Joba Chamberlain 100 MPH (2007)
6:59
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@user-llllllllllllllll
@user-llllllllllllllll 6 сағат бұрын
루키보고 오신분
@user-sz6gu6ns9r
@user-sz6gu6ns9r 15 сағат бұрын
最近ようやく、ベーブールースのピッチャー映像出てきましたね♪無かったから映像残ってないかと思ってました。確かに二刀流ですね♪ 左は世界を制す!
@pizzathehut1674
@pizzathehut1674 Күн бұрын
I’m sorry but this guy would get mashed on the daily today, all I see are fastballs in the middle our way outside the box. 8 teams back then narrows the competition and skill vastly
@spcooper94
@spcooper94 Күн бұрын
Maybe conduct a greater film study before jumping to conclusions. But thanks for watching
@RisitasKEKW
@RisitasKEKW Күн бұрын
I read his book, he was a legend for me growing up, a left handed Jewish pitcher who threw gas and did things his way. Rip 🪦 🕊️ true legend 🫡
@spcooper94
@spcooper94 Күн бұрын
@@RisitasKEKW RIP? Sandy’s still alive and well
@RisitasKEKW
@RisitasKEKW Күн бұрын
@@spcooper94 is he? Damn he must be a dinosaur. What a living legend ✊😅
@Lava1964
@Lava1964 2 күн бұрын
For those fans who want to argue that Willie Mays was the greatest ballplayer of all time, I have a simple question: What were Mays' MLB pitching stats? That's right...he didn't have any. Meanwhile, Babe Ruth was the best left-handed pitcher in the AL in the 1910s and he certainly would have been considered a Cy Young candidate in 1916 if the award had existed then.
@user-ly3ho1cv6e
@user-ly3ho1cv6e 4 күн бұрын
打ち返したけど絶対掌 ピリピリだつたはず😂
@adamrobinette6832
@adamrobinette6832 5 күн бұрын
When he's warming up, he's still throwing bored and those last two pitches look upper 80's. Like 75-80% full power.
@adamrobinette6832
@adamrobinette6832 5 күн бұрын
With as long of arms as he had, the way his pitching arm would wrap all the way around his back before he would uncork it, I have no doubt he threw in the upper 90s. No sidearm thrower today has that level of flexibility in their pitching arm.
@steplumpkin5432
@steplumpkin5432 5 күн бұрын
MY DAD'S FAVORITE PITCHER!!!!!!!!!!
@Kevin_40
@Kevin_40 7 күн бұрын
the baggy uniforms made him look fatter and less in shape than he actually was. underneath the baggy uniform was a very strong solid dude. He was very tall as well.
@thetruthfornow6045
@thetruthfornow6045 7 күн бұрын
Walter and Nolan Ryan had bionic arms. Both threw 100 mph. They both were great and had amazing longevity
@ElectricScooterMan
@ElectricScooterMan 7 күн бұрын
Sandy STILL GOT IT. If it wasn’t for his injuries, he could have played another 10 years
@spcooper94
@spcooper94 7 күн бұрын
@@ElectricScooterMan those pitching mechanics still looked beautiful
@classic-kool
@classic-kool 7 күн бұрын
At 00:58 - Ruth knows his time is short, so why not get on the mound, pitch 9 innings, get the win and top it off by hitting a home run! The man was simply incredible‼
@Smortguy739
@Smortguy739 8 күн бұрын
people had heather bats back then and he probably threw 90-95 so of course people couldn't hit off of him. I think Nolan Ryan is the best.
@davehorton1486
@davehorton1486 8 күн бұрын
Ruth didn`t look like an Athlete, but he could do it all, Pitch, Hit, field, and he was a smart Player, and that`s why he was great.
@Angels-mou-detai
@Angels-mou-detai 8 күн бұрын
大打者なりました。
@paulfhoffman
@paulfhoffman 8 күн бұрын
It's like the coach said, "Don't act like it's the first homer you ever hit."
@nikonmark37814
@nikonmark37814 8 күн бұрын
Nolan Ryan didn't need a pitch clock like today's pitchers. There are no equals today, everyone grew up pitching 100 pitches or 5 innings meaning they can't go 9 innings game after game after game and throw 100+ for 9 innings!
@opes134
@opes134 9 күн бұрын
the crazy thing is he had the same motion for each pitch. The batter would never know whats coming.
@briangarcia1190
@briangarcia1190 9 күн бұрын
I am here July 2024!
@LambOfGod2188
@LambOfGod2188 9 күн бұрын
I'm gunna need joyner dre and 50 on this beat ASAP
@kecu4929
@kecu4929 9 күн бұрын
No bat flip, no stare down, no homerun swagger around the basses and no 7-step congratulations at the plate... just pure.
@avnillc8046
@avnillc8046 5 күн бұрын
I love after the first out the first baseman rolls the ball back to the mound. They probably used one ball unless it went in the stands.
@ahwien
@ahwien 9 күн бұрын
My maternal Grandparents went on dates to the Stadium at that time. Wonderful post. thank you!
