The All Star games of my youth were awesome, because it was basically my baseball card collection come to life. You only saw out of market teams on the NBC Saturday Game of the Week and occasionally on ABC's Monday Night Baseball. So the players felt larger than life because you only got to see them in scarce situations like the All Star game, playoffs or World Series. BTW, shoutout to my A's having representative wear two different unis. Gotta love it.
This is so true! If you were one of the lucky ones who had cable (I was!) you could watch the Chicago Cubs and Atlanta Braves games to see some of the national league stars from time to time. I grew up in Detroit Tigers country...so I was an AL fan growing up. I always had a soft spot for the Braves....those mid 80's teams were brutal....but you had guys like Dale Murphy, Rick Mahler, Pascual Perez, etc. who made things interesting. Plus on the Chicago side....jesus....I loved the Tigers like no other back then.....but for best overall player in both leagues....that had to go to Ryne Sandberg.....that dude played out of his mind in 1984....unreal!
Im 49 now and the All Star game was a highlight for me every summer while growing up. Same like you said, I collected cards and had a bunch, new all the players, their number and position lol. I loved the player introductions and seeing each player wear their uniforms. Seeing them switch out after a couple innings. Golden years.
I grew up an Expos fan and saw Carter play many times. I met him when I was 12 at a spring training game against Phili. I called out to him, " Mr Carter, can I have your autograph?" He replied, " Call me Gary son ". RIP # 8.
Gary Carter was a living legend in my home town of Montreal from day-1! We were blessed to have him play on our team and represent at these all-star contests! He was a star among stars! We miss you Gary…. But you’re always in our hearts!
The line up introductions were so cool. I was watching and I thought, wow, the AL line up was stacked. Then they introduced the NL line up, even better. This reminds me of my baseball card collection
Same!!! Then check out the NL pitchers… Charlie Lea (9-3), Valenzuela, Doc Gooden, Soto and the Goose Gossage… absolutely demoralizing pitching staff!!!!
Other than the hometown Giants and the nearby resident Oakland A's the player with the loudest ovation during the introductions was Phil Niekro. 1:34 Because he was 43 years old and many thought he was done when he went to New York. Being one of the classiest men in baseball didn't hurt either. RIP
Wow! This is amazing to me to see this again after so many years.... I couldn't even see this broadcast for a good portion of the game due to severe storms in West Michigan....we had a severe thunderstorm warning and a tornado warning and our local ABC affiliate went off the air due to all of the lightning strikes. For those that are old enough....remember when you'd have the local fire or police frequency cut through on your television set during really bad storms that knocked out your channel? That's what happened on this night! I was nine years old and I was stoked to see all of the great TIgers players that made the team. I remembered seeing Brett's homer to center and that's about it...honestly....Before something like TH-cam came along, you were relegated to whatever memories that you had from the live airing. Everyone always talks about Dwight Gooden mowing them down during his time on the bump and I just didn't remember that as a kid. I was more an American League fan at that time and the only National League teams that I liked were the Cubs and Braves because I could watch their games (thanks Cable TV!) I had to sit in the basement during the tornado warning and by the time our ABC affiliate came back on the air....the game was almost over and I had to go to bed, haha! It's funny how bad storms stay in your memory, especially when they're tied to a game like this.
Back when the ASG had players that cared about the game and played like gentlemen. I haven't watched an ASG of any kind in at least 18 years with the exception of the last ASG at the old Yankee Stadium in 09
That ASG at old Yankee Stadium was so cool. They had old-time All Stars of the AL at their positions and the contemporary All Stars trotted out when announced and met them at their positions!
Not even sure what this is supposed to mean, but I'd bet guys from the 50's would've commented the same thing on vintage youtube videos being watched in the 80's, if it existed then. The more things change, the more they stay the same 😂
@@gst013 It hasn't been the same when the game became a business. Players only care about padding their stats, getting 100 million dollar contracts ect.
It's tough. There are a lot of guys in the Hall who weren't the premier power hitter in baseball for 6-7 years. Then again, his career stats make it sort of easy to justify him not being in. It's kind of goofy because if he didn't poop out at like 33-34 and just strung together 5-6 so-so seasons after his gravy run, he'd probably get in, but it wouldn't have really made him greater. It's a fickle thing this Hall.
