That stretch is totally bananas. I believe Eric the Red has the most talent ever, he just tore his body apart playing ball.
@stephaniechaffin11548 ай бұрын
He was great but Frank Robinson, Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan, Tony Perez and Pete Rose were all elite and more talented.
@mcnell311 Жыл бұрын
The most aesthetically pleasing ball player ever. He was the embodiment of cool. It looked effortless. Great vid!
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
Eric the Red was something else to watch! And thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed 😎
@Boss3Nate Жыл бұрын
Eric Davis is for sure my GOAT... just loved this guy as a kid. Played CF like he did, wore 44 like he did and even tried to mimic his stance. Hahaha. Just a beast offensively and defensively. Saw him play live countless times at Riverfront stadium and all the time on tv. Sealed the deal when I mailed him a letter and a baseball card to the stadium where I got the address out of the back of my Beckett Book.. hahahaha. He was the only player to write back and autograph the card. Still have it to this day. And a baseball signed by him and the whole Reds team when Pete Rose was the manager.. Awesome video
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
I can see why you loved watching him play! Excellent ballplayer and the power speed combo is such a rarity it’s exciting to see that in action.
@Boss3Nate Жыл бұрын
@@Cam23 do you think Paul O'Neill would be worth a video? Really interesting career... 5 All Stars... 5 rings.. 1 with the Reds and 4 with the Yankees. Even won a batting title. Not an all time great but talk about an extremely good player. Around .300 and 20 HR and 90 RBI's a season and you could count on him for 150 games a year bc he didn't sit very often
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
@@Boss3Nate funny enough I did a video on him a couple years back 😂 I’d have to dig for it but I think he’d be a great one to do a full length. There’s just so many players it’s tough to manage, in all honesty! I enjoyed learning about him last time though I do remember that
@sisyphushappyxvx Жыл бұрын
Eric the Red was my favorite player as a kid growing up. I was lucky to see many games as a kid from the nosebleeds at Riverfront, including the incredible '90 wire-too-wire season. I used to copy his batting stance as a kid, too!
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
His batting stance is iconic!
@richardwilson8198 Жыл бұрын
I still hit like that and was in the nose bleeds from 87 to 91 every chance I could be! Most all around skill as a ball player I ever witnessed.....
@ryanthompsonthompson820 Жыл бұрын
Eric Davis, my favorite player. Awesome video.
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I hope I did him justice on how talented of a player he was
@ryanthompsonthompson820 Жыл бұрын
@Cam 23 You did a great job. Can you make a Historic Level video on Don Mattingly?
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
@@ryanthompsonthompson820 That will be a fun video to make. Thanks for the suggestion!
@LionsTigersPistonsWings8 ай бұрын
I was born in 77, Eric Davis was an absolute legend to our age group. You watched SportsCenter just to see what he did for a couple years.
@GaryCedestromIII6 ай бұрын
He's responsible for my allegiance switching from the Pirates to the Reds as an 11 year old in 1987. Still a Reds diehard 37 years later.
@ousamaabdu79411 ай бұрын
I really started getting into baseball back in 1987 when I was 9 years old.. Eric Davis was all over ESPN that year, he was constantly getting compared to the GOAT, Willie Mays.. Made HR robbing catches in back to back games.. I also remember watching him playing for Baltimore at Camden in 1998.. He looked like he was the best player on the field even at 35 years old.
@LionsTigersPistonsWings8 ай бұрын
I was 10. In 87 and 88 he was lights out. Kevin Mitchell hit the scene for a couple years right after him.
@leightoncotterell24186 ай бұрын
He's MY GUY to this day!!!!!! Haven't seen anyone better SINCE!
@ImGonnasayit Жыл бұрын
Eric Davis with 3 more healthy seasons in his prime probably waltzes into the hall.
@douglasjacobson676 Жыл бұрын
I agree. But that also applies to every player close to being a Hall of Famer.
@dallasj244 Жыл бұрын
Even 1 more season of something like 20HR & 50SB in either 1991, 1994 or 1995 when he didn't play or didn't play much, would give him a lofty EIGHT 20/20 seasons in his career, would also have put him over 300 HR and 400 SB mark! It'd have been hard to keep him out of the Hall, and he certainly would have went in if he was a Yankee, Red Sox, or Dodgers player his whole career and led them to the world series in 1990.