@spcooper94
@spcooper94 9 күн бұрын
@@ahwien thanks for sharing. Attending Babe Ruth games must have been the ultimate fan experience of any era
@user-tj5qz8mj8g
@user-tj5qz8mj8g 9 күн бұрын
159〜…⤵︎⤵︎ いや、十分過ぎんのよ。笑 国民脳内バグ
@renodavid
@renodavid 9 күн бұрын
Fun to see the Babe pitch towards the end of his career. I had no idea he ever took the mound for the Yankees. Also, if you watch the video at .75x it looks MUCH better.
@tadanokumanomi
@tadanokumanomi 9 күн бұрын
この時はオールスターに熱気があった
@bogey19018
@bogey19018 9 күн бұрын
Imagine dirt making dust on a baseball field.
@Paul-lm5gv
@Paul-lm5gv 10 күн бұрын
A complete game at age 38! Today's younger pitchers don't usually go more than 6 innings!
@Yeehaw-or7cx
@Yeehaw-or7cx 9 күн бұрын
Pros nowadays have a lot more velocity, which leads to a lot more injuries. Makes sense.
@jimcharles9705
@jimcharles9705 10 күн бұрын
Too bad we don't have footage from, say, 1916 when he was at his peak as a pitcher at age 21. Would love to have seen his mechanics then, when he was 23-12 with a 1.75 ERA. I'm sure his pitching motion would've been tighter then than at 38.
@spcooper94
@spcooper94 10 күн бұрын
@@jimcharles9705 i agree but it is truly a blessing that we have surviving footage of any pitchers from that time. You can find lots of great footage of Walter Johnson pitching, although, and older version of Johnson but still one who might’ve been in MVP form at that time
@KozueMaxima
@KozueMaxima 10 күн бұрын
The trailhead of a new life in a
@mudewitz
@mudewitz 10 күн бұрын
#BabeRuth
@donarthiazi2443
@donarthiazi2443 10 күн бұрын
Bartolo Colón was the BoSox starting pitcher that day. The Sox handed him the ball because Jamie Moyer had a touch of tendinitis.
@SteveGee1986
@SteveGee1986 10 күн бұрын
Why is his voice so high. Audio technology?
@Rhodesbda01
@Rhodesbda01 10 күн бұрын
Babe Ruth knew two things: drinking, and playing drunk baseball.
@dodiad
@dodiad 11 күн бұрын
Hey, who is this guy? Reminds me of Shohei Ohtani.
@daBEAGLE1017
@daBEAGLE1017 11 күн бұрын
Many people dont know Ruth also helped pitch a no hitter.
@tommyfu9271
@tommyfu9271 11 күн бұрын
helped is generous lol.
@daBEAGLE1017
@daBEAGLE1017 11 күн бұрын
@@tommyfu9271 if he didn't get thrown out for arguing the walk to the first batter it may never have happened.
@bitofwizdomb7266
@bitofwizdomb7266 11 күн бұрын
Ruth is so damn over rated . He was like an adult playing in a tee ball league
@tadaimaokaeri8004
@tadaimaokaeri8004 11 күн бұрын
この時の大谷、真美子夫人にそっくりやな
@whataboutthepotatoes6085
@whataboutthepotatoes6085 11 күн бұрын
Cool video. Pretty sure that was Julio Franco's rookie season, too.
@josephosheavideos3992
@josephosheavideos3992 11 күн бұрын
Washington won the pennant that year, so having Ruth pitch was probably a way for the Yankees to draw some fans to this otherwise meaningless game. He was probably 50 pounds heavier than in his pitching prime with Boston 15 years earlier. Still, it is interesting to see him pitch.
@chrism.1749
@chrism.1749 11 күн бұрын
9IP 12H 5ER and 0SO. That’s a funny way to pitch a complete game today.
@kingmanarizona2661
@kingmanarizona2661 11 күн бұрын
This was a meaningless game. Ruth asked if he could pitch and why not? A gimmick that might sell tickets for the last game of the season, where the yankees were not in the pennant race. Contrary to popular belief, the yankees with ruth were really never much of a draw in NY. They averaged only 15K fans a game in 1927. In 1933, the yankees had less than 10K fans a game. The depression was hitting hard, and teams were feeling it. The last game drew 20K fans.
@JaneSmith0709
@JaneSmith0709 11 күн бұрын
How did he have the stamina to pitch 9 innings AND hit a HR at almost 40 years old and that heavy? He was just an amazing athlete.
@randymarsh6931
@randymarsh6931 10 күн бұрын
He was probably throwing 75 mph lol. It wasn’t like these were max effort 95 mph fastballs. The game was so much different back then. Granted that’s not a reason to take anything away from his accomplishments like some fans try to do.
@JaneSmith0709
@JaneSmith0709 10 күн бұрын
@@randymarsh6931 True. But still, using his arm that much in any capacity would be taxing, not to mention batting as well. Even with the slower pitching, I still think it would be tiring and a lot of wear and tear on the arm. I still can't believe he did what he did with that body and while drinking so much and so often. I'm sure that's one reason his life was cut so short.
@kensilverstone1656
@kensilverstone1656 11 күн бұрын
Fantastic. The best player in baseball history--maybe in sports history. He's my favorite.
