The fact that he threw 2 no-hitters after turning 40 might be his most impressive feat, and there are a lot to pick from. I'm 39 and I don't even like walking up stairs.
@Brah426 ай бұрын
In 1973 he threw 26 complete games. 🍌s
@Cam236 ай бұрын
That's too funny! 😂
@bwink236 ай бұрын
Not close to his most impressive
@frocat51635 ай бұрын
@@bwink23 *"Not close to his most impressive"* I can only assume you're not in your 40s, then. Probably not even your late 30s.
@charlesenfield21925 ай бұрын
The guy was one of the hardest throwers in the game and was still pitching 7 innings per outing in his 40's. If his manager would have tried to put him on a pitch count, Ryan probably would have punched him.
@alexanderbreeding18305 ай бұрын
Frankly, I believe the most impressive thing about Nolan is despite ALL of his MLB accolades, he remained a humble, quiet rancher at heart! He's a very nice, approachable and decent man!! I was fortunate enough to be able to watch several TCU games with both Nolan and Tom Grieve when their sons were both pitching for the Horned Frogs in the 90s. I had recently separated from the Navy and was working at TCU. They didn't pay overtime so any extra work I did was compensated with time off. I saved that time for watching baseball in the spring. As a lifelong baseball fanatic and also a huge Nolan Ryan fan, I immediately recognized both of them during one afternoon game on campus. I meekly approached 2 famous and accomplished former athletes just to tell them how much I appreciated their play. Instead of stating that I was undoubtedly disturbing them, I was invited to sit with them and talk baseball! They were seemingly just fathers watching their sons play baseball, and boy could they talk baseball!! Eventually Nolan was hired as a restricted-earnings coach so he didn't have to remain in the stands. Still it was an incredibly enjoyable experience while it lasted and it just made me that much of a bigger Nolan Ryan fan. Oh, and Tom Grieve was a pretty cool guy at the time, too.
@MaryShoemaker-wi4fy5 ай бұрын
Memories 🙌
@wayneorendorff5 ай бұрын
What a tremendous candid story of these two baseball fathers! I was a referee who told recruits, "If you want to hear the best human interest stories off-the-cuff, go to a high school game and ask one of the parents in the stands which boy is theirs." You got a double portion!
@albundy6008Ай бұрын
And it is unfathomable that with his impressive numbers, he never won a Cy Young.
@jritechnology5 ай бұрын
April 8th, 1986...Houston Astrodome. Nolan Ryan facing a fresh faced rookie Will Clark and starts him off with that diving curveball. You can see Will smile. 2 pitches later, he got the Express and got all of it sending it over the centerfield wall and his first at bat vs the greatest righty of the time culminated in a homerun. He pointed to his parents, and sat down in the dugout next to Chili Davis. He noticed that the dugout was kind of quiet considering, so he figured straight away....turned to Chili and asked "He's going to hit me next at-bat, isn't he..." Chili just replied "Oh yes, yes he is."
@trevor8307Ай бұрын
Is this story true? I know Clark homered off Ryan is his first MLB at bat, but I haven’t heard the dugout story before. Will the Thrill and Ryan were my two favorites in the early 90s.
@JimboTheOrangutang6 ай бұрын
The fact that Nolan didnt get a single cy young even though he put historical numbers is the most criminal baseball thing to ever happen
@allstarr9tc6 ай бұрын
lol
@ToonTwist6 ай бұрын
Nolan Ryan should have only won the award twice in 1981 and 1987. In 1981 although he definitely should have won his low inning count might have prevented him from winning. In 1987 he also should’ve won but it’s not like him losing was some huge robbery or anything. Ryan definitely did not put up historic seasons every year.
@mickeywhite78786 ай бұрын
Not really…lost too many games wasting pitches and being wild. Conversely, look up Greg Maddux’ numbers or Roger Clemens even. Neither came close to losing 300 games like Ryan. No knock on Ryan, but baseball is about numbers
@ToonTwist6 ай бұрын
@@mickeywhite7878 Wins are a meaningless stat and while I think Nolan Ryan is extremely overrated and I agree that Clemens and Maddux are way better it’s not Ryan’s loss record that makes this the case.
