Met Yogi twice. One of the most important, inspirational and kind people I ever met. I brought his dog home to him in 1977 and again he remembered me in 1980, he said he loved that dog!
I did not know of the animosity between these two greats, but Mickey Mantle was a hero to me as a kid, and I'm a White Sox fan. I had read that he played football in high school and injured his leg and almost lost it, but overcame it and went on to be a great Yankee baseball player. He was an inspiration to me!
There wasn't any animosity.. Just not buddies.. Mick was 19, Dimaggio 36 and Mick was in awe.. Could have Joe D reached out? Yeah he could but it wasn't his way. Never was... Led by example. . Mick knew that's how rookies were treated back in those days . Scooter was brutal on rookies especially if he felt they might take his job. Playing for the Yankees was a pri iledge of the highest. Order
Loved the conversational tone of this video. I didn't know the behind the scenes as I'm not a Yankee fan. But as a baseball history fan, this still came as news to me. Nice video! 😃 Looking forward to more content from this channel.👍
Growing up as a huge fan of the sport, we should always keep in mind that our admiration for these players is based solely on how they play the game. Just like with entertainers, actors and actresses, when they are in the private sector, they are citizens and basically otherwise strangers, like that of most people we encounter on a daily basis. As such, they ought to be treated as such because one bad encounter might cause a bitterness in one’s mouth that might last a lifetime, but even a friendly encounter could result in being upset if that athlete for whatever reason and at some time in his life is accused of something, might also result in one displaying a hypocritical point of view of the athlete while discrediting the possible victim(s) of the athlete.
Both of them were before my time. Mantle was still playing when I started following the game as a kid but he was old and past his prime. I do know Denny McClain, another notorious bad boy and one of my favorite players for a time, grooved a pitch for Mickey so he could hit one out at Tiger Stadium one final time before he retired. That's respect. Mickey admitted his faults, not sure DiMaggio was ever as forthright as that. But Mickey did waste a lot of his talent, and that's too bad. Oh well, Al Kaline was my hero so I don't really have a dog in this hunt. A great truly humble player who never got on anyone's bad side. Interesting video.
Here's one.... in 1969, the first Old Timer's Day Mickey was introduced at following his retirement, he was brought out last, to thunderous ovation, after Joe D's introduction. This infuriated The Yankee Clipper, who swore he would never attend another one. The next year, when DiMaggio was introduced, PA announcer Frank Messer said, somewhat cryptically "For obvious reasons, we save this introduction for last...",and went on to heap tons of praise on him.
Dimaggio was probably a jerk, but he was a better baseball player than Mantle or Berra or Reggie or whomever else the Yankees had outside of Ruth and Gehrig. As great as he is even Aaron Judge won't surpass Dimaggio. A-Rod is probably the best Yankee player since DiMaggio.
I suppose Carl Yastrzemski lucked out by debuting just after Ted Williams retired. At the start of his career Joe DiMaggio had 3 years of overlap with Lou Gehrig. We can assume their relationship was amiable because if there had been any animosity we would have heard about it.
That s an interesting question, How Gehrig treated him . Joe D hit like. 329 w like 30 Hrs and 100 plus RBIs so I'm sure Gehrig loved having him... That was a very deep team 36-39 Arguably the greatest Yankee dynasty
@@jayclarke9611that is actually interesting. I know the 2 overlapped a little bit, but I never really stopped to think that they were both playing great at the same time (for short time). Because you always think of Ruth and Gehrig together, and then DiMaggio leading the way for the next generation. But no, him and Gehrig were definitely a dynamic duo for a short time. How interesting.
@@king_supreme1102 Yes, Dimaggio s first year he had a wonderful rookie season, but Gehrig was League MVP w #s like Mantles '56 Season w slash line.354avg,49 Hr, 130 RBIs which is almost identical to the Micks greatest season in 56. 2nd Year together Dimag had his best statistical season as a Yankee w .346avg .46 HR 164 Rbi s!...Gehrig still hit over .350 and had over 150 RBI but his HR toTAL LOWERED TO 37...i mean after Ruth n Gehrig , that s the best 1-2 combo this side of Manny and Papi
However u try to portray Dimag s personality, you couldn’t be more wrong about Dimag not being a team player.Yogi Scooter Gordon Heinrich Dickey all stated Dimag was the epic leader of Yanks…leader who went 9-1 in WS, like Jeter he led by his playing example. ‘I never saw him make a Mistake on the field’- Yogi Berra. You’ all couldn’t be more wrong, Mantle said it best..’ if you re go to give me a plaque, Joe s gotta have one hanging a lil higher than mine”
@@jayclarke5466 I might be one to other people but I’m honest about it Joe thought being the center fielder of the New York Yankees was more important in life
Why blame DiMaggio for Mantle’s injury? I blame the Yankees. Too cheap to get their field into playing condition. Any outfielder, home team or visitor, could have been injured. It was an accident waiting to happen.
as the story goes he or the mob paid a grounds keeper to leave the drain cover off because joe was so jealous of mickey and the mob did not want their boy looking bad
I met Joe D. He was an absolute gentleman. How could he not be a team player when he led his team to the WS 10 times and won 9 of them in only 13 seasons? Mick could have been the best ever if he laid off the juice.
Mantle s teams had amazing pitching and he played w Berra, Bauer, McDougal, Rizzuto, Mize, Howard, Maris, Boyer, Skowron... Maybe not as gaudy as 36-43 Yankees but pretty damn good
DiMaggio was the leader of that team by example and everyone on the team knew it. Someone asked him once why he always played so hard he said "because there may be someone out there that has never seen him play before."@@kevmac1230
But in those days they had the best team that's why he won all those titles. Now he would win none because there are lots More teams. And Yankees are not the best anymore. 1 player does not win. The team wins
When ur by FAR the Best player on a great team(save 36 n 37) You get all the spoils. Dimaggio was a better ballplayer at BASEBALL than my beloved Mick Mick was physically more gifted, Joe D the better player.
Did u see the play? THen how do u know when he called hm off...Maybe if Yankees had safer drainage system Mantle would have been alil less injured,,,a lil CF er us the captain of the outfield. Period.
I find it hard to believe that Dimaggio was taking a play unserious in the World Series. With Mays at the plate in an important game. There are no stories of Tommy Heinrich getting injured waiting for Joe to call off a play. It was just bad luck Mickey stepped in the drain and got hurt.
100% correct, and Joe was a classy fellow. He always thought you should have your hair combed and always in a suit and tie. I dont think Mantle echoed those same traits and thats okay. both we're great men
@@jayclarke9611It's not what's on u, it's what's in u. Mick's bum leg and personal belief in "the Mantle curse" led him to jump head first into alcohol; no suit & tie can fix that.
My Dad saw Gehrig Dimagg and Mantle on a regular basis...He said Mantle was not close...He saw Gehrig and Dimag up close '36-39 WS all home games via Paramount tix I loved Mantle so it hurt me to hear him assess him that way. But Mantle K'd so much and from 30's -60 s to K was an embarrassment
Paul Simon famously said he only used Joe DiMaggio's name in the song because the syllables fit best LOL Ol' Joey was never the same after Marilyn stepped out. Hurt his ego badly. Insecurity and ego are a poison.