@BATMANZ899
@BATMANZ899 9 күн бұрын
BASE BALL HISTORY,....BATMANZ 1GOD IS BEST IN GOLF BASKETBALL 🏀 FOOTBALL BOXING BASEBALL ⚾️ AND MUCH MORE...JESUS PB IS BETTER THAN US SO IS MOSES PB SOLOMON PB MUHAMMAD PB AND 1GOD ALLAH IS CREATOR
@ragnarthered6459
@ragnarthered6459 9 күн бұрын
​@@BATMANZ899 What the fuck are you talking about?
@Blackdog222
@Blackdog222 9 күн бұрын
I agree 100% with your assessment of Babe as the greatest player in MLB history. Had he remained a pitcher he would very likely have made it to the HOF as a pitcher. 94-46 win/loss with a 2.26 era is credible. In 1916 he won 23 games with a 1.75 era and in 1917 he won 24 games with a 2.01 era. 58 complete games in those two years. Tells me he probably pitched extremely well in the games he lost..
@brucetowell3432
@brucetowell3432 5 күн бұрын
He'd probably be a designated hitter in todays game, maybe .250-260 hitter...any idea how fast he was throwing?, 85-90 MPH?
@kensilverstone1656
@kensilverstone1656 5 күн бұрын
@@brucetowell3432 Can't judge the speed but I believe he had a great winning percentage. I also can't guess what he would hit today. How about Ty Cobb or Ted Williams?
@firstlast4874
@firstlast4874 11 күн бұрын
I knew an older gent who was the nephew of Ossie Bluege, who played for the Senators from 1922-39. His uncle told him a story about the Yankees playing a weekend series vs. the Senators at the old Griffith Stadium. It seems that the Senators planned to take Ruth out after the game and make sure he got good and drunk. The plan appeared to be working as the next afternoon, the Babe was hung over and having a horrible game. Until, that is, he got up in the 9th and hit a HR that proved to be the game winner. After crossing home plate, he yelled over to the Senator dugout, "hey boys, where we going tonight?"
@donarthiazi2443
@donarthiazi2443 10 күн бұрын
That trick was tried on Lawrence Taylor too... a bevy of cocaine wielding prostitutes showed up at his hotel room on a Saturday night. Needless to say LT got no sleep whatsoever that night/morning. He had one of the best games of the season the next day 😂
@charleshultquist9233
@charleshultquist9233 9 күн бұрын
Tremendous!
@MikeCee7
@MikeCee7 11 күн бұрын
Fantastic video, Nice video, but what I don’t understand is: If Ruth was willing to pitch in 1933, then why didn’t he pitch (once every 5 days) since 1919? He could’ve still had the same home run total, since he was still in the lineup every day
@scarbo2229
@scarbo2229 11 күн бұрын
Good way to shorten a career. Takes time to recover after pitching.
@MikeCee7
@MikeCee7 10 күн бұрын
@@scarbo2229 That’s funny I grew up being a fan of Tom Seaver, Steve, Carlton, Nolan Ryan, Phil Niekro, etc. Who all pitched into their 40s. Nolan even pitched some no-hitters After turned 40. & don’t forget Clemens (& I’m sure there are many more, I just don’t feel like researching it)
@scarbo2229
@scarbo2229 10 күн бұрын
@@MikeCee7 All great pitchers for sure. I saw all of them and especially Bob Gibson in St. Louis. I think he almost made it to age 40 also. If we’re talking longevity, Satchel Paige was the most amazing, probably. Pitched well into his 50’s, I think, and still winning games in the majors. His young years he pitched crazy amounts, but obviously that’s a freak of nature. Pitching at that level is really hard on the arm for mere mortals, and it takes a few days to recover generally, so it’s usually not possible for pitchers to be in the lineup at another position every day.
@reybarreto7979
@reybarreto7979 12 күн бұрын
If Ty Cobb said he couldn’t touch Walter because his fast ball was too fast, and he did say that, then for sure Walter had a blazing fast ball that would kill you or put you in the hospital if it hit you. Some players did get hit with it, never intentionally as Walter was known to be a compassionate man, and they had to be hospitalized. Don’t let his easy delivery fool you. He’s throwing softly in this video out of fear of hitting the guy with the camera who is obviously in the line of fire. In spite of that, the ball is popping out of his hand with surprising speed, considering his relaxed delivery. I only wish there was close-up footage of him throwing at full, maximum speed.
@user-er7yz2hk2l
@user-er7yz2hk2l 12 күн бұрын
メジャーリーガー対決...
@reybarreto7979
@reybarreto7979 12 күн бұрын
Rare footage indeed. Finding this video is like finding gold, and in this footage Walter Johnson comes across as a simple man, so easygoing and humble. Imagine that, a humble and gentle-hearted man owning the most powerful arm in baseball history. It makes sense God would bestow the gift of such an arm upon a kind-hearted soul, for it would have been too dangerous to give such lethal power to a cruel and abusive man. Only a noble soul like Walter Johnson was worthy of it.
@AFRAKER1
@AFRAKER1 12 күн бұрын
So much wasted motion, but that was standard for the time.