@JimboTheOrangutang6 ай бұрын
@ToonTwist if anything he is perfectly fine
@carlpacquing25756 ай бұрын
That 85 MPH first pitch at 63 years old is insane!
@Cam236 ай бұрын
His arm must be made of steel 😂
@poindextertunes6 ай бұрын
I’d almost guarantee he had been training leading up to that first pitch lol if he just came off the couch thats fxcking wild 😂
@MichaelStarnes-24 ай бұрын
@Cam23 do more pitchers please
@ScenicallyViewed2 ай бұрын
@@Cam23Walter Johnson please
@jamesesterline6 ай бұрын
It's wild that Ryan never won a Cy Young, he had a solid case in '73 but barely lost to Palmer and was robbed in '87 because he had a losing record and played for a sub .500 Astros team despite him leading the league in ERA and strikeouts
@uberboomer86706 ай бұрын
I can't believe how many losses the poor guy had in seasons where he had a sub 3 ERA. He'd be so much more celebrated I'd he wasn't consistently on garbage teams
@CSDonohue116 ай бұрын
Most definitely He should easily have 3 Deserves more They were just far less informed voters and most fans knew even less way back then
@Brah426 ай бұрын
What's crazy is not only how great he was that he never won a Cy Young but how great he was for so long and never won a Cy Young.
@uberboomer86706 ай бұрын
@Brah42 seriously, he was STILL dominant in the 90's, practically never gave up HRs, threw complete games in nearly half of his starts....it's wild to think of some of the random guys who have Cy Youngs instead of Ryan
@allstarr9tc6 ай бұрын
@@CSDonohue11Which seasons would you say he should have won?
@TraitofSiNN7275 ай бұрын
this man was my childhood idol when I was a kid in the 80s. I'm from Toronto Ontario Canada and every summer my parents made me go live with my aunt who was my mother's older sister in Houston for the whole summer. her and her husband use to take me to watch the Astros at the old Astro Dome. great memories I was excited every time I seen Nolan Ryan and say to myself that's me when I play baseball against my fellow classmates playing baseball. I was the only kid in class picture with a Astros shirt and the rest had Blue Jays sweaters or shirts lol. thanks for this video made my day even brighter and made me feel young again.
@mattmanis67866 ай бұрын
As an Astros fan, I really appreciated this footage. I saw Nolan pitch many times and it was always exciting and impressive. Thanks for the memories.
@Cam236 ай бұрын
I'm glad you enjoyed the video, thanks for watching!
@outoftheboxmedic16085 ай бұрын
Simply, he’s always been one of my two favorite players!
@commiehunter733Ай бұрын
I still buy his baseball cards
@trevor8307Ай бұрын
@@commiehunter733 Me too! My favorite is his 1969 Topps card. It’s not a rookie card, but it’s his first individual card, which makes it better than his rookie card in my eyes. I have two of them, but they’re in rough shape lol
@jameswright55725 ай бұрын
I was able to meet him as just a neighbor when growing up in Friendswood as a teen. He lived one town over and you could always count on him and his family to support the community. Just a super nice guy and his wife and kids are terrific people.
@ArtisticallySavvyPhotography6 ай бұрын
Yes! My favorite power pitcher of all-time
@naswiipp6 ай бұрын
On August 4,1993 Nolan Ryan set the MLB record by hitting Robin Ventura 8 times in 1 at‐bat. Go Cubbies!!!!!
@KlassBlassie5 ай бұрын
Great content as a 44 year old life long ball fan I loved this breakdown of the big bull a true ace Nolan Ryan
@Cam235 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed the video it was a blast to learn more about Nolan Ryan
@jamesnug44536 ай бұрын
My favorite player of all time! Thanks for the content great video
@Cam236 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching! Glad you enjoyed
@Yo_AB_Breaks5 ай бұрын
I'm 41. If I threw a baseball as hard as I could, it'd injure something from foot to neck and would likely clock in at 65 mph. This man's last pitch at 46 was 98 mph then an 85 mph zipper at 63 years old. Legend.
