed was off the charts before the knee injury. He was easily the fastest player in baseball, and strong as an ox.
The more I hear about Dizz, the more I like him.....got a shovel? lol
well that was an extremely misleading title.
Baseball the boys of summer need I say more
Wow
When i learned mr duroscher was a yankee, my perception of him changed alot
some guy named stone must be drunk saying mays was overated.mays could do it all, a true 5 point player, had he not done 2 years in the army in his prime he would have re-set all the records that even aaron and bonds wouldn;t be able to break.simply the greatest, said dimaggio, durocher, lasorda, cosell, ect. ect. ect...
+Bill Flower ~> The "reason" for Mays' greatness was mentioned on an episode of Bewitched AND he was mentioned in the song Centerfield by that Creedence Clearwater guy. ☺
I believe what you say may be true,Bill.There was a baseball stats keeper who said 45 balls of willies were blown back into play in a single season at candlestick...and with the 2 seasons missed you can be sure the records would have fallen.I wonder what would have happened if Ted Williams had not missed because of military service.
Bill Flower How about the wind blowing in from Left Field in Candelstick? He was the greatest Five tool player in history. Still the best I ever saw!
DiMaggio missed three years to the military right in his prime..28, 29, 30 ...He was great..Top five all time in my opinion
Bill Flower mays could not do it all,he was overrated-how is hitting .302(good for 177th on the all time list)hitting for average?.300 is a good average,not great.he was not great at everything. .302?no.
Sounds like Cobb talked trash like so many star players. The job one hack reporter did to his reputation, as documented in the Prager University video, is unjust. Great video.
GEORGE HALAS has a great anecdote on Ty Cobb about a run-in he had with Cobb during Halas' short stint with the Yankees. It begins at 13:10.
th-cam.com/video/insS_NE_f6k/w-d-xo.html
When I was a kid people would ask if I was related haha...I am 55 now.
i am friends with the great grads daughter
The only thing I ever liked about Durocher was his cameo on an episode of "The Munsters."
Dizzy Dean - The guy who said, "If you're not cheating, you're not trying."
So funny how much people make of steroids or the Astros camera cheating when when all the old time "classy" players cheated like crazy.
@@ourvaluesarewhoweareinadem4093 Stealing signs is as old as life itself. Steroids is in a different category entirely. So is high tech cheating. AI will create a whole new dimension.
@@anonymike8280 So it was totally cool back when teams had guys in the stands stealing signs and using hand signals to get the signs to the batter? But if you use a cell phone it is somehow total moral bankruptcy? And steroids is somehow different from the meth they used in the 50s, 60s, and 70s and the cocaine they used before that? Idiot.
The famous picture of Rose ploughing into Fosse has Leo in the background yelling at Rose to go in hard, he was the 3rd Base coach in that game. howtheyplay.com/team-sports/Redemption-The-Ray-Fosse-Story
great managers we'll never benefit from again.
He needs to ask him about Herman Munster!
The only ballplayer you repeatedly hear being the absolute best all-around was Mays: seems he was superlative at every aspect--hitting, running, and fielding. Sounds like Mantle was his peer before the injuries got him.
Mantle definitely was, and probably a little better even. A torn ACL was career ending for most players in the 50s, and 60s, but Mantle kept playing well.