Four Hall of Fame Catchers Interviewed by Tim Russert in 2003

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  • Опубліковано 2 жов 2024
  • Tim Russert interviews Johnny Bench, Yogi Berra, Gary Carter and Carlton Fisk at the Yogi Berra Museum and Learning Center, on the campus of Montclair State University in Little Falls, New Jersey.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 418

  • @jorgeespinosa3179
    @jorgeespinosa3179 2 роки тому +10

    Wow, this is so precious! Missing, RIP, Thurman Munson.

  • @daveinmilwaukee
    @daveinmilwaukee 6 місяців тому +1

    It is such a delight to see these five great men on the same stage. Each one represents intelligence, class, and the cream of their profession. To Gary, Yogi, and Tim, you are loved and missed. To Pudge and Johnny, many more happy and healthy years.

  • @blucheer8743
    @blucheer8743 2 роки тому +73

    Seeing Tim brings a tear to my eye… we use to have newsmen and women that tried to unite us as a people not tear us apart tim. He was one of the best… he’s very missed

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  2 роки тому +3

      couldn't agree more, Blu

    • @benjaminmcalister9567
      @benjaminmcalister9567 2 роки тому +2

      You said it pal!

    • @nstix2009xitsn
      @nstix2009xitsn 2 роки тому

      Tim Russert was a democrat operative--he'd been an aide to senator Pat Moynihan--and yet, I wonder if he would have gone along or defied the party's turn to the White Genocide Project.

    • @63DANNYLEE
      @63DANNYLEE Рік тому +2

      He was the best!

    • @Jack-ms3so
      @Jack-ms3so 4 місяці тому

      He wouldn’t have tolerated the MAGA cult!

  • @mattdietz2557
    @mattdietz2557 3 роки тому +7

    Recovering from surgery and have found some great old interviews. Great time watching these legendary players sharing so many stories.

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому +3

      Thanks for your comment, Matt; and, get well soon! In the meantime, you might enjoy some of the other interviews I posted.
      Jackie Gleason: ua-cam.com/video/kGW9DuXDE28/v-deo.html
      Phil Silvers: ua-cam.com/video/eg5_zgHtXVc/v-deo.html
      Peanuts" creator, Charles Schulz: ua-cam.com/video/T3eJ6WUVMFc/v-deo.html
      Jack Paar: ua-cam.com/video/2qwK08oWbrs/v-deo.html
      Jackie Robinson: ua-cam.com/video/YCr0RAzf8ds/v-deo.html
      Vince Scully: ua-cam.com/video/Lo29DoqcoGo/v-deo.html

    • @mattdietz2557
      @mattdietz2557 3 роки тому +3

      @@pianopappy I'll be looking into for sure.

  • @michaeljerome554
    @michaeljerome554 4 місяці тому +1

    4 of the greatest, blessed to have grew up watching 3 of them and wishing I had watched the 4th.

  • @davidr5961
    @davidr5961 10 місяців тому +1

    Tim did great interviews. This one, and another he did with Yogi, Whitey F, and Rizzuto was another good one. RIP

  • @fightingirish8631
    @fightingirish8631 3 роки тому +32

    Loved Tim Russet for his passion and respect of organized sport... Also a quality political journalist. Sorely missed.

  • @SuperIliad
    @SuperIliad 3 роки тому +6

    A golden moment in time.

  • @norms3913
    @norms3913 3 роки тому +13

    Tim Russert was always been a big baseball fan

  • @edwardf.martiniii8641
    @edwardf.martiniii8641 3 роки тому +56

    A fan since 1949...these men represent the wonderful game and the American spirit. Bless and Thank them all...

    • @basam52
      @basam52 3 роки тому +4

      AMEN!!!

    • @gb2828
      @gb2828 Рік тому

      A fan since '52 here - I agree 100% !!