@JSR_6 ай бұрын
Robin Ventura just left the chat
@GeeEm13136 ай бұрын
Ha.
@richardwingert28276 ай бұрын
Don't mess with the big guy from Texas. Ryan's fast ball was no joke
@frocat51635 ай бұрын
I've been a White Sox fan since the mid '80s. I was 13 when that fight happened, and I was watching the game. Ventura was one of my favorite players around that time, because I also played third base.
@LaStOnE_leFt5 ай бұрын
@@frocat5163I'll never forget that fight lol. He whooped that ass
@jadprinz4826 ай бұрын
You listened when I asked for an Albert Belle video 🙏. This time we need a video on the prime of Bernie Williams. Dude was a stud in an era of roided up sluggers .
@Akkbar216 ай бұрын
Screw the Yankees :)
@russellboyd98585 ай бұрын
Great yankee center fielder
@andrewchamberlin81805 ай бұрын
He was a great testament for which players should aspire to in all aspects of playing pro ball.
@trevander1able6 ай бұрын
I was watching that game live on TV, I'm a die hard Mariners fan! In 1993 i was 15 yrs old, the hight of my baseball card collecting! When i found out Nolan Ryan was starting i was so excited!! Now my memory is not what it used to be, but if im remembering correctly, mike blowers hit a grand slam the batter before. I knew something was wrong, when Ryan was taken out of the game mid batter i was shocked/sad, then when he came out fir a curtain call the M's fans gave him a standing ovation, that brought me to tears, i had a feeling i just witnessed the end of a baseball Legend. Nolan Ryan is in my top 5 favorite players of all time! He has a ridiculous amount of records that will never be broken. And if he had any kind if run support in the 70's and early 80's he'd easily have over 400 wins!! The Ryan Express is My goat pitcher!
@wayneorendorff5 ай бұрын
Dann Howitt was the M's batter who hit that grand slam off Ryan. As I recall, Dave Madigan followed with a single and Nolan walked off the mound to say goodbye before delivering a pitch to the next batter. Ryan went ahead to make his curtain call appearance on the road in Seattle, rather than to wait for a Ranger's home game. He had set out of the rotation to rest and rehab his arm for one more start. Of course we cried in Seattle to see the last ML pitch of a fireballing great HOF from Texas.
@trevor8307Ай бұрын
I seriously wondered if I wrote your comment and forgot about it. I watched that game live on TV at 15yo as well! I was BIG into card collecting too. During that time there were two cards I wanted to pull from a pack: Nolan and Griffey. The 1991 Upper Deck set was my favorite. Lots of good throwback cards of Ryan for all his teams.
@conorgilles815 ай бұрын
Nolan Ryan's longevity alone affords him legend status. It is even more impressive when you consider that he was a starter, and was thoroughly utilized, through much of his career. He wasn't some guy who went from team to team, pitching a few innings here and there to any team who could use him. He was an institution unto himself. He threw A LOT of pitches.
@trevor8307Ай бұрын
When the other greats from his era like Steve Carlton just couldn’t hang on anymore…he just kept on trucking. I always think about the fact that he began his career before Johnny Bench, but Bench retired in 1983…ten years before Ryan! I know you can’t compare pitchers and catchers for longevity…but I just did lol
@johnnieclemons29215 ай бұрын
Nolan Ryan and Randy Johnson my 2 favorite pitchers of all time
@roseforyoubabe3 ай бұрын
randy was better
@chrisholden6156 ай бұрын
Another gem of content generated buddy, great work as usual Cam!🎉 Nolan Ryans longevity was ridiculous!
@Cam236 ай бұрын
Thank you Chris! Always appreciate you stopping by and supporting the channel. And you got that right, 27 years continues to baffle my brain 🤯
@j.w.perkins60045 ай бұрын
Nolan lives just south of Houston in Alvin Texas and is still ranching and running several successful businesses. True badass.