Met Joe D at a bus show in Chicago Couldn't have been nicer.. A gentleman Mickey was more 'one of the guys' Doesn't mKe him better Joe D was clearly the more productive player in every way save OBP Loved the Mick but like Mick said in 69 'if your e gonna give me n Joe a plaque, Joe s gotta hang a lil higher...'
@@jayclarke9611 Very good question but they played different positions stupid. What did you do stupid to miss that? Mickey didn't bat next to the Babe either.
In the end, we learned that Mickey was 1,000 times the human being of DiMaggio. Ironic that DiMaggio was part of that era that thought that class was just your persona on television. Mantle was more accepting of Black teammates. DiMaggio's issues with women are pretty famous. Mantle never was divorced. More than anything, Mantle had the one thing that unites all great people. He knew he wasn't perfect, and never seemed to judge anyone. By the numbers, and in class, he was far superior to DiMaggio.
It's because DiMaggio is Italian and most Italians are racists. They think that they are better than black people. If they are better, then how is it that Black people were the oldest and 1st race on Earth? Put that in your Italian dish and eat it Dimaggio. 💯💯😤😡😆🤣😭
Lol, Mickey Mantle was a mean nasty bigoted drunk, and to his credit admitted it when he got religion later in life. Joe DiMaggio had his faults, but he was a soft-spoken quiet guy, that was kind to most people he met. As a player Mantle couldn't carry Joe's jock strap, and mantle knew it. Mick struck out over 2,000 times and killed more rallies than any player in history. Mick had a 1 HR to 4 SO ratio, Joe who only struck out 350 times had a HR to SO ratio of 1 to 1. Joe also lost 3 prime playing years serving in the military in WW2. Joe was a veteran where Mantle never saw military service.
Just because Mickey liked to drink that's no reason to label him a troublemaker, he was not. About the play, it's common practice for the centerfielder to be the only outfielder to call a ball, he calls it because he's sure he can get it then the other guy gives way. Likely Mickey made the call but Dimaggio kept coming anyway.
No, Mantle didn’t call it. Joe did, at the last second. Here’s what happened : Prior to the game, Yankee manager Casey Stengel told Mantle, then playing right field, to take anything he could reach because DiMaggio simply couldn’t run anymore. (DiMaggio had suffered from bone spurs on his heel.) So when Mays hit the short fly ball toward right-center, Mantle sprinted after it intending to catch it, but DiMaggio came on and called him off at the last moment, causing Mantle to stop short, and his spikes got stuck in the open drain. This caused terrible injury to his knee from which he never fully recovered. Willie Mays said later that Di Maggio should have called for it earlier and caught the ball coming in instead of getting under it and then calling for it. Basically, Mantle was following Stengel’s pregame instructions. Joe should’ve called him off earlier.
Mantle wasn't a trouble maker, his teammates loved him and he was a great player, but he caroused and was for sure a philander and a drunk. He was also my hero when I was a lil boy
"I don't really feel sorry for the guy. He did it to himself." These words show that while Joe DiMaggio was a great player and perhaps a nice, kind, inspirational gentleman in many ways, he could have used a little more understanding of human beings and a consequent increased measure of leniency. To put it in a nutshell, causality in human affairs is a complex phenomenon.
It's wild that I can agree with what you said while also fully agreeing with DiMaggio's on point statement. He did do it to himself. So although it's a statement that's seemingly harsh, it's also the truth (one Mantle agreed with) and the truth doesn't take feelings into account. Even whem the truth lacks all the nuance that comes with life.
you dont apologize for alcoholics...they want to party its on them...particularly a pro athlete who has an obligation to keep himself in shape..case closed
DiMaggio was a GREAT LEFT HANDED HITTER WITH A LOT OF FOLKLORE during his playing days, a mention by Paul Simon in song lyric ..... the man could play = HIT WELL in Base Hits and POSTED A MARK FOR HISTORY = 56 Games Hit Streak .... he ran like a gangling bird loping and bouncing without grace ..... he was still a hero ! Now for the BETTER ATHLETE and Very fast (until Joe D. & his ego cut Mick off catching a ball destroying Mantle's knee on hooking foot on sprinkler head stud ....... ... Mickey was Great in running down fly balls, throwing our a try for a double, good glove, phenomenal strength, power / high average FROM *BOTH sides of the plate ..... 565 feet long (still record longest Home Run) homer in Detroit, 536 Homers in a injury shortened career & 18 World Series Home Runs ( still M.L.B. RECORD) Played hurt most of his career, always in pain since his first year in MAJORS ..... and loved by his teammates beyond all others. DiMaggio was an ego maniac and always resented Mantle .... his causing Mantle's injury that denied him an even better career NEVER ADMITTED by the arrogant DiMaggio ...... Ted Williams was better than Joe D. .... that was a sore point for Joe as well. I have been a N.Y.Y. fan for 68 years .... saw them both play ..... Sad that it was not how it turned out .... wickedness and envy is poor excuse for honor. jj
Except Joe was a RIGHT handed hitter who missed 3 seasons(the war) and if he had those and was Left handed…he would have 500 Hrs with ease…and Dimagg as a big an ego maniac u…he was a quiet proud man that tried to protect his image. What was Mick s image? A carousing , unfaithful drunk
Williams was not better than Joe D. Williams was a better hitter, but sucked in the field, and even he admitted that. Joe was the greatest center fielder in baseball history. He did not cause Mantle's injury, that was the Yankee management who should have known you don't have an open drain in the playing field.
I read a lot of these comments about what YOU thought they were like, what they were thinking or anything personal about themselves. Only DiMaggio, Williams, and Mantel know for sure. Not the press nor the people know how they really were. All we really know is they were great baseball playets. So let them rest in peace once and for all.
I had a Friend who s Dad owned the Flying Dutchman steak House in the BX near YS where all the players went after games for a great steak. My friend was VERY close w Bill Dickey, Henrich,Mel Allen and many Yanks and Giants players. She said Dimag wanted a table in the back , and wanted a quiet peaceful meal He ate w a friend or a fellow Yankee. She said he was ALWAYS pleasant, well mannered and tipped well As Ive mentioned before, I met him at McCormick Place in Chitown in the 70's at a Business shoe...he was Mr Coffee. Absolutely Bludgeoned by fans well wishing, autograph hunting etc...He was charming and gracious. I understand public life and private life can be reciprocal, but that s what I saw.
@@treejay818 I knew Mickey for the last fifteen years of his life. We hired him to make appearances for our company to promote products. He was always pleasant and good with the fans. He didn't have a bad word for anyone except Curt Gowdy who was the reason he left the announcing business so quickly. I have respect for Joe as a great ball player but he lacked Mickey's warmth according to some. I never met him.
Joe D was a great player but in my view he was a self center jerk. If Mickey would have taken care of himself he would have been much greater than the jerk.I personally think Mantle was better despite his injuries.
Mantle was in awe of DiMaggio. He called him the greatest all-round player he ever saw. He deferred to DiMaggio on that play in 51 out of respect for who Joe was. DiMaggio didn't really get along with anybody except Yogi; he treated everybody like crap.
@@MarkMitchell-e2x Bro you cant judge when you werent there, everyone is different actions speak louder than words meaning joe couldve treated you nice with action but not words , stop the hate on joe hes was respectable
@@treejay818 Not trying to hate on DiMaggio. He was a great player. But a number of books have written about how aloof he was with his teammates. And a number of books have written about how well-liked Mantle was by his teammates. That's all I'm saying.