@@bennylevine387 it's not tough, if Ryan Sandberg, Barry Larkin, Larry Walker, Harold Baines and now Ted Simmons are HOFers then Murphy is aswell. His overall numbers are as good if not better than those players and for a five or six year stretch, I'm not saying he was, but you could make a strong argument that he was the best player in baseball. Other than cherry picking a season or two of Sandberg's and Walker's career you can't even come close to saying that about the players mentioned above. He's a HOFer, stop dicking around and put him in and be done with it.
@@jsd795 So the guy (Walker) who gets in on his last year had about the same career power numbers of Murphy, just 50 points higher in batting average and OBP. And him getting in on the skin of his teeth makes Dale a slam dunk in your mind? I think his best case lies in the fact that for a nice period of time, he was maybe the premier power hitter in the NL. Maybe that's enough. But I think you're off-base in your vibe that this isn't worthy of a debate and his numbers are better than these more consistent players. Because you basically have 6-7 good years with Dale and about ten that aren't that great. And he's not the only HOF candidate with that kind of career, but most guys in the HOF were better in their non-best seasons to give their career more of an all-around feel. But I wouldn't cry that hard if he got in. Being the standout power hitter of the mid eighties counts for a lot in my book too.
@@bennylevine387 I won't even bother arguing about Baines and Simmons because there is no doubt that Murphy has a better case than those two, if you disagree then take it up with someone else. As for Walker forgive me if Coors field and playing in the height of the roid era make me more than a little skeptical about his numbers, and they still aren't substantially better than Murphy's. As far as Sandberg and Larkin's numbers, if you look them up they aren't overwhelming in terms of being HOF worthy. Lastly the fact that Murphy was a dominant player for a prolonged stretch, something that with none of the other players mentioned can be said, combined with his overall numbers, which are probably good enough on their own, make him a HOFer. This is just my opinion but I think it stands up to just about any counterargument that can be made.
@@jsd795 Well, there is a debate for the apparent majority of people who think 3-4 great years and 10 good years trumps 6-7 great years and 10 average years. Obviously, the people who vote think there is an actual debate on what you won't even entertain for some reason. You're not going to be able to make a case people can get behind by handpicking a group of hall of famers who you feel are the most undeserving inductees and then running a comparison. Whether Dale should be in the Hall doesn't come down to whether Larry Walker played at Coors or if Ted Simmons was ever truly dominant. You're sort of inventing a standard that doesn't exist. I'm not even against him being in just to be clear. He was clearly great. And that's what matters. You're right, none of those guys were ever feared like Murphy was. But to say that Murphy is so beyond Simmons and Baines that you won't even discuss it tells me you're having a little bit of an issue in evaluating a baseball career. If you'd just say he's better, I could maybe get behind that. But it's not as slam dunk a case as you're saying at all.
You got that right as in the early 90’s my brother and I went to watch the Giants take on the A’s at the stick and we have seats under the roof of the upper deck and it was cold for a Summer day.
Absolutely. I recall a Giants-A's warm-up game at the Stick to get ready for the second half of the 1981 strike season. Pot smoke and drunks filled the air.
My neighbor went to the final game in 84.and said people were ripping drainage pipes out the field for souvenirs and tipping cars over after the game ! Made detroit look better
I love how, in the 3rd inning, the announcers talk about this Apple Company thing' and how it may turn into something because fruit is healthy for you. And stuff. Wise advice!
38 yrs later, so much has happened since this time.. a few players such as Charlie Lea & Tony Gwynn & nearly all the managers in this game have passed away. 9/11, America has had a Black Presiden both the White Sox and the Cubs have won at least one World Series, the top 2 80s icons Michael Jackson & Prince have died, Covid... and with all that..... Tony LaRussa is still the freaking manager of the Chicago White Sox.
Wow! All the studs on my baseball cards I got to see all together and joking around in George Brett did which was rare. A lot of heartfelt good content.
Detroit was stacked that year and had a really good line up. And this doesn't include Kirk Gibson, who had a great World Series that year and was MVP of the ALCS. But the most valuable person on that team was the great "Sparky" Anderson.