@douglasjacobson676 Жыл бұрын
@@dallasj244 I was a big fan of Eric Davis (except for when he was a Dodger). The bottom line however is not one of his career totals of any offensive category is Hall Of Fame worthy (not even close) In 17 years he played over 100 games in only 9 seasons, and his most in any year was 135. He was unbelievably talented, and the heart and determination he displayed coming back from injury after injury (even winning Comeback Player of the Year) made him a fan favorite of all 6 teams he played for. Furthermore, his being diagnosed with, going through the treatment , and then coming back after beating colon cancer showed the desire Eric Davis had to play baseball. ,
@dallasj244 Жыл бұрын
@@douglasjacobson676 hear hear! Great points. He's inspirational to many fans, that's what matters. Barry said he was the guy for the team, during his HOF speech, so those who listened to the games or went to the park knew how great E.D. was...
@Deadtrumpanzeesmakemehappy-4205 ай бұрын
He never had ANY truly healthy seasons, he never once played more than 135 games in a season while playing in an era where star position players were basically expected to play all 162 or close to it. I think he needed a bit more to be HOF material. Maybe 3 more good prime seasons AND actually making it through a few seasons without spending multiple weeks on the DL.
@Hatbilly Жыл бұрын
This was so well done, man. Keep it up!
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, that means a lot!
@Hatbilly Жыл бұрын
Want to collaborate on an O's video sometime in the near future? 🙂
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
@@Hatbilly I'm down! You got a topic in mind?
@Hatbilly Жыл бұрын
@Cam 23 Frank and Brooks Robinson? We could each "specialize" in one of the two, then tie it together. You on Twitter? Feel free to hit me there and we could brainstorm further.
@Hatbilly Жыл бұрын
@MiLB_Hatbilly
@ChrisRyanNJRealtor Жыл бұрын
I’ve always wondered if someone would make this video. Seeing it a year later. Thanks for posting, really one of baseballs underrated greats
@Schneltor7 ай бұрын
Growing up in Cincinnati and watching Eric Davis was.....amazing. We all emulated his batting stance, we all wanted to be Eric the Red! I was at Game 1 of the 1990 World Series with my grandfather. Davis hit that no-doubter and the place was so loud you might think the stadium would fall apart. The clip of the NLCS throw here doesn't do the play justice. He covered a huge distance to get to the ball, and then turned and nailed a perfect throw to third. Without the injuries, Eric Davis would not only have been first round HoFer, but his name would have been uttered right along with Willie Mays. I like to think that's the kind of thing my son is watching with Elly de la Cruz. The parallels between the two players are amazing: the speed, power and just baseball smarts. One thing that Elly will never do, however, is don Kal Daniel's jersey and steal second base like at 3:44
@kennyscott9795 ай бұрын
Saw him hit for the Cycle June 2, 1989 against the Padres. The most unique feat I’ve ever seen in person at a sporting event. The clip shown where he’s sliding into third and the third baseman drops the ball is video of the triple he got to complete the Cycle.
@dallasj244 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for addressing perhaps the greatest talent in baseball history that is overlooked. If he was a New York Yankee and did this insane nearly 50/100 162 game stretch - there'd be hundreds of jerseys with Davis on them at Yankees home games. Eric Davis had 7 20/20 seasons playing 120-130 games a year. Pete Rose, Paul O'Neill, Dave Parker, Cal Ripken and many more called him the greatest player they'd ever saw play! WOW! Now, what upsets me is that new cards rarely show him when they show great players of the past. For example, Will Clark, an excellent player, has over 100 Topps cards the past decade, but Davis has about a dozen! And Davis won the World Series with the Reds and hit THE home run of that series against the McGwire/Canseco/Henderson Athletics in a series sweep! AGAIN, THANK YOU FOR MAKING THIS VIDEO! He was legendary, and nearly having a 30/30 season in the FIRST HALF of 1987 showed how amazing his talent was! I wish he received greater acclaim, but you have helped with this great video! :)
@dallasj244 Жыл бұрын
And you touched on so many important aspects of his talent and disrespect he received. Not getting in the top 3 of MVP in '87 with that crazy year (I don't care if he was injured half the month of Sept, the other months were absurd x10!) was so disrespectful. I'm not sure if it's because the Reds came in 2nd place because they collapsed because he was injured (but doesn't that point out how VALUABLE he was? in the 130 games he started?). To make matters worse, there was so much racism directed his way by the jerks on 700 wlw the Reds flagship station and whining by racist Reds fans for many years because of his diving to save games and getting injured a few times for several weeks. They said he was soft and was milking his injuries. They said he he didn't want to work. It was grotesque and I called many people racists who absolutely were, and called the station a few times to tell them they were disrespectful to one of the greatest players in MLB history, as they never said these things about white players who got hurt. Subscribed - you really did your work.