Not only did Mickey drink, but few mention he cheated on his wife all the time. That's a pretty low life guy, hero or not. Yogi Berra was so valuable to the Yanks, even though he was not the icon Mantle was. Yogi was responsible for so many world series wins with his knowledge of the hitters and how he helped the pitchers win. He also was a dynamite hitter when the chips were down.
DiMaggio was married to another actress prior to Monroe. He was chasing the same thing as Mantle, but on the down-low. Joe wasn't a saint and his WWII record isn't anything to be proud of.
To be fair to Mantle, he freely acknowledged his failures later in life, and sincerely I think. If you read Ball Four, you get a good taste of the toxic culture they lived in. The Mick was pretty much a very gifted, but kinda dumb jock, who had unlimited opportunities to party, drink, and screw around. I'm not sure I or many other men would have done that different. Basically, he was like a rock star.
@@nicholasschroeder3678 I think you’re right about Mantle. And that few men given a blank check won’t go crazy and abuse it. Btw my bitter comment was about DiMag (and the bitterness is because I grew up worshipping him).
@@PabluchoViision u grew up in an age where press elevated stars, now U live in an age where they tear them. Down and Ur disappointed because I spite of their wealth and fame... Their still human
@@jayclarke9611 I hear you, there’s truth in what you say, but only partially. The press has never torn down the figure of The Great DiMaggio, and it does not tear down certain sacred (money-generating) cows like LeBron James. Just the opposite, announcers are almost 100% silent when LeB screws up, doesn’t get back on D, etc. And if you look at the Orioles/Kevin Brown affair, ownership/league insistence on media cheerleading for team and stars is growing-in some ways a return to the old model.
@@jayclarke9611 Oh, and I realize athletes are human… but some are more “human” than others, and DiMag was a piece of work. A real monster. Look at how he treated his son, and how the son ended up. Now-as a ballplayer he was beyond great, he was close to perfection.
Every player on the Yankees always made things tough on every rookie and particularly ones as highly touted as Mantle. His knees are not what happened to his career the drinking and getting absolutely tanked 7 days per week did. He could have been the greatest that ever played.
DiMaggio was very vain and self-centered, not a team player, not friendly, not popular with his teammates. He was very uptight, arrogant and lonely. Sure he resented Mantle, he didn’t speak to him throughout the entire season in 1951 although his locker was right next to Mickey’s.
@@tubaman7205 If he wasn’t so vain, he would’ve called Mantle off earlier and Mantle wouldn’t have sustained that terrible knee injury in the ‘51 WS that impacted his entire career. You know what I mean?
Yep, Not a team player. Mickey tried his best and Won Triple Crown Twice and did play with pain all his career.Sae him play in late fifties at old Griffith stadium and even RFK towards his last years.I am sure his pain caused drinking problems but Don't forget teammates like Billy Martin and Hank Bauer introduced him to their bad lifestyle as a young man . Had Mickey been on a team like Boston for example he may have been around people like Williams who would have helped him.N.Y. was not good for his career but he did set records like most HRs in World series. Rest in Peace Mickey.
Mickey was an alcoholic, womanizer, just a party guy. Joe wasnt anything but clean cut. Joe was a different breed as was mantle, just two amazing talents who lived totally different lives
@@jayclarke9611 read Joe DiMaggio The Hero’s Life by Richard Ben Cramer Don’t take this as changing your opinion with how you feel about Joe but he was an absolute douche The Billy Crystal story with Joe was really bad too Mickey may have been a bum after baseball but he warned people “hey man don’t be like me” He had so much pressure being the next great one and drank because he was scared that he would die young like his father and members of his family
Dimaggio wasn't the God you make him Not humble, a narcissist Mickey was a great teammate, coming out if the hicks, Always afraid he was going to die by 40 Ending up as humble and very retrospective of his failures
So it is very hard to get 1 base hit for 60 something games in a row? That should not be hard at all. These mlb players are majorly slacking if this is the case. SMH
Joe D wasnt a bitter guy, he was quiet , reserved and old school proud. Mantle was more the partier, womanizer, drunk...but his teammates loved him , especially the ones who caroused w him. Mantle had exceptional G d given talent, but Joe was the better player...Sorry
If Mickey had Two Wheels, Mickey Would have set records unbelievable . DiMaggio Was from forties and thirties.He ignored Mickey Dom DiMaggio was outgoing and a good personality.But only Mickeys drinking woman chasing and of coarse his Bad legs hurt his career. He admitted it.Loved Mickeys courage. Screw Joes Lack of humanity!
Mantle would have been better…if Mantle took better care of himself…He s stated it many times. He s never mentioned ‘51 WS Dimag was the more complete and productive player…period…Mickey would agree…he s said as so much
Mantle might have had a fewmore incredible seasons, but he was never Joe w a Bat...and the Mick would be the first to tell ya that. If Joe D played for the Redsox and didnt lose 2.5 years w the war and in '49 injured...he'd have easily hit more HR s than Mantle. a Righty had a harder time hitting HR s in Orignal YS where Left Center was 457. If Judge played in THAT YS , he NEVER hits 62.
Mickey played his whole career after fifty-one either drunk or hung over! He mistreated his wife and kids! Small wonder someone like DiMaggio would dislike him. But if Joe had let Mantle catch that ball in the field, chances are Mickey would not have been drinking to handle the pain and effects of the accident! He had already had knee problems thanks to an accident when he was a kid!
So u blame the gun... Not the shooter Yanks placed a drain in a bad place and Mantle got hurt but U blame the CF who is the captain in the Of and calls all balls in air Cmon
He did not have knee problems. Mickey was diagnosed with osteomyelitis of his lower leg due to a football injury at age 14. The infection was cleared up with antibiotics and he had 2 good legs when he came to the Yankees.
Publicly The Mick. Carried himself in the Yankee way, He wore suits everywhere and was polite in TV interviews. His teammates loved him cause he Was one of the guys... Dimaggio was more aloof.. Kinda like Jeter.. But in a much less publicized era. Whatever faults Joe had, Mick. More than matched him
Ahh…no! Joe was the leader of his Yanks era 9-1 in WS(Mick 7-5) Joe hit .325 lifetime, Mantle wasn’t even a .300 hitter Joe avg 140 RB I a season, far more productive Mantle acknowledged Joe was vastly superior CFer Mick had him beat w HR s and OBP…but Mick struck out over 1700 times, Joe 367!!! Joe DiMaggio missed over 3 seasons(2.5 w War, 1 w injury) ,Micks played more years but his career was basically over after 1964.
Ridiculous post. Always amazes me that someone could go back 70+ years and act like they knew what people were thinking back then, especially when everyone involved is dead. Two great ballplayers, that’s really all we know, and all we need to know. Want to add in flawed human beings? Gee , what a surprise. Who isn’t? They gave us a lot, let them rest in peace.
Joe DiMaggio was an absolutely awful human being Read the book “Joe DiMaggio The Hero’s Life.” Tells you everything you need to know of how douchey he was
One take on it... I'd prefer to go by people I knew that knew Joe D.. I met Joe D as did my friends. Hitting a man when he s dead... Shameful DIMAG wasn't the model human specimen... Are U?
@@JackCallSports the Torah teaches us not to delve in gossip about another person that can't defend themselves Here s Rizzuto on Dimag 'There was an aura about him (Joe DiMaggio). He walked like no one else walked. He did things so easily. He was immaculate in everything he did. Kings of State wanted to meet him and be with him. He carried himself so well. He could fit in any place in the world.' Sorry bud...