@jironthunder75196 ай бұрын
I just arrived in Chicago after the 13 hour all day drive. I sat down and turned the hotel TV on and at that moment, Ryan just plunked Robin Ventura. Ventura charged the mound and took a beating the Chicago mob woulda been proud of. Welcome to Chicago!!! Life moves pretty fast...
@iAintSayDat6 ай бұрын
If I’m picking a pitcher for one game with my life on the line, I’m taking prime Bob Gibson. If I’m talking one pitcher to start my franchise, I’d pick Nolan Ryan.
@n8doggy7336 ай бұрын
Satchel Paige
@iAintSayDat6 ай бұрын
@@n8doggy733 Touché
@Cam236 ай бұрын
I agree with that hypothetical!
@iAintSayDat6 ай бұрын
@@n8doggy733 Touché
@iAintSayDat6 ай бұрын
@@n8doggy733 Touché
@mmmthatguy6 ай бұрын
Didn’t know there was so much vintage Ryan footage out there. Awesome job in procuring the footage.
@KlassBlassie5 ай бұрын
He just said 235 pitch start that's about 5 startrs for any ''Ace" of the morden day game. Simply unbelievable!!
@Mr.JayDice4 ай бұрын
Genuinely curious why today’s pitchers don’t go the distance/aren’t allowed. Would love to see more of that.
@monkeymagee20086 ай бұрын
Yessir Nolan Ryan! Another fire vid Cam!
@Cam236 ай бұрын
Ey thank you Sergio! 😎 I appreciate you watching as always
@thecaveman35036 ай бұрын
I can only speak for me. But, Ted Williams, Paul Molitor, Curt Schilling, Rod Carew, Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker in one video, Gary Carter, Johnny Bench, Carlton Fisk, and Roger Clemons among others would make great videos in my opinion. Love this series and hope to see it continue!
@northstarjakobs6 ай бұрын
If Cam23 makes a video about Johnny Bench, I hope he finds some way to bring up the kids' TV show that Bench did while he was playing as well as the story of how Bench perfected his penmanship
@hattorihongzo6 ай бұрын
Great episode - thanks for keeping the memory of such an unbelievable player and person going. 👏👏👏
@Cam236 ай бұрын
Thank you! I appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment 👏
@Oldtimeleftie6 ай бұрын
I get so fricken excited everytime I see a new video on this page
@Cam236 ай бұрын
I really appreciate that! I am extremely thankful to have such great supporters of this series, including yourself, so thank you for making these videos possible 😎
@ChristopherM7203 ай бұрын
I was blessed to get to see him pitch one time. August 1990, in Arlington, first game of a double header. He went 10 (game went I think 12), and in the 10th inning, sitting in cheap seats in CF, the first pitch we could hear pop all the way out there. The man was a legend, like some tall tale you'd share. Because the game has changed no one will get close to his marks. Pitchers are to valuable to throw 200+ pitches, or have 20 CG. But, he really existed and I got to see him. True gentleman and a real highlight. And come on, who were the dunces who looked at their HOF ballot and said, "nah, he's not a HOF player?"
@mykelengieza70575 ай бұрын
Got to see Mr. Ryan, on tv live and highlights.....insane arm strength and endurance
@wayneorendorff5 ай бұрын
Nolan Ryan, what a tough and unforgettable hurler! He did the work of a starter, two high-leverage set up men and a closer for his whole career. He pitched himself out of his own jams; like a bulldog in a den of snakes. He was easy to manage because he was easy to trust... put the team on his shoulders then give him 3-4 runs.
@JR-zv6qm2 ай бұрын
That 12 - 6 curveball was insane.