Check out at 9:18- Pirates Chuck Tanner chasing his cap halfway through the playing field. Haha. Typical Candlestick. This was Tony Gwynn's first allstar appearance. Nice to see Hank Greenberg and Willie McCovey. Huey Lewis and the news singing national anthem. Very classy. Good memories.
@lb2455 Candlestick was always cold in July as the hot air rising from central California pulls in cooler air from the Pacific cold current to being wind and fog to the San Francisco peninsula…..
Lou Whittaker & Lance Parrish introduced Alan Trammel & Jack Morris respectively at their HoF inductions in 2018. And bravo for Trammel to then there lobby for Sweet Lou's addition to the Hall----as well he should! AND Kirk Gibson!
para mi gusto los ultimos años de una gloriosa epoca dorada. terminando a finales de los 80s....cuando los beisbolistas se rompian las camisas por su equipo. cuando no les importava lastimarce ....como extraño esas epocas.
Look how cleancut they are. Unlike today where most of the players have stuff on their heads that looks like something the dog drug up. And back when MLB generally had respect for one another. And when MLB was an A M E R I C A N game 🇺🇲⚾🇺🇲
They booed all the Dodgers including former Dodger who was a padre all star Steve Garvey because the game was in San Francisco Giants and Dodgers Hate each other!!!!!
The O's manager Joe Altobelli was born and raised in Detroit, and grew up idolizing "Hammerin' Hank" Greenberg. Greenberg was also the GM for Cleveland and signed Altobelli to the latter's first pro contract.
What is Howard talking about at 48:11 “he wasn’t on that team of the 90’s Earl, because he’d be in his 90’s” Was Howard a time traveler who forgot where he was and what his mission was?
Probably got inspired by reading the lyrics for a song called Back In Time that Huey Lewis wrote for the upcoming movie Back To The Future. Whom Howard met before the game.
This will mark the final time Candlestick Park will host a Major League Baseball All-Star Game. When it returned to San Francisco in 2007, the 2007 All-Star Game takes place in Pacific Bell Park instead of Candlestick Park (only because Candlestick Park is no longer a Baseball park).
It's great to see the Giants well represented the All-Star Game at Candlestick Park. Both Bob Brenly and Chili Davis were one of the few bright spots in what would be a horrible season for my Giants as they would finish DEAD LAST in the National League West with a 66-96 record 26.0 games out of first place with the WORST record in the majors. And one-foot note that Jack Clark who would have been on the National League Squad have not he was injured he was having a career year before suffering a serious knee injury and missed the rest of the season.
I'd forgotten how much I disliked listening to Cosell commentate baseball games as a kid. His style did not mesh with the pace of baseball games at all.
Ageof Craccadillia go back to 77 the commissioner stepped in and made Bill Russell and Davey Lopes start at shortstop and second base over Morgan and consepcion because Bowie Kim said we couldn't have seven of their nine starters be Reds we're not playing the Cincinnati Reds against the American League that's when you got a team young man!!
George Brett hemorrhoids at the beginning of 84 and had to have his a****** operated on and he started out on the disabled list that was a joke all of 84 I remember that
I just watch this on a 33 44 I believe Reggie Jackson makes a couple errors out here if I'm not mistaken and they talk about how a designated hitter has to be forced to play the field. in national league parks
first time ever seen Garvey get f****** dirty ever seen Garvey on his back we called him mister Clean a f****** no good Dodger although I did get respect for him in 84 when he beat the f****** Cubs
Watching the introductions felt like I was looking my old baseball cards. Some classic names in those lineups.
Lol absolutely I was visualising my cards.
Sure sounds like Hank Greenwald on the ‘Stick mic at start... The A’s got some laughs with the crowd and KC and TC guys.
I miss the 80's. MLB was diverse and cool.
Gary L. Street indeed 🌈 I’m 57 from the Bay Area ✨✨✨Classic times 🦋
It's still diverse.
@Chuck Morrison that's where a lot of money comes from to pay these outrageous contracts the players have... it's a business...