@@jayclarke9611 fuck no I’m not a model human specimen But I’d rather be on my deathbed realizing I was a good friend, father, husband than I was the center fielder for the New York Yankees and everybody hates me
Living in Bay area the miserable Joe stories are endless,a real piece of work and hater.beating mm was intolerable, let alone any woman.they had a yankee tradition to up hold.at lease mick had billy,and other drunks ft to edge him,Joe had his miserable self
Imagine how many records mantle would have broken if he hadnt hurt his knee in that drainage ditch, when dimaggio refused to be callwd off a poo fly when the ball was clearly mantles to catch
He (Joe D)was the Most Valuable Player even though Ted won Triple Crown....Yanks went all the way w Dimag have a great season ...Ted was the Best hitter...no doubt
@@nicholasschroeder3678 Do you know what the most unbreakable record is? Dimaggio's streak? Bonds? NO!! Most consecutive No-Hitters. Vandermeer pitched TWO consecutive. If someone breaks the record they would have to TRIPLE the #3 mark for consecutive no hitters
@@TimSpangler-v9i But it's a relatively meaningless record--kind of a stunt. Sure, only a very good hitter could do it, but a hit in each game doesn't necessarily impact the outcome of the game--a single here or there in a game can be meaningless. But I feel this way about all streaks in general, like the consecutive games one, for instance. What would it have really mattered had Gehrig or Ripkin sat out the rare game because they had the flu or had a funeral to attend. Most tellingly, Williams bated better than DiMaggio during his streak. Not by a lot, but still. I'm not a New Yorker or Yankee fan, so I don't really fall into the mystique. I wonder if it's a philosophical thing with me: I just think we're human and have off days here and there. I remember in grade school they used to give awards for perfect attendance. I always that it was lame: so they always showed up and did their same mediocre performance? I guess the teachers love it, and I suppose employers and managers also love having someone that reliable. Funny, I don't think I've been late or absent from work in several years. I think my boss likes my reliability a lot, but I just see it as my habit. A good one, I guess, but nothing to make a deal about. That's pretty much how I see hitting streaks: nice and all, and there's suspense in it for the fans, but not inherently all that significant. A guy who wins a game for the team at plate, then goes hitless the next, did a lot more for the team than the guy who got unproductive hits in both games.
This video Is toxic.. I can only assume the author if this vid has a silly vendetta against DIMAG... This is not a criminal.. He was our parents Gen... Maybe that's it.. Author hates the WWii Gen.
DiMaggio was a great ball player but a total jerk. The "Mick" was better, IMO. Joe D. caused endless problems for mickey and Casey. What a whiner in his older age after Baseball!
Met Yogi twice. One of the most important, inspirational and kind people I ever met. I brought his dog home to him in 1977 and again he remembered me in 1980, he said he loved that dog!
I did not know of the animosity between these two greats, but Mickey Mantle was a hero to me as a kid, and I'm a White Sox fan. I had read that he played football in high school and injured his leg and almost lost it, but overcame it and went on to be a great Yankee baseball player. He was an inspiration to me!
There wasn't any animosity.. Just not buddies.. Mick was 19, Dimaggio 36 and Mick was in awe.. Could have Joe D reached out? Yeah he could but it wasn't his way. Never was... Led by example.
. Mick knew that's how rookies were treated back in those days . Scooter was brutal on rookies especially if he felt they might take his job. Playing for the Yankees was a pri iledge of the highest. Order
Mickeys injury that kept him out of the Korean war was sustained playing basketball.
Mantle was a great team mate, 12 players that played with him named their sons after him..from1951 through 1964 nobody was ever better!
Good 🥧 piece
how about mays & aaron???
@@cooltkllBobby Bonds did make Willie Barry's godfather
You only have 881 subs yet make content like THIS?? Stick with it man. This was amazing
Mantle was the greatest switch hitter in history.
That’s a pretty cold line by Joe at the end there
well was he lying....nope
Truth hurts, but its better than being flattered.
Joe's seeming perfection ironically revealed him to be cruely imperfect.
Mickey Mantle was ,and as far as I know he was the best hitting switch hitter I have ever seen .
Loved the conversational tone of this video. I didn't know the behind the scenes as I'm not a Yankee fan. But as a baseball history fan, this still came as news to me.
Nice video! 😃
Looking forward to more content from this channel.👍
Glad you enjoyed!
Growing up as a huge fan of the sport, we should always keep in mind that our admiration for these players is based solely on how they play the game. Just like with entertainers, actors and actresses, when they are in the private sector, they are citizens and basically otherwise strangers, like that of most people we encounter on a daily basis. As such, they ought to be treated as such because one bad encounter might cause a bitterness in one’s mouth that might last a lifetime, but even a friendly encounter could result in being upset if that athlete for whatever reason and at some time in his life is accused of something, might also result in one displaying a hypocritical point of view of the athlete while discrediting the possible victim(s) of the athlete.
This is great! I learned many new things!
You ve learned many new things and some of them aren’t factual.Good for you!
Both of them were before my time. Mantle was still playing when I started following the game as a kid but he was old and past his prime. I do know Denny McClain, another notorious bad boy and one of my favorite players for a time, grooved a pitch for Mickey so he could hit one out at Tiger Stadium one final time before he retired. That's respect. Mickey admitted his faults, not sure DiMaggio was ever as forthright as that. But Mickey did waste a lot of his talent, and that's too bad. Oh well, Al Kaline was my hero so I don't really have a dog in this hunt. A great truly humble player who never got on anyone's bad side. Interesting video.
Here's one.... in 1969, the first Old Timer's Day Mickey was introduced at following his retirement, he was brought out last, to thunderous ovation, after Joe D's introduction. This infuriated The Yankee Clipper, who swore he would never attend another one. The next year, when DiMaggio was introduced, PA announcer Frank Messer said, somewhat cryptically "For obvious reasons, we save this introduction for last...",and went on to heap tons of praise on him.
And rightly so…respect for elders
@@jayclarke5466More likely building up a fragile ego.
Dimaggio was probably a jerk, but he was a better baseball player than Mantle or Berra or Reggie or whomever else the Yankees had outside of Ruth and Gehrig. As great as he is even Aaron Judge won't surpass Dimaggio. A-Rod is probably the best Yankee player since DiMaggio.
@@PFB1994 Roids.
I suppose Carl Yastrzemski lucked out by debuting just after Ted Williams retired.
At the start of his career Joe DiMaggio had 3 years of overlap with Lou Gehrig. We can assume their relationship was amiable because if there had been any animosity we would have heard about it.
Dimaggio missed 3 years in his very prime(28-31).
That s an interesting question, How Gehrig treated him
. Joe D hit like. 329 w like 30 Hrs and 100 plus RBIs so I'm sure Gehrig loved having him... That was a very deep team 36-39
Arguably the greatest Yankee dynasty
@@jayclarke9611that is actually interesting. I know the 2 overlapped a little bit, but I never really stopped to think that they were both playing great at the same time (for short time). Because you always think of Ruth and Gehrig together, and then DiMaggio leading the way for the next generation. But no, him and Gehrig were definitely a dynamic duo for a short time. How interesting.
