Collector's World
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Collector's World Store Promo
Check out Collector's World in Annandale, VA! Right outside Washington, D.C. with more than 6,000 square feet it's a Collector's Heaven!
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Відео

Frank Howard discussing Mickey Mantle going 5 for 5 May 30th, 1968 vs Senators at Collector's World!
Переглядів 288 тис.10 років тому
via UA-cam Capture

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @Rk-bd2ez
    @Rk-bd2ez 3 дні тому

    What a legend! Thank you for posting.. I see so many of his qualities in Aaron Judge.

  • @dennisgeary2740
    @dennisgeary2740 3 місяці тому

    I'm not sure who's he's referring to by "Junior"? Can anyone help me out 😂

    • @junkviewer
      @junkviewer Місяць тому

      Joe Coleman. Hondo calls him "junior" since Joe's father also pitched in the MLB as was named Joe.

    • @dennisgeary2740
      @dennisgeary2740 День тому

      Not sure about that 🤔

  • @Shlumbis-tk6me
    @Shlumbis-tk6me 4 місяці тому

    Do you have starting lineup? What’s the price?

  • @DeeDee-y9n
    @DeeDee-y9n 4 місяці тому

    Not many today's baseball fans understand that now a days the baseballs bounce so much higher than years gone by, equipment they use is much better, training is more scientific, playing fields are smaller, artificial grass, than in the likes of so many greats were playing. It's not ever fair to compare. But back then they played hurt, had regular jobs off season. No players back then were the real deal, not like today's players. Not even any comparison whatsoever. I never watch them play anymore, can't afford to go to a game, with everyone's high salaries.

    • @bradbradshaw-i4n
      @bradbradshaw-i4n 3 місяці тому

      i loved going to old tiger stadium. i also liked going to spring training games. my parents moved to ft lauderdale in 1972. the yankees field was a few miles from their house. you could watch the practice for free and the games cost 2 dollars. it was great, got to see a bunch of national league players who i only saw on tv before and all the old yankees. it got to expensive so i quit going.

  • @thebambino4728
    @thebambino4728 5 місяців тому

    I remember watching Frank Howard hitting fungoes DEEP into the centerfold bleachers at Yankee Stadium when he was a coach for the Brewers in the late 70's. It was the MOST AWESSSSSSOME DISPLAY OF STRENGTH IVE EVER SEEN ! He just tossed the ball up with one hand and whacked it about 420 - 440 feet with VERY LITTLE EFFORT !! To this day it still seems LIKE A DREAM when I think about it . That man was RIDICULOUSLY STRONG - its NO WONDER he has some of the longest homers ever hit !

  • @thebambino4728
    @thebambino4728 5 місяців тому

    This is HILARIOUS AND PRICELESS AT THE SAME TIME and coming from Frank Howard you know it AINT NO BULLSHIT !

  • @Slickmickyoyo97
    @Slickmickyoyo97 6 місяців тому

    What a great baseball mind, and a class act through and through. And what a hulk of a man. One of the biggest to ever play the game. Rest in peace Hondo!

  • @robertmayer2748
    @robertmayer2748 7 місяців тому

    Nice stories from Frank. He and Mick could crush the ball.

  • @ignatiusmattie9422
    @ignatiusmattie9422 7 місяців тому

    I always loved hearing Frank. I was fortunate to have started watching or listening baseball in 1951, Mickey's rookie year. I watched every game I could then, and staid a huge Baseball fan and to this day. We went to the Stadium often. Ive never seen a player to compare to Mantle since. Switch hitter, longest HR hitter next to Ruth. Fastest player even on damaged knees. Great base stealer and amazing outfielder. I've never heard a sound comparable to when Mantle hit the ball. I wish fans today could experience Mickey Mantle. Oh, he played in a Stadium that was 463 feet in his power alley. When the Babe played, that wall was 495 feet. 😂 and the baseball was suped up at least 3 times starting in 1969.

  • @RobertBroatch-dc5qw
    @RobertBroatch-dc5qw 8 місяців тому

    Saw Frank play in AAA ball in Spokane in 60 and he hit a laser shot over center field wall at 410 ft. Hardest ball I have ever seen hit

  • @josephmeeker5297
    @josephmeeker5297 8 місяців тому

    That’s great! Love the stories!

  • @joeteixeira5214
    @joeteixeira5214 Рік тому

    Rest in peace Mr. Howard.

  • @roberthayes7986
    @roberthayes7986 Рік тому

    Met Frank in the Liquor business in D.C. just a fine gentleman 😊👍👈🙏

  • @jeffc.5460
    @jeffc.5460 Рік тому

    Frank talks a lot like Joe Biden.