It was a time where players knew how to play the actual game, not just hit, catch and throw. No shift back then
The All Star games of my youth were awesome, because it was basically my baseball card collection come to life. You only saw out of market teams on the NBC Saturday Game of the Week and occasionally on ABC's Monday Night Baseball. So the players felt larger than life because you only got to see them in scarce situations like the All Star game, playoffs or World Series. BTW, shoutout to my A's having representative wear two different unis. Gotta love it.
This is so true!
If you were one of the lucky ones who had cable (I was!) you could watch the Chicago Cubs and Atlanta Braves games to see some of the national league stars from time to time. I grew up in Detroit Tigers country...so I was an AL fan growing up. I always had a soft spot for the Braves....those mid 80's teams were brutal....but you had guys like Dale Murphy, Rick Mahler, Pascual Perez, etc. who made things interesting. Plus on the Chicago side....jesus....I loved the Tigers like no other back then.....but for best overall player in both leagues....that had to go to Ryne Sandberg.....that dude played out of his mind in 1984....unreal!
Im 49 now and the All Star game was a highlight for me every summer while growing up. Same like you said, I collected cards and had a bunch, new all the players, their number and position lol. I loved the player introductions and seeing each player wear their uniforms. Seeing them switch out after a couple innings. Golden years.
Same here
Classic. 80s baseball was untouchable
Yes agree and was our country!!!
Totally!
❤ It Really Was!!
so much star power!
Now??? Not so much.
Carter, only player to hit 2 hr’s in a an all star game and 2 in a World Series game. Legend RIP kid #8
I wore #8 every year in little league because of Gary Carter. I wasn't a catcher but he was my fav player during my youth.
I grew up an Expos fan and saw Carter play many times. I met him when I was 12 at a spring training game against Phili. I called out to him, " Mr Carter, can I have your autograph?" He replied, " Call me Gary son ". RIP # 8.
Gary Carter was a living legend in my home town of Montreal from day-1! We were blessed to have him play on our team and represent at these all-star contests! He was a star among stars! We miss you Gary…. But you’re always in our hearts!
The line up introductions were so cool. I was watching and I thought, wow, the AL line up was stacked. Then they introduced the NL line up, even better. This reminds me of my baseball card collection
Same!!! Then check out the NL pitchers… Charlie Lea (9-3), Valenzuela, Doc Gooden, Soto and the Goose Gossage… absolutely demoralizing pitching staff!!!!
Rod Carew. Only 18 ASG selections. What a slacker.
De maravilla el beisbol
Haha🤣
Dwight Gooden of the Mets pitching to Gary Carter of the Expos. Just nine months later those two would be the Mets Opening Day starting battery.
For the first time ever...I enjoyed the commercials as much as the baseball game :-) Love seeing those old commercials for Cars, Coke, Pepsi.
Other than the hometown Giants and the nearby resident Oakland A's the player with the loudest ovation during the introductions was Phil Niekro. 1:34
Because he was 43 years old and many thought he was done when he went to New York.
Being one of the classiest men in baseball didn't hurt either. RIP
Wow!
This is amazing to me to see this again after so many years....
I couldn't even see this broadcast for a good portion of the game due to severe storms in West Michigan....we had a severe thunderstorm warning and a tornado warning and our local ABC affiliate went off the air due to all of the lightning strikes. For those that are old enough....remember when you'd have the local fire or police frequency cut through on your television set during really bad storms that knocked out your channel? That's what happened on this night! I was nine years old and I was stoked to see all of the great TIgers players that made the team. I remembered seeing Brett's homer to center and that's about it...honestly....Before something like TH-cam came along, you were relegated to whatever memories that you had from the live airing. Everyone always talks about Dwight Gooden mowing them down during his time on the bump and I just didn't remember that as a kid. I was more an American League fan at that time and the only National League teams that I liked were the Cubs and Braves because I could watch their games (thanks Cable TV!)
I had to sit in the basement during the tornado warning and by the time our ABC affiliate came back on the air....the game was almost over and I had to go to bed, haha!
It's funny how bad storms stay in your memory, especially when they're tied to a game like this.
Call me crazy, but I loved The Expos uniforms! Stroll down memory lane. First All-Star game I ever watched was this one.
I like the sky blue roads they wore even better.