@@king_supreme1102 Yes, Dimaggio s first year he had a wonderful rookie season, but Gehrig was League MVP w #s like Mantles '56 Season w slash line.354avg,49 Hr, 130 RBIs
which is almost identical to the Micks greatest season in 56. 2nd Year together Dimag had his best statistical season as a Yankee w .346avg .46 HR 164 Rbi s!...Gehrig still hit over .350 and had over 150 RBI but his HR toTAL LOWERED TO 37...i mean after Ruth n Gehrig , that s the best 1-2 combo this side of Manny and Papi
@@jayclarke9611 I was looking at those stats last night. It’s like DiMaggio came in and replaced Babe’s production (kind of).
However u try to portray Dimag s personality, you couldn’t be more wrong about Dimag not being a team player.Yogi Scooter Gordon Heinrich Dickey all stated Dimag was the epic leader of Yanks…leader who went 9-1 in WS, like Jeter he led by his playing example.
‘I never saw him make a Mistake on the field’- Yogi Berra.
You’ all couldn’t be more wrong, Mantle said it best..’ if you re go to give me a plaque, Joe s gotta have one hanging a lil higher than mine”
He may have been a team player but he was an absolute scumbag
@@JackCallSports based upon what? Whose to say u aren’t one yourself
@@jayclarke5466 read the book by Richard Ben Cramer
Joe DiMaggio A Hero’s Life
Tells you all you need to know
@@jayclarke5466 I might be one to other people but I’m honest about it
Joe thought being the center fielder of the New York Yankees was more important in life
@@JackCallSports try reading Joe DiMaggio the Long Vigil: by Joe Charyn and realize Mr Kramer s conclusion can be somewhat faulty.
Awesome Stuff.
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed!
This is cool!
Thanks much!
Video s vool... Narrator s an ass
Why blame DiMaggio for Mantle’s injury? I blame the Yankees. Too cheap to get their field into playing condition. Any outfielder, home team or visitor, could have been injured. It was an accident waiting to happen.
as the story goes he or the mob paid a grounds keeper to leave the drain cover off because joe was so jealous of mickey and the mob did not want their boy looking bad
and that is true
Met Joe D on three occasions always respectful and a gentleman to me . .
I met Joe D. He was an absolute gentleman. How could he not be a team player when he led his team to the WS 10 times and won 9 of them in only 13 seasons? Mick could have been the best ever if he laid off the juice.
He had a hell of a lineup around him though.
Mantle s teams had amazing pitching and he played w Berra, Bauer, McDougal, Rizzuto, Mize, Howard, Maris, Boyer, Skowron...
Maybe not as gaudy as 36-43 Yankees but pretty damn good
DiMaggio was the leader of that team by example and everyone on the team knew it. Someone asked him once why he always played so hard he said "because there may be someone out there that has never seen him play before."@@kevmac1230
But in those days they had the best team that's why he won all those titles. Now he would win none because there are lots More teams. And Yankees are not the best anymore. 1 player does not win. The team wins
When ur by FAR the Best player on a great team(save 36 n 37) You get all the spoils.
Dimaggio was a better ballplayer at BASEBALL than my beloved Mick
Mick was physically more gifted, Joe D
the better player.
If Joe had called for the ball when he should have, Mickey would have played his entire career on two good legs.
He was still the best switch hitter of all time
Did u see the play? THen how do u know when he called hm off...Maybe if Yankees had safer drainage system Mantle would have been alil less injured,,,a lil
CF er us the captain of the outfield. Period.
@@jimboscooter432 Eddie right there w him
Booze destroyed Mantle he could have been the greatest ever.
I find it hard to believe that Dimaggio was taking a play unserious in the World Series. With Mays at the plate in an important game. There are no stories of Tommy Heinrich getting injured waiting for Joe to call off a play. It was just bad luck Mickey stepped in the drain and got hurt.
Dimag and Mantle never had volatile' relationship. They just weren't buddies. Different generational players.
@@NUNYABIZNNAAAZZZ English translation?
100% correct, and Joe was a classy fellow. He always thought you should have your hair combed and always in a suit and tie. I dont think Mantle echoed those same traits and thats okay. both we're great men
@@ChrisP-in8qr Id have to agree with you here, but Mantle looked the part, especially in the 50's(well groomed, suit n tie etc)
@@jayclarke9611It's not what's on u, it's what's in u. Mick's bum leg and personal belief in "the Mantle curse" led him to jump head first into alcohol; no suit & tie can fix that.
Thanks for the video! Maybe consider a pop screen for your mic.
Are you in our minds? :) Thanks for reaching out and for watching through the poppy ps, too
Mantle was the better ball player no question about it,im old enough saw both of them play
My Dad saw Gehrig Dimagg and Mantle on a regular basis...He said Mantle was not close...He saw Gehrig and Dimag up close '36-39 WS all home games via Paramount tix
I loved Mantle so it hurt me to hear him assess him that way. But Mantle K'd so much and from 30's -60 s to K was an embarrassment
me to
Paul Simon famously said he only used Joe DiMaggio's name in the song because the syllables fit best LOL Ol' Joey was never the same after Marilyn stepped out. Hurt his ego badly. Insecurity and ego are a poison.
Met Joe D at a bus show in Chicago
Couldn't have been nicer.. A gentleman
Mickey was more 'one of the guys'
Doesn't mKe him better
Joe D was clearly the more productive player in every way save OBP
Loved the Mick but like Mick said in 69
'if your e gonna give me n Joe a plaque, Joe s gotta hang a lil higher...'
@@jayclarke9611 How many home runs did your dad hit jr?
@@laryjohnson5736 Hey Lary, what did u do w the missing R?
Mantle hit more HR s than Gehrig too, Mick the better player??
@@jayclarke9611 Very good question but they played different positions stupid. What did you do stupid to miss that? Mickey didn't bat next to the Babe either.
@@jayclarke9611 You have to be a little kid to compare players who played different positions in different eras.
In the end, we learned that Mickey was 1,000 times the human being of DiMaggio. Ironic that DiMaggio was part of that era that thought that class was just your persona on television. Mantle was more accepting of Black teammates. DiMaggio's issues with women are pretty famous. Mantle never was divorced. More than anything, Mantle had the one thing that unites all great people. He knew he wasn't perfect, and never seemed to judge anyone. By the numbers, and in class, he was far superior to DiMaggio.
It's because DiMaggio is Italian and most Italians are racists. They think that they are better than black people. If they are better, then how is it that Black people were the oldest and 1st race on Earth?
Put that in your Italian dish and eat it Dimaggio. 💯💯😤😡😆🤣😭
Lol, Mickey Mantle was a mean nasty bigoted drunk, and to his credit admitted it when he got religion later in life. Joe DiMaggio had his faults, but he was a soft-spoken quiet guy, that was kind to most people he met. As a player Mantle couldn't carry Joe's jock strap, and mantle knew it. Mick struck out over 2,000 times and killed more rallies than any player in history. Mick had a 1 HR to 4 SO ratio, Joe who only struck out 350 times had a HR to SO ratio of 1 to 1. Joe also lost 3 prime playing years serving in the military in WW2. Joe was a veteran where Mantle never saw military service.
DiMaggio was a far better player than Mantle. You know nothing about either man to be able to judge their character
Bullshit. Mantle was an asshole.
@@neilm2794 Neil’s is on point. I was a huge fan of the Mick, but Joe was better … and classier
Just because Mickey liked to drink that's no reason to label him a troublemaker, he was not. About the play, it's common practice for the centerfielder to be the only outfielder to call a ball, he calls it because he's sure he can get it then the other guy gives way. Likely Mickey made the call but Dimaggio kept coming anyway.