@commiehunter733Ай бұрын
Hammer curve
@jritechnology5 ай бұрын
We will never see another man like Nolan Ryan in baseball again. Why? 1. There aren't "real men" like Nolan vying for a pitching position. 2. They have ruined my beloved game with making it a hitters game. All a pitcher is now is a server, you have to mix up the meal just right in order to get a win, and there are no complete games now. 3. If a pitcher gets a mismanicured nail, he is considered "injured". It's sad what they get paid now versus what they have to actually do. 4. Hitters are conditioned to hit 100mph fastballs right down the middle. A pitcher would have to throw 110mph+ to be dominant. Then figure out how to be pinpoint perfect to deal with the shi*ty umpiring like Angel Hernandez. I could go on and on....keep 'em coming.
@Shinobi336 ай бұрын
My favorite pitcher of all time bar none. Close to 6,000 Ks. Nuts. And he could've been close to 400 wins had he had consistent run support
@mblackstock26 ай бұрын
Great video!!! Id like to see one on Gary Sheffield, Andres Gallaragah and Fred Mcgriff!! 3 of my favorite Braves!!
@jmillshobbies63446 ай бұрын
How did I not ask for this, Great video, Ryan was awesome. I only caught the tail end of his career but he got 2 no hitters and made the 5k club, and i got to enjoy watching hit do that and beat the crap out of ventura.
@Cam236 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed the video! I apologize if I missed your comment I have a search filter and sometimes it doesn't correctly pull up every comment that mentions Nolan Ryan
@ryanthompsonthompson8206 ай бұрын
Thank you Cam23⚾️💥👊
@Cam236 ай бұрын
I knew you'd enjoy this one Ryan! Thanks for watching 😎
@marvinsannes93975 ай бұрын
Ryan's career was my heyday as a fan. I remember a telecast where they played Ryan's ball hitting the catcher's glove and the sound of a rifle shot.
@jeffarmfield23466 ай бұрын
This man was out here puttin up 2 years worth of modern pitching stats in single seasons lol
@mickeywhite78786 ай бұрын
Especially walks and losses!
@FadedDream69696 ай бұрын
This is crazy me and my co worker who plays college baseball were just talking about nolan on thursday. Like he played for so long at at such a high level.
@Cam236 ай бұрын
That's a cool coincidence! I feel like sometimes the figurative "baseball" finds you on the field.
@bkfabs4 ай бұрын
Legend… So many complete games! That was the big boy era back then.
@maidenforge332 ай бұрын
Throwing 85 mph at 63 years old is ridiculous.
@stevenwalker9013Ай бұрын
In slacks and belt with shirt tucked in. Not loose. I bet he could hit 90 easy. Then of course.
@MichaelElias-q2z4 ай бұрын
A truly superior major league pitcher but oddly underated and somehow unappreciated.
@8rickey6 ай бұрын
Mr. October is definitely overdue for an Insane Prime video.
@sammycampbell16545 ай бұрын
The fact nobody thinks there's any possible way Ryan was using some roids or HGH during his Rangers years is mind blowing to me.
@scottb21133 күн бұрын
Sure, and was still on them when he threw out the game ball at age 63 @ 85 Mph. His work out regime is well documented on how he would ride the stationary bike for hrs after pitching in a game. A pitcher is not helped by those enhancers like a fielder or hitter and he already had his recovery regime as a haabit since his Houston days. The guy turned down Tommy John surgery and threw 98 Mph his last pitch. He regularly threw over 130 pitches in a game and estimtely 235 in 13 innings then on 3 days rest 7 innings against the Yankies duringf the 70's before the juice era. No wonder he went into his 40's and still threw 95+ which if enhncers helped there would be many more. Haters love top hate.
@thinkforyourself56726 ай бұрын
His stats are almost unbelievable. He is the best pitcher in history and as time goes on it's even more clear that will never change.
@mickeywhite78786 ай бұрын
The how did he lose almost 300 games?