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
I don’t know how I missed this comment but thank you! You provide some great insight!
@MarvinMonroe Жыл бұрын
@@dallasj244yeah remember Marge wouldn't pay for his flight home after he got out of the hospital in Oakland after they won the World Series. And she called him "her n-word" with the hard R of course
@colormecolorado5965 ай бұрын
@@Cam23 Thanks man, kind of you to say that. I watched it again after watching it last year.
@goodwoodBD11 ай бұрын
I watched Davis play the entire time in Cincinnati,he did get injured often but if he would have stayed in Cincinnati he would be the greatest Reds player of all time. Ppl talk about his power,his speed and his defense in the outfield but his arm was to me the most amazing thing about him. He could throw you out from the deepest part of the outfield to any base,even home plate. If a guy with a great arm is called having a gun,Davis had a cannon.
@juanfranciscosantana47938 ай бұрын
I wish Eric the red would be able to play in this modern baseball fields ,( malls ) and not the riverfront,and could stay healthy ,ease HOF .
@goodwoodBD8 ай бұрын
@@juanfranciscosantana4793 no doubt in my mind,I also think he should have stayed in Cincy.
@juanfranciscosantana47938 ай бұрын
@@goodwoodBD me too ,but remrmber that is business 💰 ,
@ousamaabdu79411 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite videos you ever did.. Great job!
@Cam2311 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@jimmyfitz8907 Жыл бұрын
I dig your channel bro…keep up the good work
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I’m glad you’re enjoying the content 😎
@mattyust61273 ай бұрын
Got to meet him on 9/10/01 the day before the world changed forever. Super cool guy and I’ll never forget either event that happened in that next 24 hours!
@colormecolorado5965 ай бұрын
Just a note for statheads, Davis did in fact have 35 stolen bases 5 years after the 1988 season when he also had 35. In 1993 Davis had 35 between stints with the Dodgers & Tigers. To finish with seven 20HR/20SB seasons like he did, missing around 30 games every season because of playing such fearless defense in centerfield, is so incredible. He is in the top 5 all time in the 20/20 stat despite the missed games - wild!
@StoneGone4 ай бұрын
Ohthani is now the first 50:50 guy
@tysonbasye51713 күн бұрын
I played in college, and I know major league pitching is a whole different animal, but I would think that between pitchers throwing 97-100mph, and catchers throwing 85-95mph, it would be considerably more difficult to steal a base in Major League Baseball than it is to hit a home run (if the opposing team sees you as a base-stealing threat… there are obviously situations where even guys like 40-year-old Albert Pujols have swiped bases bc the other team doesn’t care). If you’ve made it to the Major Leagues, chances are you’ve proven you have the ability to put the bat on the ball. If you just put a good swing and get good contact on a ball going more than about 90mph, there’s a good chance you can hit it out of a 400-foot field. The speed and timing it takes to steal a base when everybody knows you’re going is something that is super elite.
@MarvinMonroe Жыл бұрын
3 more hr and Davis would have been 40/50 club in 1987. That would have made all that Canseco hype in 1988 about first ever 40/40 non existent
@j.yumuraj2880 Жыл бұрын
Acuna at 40/70 this year
@brandondodds1249Ай бұрын
Good evening everyone E.D was my guy coming up in the game of baseball ⚾. Thanks for showing love with this video. Peace and love coming from ya Champ.
@hugosegura628711 ай бұрын
I always thought that Eric Davis, was the reincarnation of Roberto Clemente. He looks just like him!!!