No, Mantle didn’t call it. Joe did, at the last second. Here’s what happened : Prior to the game, Yankee manager Casey Stengel told Mantle, then playing right field, to take anything he could reach because DiMaggio simply couldn’t run anymore. (DiMaggio had suffered from bone spurs on his heel.) So when Mays hit the short fly ball toward right-center, Mantle sprinted after it intending to catch it, but DiMaggio came on and called him off at the last moment, causing Mantle to stop short, and his spikes got stuck in the open drain. This caused terrible injury to his knee from which he never fully recovered.
Willie Mays said later that Di Maggio should have called for it earlier and caught the ball coming in instead of getting under it and then calling for it. Basically, Mantle was following Stengel’s pregame instructions. Joe should’ve called him off earlier.
Mantle wasn't a trouble maker, his teammates loved him and he was a great player, but he caroused and was for sure a philander and a drunk.
He was also my hero when I was a lil boy
hje requested the number 7 when he came back up dude
I think the Yanks wanted him to be off of#6 to lower the pressure of 3,4,5,...
@@jayclarke9611 Mantle had nothing to do w it.Facts
@@jayclarke5466 I agree
As a life long Yankees fan, I know that The Mick, was my childhood Hero. Screw dimaggio. I missed his act anyway Greatest living Yankee my ass.
"I don't really feel sorry for the guy. He did it to himself." These words show that while Joe DiMaggio was a great player and perhaps a nice, kind, inspirational gentleman in many ways, he could have used a little more understanding of human beings and a consequent increased measure of leniency. To put it in a nutshell, causality in human affairs is a complex phenomenon.
It's wild that I can agree with what you said while also fully agreeing with DiMaggio's on point statement. He did do it to himself. So although it's a statement that's seemingly harsh, it's also the truth (one Mantle agreed with) and the truth doesn't take feelings into account. Even whem the truth lacks all the nuance that comes with life.
you dont apologize for alcoholics...they want to party its on them...particularly a pro athlete who has an obligation to keep himself in shape..case closed
DiMaggio was a GREAT LEFT HANDED HITTER WITH A LOT OF FOLKLORE during his playing days, a mention by Paul Simon in song lyric ..... the man could play = HIT WELL in Base Hits and POSTED A MARK FOR HISTORY = 56 Games Hit Streak .... he ran like a gangling bird loping and bouncing without grace ..... he was still a hero ! Now for the BETTER ATHLETE and Very fast (until Joe D. & his ego cut Mick off catching a ball destroying Mantle's knee on hooking foot on sprinkler head stud ....... ... Mickey was Great in running down fly balls, throwing our a try for a double, good glove, phenomenal strength, power / high average FROM *BOTH sides of the plate ..... 565 feet long (still record longest Home Run) homer in Detroit, 536 Homers in a injury shortened career & 18 World Series Home Runs ( still M.L.B. RECORD) Played hurt most of his career, always in pain since his first year in MAJORS ..... and loved by his teammates beyond all others. DiMaggio was an ego maniac and always resented Mantle .... his causing Mantle's injury that denied him an even better career NEVER ADMITTED by the arrogant DiMaggio ...... Ted Williams was better than Joe D. .... that was a sore point for Joe as well. I have been a N.Y.Y. fan for 68 years .... saw them both play ..... Sad that it was not how it turned out .... wickedness and envy is poor excuse for honor. jj
Except Joe was a RIGHT handed hitter who missed 3 seasons(the war) and if he had those and was Left handed…he would have 500 Hrs with ease…and Dimagg as a big an ego maniac u…he was a quiet proud man that tried to protect his image.
What was Mick s image? A carousing , unfaithful drunk
Williams was not better than Joe D. Williams was a better hitter, but sucked in the field, and even he admitted that. Joe was the greatest center fielder in baseball history. He did not cause Mantle's injury, that was the Yankee management who should have known you don't have an open drain in the playing field.
Nobody mentions DiMaggio much anymore. A tribute to the saying, "if you can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all".
That was DiMaggios ball though. Cant blame him for Mantles injury.
If Mantle hadn't injured his knee.
He might've gotten drafted to serve in Korea.
To me, Mantle is the greatest ball player ever. If the knee injury never happens, I don’t think it’s even a question.
Mantle had many injuries, it’s who he was
I saw years ago on TV Mantle's wife said that in his rookie season DiMaggio wasn't helpful to him.
And was Rizzuto, Berra, and other vets? No!…it was tough love …plus vets were trying to hold on to their careers
I read a lot of these comments about what YOU thought they were like, what they were thinking or anything personal about themselves. Only DiMaggio, Williams, and Mantel know for sure. Not the press nor the people know how they really were. All we really know is they were great baseball playets. So let them rest in peace once and for all.
I knew Mickey and he was humble and fun. DiMaggio maybe not so much.
I had a Friend who s Dad owned the Flying Dutchman steak House in the BX near YS where all the players went after games for a great steak.
My friend was VERY close w Bill Dickey, Henrich,Mel Allen and many Yanks and Giants players. She said Dimag wanted a table in the back , and wanted a quiet peaceful meal
He ate w a friend or a fellow Yankee. She said he was ALWAYS pleasant, well mannered and tipped well
As Ive mentioned before, I met him at McCormick Place in Chitown in the 70's at a Business shoe...he was Mr Coffee. Absolutely Bludgeoned by fans well wishing, autograph hunting etc...He was charming and gracious. I understand public life and private life can be reciprocal, but that s what I saw.
stop lies you didnt know him respect joe
@@treejay818 I knew Mickey for the last fifteen years of his life. We hired him to make appearances for our company to promote products. He was always pleasant and good with the fans. He didn't have a bad word for anyone except Curt Gowdy who was the reason he left the announcing business so quickly. I have respect for Joe as a great ball player but he lacked Mickey's warmth according to some. I never met him.
Joe D was a great player but in my view he was a self center jerk. If Mickey would have taken care of himself he would have been much greater than the jerk.I personally think Mantle was better despite his injuries.
But instead Mantle was the jerk…and Joe stayed the better player.
You'd think both named mm he love em both
Kind of.. Not quite Babe s production, but 36-39team was loaded offensively.. So Joe D didn't need to be Ruth.. He was pretty spectacular.
Mantle was in awe of DiMaggio. He called him the greatest all-round player he ever saw. He deferred to DiMaggio on that play in 51 out of respect for who Joe was. DiMaggio didn't really get along with anybody except Yogi; he treated everybody like crap.
so what mickey treated everyone like crap too .
@@treejay818 Mantle did not treat his teammates like crap. Everybody liked playing with the Mick.
@@MarkMitchell-e2x Bro you cant judge when you werent there, everyone is different actions speak louder than words meaning joe couldve treated you nice with action but not words , stop the hate on joe hes was respectable
@@treejay818 Not trying to hate on DiMaggio. He was a great player. But a number of books have written about how aloof he was with his teammates. And a number of books have written about how well-liked Mantle was by his teammates. That's all I'm saying.
My hero was Bobby Murcer. When I asked for his autograph he told me to get lost..
Maybe he was having a bad day? No hard feeling on my part
I talked to Bobby about that. He said you were a potty mouth.