@@MatthewChristianMurray Yeah, those were great!
This is my own personal Golden Age of Baseball...thanks for uploading
RIP willie McCovey
RIP Gary Carter!!
All of those wonderful uniforms. Wow. Especially the v necks with no buttons. Awesome.
When the All-Star Game was good.
When baseball was good.
When a player could tell the ump to eat @$%& ! And a player would kick a guy for running on the field
Back when the ASG had players that cared about the game and played like gentlemen. I haven't watched an ASG of any kind in at least 18 years with the exception of the last ASG at the old Yankee Stadium in 09
That ASG at old Yankee Stadium was so cool. They had old-time All Stars of the AL at their positions and the contemporary All Stars trotted out when announced and met them at their positions!
THE ASG IS STILL A SPECIAL GAME WITH COOL MATCHUPS AND MAJOR TALENT!
Gtf off my lawn
Baseball All star game is still good. The Pro Bowl is a disgrace and has been awful! NBA all star game is awful now too.
@@meirdaniel7515 exactly baseball all star game is still great
Pretty cool to see a guy who pitched to Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig throw out the first pitch 👍
When Baseball was still BASEBALL - Good Great Times
South Texas Brush Country Boy 1984 was a wonderful time ⭐️ when I was 21...it was a very good year ✨
@@depaola63 it was a good one. A great time in all Sports. I was 29
Not even sure what this is supposed to mean, but I'd bet guys from the 50's would've commented the same thing on vintage youtube videos being watched in the 80's, if it existed then. The more things change, the more they stay the same 😂
@@gst013 It hasn't been the same when the game became a business. Players only care about padding their stats, getting 100 million dollar contracts ect.
@@jackdull5699 Its still a great game. Of course they want money, that what they play for.
1:00 Dan Quisenberry was a great pitcher and very funny.
R.I.P.
Bill Caudill was the real prankster. He was known for it.
He was dominant in those days👍
The Garvey intro is great. God bless the SF fans. Also, Murph is a HOFer in my book. Knee problems cost him the nod.
It's tough. There are a lot of guys in the Hall who weren't the premier power hitter in baseball for 6-7 years. Then again, his career stats make it sort of easy to justify him not being in. It's kind of goofy because if he didn't poop out at like 33-34 and just strung together 5-6 so-so seasons after his gravy run, he'd probably get in, but it wouldn't have really made him greater. It's a fickle thing this Hall.
@@bennylevine387 it's not tough, if Ryan Sandberg, Barry Larkin, Larry Walker, Harold Baines and now Ted Simmons are HOFers then Murphy is aswell. His overall numbers are as good if not better than those players and for a five or six year stretch, I'm not saying he was, but you could make a strong argument that he was the best player in baseball. Other than cherry picking a season or two of Sandberg's and Walker's career you can't even come close to saying that about the players mentioned above. He's a HOFer, stop dicking around and put him in and be done with it.
@@jsd795 So the guy (Walker) who gets in on his last year had about the same career power numbers of Murphy, just 50 points higher in batting average and OBP. And him getting in on the skin of his teeth makes Dale a slam dunk in your mind? I think his best case lies in the fact that for a nice period of time, he was maybe the premier power hitter in the NL. Maybe that's enough. But I think you're off-base in your vibe that this isn't worthy of a debate and his numbers are better than these more consistent players. Because you basically have 6-7 good years with Dale and about ten that aren't that great. And he's not the only HOF candidate with that kind of career, but most guys in the HOF were better in their non-best seasons to give their career more of an all-around feel. But I wouldn't cry that hard if he got in. Being the standout power hitter of the mid eighties counts for a lot in my book too.
@@bennylevine387 I won't even bother arguing about Baines and Simmons because there is no doubt that Murphy has a better case than those two, if you disagree then take it up with someone else. As for Walker forgive me if Coors field and playing in the height of the roid era make me more than a little skeptical about his numbers, and they still aren't substantially better than Murphy's. As far as Sandberg and Larkin's numbers, if you look them up they aren't overwhelming in terms of being HOF worthy. Lastly the fact that Murphy was a dominant player for a prolonged stretch, something that with none of the other players mentioned can be said, combined with his overall numbers, which are probably good enough on their own, make him a HOFer. This is just my opinion but I think it stands up to just about any counterargument that can be made.