@acason4 Жыл бұрын
I'm watching this realizing Acuna posted a stat line this year of: 217 hits 149 runs 41 HR 107 RBI 73 SB .337/.416/.596 1.012 OPS 168 OPS + 383 TB 😳 Arguably a Top 10 season in MLB history! Granted, his OPS isn't as high as you'd think, but those numbers are historic!! As a lifetime Reds fan (Cincinnati kid who was 10 years old when we won a ring in 90') Eric the Red #44 was my favorite player as a kid. If only he'd stayed healthy!
@YellowHillbilly2 ай бұрын
legendary stats for sure 💯
@flame-sky7148 Жыл бұрын
A great player who suffered injuries. 87 through 89 seasons were amazing.
@tonyleukering88328 ай бұрын
Good to see a bio about Davis. Just a nitpicky note: If at ~2:57 you're going to avoid ending a sentence a preposition with by starting it "for which," don't end it with 'for." 😉
@steveparish42096 ай бұрын
My favorite player, ever. He was like a cartoon character. 6'2" and like 150 lbs.
@paulstone35667 ай бұрын
I’m salty #44 has bounced on the back of team jerseys this long, mostly to other great players
@randalljohnson712310 ай бұрын
🙋🏾♂️💭MY ALL TIME FAVORITE BASEBALL PLAYER ERIC DAVIS HOPEFULLY THAT NUMBER ISN'T HAUNTED AS THE FELLOW SUCCESSOR ELLY DE LA CRUZ IS ROCKING IT DOING JUSTICE FOR THE BIG RED MACHINE
@frankwhite18956 ай бұрын
Marge Schott treated davis like shit
@MarvinMonroe Жыл бұрын
20/80 club? Three more hr and he woulda been 30/80 club thats insane (1986 season by the way)
@dallasj244 Жыл бұрын
Isn't that nuts? 30/80 season if he'd just have been in from the start of 1986. And again, so close to 40/50 in 1987! Well, we can at least be greatful for his awesome level of play, always trying to save runs when many outfielders will never dive like he did to save games (saved a no hitter in St Louis, June 25th 1999 for rookie Jose Jiminez against Randy Johnson). Davis DESERVES an election by the Veterans Committee to the HoF one day, for being one of the great ambassadors on the field, and when he had cancer in 1997, and his top 10 of all time talent, no question!
@MarvinMonroe9 ай бұрын
@@dallasj244yeah man remember all that Canseco hype in 1988 about first ever 40/40 club? Would have all been non existent if Davis woulda been 40/50 in 1987
@clemke007_FF3 ай бұрын
So annoying about Canseco in '88...Davis showed the world who the better player was in the '90 World Series!! Most talented & favorite player I've ever watched play.
@Crush_Tiggrr Жыл бұрын
Awesome player
@betweenparticipation7 ай бұрын
Elly De La Cruz’s father
@ThePalePatriot19 күн бұрын
44 Magnum baby!
@sammymorales68384 ай бұрын
well Ohtani just took this to another level
@daveosullivan26988 ай бұрын
Who is shown stealing second base at the 3:44 mark?
@Cam238 ай бұрын
Imma be real, no clue. Looking back at this video, lots of question marks. My guess is there was hardly any footage and I found a Reds player stealing a base around that time frame and used it. I wasn't putting nearly the same amount of time into videos a year ago as I do now
@daveosullivan26988 ай бұрын
Just looked it up. It was Kal Daniels.
@colormecolorado5965 ай бұрын
@@daveosullivan2698 Kal was a pretty darn good hitter for a few years, and even had an all-star year with the Dodgers I believe, after the Reds let him go.
@colormecolorado5965 ай бұрын
@@Cam23 If you only had a way to let a super fan of each player give your video a review before you post it to correct any omissions or numerical errors. But, to gather all that you did with so few probs is beyond commendable! This was no small feat.
@smoceany9478 Жыл бұрын
well, you were right, acuna was most definitely a candidate lol
@Cam23 Жыл бұрын
Holy smokes I forgot about my take, not too shabby 😂
@sjw4life5468 ай бұрын
Bonds was 40/40 in 96? Interesting...........
@ickcubs102 Жыл бұрын
Soooooo when players play well, the team wins........ahhhhhh, I get it now.....
@ice-iu3vv Жыл бұрын
explain it to the rest of us then. this comment has NOTHING to do with the context of this video.