Not only did Mickey drink, but few mention he cheated on his wife all the time. That's a pretty low life guy, hero or not. Yogi Berra was so valuable to the Yanks, even though he was not the icon Mantle was. Yogi was responsible for so many world series wins with his knowledge of the hitters and how he helped the pitchers win. He also was a dynamite hitter when the chips were down.
It wasn't a feud. Joe was a shitbag to Mickey. Mickey did nothing to Joe.
Please list all the 'sh*tbag" things Joe did to Mick...they played together alil more than half of one season...I'll wait....
@@jayclarke9611
Wait outside.
@@TheBatugan77 U forgot your bib!
@@TheBatugan77 1, 2 …meet me outside, meet me outside
@@jayclarke5466
3,4...Shut up, shut up.
One hears of Joe Ds' class.His refusal to take young Mick under his wing is proof of the opposite.
Did Mantle take Murcer under his wing? Did he do it w Tresh? No...enough said
Yankees! Sheesh!!
Being a drunk wreak his careers and not.rehabimg just being a drunk
Dimmago took mantle a side. And told him wat Lou gerik told him.act like a yankee.not a hill jack.but psy no mind lm adrunked hill jack
DiMaggio was married to another actress prior to Monroe. He was chasing the same thing as Mantle, but on the down-low. Joe wasn't a saint and his WWII record isn't anything to be proud of.
Dimag s record in WWii was controlled by USAS…he wanted to be in the war…they wouldn’t let him..see Joe Louis…
He was as great a mentor as he was a father. What a sick human being. Fantastic ballplayer, toxic guy.
To be fair to Mantle, he freely acknowledged his failures later in life, and sincerely I think. If you read Ball Four, you get a good taste of the toxic culture they lived in. The Mick was pretty much a very gifted, but kinda dumb jock, who had unlimited opportunities to party, drink, and screw around. I'm not sure I or many other men would have done that different. Basically, he was like a rock star.
@@nicholasschroeder3678 I think you’re right about Mantle. And that few men given a blank check won’t go crazy and abuse it. Btw my bitter comment was about DiMag (and the bitterness is because I grew up worshipping him).
@@PabluchoViision u grew up in an age where press elevated stars, now U live in an age where they tear them. Down and
Ur disappointed because I spite of their wealth and fame... Their still human
@@jayclarke9611 I hear you, there’s truth in what you say, but only partially. The press has never torn down the figure of The Great DiMaggio, and it does not tear down certain sacred (money-generating) cows like LeBron James. Just the opposite, announcers are almost 100% silent when LeB screws up, doesn’t get back on D, etc. And if you look at the Orioles/Kevin Brown affair, ownership/league insistence on media cheerleading for team and stars is growing-in some ways a return to the old model.
@@jayclarke9611 Oh, and I realize athletes are human… but some are more “human” than others, and DiMag was a piece of work. A real monster. Look at how he treated his son, and how the son ended up. Now-as a ballplayer he was beyond great, he was close to perfection.
Every player on the Yankees always made things tough on every rookie and particularly ones as highly touted as Mantle. His knees are not what happened to his career the drinking and getting absolutely tanked 7 days per week did. He could have been the greatest that ever played.
He started drinking away the pain. Ended up a habit
Stop it with your LIES!
DiMaggio was very vain and self-centered, not a team player, not friendly, not popular with his teammates. He was very uptight, arrogant and lonely. Sure he resented Mantle, he didn’t speak to him throughout the entire season in 1951 although his locker was right next to Mickey’s.
Truth! I resent DiMaggio to this day for the reasons you stated so well.
@@tubaman7205 If he wasn’t so vain, he would’ve called Mantle off earlier and Mantle wouldn’t have sustained that terrible knee injury in the ‘51 WS that impacted his entire career. You know what I mean?
Exactly right!
Yep, Not a team player. Mickey tried his best and Won Triple Crown Twice and did play with pain all his career.Sae him play in late fifties at old Griffith stadium and even RFK towards his last years.I am sure his pain caused drinking problems but Don't forget teammates like Billy Martin and Hank Bauer introduced him to their bad lifestyle as a young man . Had Mickey been on a team like Boston for example he may have been around people like Williams who would have helped him.N.Y. was not good for his career but he did set records like most HRs in World series. Rest in Peace Mickey.
@@JGLeber correction. He won the Triple Crown only once. In 1956.
But Bob Sheppard's favorite was alway the Mick and that counts for something.
7>5
Joe married Marilyn Monroe. Don't tell me he was squeaky clean.
Mickey was an alcoholic, womanizer, just a party guy. Joe wasnt anything but clean cut. Joe was a different breed as was mantle, just two amazing talents who lived totally different lives
Joe beat up Marilyn Monroe, he was no angel
@@jimmcmahon2603 Undocumented...hearsay. Mantle was a bum in much of his public life
@@jayclarke9611 read Joe DiMaggio The Hero’s Life by Richard Ben Cramer
Don’t take this as changing your opinion with how you feel about Joe but he was an absolute douche
The Billy Crystal story with Joe was really bad too
Mickey may have been a bum after baseball but he warned people “hey man don’t be like me”
He had so much pressure being the next great one and drank because he was scared that he would die young like his father and members of his family
Tell us more about your daddy?
Dimaggio wasn't the God you make him
Not humble, a narcissist
Mickey was a great teammate, coming out if the hicks,
Always afraid he was going to die by 40
Ending up as humble and very retrospective of his failures
Dimaggio Didn't Attend Mantle's Funeral
classy
@@laryjohnson5736 I didnt attend my Uncle s ...there are reasons.
@@jayclarke9611 because your mummy changed your diaper when it happened.
Which Dr did u pick for your labatomy?
@@jayclarke9611 Is that the best you can do little joy? What grade are you in? When you aren't lying for your grandpa; you try to be funny.
So it is very hard to get 1 base hit for 60 something games in a row? That should not be hard at all. These mlb players are majorly slacking if this is the case. SMH
Can you do it?
Forget,about UFO.He s an idiot.
Why , since 1941…only one person came even reasonably close…and that was the MLB lifetime hit leader
I lost a lot of respect after hearing all that DiMaggio said
to bad joe bad joe d was so bitter
Joe D wasnt a bitter guy, he was quiet , reserved and old school proud. Mantle was more the partier, womanizer, drunk...but his teammates loved him , especially the ones who caroused w him. Mantle had exceptional G d given talent, but Joe was the better player...Sorry
Met him (Joe D)in 1976, a nice friendly bloke...maybe ur the bitter one...whats ur excuse?
If Mickey had Two Wheels, Mickey Would have set records unbelievable . DiMaggio Was from forties and thirties.He ignored Mickey
Dom DiMaggio was outgoing and a good personality.But only Mickeys drinking woman chasing and of coarse his
Bad legs hurt his career.
He admitted it.Loved Mickeys courage. Screw Joes Lack of humanity!
Screw your closed minded subjective opinion.. There
Mantle would have been better…if Mantle took better care of himself…He s stated it many times. He s never mentioned ‘51 WS
Dimag was the more complete and productive player…period…Mickey would agree…he s said as so much
Mantle might have had a fewmore incredible seasons, but he was never Joe w a Bat...and the Mick would be the first to tell ya that. If Joe D played for the Redsox and didnt lose 2.5 years w the war and in '49 injured...he'd have easily hit more HR s than Mantle.
a Righty had a harder time hitting HR s in Orignal YS where Left Center was 457.