  • @dennisgeary2740
    @dennisgeary2740 Рік тому

    RIP Frank Howard. So glad that I got to see you play for the Senators 😂

  • @mytg8
    @mytg8 Рік тому

    RIP Capitol Punisher

  • @VILJL
    @VILJL Рік тому

    Frank Howard, a hugely popular giant of a man who singlehandedly elevated Washington baseball from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s, has died, the Nationals announced on Monday October 30, 2023. He was 87. Though Howard never guided the Washington Senators to the postseason, he was an All-Star four times, had two top-5 finishes in MVP voting and won two home run crowns during his time with the club from 1965-71. Howard, who stood 6-foot-7 and weighed more than 250 pounds during his heyday, was aptly nicknamed “The Capital Punisher” and “The Washington Monument.” His mammoth home runs -- including a 500-foot shot at RFK Stadium in 1970 -- only added to his legend. He finished his career with 382 home runs, leading the Majors with 44 in 1968 and the American League with 44 in '70.

  • @claireelise3125
    @claireelise3125 Рік тому

    rest in peace to frank howard! although i never met him personally, i was always so proud to know he came into my dad’s store all these years ago. seemed like such a nice guy

  • @scottmorissey8915
    @scottmorissey8915 Рік тому

    Such a classy person...Telling the story of a fading Mantle. Respect to you Howard. RIP.

  • @cesarthegreeneyedbandit7162

    Rest In Peace Frank Howard. A giant of a gentleman. ⚾️🕊

  • @stephenmolaro2031
    @stephenmolaro2031 Рік тому

    ❤😢

    • @stephenmolaro2031
      @stephenmolaro2031 Рік тому

      My heart is broken with the passing of uncle frank😢❤

  • @AmericasChoice
    @AmericasChoice Рік тому

    I just saw that Dick Cavett Show with Hank Aaron, Leo Durocher, Mickey Mantle and Tom Gorman. Mantle said Hank Aaron was the best all round player he ever saw, and that Frank Howard hit the ball harder than anyone.

    • @bradbradshaw-i4n
      @bradbradshaw-i4n 3 місяці тому

      ernie harwell said ted williams was the best hitter he ever saw and willie mays was the best all around player he ever saw.

    • @AmericasChoice
      @AmericasChoice 3 місяці тому

      @@bradbradshaw-i4n All good players, hard to pick one over another.

  • @1950Grendel
    @1950Grendel Рік тому

    I like the way he talked about Aaron adjusting his batting style to fit the ballpark. Too much pride to do that now - they'll go from .289 to .240 overnight and wonder why.

  • @Aquaman1054
    @Aquaman1054 Рік тому

    Frank Howard! Class Act!

  • @handyrandysgarage6929
    @handyrandysgarage6929 Рік тому

    Has a young boy growing up in Northern Virginia in the 60’s that man right there was a God to me!!!! Thank you Frank for making my childhood full of baseball and hero’s fun.

  • @charlesdowell4505
    @charlesdowell4505 Рік тому

    I met him at the coliseum playing for the Dodgers, I was twelve and he was a giant of a man to me.

  • @juliam.mallen9019
    @juliam.mallen9019 Рік тому

    Love the classic storytelling..love the sound of the laughter of those listening to him!👍💕🦅🇺🇲

  • @JGLeber
    @JGLeber Рік тому

    Saw Frank play at RFK He had that huge strike zone and noone on that Senator team to back him up. Over 40 HRs a year and they were Bombs He hit one two seats from top of Stadium.Closest Anyone can from hitting one Out. Frank was the man on a poor team and too me, no one could hit like Frank. Great guy too.The trade for Claude Osteen, to Dodgers was a great movie in 1965. And in a pitchers era.

  • @robertwelsh9789
    @robertwelsh9789 Рік тому

    Went to many games to watch you hit tape measure bombs into the upper deck. Wonderful memories

  • @Macca50
    @Macca50 Рік тому

    Both from Bama: The great Willie Mays and Henry Aaron.

  • @marksleboda8325
    @marksleboda8325 Рік тому

    A remembrance of Big Frank Howard or "Hondo" as he was affectionally known is still in my memory. He played for the Detroit Tigers for the '72 & '73 seasons. Nobody wanted to pitch to him at Tiger Stadium and man, could he hit the ball a long way

  • @daveyvane
    @daveyvane Рік тому

    Willie Hortons roomate

  • @metaphoria3
    @metaphoria3 Рік тому

    What a treat listening to our dear Frank Howard

  • @metaphoria3
    @metaphoria3 Рік тому

    2 500’ hrs in one game then 435’ shot plus 2 liners

  • @budflounders8845
    @budflounders8845 Рік тому

    Capital Punishment

  • @letsdanceoo
    @letsdanceoo Рік тому

    Frank was no slouch.

