RIP Yogi Berra 1925-2015 (1 Viewer)

BLReed

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NEW YORK – Some of the more widely quoted philosophy of Yogi Berra, the New York Yankees Hall of Fame catcher who died Tuesday at age 90:
http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/a4d43fa1
On his approach to at-bats: "You can't think and hit at the same time."

On selecting a restaurant: "Nobody goes there anymore. It's too crowded."

On economics: "A nickel ain't worth a dime anymore."

On the 1973 Mets: "We were overwhelming underdogs."

On how events sometimes seem to repeat themselves "It's deja vu all over again!"

On baseball attendance: "If people don't come to the ballpark, how are you gonna stop them?"

On a slipping batting average: "Slump? I ain't in no slump. ... I just ain't hitting."

On travel directions: "When you come to a fork in the road take it."

On pregame rest: "I usually take a two-hour nap from 1 to 4."

On battling the shadows in left field at Yankee Stadium: "It gets late early out there."

On fan mail: "Never answer an anonymous letter."

On being told he looked cool: "You don't look so hot yourself."

On being asked what time it was: "You mean now?"

On being given a day in his honor: "Thank you for making this day necessary."

On a spring training drill: "Pair off in threes."

On his approach to playing baseball: "Baseball is 90 percent mental. The other half is physical."

On death: "Always go to other people's funerals. Otherwise they won't go to yours."

On learning: "You can observe a lot by watching."

On his team's diminishing pennant chances: "It ain't over `till it's over."

On the fractured syntax attributed to him: "I really didn't say everything I said."
 
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Good Bye ,Yogi

The last of the classic all time Yankees, Yogi Berra, passed away at 90. They do not make them like the players from his era, anymore. How truly great were the teams he played for. We throw around the terms ,great, greatest, best team or best player ever, for the pale imitations we root for today. His baseball generation were the giants ,no matter the team, hall of famers, every one. Michael
 
Re: Good Bye ,Yogi

He was great and he was a good manager too. Won't ever forget how he led the Mets in 1973 to the World Series.

He was also principled and stuck to his guns after Steinbrenner fired him. George had to apologize before he would come back to Yankee Stadium.
 
Re: Good Bye ,Yogi

Yogi was the best and a great ambassador for baseball. "The future ain't what it used to be." The man charted votes for MVP 15 years in a row, and won 3 times. RIP, Yogi. -- Al
 
No doubt about it he was a Military veteran who served during D-Day 1944 and was an awesome player and Manager. Good to see that he lived a full life !
 
I'm just glad I got to take my children to his last appearances at old timers day, 2 and 3 years ago, so they got to see the last of the true Yankee greats.
 
Most of you were not old enough to see him or remember him as a player but I did in the waning days of his career in 1962 and, of course, I was at Shea Stadium in 1969 when he was a coach and later in 1973 (after I finished college) when he brought the Mets back to win the NL Pennant. He was quintessentially NY, a valued member of both teams and NY. He was more feared than Mantle as a hitter because Mantle could be pitched to whereas Yogi was your quintessential bad ball hitter. I heard yesterday that in 1950 he struck out only 12 times! Today players do that in a week.
 
Most of you were not old enough to see him or remember him as a player but I did in the waning days of his career in 1962 and, of course, I was at Shea Stadium in 1969 when he was a coach and later in 1973 (after I finished college) when he brought the Mets back to win the NL Pennant. He was quintessentially NY, a valued member of both teams and NY. He was more feared than Mantle as a hitter because Mantle could be pitched to whereas Yogi was your quintessential bad ball hitter. I heard yesterday that in 1950 he struck out only 12 times! Today players do that in a week.
Brad, Yogi's batting record is remarkable. In 8359 PA over his 19 year career, Yogi fanned only 414 times, while walking 704 times. The most he ever struck out in a season was 38 times. That is a fantastic record for a man who also managed 728 extra-base hits. Yogi was one-of-a-kind, on the field and off. -- Al
 
Al, I think it was a different approach to hitting than we see today. Strikeouts were frowned upon plus people weren't always swinging for the fences like they do today. It's just a different game they play today.

Brad
 
Rest in Peace Yogi! He was a great ball player and a great person who had a interesting way of seeing things! I wish we had more folks like him.

Dave
 
Yesterday on WFAN Yogi was the subject of the day, the ball player and the man. The point was made that Yogi was a very intelligent person despite what some people thought about his looks; he saw things on the ball field that others didn't. That's why Stengel called him his assistant. He was also a great businessman: everything he touched turned to good.

Suzan Waldman, who is the analyst on Yankee games on WFAN and was a good friend of the Berras, told of how she brought Yogi and George together. She also mentioned how Donn Mattingly told her that Yogi made him the player he became, which is why he wears number 8.

Some of these interviews may be on the WFAN website, www.wfan.com, for those who want to hear the interviews.
 
Most of you were not old enough to see him or remember him as a player but I did in the waning days of his career in 1962 and, of course, I was at Shea Stadium in 1969 when he was a coach and later in 1973 (after I finished college) when he brought the Mets back to win the NL Pennant. He was quintessentially NY, a valued member of both teams and NY. He was more feared than Mantle as a hitter because Mantle could be pitched to whereas Yogi was your quintessential bad ball hitter. I heard yesterday that in 1950 he struck out only 12 times! Today players do that in a week.

You are very lucky to have seen him play, my friend! He really was something special.^&cool
 
I know very little about baseball but had heard of Yogi
His witticisms are legendary
He was obviously a great leader and a great sportsman
 

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