If Judge played in THAT YS , he NEVER hits 62.
Too bad Star Wars didn’t come out in 51
Mantle was *twice* the player Dimaggio was. Maybe 3X.
Not never not no how…
Dimag a MUCH better hitter…and a far superior CF er.
If Joe D had been LH…he would have hit 50+ Hr s a couple of times
Mickey played his whole career after fifty-one either drunk or hung over! He mistreated his wife and kids! Small wonder someone like DiMaggio would dislike him. But if Joe had let Mantle catch that ball in the field, chances are Mickey would not have been drinking to handle the pain and effects of the accident! He had already had knee problems thanks to an accident when he was a kid!
So u blame the gun... Not the shooter
Yanks placed a drain in a bad place and Mantle got hurt but U blame the CF who is the captain in the Of and calls all balls in air
Cmon
@@jayclarke9611 Joe's own teammates blamed him. The ball was Mickey's to handle.
He did not have knee problems. Mickey was diagnosed with osteomyelitis of his lower leg due to a football injury at age 14. The infection was cleared up with antibiotics and he had 2 good legs when he came to the Yankees.
@@georgesouthwick7000 Mickey himself declared that his knees were not a good as they should be!
@@annettemalaski1967 name the teammates who said it.. Never seen that
Publicly The Mick. Carried himself in the Yankee way, He wore suits everywhere and was polite in TV interviews.
His teammates loved him cause he Was one of the guys... Dimaggio was more aloof.. Kinda like Jeter.. But in a much less publicized era.
Whatever faults Joe had, Mick. More than matched him
Mantle was twice the ball player Joe D was. Not even close!
Ahh…no!
Joe was the leader of his Yanks era 9-1 in WS(Mick 7-5)
Joe hit .325 lifetime, Mantle wasn’t even a .300 hitter
Joe avg 140 RB I a season, far more productive
Mantle acknowledged Joe was vastly superior CFer
Mick had him beat w HR s and OBP…but Mick struck out over 1700 times, Joe 367!!!
Joe DiMaggio missed over 3 seasons(2.5 w War, 1 w injury)
,Micks played more years but his career was basically over after 1964.
Ridiculous post. Always amazes me that someone could go back 70+ years and act like they knew what people were thinking back then, especially when everyone involved is dead. Two great ballplayers, that’s really all we know, and all we need to know. Want to add in flawed human beings? Gee , what a surprise. Who isn’t? They gave us a lot, let them rest in peace.
Mantle was better imo wasn’t alive for either but my dad was and said mantle was great and could’ve been better if he didn’t get hurt because of Joe
Joe DiMaggio was an absolutely awful human being
Read the book “Joe DiMaggio The Hero’s Life.”
Tells you everything you need to know of how douchey he was
Not true
@@jayclarke9611 more than true bud lmfao
One take on it... I'd prefer to go by people I knew that knew Joe D.. I met Joe D as did my friends.
Hitting a man when he s dead... Shameful
DIMAG wasn't the model human specimen... Are U?
@@JackCallSports the Torah teaches us not to delve in gossip about another person that can't defend themselves
Here s Rizzuto on Dimag
'There was an aura about him (Joe DiMaggio). He walked like no one else walked. He did things so easily. He was immaculate in everything he did. Kings of State wanted to meet him and be with him. He carried himself so well. He could fit in any place in the world.'
Sorry bud...
@@jayclarke9611 fuck no I’m not a model human specimen
But I’d rather be on my deathbed realizing I was a good friend, father, husband than I was the center fielder for the New York Yankees and everybody hates me
DiMiaggio was jealous of Mantle.
Mantle was no angel but Dimaggio was an absolute prick with zero humility whose every action was either for money or self aggrandizement.
This really is a bad look for DiMaggio.
Performed for over 150k in my. Life.. U?
Mantle played as hard as anyone. The problem was that he partied hard too!
Joe was very arrogant.
Willie mays Henry arron Ro🎉berto clemente butĺ they were black
Robert Creamer portrays DiMaggio as a mean, stingy, misanthropic, arrogant prick. Not a nice guy at all.
Living in Bay area the miserable Joe stories are endless,a real piece of work and hater.beating mm was intolerable, let alone any woman.they had a yankee tradition to up hold.at lease mick had billy,and other drunks ft to edge him,Joe had his miserable self
Mickey Mantle > DiMaggio
Imagine how many records mantle would have broken if he hadnt hurt his knee in that drainage ditch, when dimaggio refused to be callwd off a poo fly when the ball was clearly mantles to catch
Mantle was better than joe
Dimaggio shouldnt have won the MVP in 1941
He (Joe D)was the Most Valuable Player even though Ted won Triple Crown....Yanks went all the way w Dimag have a great season ...Ted was the Best hitter...no doubt
@@jayclarke9611 Correct
Lucidrous giving it to DiMaggio. Williams had the far better season, even hit better during D's overhyped streak. He arguably had the best season ever
@@nicholasschroeder3678 Do you know what the most unbreakable record is? Dimaggio's streak? Bonds? NO!! Most consecutive No-Hitters. Vandermeer pitched TWO consecutive. If someone breaks the record they would have to TRIPLE the #3 mark for consecutive no hitters
@@TimSpangler-v9i But it's a relatively meaningless record--kind of a stunt. Sure, only a very good hitter could do it, but a hit in each game doesn't necessarily impact the outcome of the game--a single here or there in a game can be meaningless. But I feel this way about all streaks in general, like the consecutive games one, for instance. What would it have really mattered had Gehrig or Ripkin sat out the rare game because they had the flu or had a funeral to attend. Most tellingly, Williams bated better than DiMaggio during his streak. Not by a lot, but still. I'm not a New Yorker or Yankee fan, so I don't really fall into the mystique. I wonder if it's a philosophical thing with me: I just think we're human and have off days here and there. I remember in grade school they used to give awards for perfect attendance. I always that it was lame: so they always showed up and did their same mediocre performance? I guess the teachers love it, and I suppose employers and managers also love having someone that reliable. Funny, I don't think I've been late or absent from work in several years. I think my boss likes my reliability a lot, but I just see it as my habit. A good one, I guess, but nothing to make a deal about. That's pretty much how I see hitting streaks: nice and all, and there's suspense in it for the fans, but not inherently all that significant. A guy who wins a game for the team at plate, then goes hitless the next, did a lot more for the team than the guy who got unproductive hits in both games.
This video Is toxic.. I can only assume the author if this vid has a silly vendetta against DIMAG...
This is not a criminal.. He was our parents Gen... Maybe that's it..
Author hates the WWii Gen.
Mantlfe drank but he still was a way better person then Joe was.
DiMaggio was a great ball player but a total jerk. The "Mick" was better, IMO. Joe D. caused endless problems for mickey and Casey. What a whiner in his older age after Baseball!
Didn't know how to treat women. If Marilyn was here, she'd tell you
Yeah and Marilyn was such an upstanding reliable source…
Joe dimmago said when mantle die joe I don't feel sorry him. He broth it on himself
self🎉
Where is that quoted from? Never ever saw that quote
@@jayclarke5466 I think Babe Rutt said that. 😅
Oo ko
He was to vain joe.nevet talk team mates for 10 years
He wreck mickey carer and never paid a bill
Type in English please
He always dislike Ted Williams got natting400ave.on 1941 because he want to.bay ,400
In French maybe?