@thinkforyourself56726 ай бұрын
@@mickeywhite7878 Is that a real question lol? Pitching 26 seasons, Pitching for bad teams and not getting run support for extended periods of time during his career. 26 season's, 300 wins, 5700 SO's and an 81.3 WAR. Getting to 300 wins isn't happening anymore and no one is beating his 5700 SO's and 7 No No's. His career numbers are absurd. Wins and losses is the least important stat and luckily we finally figured that out. Look at deGroms 2 Cy Young seasons. Win / Loss record alone and it looks like he sucked
@trevor8307Ай бұрын
I’ll never forget, as a kid growing up in the early 90s, we were watching Ryan on TV and my dad made a crazy observation: Nolan Ryan pitched in the major leagues two years before man walked on the moon. That completely blew my mind! In my mind, the moon landings were like ancient history at that point. Turns out he actually pitched 3 years before the moon landing of 1969 lol
@tochamp54415 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to be able to watch him he was by far the best pitcher in mlb
@richardlefaive19445 ай бұрын
Absolutely the most electric stuff of all time... and it's not really close. Had he been able to control it better and developed a change ... he would have been the most unhittable pitcher of all time by far.
@roseforyoubabe3 ай бұрын
wrong...
@LaStOnE_leFt5 ай бұрын
Some records in sports will never be broken, and he has just about every one a pitcher could have!
@thebombcat5 ай бұрын
Such a legend, I named my son after him.
@jritechnology5 ай бұрын
At the age of 38, I threw a softball across the diamond in a bang bang play that the first baseman dropped. I was furious. I yelled over to him after he retrieved the ball that almost took his face off, "How did you not catch that? It was right into your mitt!" He came over to me with his glove and said "because of this." The mitt pocket was completely blasted out, the leather strings snapped. I was proud of myself....and we figured that throw was about 75mph with a softball. 10 years later, my arm is ruined, I'll never throw a ball again....and I never even came close to what Nolan threw at 44 years old when I was firing at 38. He is a legend....
@brianbachmeier345 ай бұрын
Excellent job
@Cam235 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@thecoolcreativebuildchanne26136 ай бұрын
One of my favorite Insane Primes I've seen!!👏👏👏⚾️
@Cam236 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm happy to hear you enjoyed this one 😎
@lewisshepard9239Ай бұрын
Absolutely a Great video of a man’s Great Career !
@Cam23Ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@pallen495 ай бұрын
Back around 1974, as a kid who love only basketball, and played in our school league..I didn't follow any other sport, but I definitely knew who Nolan Ryan was, even tho I never watch a single second of an MLB games lol
@uberboomer86706 ай бұрын
Gotta make a video on another all time great pitcher, Pedro Martinez! Love your content as always man, keep grinding Of all the absurd stats for Ryan, im completely floored by the career .204 BAA, what a legend
@Cam236 ай бұрын
He'd be a great one too! Thank you for supporting the channel I really appreciate it 😎 The .204 BAA blew my mind too 🤯
@uberboomer86706 ай бұрын
@Cam23 no problem man, you always make great videos and your one of my go to channels for baseball. I know you'll do Bostons savior proud!
@puckcrazy67685 ай бұрын
Pure Legend!!! I love that man! Also my idol growing up.
@obviousfakename582824 күн бұрын
All those innings with all that heat. Dude was the Secretariat of baseball.
@bravesfan2931476 ай бұрын
All mind boggling numbers! Probably won't see anything like this ever again...
@Cam236 ай бұрын
They say nothing's impossible but I think there's an asterisk next to that (anything Nolan Ryan ever did on the ball field 😂)
@tr59475 ай бұрын
@bravesfan293147 The numbers of complete game will definitely never be seen again.
@hlcn62666 ай бұрын
You the man Cam!!
@JoeNicolosi-l8i3 ай бұрын
Ryan is on my all-time roster. IMO, that makes him one of the 25 best players of all time.
@TheEricHart3 ай бұрын
Love the video. You should do a Darryl Kile Documentary video. His 12-6 curve was one of the best and he was gone too soon. :")
@michaeloliver87905 ай бұрын
Just two words……The Best
@slyguythreeonetwonine31725 ай бұрын
(0:39) Uh? What? I'm pretty sure Nolan Ryan is legendary among people who know and understand baseball. It's an added bonus that he is also famous for winning a fight after a kid charged him on the mound. I've never heard anyone suggesting Nolan Ryan isn't well know and I'm very confused.