@@jsd795 Well, there is a debate for the apparent majority of people who think 3-4 great years and 10 good years trumps 6-7 great years and 10 average years. Obviously, the people who vote think there is an actual debate on what you won't even entertain for some reason. You're not going to be able to make a case people can get behind by handpicking a group of hall of famers who you feel are the most undeserving inductees and then running a comparison. Whether Dale should be in the Hall doesn't come down to whether Larry Walker played at Coors or if Ted Simmons was ever truly dominant. You're sort of inventing a standard that doesn't exist. I'm not even against him being in just to be clear. He was clearly great. And that's what matters. You're right, none of those guys were ever feared like Murphy was. But to say that Murphy is so beyond Simmons and Baines that you won't even discuss it tells me you're having a little bit of an issue in evaluating a baseball career. If you'd just say he's better, I could maybe get behind that. But it's not as slam dunk a case as you're saying at all.
Theres over 20 hall of famers in this game
And ... Dave Engle.
Plus Dale Murphy and Steve Garvey who probably should be
@@alvinwagner6745 AW I currently watching the 79 allstar game. Your guy steve had 66 RBIs at the break.leading the league
Did you include yourself?
@@mikechorizo I always include myself.....I got a 6'10" ego
My buddy knows a guy who was at this game and he said it was a drunk fest in the stands that day. The Stick in the 1980s could get a bit rough.
You got that right as in the early 90’s my brother and I went to watch the Giants take on the A’s at the stick and we have seats under the roof of the upper deck and it was cold for a Summer day.
Absolutely. I recall a Giants-A's warm-up game at the Stick to get ready for the second half of the 1981 strike season. Pot smoke and drunks filled the air.
My neighbor went to the final game in 84.and said people were ripping drainage pipes out the field for souvenirs and tipping cars over after the game !
Made detroit look better
I love how, in the 3rd inning, the announcers talk about this Apple Company thing' and how it may turn into something because fruit is healthy for you. And stuff. Wise advice!
Chili Davis..... forget how cool of a name that was.
Dick Dent has him beat
@@hookemdagawd5607 great name!!!
R.I.P. CHARLIE you were a great pitcher in 1984 and you deserved this honour!!
This year the Detroit Tigers started out the season a remarkable 35-5. A Major league record.
swag 1one Wire 2 Wire ! ⭐️🏆💪⚡️🌈
Damn its nice to see players not wearing all that bling jewelry! They came to play not show off their jewelry collection!
RIP Dan Quisenberry!
I think I enjoyed the commercials as much as the game.
That's when commercials were good. Now most of them are dumb.
Those uniforms are all iconic
Sweet Lou was a blasts to watch. Trammel and Whitaker are legends.
38 yrs later, so much has happened since this time.. a few players such as Charlie Lea & Tony Gwynn & nearly all the managers in this game have passed away.
9/11, America has had a Black Presiden both the White Sox and the Cubs have won at least one World Series, the top 2 80s icons Michael Jackson & Prince have died, Covid... and with all that.....
Tony LaRussa is still the freaking manager of the Chicago White Sox.
Rest in peace Cleveland Indians.
Wow! All the studs on my baseball cards I got to see all together and joking around in George Brett did which was rare. A lot of heartfelt good content.
Thank you so much for sharing this! I cannot think of a better way to spend a cold night in December
Detroit was stacked that year and had a really good line up. And this doesn't include Kirk Gibson, who had a great World Series that year and was MVP of the ALCS. But the most valuable person on that team was the great "Sparky" Anderson.
Dwayne Coy I believe they started 15-0
Sparky got quite the pop from the crowd during the introduction.
@@jbeebs1they were 35-5 after 40. Had to hold on after the break to barely play .500 and eventually win the WS convincingly.
@@miked8227 👍
Check out at 9:18- Pirates Chuck Tanner chasing his cap halfway through the playing field. Haha. Typical Candlestick. This was Tony Gwynn's first allstar appearance. Nice to see Hank Greenberg and Willie McCovey. Huey Lewis and the news singing national anthem. Very classy. Good memories.