  • @jackclubs6919
    @jackclubs6919 Рік тому

    PURE GOLD

  • @64yanks
    @64yanks Рік тому

    1963 World Series, his line drive double off Ford hit the speakers in center field

  • @joedoe5231
    @joedoe5231 Рік тому

    I saw Frank Howard hit a home run one time where he was fooled on a breaking pitch and dropped his back hand off the bat and hit the ball out with only his lead arm on the bat. Never seen anyone do that since.

  • @Mark7limited
    @Mark7limited Рік тому

    A Pittsburgh Pirate named Rennie Stennett went 7 for 7 against the Cubs on 9/16/75,now that’s a day at bat.

  • @dougperone8618
    @dougperone8618 Рік тому

    Frank Howard was my idol! When the Nationals started playing in DC they played at RFK. They repainted the seats white where Howard's home runs landed. It was awesome. I recall an interview with him and he was asked about how he felt about the seats being painted white to represent his towering Homer's. He responded with it was wonderful, they painted one green everytime I struck out. What a great man.

    • @deanmarkoshan2129
      @deanmarkoshan2129 9 місяців тому

      I'd like to know more about some of Frank Howard's prodigious home runs. I remember reading newspaper accounts of his home runs the following day. If my memory serves me correctly, did he knock a foul ball over the left field roof at Yankee Stadium in game 1 of the 1963 World Series. I heard about the ball he hit in 1970 over the same roof that was called foul.

  • @ktpinnacle
    @ktpinnacle Рік тому

    Sharp as a tack. That was the date. But Frank sells himself short. He was having a great spring. Batting .350 on that date.

  • @samuelmoulds1016
    @samuelmoulds1016 Рік тому

    yeah, I talked with Frank Howard in Kansas City in 1965! he let me take his picture! Eddie Brinkman told me not to get to close to him! really, how could I!!?! Howard was so BIG, I needed distance to keep him in the picture! the net year I saw him hit a Home Run in RFK! I swear, the ball never got over 12 feet high and made A BIG OL' DENT in the scoreboard!

  • @samuelbarrett5648
    @samuelbarrett5648 2 роки тому

    I sent Frank Howard a letter in the mail asking some questions about playing for the Senators in the 1960's, and a couple weeks later (A couple days ago), he called me and answered any question I asked. There's something pleasant about his voice, and it was great to hear his insights on some things that interest me about 1960's baseball from the most physically intimidating player of his time. I'll never forget the phone calls I have with former MLB players.

  • @Gablesman888
    @Gablesman888 2 роки тому

    Frank Howard was not a shabby hitter himself. He was known to put the ball way up into the seats when he needed to.

  • @DrHogfan
    @DrHogfan 2 роки тому

    I remember seeing Frank Howard hitting a line drive HR into the first 1st or 2nd row of left center o TV. It may have gotten 10 ‘ off the ground. 😳😮

  • @Tanamarito
    @Tanamarito 2 роки тому

    I saw Frank playing baseball in 1962 during winter. During practice, he gave me quite a scare when he reached over the chain link at the spot where I was standing, as if trying to reach a ball hit that way. It was just a joke that frightened me a little bit, but Mr. Howard was laughing non-stop. He was a very congenial man.

  • @MsBulldog44
    @MsBulldog44 2 роки тому

    I saw Frank upclose during warm ups in 1971 Yankee Stadium- I was 11 years old- My dad was a 6"4 Irish Cop in NYC- when I saw Frank I saw a man who was bigger than my own Dad, I did not know that was possible- a memory I will never forget.

  • @timfranczyk3293
    @timfranczyk3293 2 роки тому

    I remember when I was a kid the Bisons were playing an exhibition game against the Washington Senators at War Memorial Stadium where they later would film the Natural. He left the game early, changed into his civvies and took a seat behind the plate. I approached and asked for an autograph and he waved me off. He may have been a great player but couldn’t be bothered to sign an autograph. Amazing what you remember.

    • @bradbradshaw-i4n
      @bradbradshaw-i4n 3 місяці тому

      you have to remember if he signed for you he would of had a long line after. so don't be to hard on him. i never wanted to be famous. think about being bothered everywhere you go. it would get old real quick.

  • @blucheer8743
    @blucheer8743 2 роки тому

    This is what baseball has been missing… the story of baseball being told by the guys that played!!