@Cam235 ай бұрын
I was eluding to the fact he never won a Cy Young, not that no one ever recognized him as a great pitcher. People were well aware of Nolan being a freak of nature
@TheRivera15975 ай бұрын
it did work out . I do like the quick recap
@gregpeacock54975 ай бұрын
The one time I got to see Nolan Ryan pitch was one of his worst games. It was back in the 70's when he was with the Angels and they played Texas at Arlington Stadium. He went 1.1 IP, 7W and 3K. 40+ years later I still remember that game, lol.
@grace1975kauf6 ай бұрын
Great video. The fact that there fans who say that he's overrated is completely insane... There has never been another Nolan Ryan. The closest I've witnessed is Randy Johnson.
@Cam236 ай бұрын
Thank you! I think that people like to discredit the best of the best, just how it is unfortunately.
@grace1975kauf6 ай бұрын
👍💯💯💯
@ToonTwist6 ай бұрын
@@grace1975kaufOnly 83 WAR in 5000+ innings and only a 112 ERA+ yet people call him a top 10 or top 5 pitcher of all time.
@grace1975kauf6 ай бұрын
@@ToonTwist look at the teams he pitched for in the early 70s... Yeah he walked hitters but the fact he has the lowest hits per 9 in history speaks to how unhittable he was ... He was a different animal. He completed his starts, it was a source of pride.. As far as ERA plus...I think the fact that he pitched so long he certainly had some seasons bring that down.... Just like Mantle hanging around from 67 & 68 brought his career average below .300... But to do what he did for that long and excel is astounding .... We measure Pedro to be elite and rightly so but he didn't pitch the innings or the years that Ryan did but we don't discredit tht bc he was elite for the time he pitched and I would argue Pedro was a bulldog... Nolan came from a different era and sometimes WAR doesn't speak the whole career of a player.
@ToonTwist6 ай бұрын
@@grace1975kauf Nolan could throw eight innings and give up 2 hits all game. Dominant right? Well no, because those 2 hits were grand slams. His ERA+ was not affected by playing so long because through out his whole career he would have below or hear average ERA+ seasons basically every other year. Even his good ERA+ seasons weren’t that impressive compared to what other great pitchers were putting up. Pedro had the greatest prime and greatest pitching season in baseball history which is something Ryan cannot say. Pedro in his prominent years would average about 210 innings per year. Which was definitely a little less than others in the 90’s and 2000’s but it wasn’t a huge drop off. This is kinda the same with Ryan who in individual seasons wasn’t pitching as much as some other guys while still pitching a really good amount.
@105C096 ай бұрын
When I first saw him in the '69 Series, he impressed. He was up there with hero Roberto Clemente ad Bob Gibson. What competetor! I was laughed at when he went to the Angels and took the Angels as a team in my Strat-O-Matice league of six teams; two divisions, a 32 game season. He averaged a 1.22 ERA there!
@Elijah198956 ай бұрын
I don't know what's more impressive 1)If he had a little more control, Ryan would probably have a few seasons with 400Ks 2)That he never won a Cy Young 3)The Angels wasting a Generational Talent is nothing new. 4)How this guy barely have any run support?
@randythomas34883 ай бұрын
Great video!
@Cam233 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@rustyroosterrusty21 күн бұрын
I don’t even like baseball but I love Nolan Ryan
@RyanSchilling-fg9qn6 ай бұрын
For me it’s hard to pick best pitcher ever and even harder to justify Nolan as best pitcher ever because of how many walks and wild pitches he had. But looking at his stats once he left the Mets he never really had a bad season (except maybe his 93 seaeon) so I know like no one has him higher then the 11th best pitcher ever he is my pick for best pitcher ever and one thing he did that I loved he helped Randy Johnson fix his control issues I love that.