@Trumpenstein, no steroids.
Was a mess of a role call . haha people running to where they need to be.the wind looked bad
George Brett knocked the snot out of that baseball on the homer to dead center field. So many legends on the field at once.
God that Tigers team was so strong up the middle. Parrish behind the plate, Lemon in center, Trammel and Whittaker at the pivots.
I was there. RF upper deck. It was freakin' cold.
Damn bob, I was 9.
Wow, that's crazy! July in Candlestick Park...was it cold because it was shaded in the upper decks?
I think I spotted you during one of the crowd pans
@lb2455 Candlestick was always cold in July as the hot air rising from central California pulls in cooler air from the Pacific cold current to being wind and fog to the San Francisco peninsula…..
Mike Schmidt was like a vacuum cleaner at third base. R.I.P. Tony Gwynn and Gary Carter.
Commentators:
Al Michaels, Howard Cosell & Earl Weaver
Was this the only All-Star Game where the starters were from the two Canadian teams?
Yes
Canada....Fricken eh!
I enjoy watching these videos reminds me of my childhood.
Don mattingly was still referred to as an outfielder in 1984???
Lou Whittaker & Lance Parrish introduced Alan Trammel & Jack Morris respectively at their HoF inductions in 2018. And bravo for Trammel to then there lobby for Sweet Lou's addition to the Hall----as well he should!
AND Kirk Gibson!
para mi gusto los ultimos años de una gloriosa epoca dorada. terminando a finales de los 80s....cuando los beisbolistas se rompian las camisas por su equipo. cuando no les importava lastimarce ....como extraño esas epocas.
Those old White Sox jerseys look like softball unis
Chet "the Jet" Lemon as a starter! Great for him!
And he earned a World Series ring too!
When America was great
C DUB Absolutely ⭐️🌈 I was 21 on this beautiful day 💖
Except the President at the time...
Damn, that NL starting line up.
Yeah! Donnie baseball baby! The greatest ever! My childhood hero!
Mine too, I was a natural rightie but became a better left handed hitter, even still to this day
Cool commercials!! Love 80s
I was at that game. I worked in the press box on the upper level as an usher and handing out 1984 Stu Miller buttons at the gate before the game.
Look how cleancut they are. Unlike today where most of the players have stuff on their heads that looks like something the dog drug up.
And back when MLB generally had respect for one another.
And when MLB was an
A M E R I C A N game 🇺🇲⚾🇺🇲
Beautiful day at the stick for an ASG!
NL starting lineup was BEASTIN!!
They booed all the Dodgers including former Dodger who was a padre all star Steve Garvey because the game was in San Francisco Giants and Dodgers Hate each other!!!!!
The O's manager Joe Altobelli was born and raised in Detroit, and grew up idolizing "Hammerin' Hank" Greenberg. Greenberg was also the GM for Cleveland and signed Altobelli to the latter's first pro contract.
Thanks for this great memories....
My God those Expos uniforms were awesome
Smart people love all these guys and all of these special games for the fans. Imagine being any part of this greatness.
I'm 8 years old again every time I watch
RIP Claudell Washington
Am a Cubs fan but I have to admit that those White Sox uniforms look 🔥💪🏾🔥💪🏾🔥💪🏾.
You hear the stadium roar when Rickey was introduced
70s and 80s baseball just perfect. Beam me back Scotty
You'd think these San Franciscans could cheer a little for NL players in their own hometown NL ballpark!
Ricky Henderson looked ready to steal a base and he was being introduced !
Wow 19 players between both teams in 84 are currently in MLB's HOF with @ least three more that should be! What lineups! Great era of MLB!
What is Howard talking about at 48:11 “he wasn’t on that team of the 90’s Earl, because he’d be in his 90’s” Was Howard a time traveler who forgot where he was and what his mission was?
Probably got inspired by reading the lyrics for a song called Back In Time that Huey Lewis wrote for the upcoming movie Back To The Future. Whom Howard met before the game.
Both starters from the 2 Canadian teams...interesting
RIP Dámaso Garcia, Mocano Coño 🙏🙏🙏👍👍👍👍👍👍
Literally legendary lineups.