@jaynash26456 ай бұрын
came in and went out throwing smoke… legend
@artholyoke6 ай бұрын
Damn so many times he had a sub 3.00 era and 16 losses. Any run production he can have had 25 wins easily
@derrickbasenberg8114 ай бұрын
Good pitcher but nowhere near randy Johnson on intimidating batters
@SONICX10276 ай бұрын
I am waiting for the inevitable video about David Ortiz or possibly another pitcher in Pedro Martinez
@birthgravy5 ай бұрын
Nolan Ryan is my favorite pitcher of all time. He also has a beef company, simply called "Nolan Ryan Beef" that is sold at Kroger. It's really good beef, and their steaks are the only steaks I get nowadays, and I always put on baseball when I grill them up. Lol super random but wanted to share
@Cam235 ай бұрын
That's wild I never knew that, thanks for sharing! I'll keep my eye out for it now
@BatFan16 ай бұрын
Jeez, if Ryan had better support during his Angels career, all those high double digit loss seasons, he couldve had (or close to) 30 wins at least 5 times and overall a shot at 400 wins.
@thepoisonouspotato36316 ай бұрын
My favorite retired Astros pitcher of all time
@Uns_Maps_86 ай бұрын
Suggestions for “The insane prime of” : Harmon Killebrew, Rod Carew and Bob Gibson
@anggvoagg78816 ай бұрын
I don't know about the 108 mph but even if just 100 was def more being was clocked there but dif bla bla. The fact that he did it for soooo long is crazy
@stmn3466 ай бұрын
Gotta understand, not only is he all time pitcher, he was intimidating, people were scared to face him.
@tjniday60986 ай бұрын
Jim thome would be a good one. Very underappreciated
@standepain4 ай бұрын
8:55 I know the frame rate issue but that is the fastest pitch I have ever seen.
@mockingpirate76594 ай бұрын
Nolan was a serious threat to anyone.
@stmn3466 ай бұрын
Greatest pitcher EVER. PROVE ME WRONG.
@mickeywhite78786 ай бұрын
Ok, almost 300 losses. Roger Clemens won more games and had more than 100 less losses the Ryan. Same with Maddux
@jonnylawrence3818Ай бұрын
Ryan is the Brett Favre of pitchers
@deeteedubzz6 ай бұрын
That Nolan Ryan right there is a real Texas boy.
@markm32202 ай бұрын
The man gets stitches and keeps pitching?! AND I remember Robin Ventura getting his but kicked. EPIC!
@davidmorse31905 ай бұрын
5,000 strikeouts, 7 no nos and people still talk about the time he took Robin Ventura to the woodshed
@jareddanielcunanan43036 ай бұрын
“Im second to him in strikeouts and he has a thousand more strikeouts than me” - What Randy said about Nolan in the film facing nolan
@brad_patterson_6 ай бұрын
NOLAN RYAN IS MY FAVORITE PITCHER OF ALL TIME, ANY TEAM I PLAYED FOR, WHETHER FOR LITTLE LEAGUE IN THE EARLY TO MID 90'S TO MIDDLE SCHOOL TO HIGH SCHOOL AND AMERICAN LEGION, I GOT TO WEAR #34, FOR ALL OF THEM, EVEN FOR ALLSTARS. I WAS ONLY 135LBS 5'5", THROWING 80MPH, BEING A RIGHTY. A FEW GAMES I DID GET TO PITCH LEFT HANDED AS WELL, I JUST DIDN'T HAVE AS MUCH CONTROL, THROWING UP TO 78 MPH.
@commiehunter733Ай бұрын
Nobody is even close to Nolan's workload
@standepain4 ай бұрын
Insane to think if you only counted his strikeouts after he passed Walter Johnson he still has more than Gerrit Cole right now.
@gjwmsu5 ай бұрын
the only true freak in the history of sports. Never be anything like him in this lifetime, and probably ever
@evanevans54286 ай бұрын
Remember when Nolan tossed a dude off the mound? Guy was unit