A young Tony Gwynn starting in his first(of thirteen) All-Star games.
The person introducing the players & coaches is then-Giants play-by-play man Hank Greenwald
these guys were my idols. big Dale Murphy fan
Oh my god oh my godddddd Steve Garvey and Dale Murphy whaaaaaaaaa!!!🙃
This will mark the final time Candlestick Park will host a Major League Baseball All-Star Game. When it returned to San Francisco in 2007, the 2007 All-Star Game takes place in Pacific Bell Park instead of Candlestick Park (only because Candlestick Park is no longer a Baseball park).
Took a while for Chuck Tanner to get his cap back! haha! xD
😂
It's great to see the Giants well represented the All-Star Game at Candlestick Park. Both Bob Brenly and Chili Davis were one of the few bright spots in what would be a horrible season for my Giants as they would finish DEAD LAST in the National League West with a 66-96 record 26.0 games out of first place with the WORST record in the majors.
And one-foot note that Jack Clark who would have been on the National League Squad have not he was injured he was having a career year before suffering a serious knee injury and missed the rest of the season.
Likewise, Frank was fired as skipper (RIP Frank) and Ozark took over.
Wow what a great memories to see this players a very good flashback⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️
Phil Niekro looks like someone's grandpa there
He was 45 at the time.
@@MichaelSIngle-gn9qz yea those knuckballers lasted a long time. And back then 45 looked like 55.
RIP Niekro. Best knuckleballer ever.
@@Shinobi33 your right. Back then people looked 10-12 years older than their actual age.
Both starting pitchers were represented by both canadian teams which were very strong that year but never would get any acclaim.
Chet Lemon starting over Rickey Henderson?
Top vote getters started. Tigers were hotter the 1st half than any other club. So Tiger fans voted a lot. Imagine that.
Lol
The Doctor was in charge!
Timothy Maynard my idol growing up #16. Got to meet him back in ‘97 at the ESPY’s backstage.
Those 2 sliders Dave Stieb threw to Tony Gwynn to start the game is the reason why teams hated facing him at his peak
Captain Ahab was a damn devil when he was dialed in on the mound. His stuff was filthy as filthy could be.
Gooden was the most talented pitcher I ever saw. He and JR Richard are the 'Don't do coke' poster boys.
Is he Gary Sheffield’s uncle?
@@joeysbestfriend2614 Yes
Man the National league was stacked bro lol
Who was the PA Announcer for the intros? Love it!!
Before the game starts, NL starting lineup is almost legendary.
I'd forgotten how much I disliked listening to Cosell commentate baseball games as a kid. His style did not mesh with the pace of baseball games at all.
I think he was good as the 3rd voice in the Booth
Wow look at all them Tigers
Ageof Craccadillia go back to 77 the commissioner stepped in and made Bill Russell and Davey Lopes start at shortstop and second base over Morgan and consepcion because Bowie Kim said we couldn't have seven of their nine starters be Reds we're not playing the Cincinnati Reds against the American League that's when you got a team young man!!
I love those expos uniforms growing up in Cincinnati during the 70's I wanted to play for the expos
George Brett hemorrhoids at the beginning of 84 and had to have his a****** operated on and he started out on the disabled list that was a joke all of 84 I remember that
I just watch this on a 33 44 I believe Reggie Jackson makes a couple errors out here if I'm not mistaken and they talk about how a designated hitter has to be forced to play the field. in national league parks
first time ever seen Garvey get f****** dirty ever seen Garvey on his back we called him mister Clean a f****** no good Dodger although I did get respect for him in 84 when he beat the f****** Cubs
I dont remember the game but I know I remember them talking about a player having 100 rbi back in the old days and not making the team
Hank Greenberg
That year tiger's player's represented and they went on to win the World Series ( 84 ) 🐯⚾🐯⚾
no wonder the tigers won the AL east title with the best record in baseball and losing 1 playoff game enroute
Tigers roar in 84’
That is one helluva a great starting defense for the NL
The Great George Brett 2nd inning home run.
Love the different uniforms,instead of the same everyone looks the same softball uniforms they have now.
Hall of Famers all of the field. Wow!