  • @drizzle452
    @drizzle452 3 роки тому +12

    That was really interesting to just see them interact-big personalities with a little bit of competitive ego. As great as Carter was, you could tell that he wasn’t always a player favorite. You could kind of feel that JB considers himself the goat (resents the lung surgery changing the course) where as yogi feels very secure with his rings as his legacy. The commander was still as brash/fiery as ever.

    • @shadoworksphilosophy120
      @shadoworksphilosophy120 3 роки тому +2

      Ten rings. Ten.

    • @sdgakatbk
      @sdgakatbk 2 роки тому +1

      @@shadoworksphilosophy120 Love it, though I gained respect for Bench in this. Another great Yankee catcher I put in the discussion of GOAT catchers is Bill Dickey. And of course Josh Gibson.

    • @oldtimer794
      @oldtimer794 2 роки тому

      @@shadoworksphilosophy120 one more than Joe DiMaggio, his teammate.

    • @HigherPowerWorldWide
      @HigherPowerWorldWide 2 роки тому +3

      Yes, but Berra's 14 World Series Championship rings makes you evaluate his career when compared to Bill Russell, and Michael Jordan. Berra was the ultimate winner.

    • @oldtimer794
      @oldtimer794 2 роки тому

      @@HigherPowerWorldWide I would put Russell in the same category as Berra and DiMaggio. Also, maybe Gretzky too.

  • @stuartdamon3610
    @stuartdamon3610 3 роки тому +3

    What a treasure of a video!
    Thank you!

  • @richardmason7840
    @richardmason7840 Рік тому +1

    Yogi Berra had a Superior mind. Every team needs a Yogi Berra ! The game would be more fun. Thanks.
    Be Blessed

  • @bigdawg7262
    @bigdawg7262 Рік тому +22

    Gary Carter was so great. He played the game like it should be played.

    • @davidpost428
      @davidpost428 10 місяців тому +1

      I loved watchng him play for the Expos and seing his youthful enthusiasm for the game and his home runs!

  • @frostwill
    @frostwill 3 роки тому +6

    Anyone else catch the Yogi-ism at 8:56? “I think pitchers are the dumbest guys on the mound!”

  • @junkyarddog9799
    @junkyarddog9799 3 роки тому +22

    A great moment with Russert in company with these outstanding players...Pudge Fisk-Deon Sanders story finally described in vivid detail.

  • @Brammy007a
    @Brammy007a 3 роки тому +3

    Whoever gave this great interview a thumbs down should be keelhauled.
    And here's my shameful story. In 67 ( I was 13 and a Yankees fan) my father met a Mets VP and my brother and I got box seats and a tour of the dugout with Ed Kranepool as our host. So there we are in the Shea Stadium dugout before the game and Yogi was there about 10 ft away. I look at him absolutely gobsmacked...... Yogi looks at me for a few seconds with what I now know was a look saying "ok, kid, if you're going to get my autograph, now is the time to do it"........ and the few seconds went by and Yogi walked away. I kick myself today. What was going through my mind? To be honest?.... "wow, that's Yogi Berra"..... and also "wow, I'm taller than he is, I bet I could play as well as he can. After all, I was pretty good in Little League..... maybe?".
    Wow.... the idiocy of youth. After the game I did get Tommy Davis' autograph.

    • @oldtimer794
      @oldtimer794 2 роки тому

      whoever gave this great interview a thumbs down should be introduced to Carlton Fisk.

  • @steveprestegard5151
    @steveprestegard5151 3 роки тому +8

    This was outstanding. It shows why you would want to be a catcher.

  • @982spyder5
    @982spyder5 2 роки тому +15

    Wow, what a great job Tim Russert did and these guys bringing up the reality of how the game should be played! I miss the honor of going deep inside after a guy crushes a home run. I grew up when baseball was great.

  • @bradburks696
    @bradburks696 5 місяців тому +3

    Absolutely the best. RIP Tim, Yogi, and Gary. This must have been taped after the 2003 season since Tim eluded to the Boone home run on game 7 of the ALCS.

  • @TheBtstephens
    @TheBtstephens 3 роки тому +27

    37:30 It’s so strange to me to see that Carlton Fisk, a life long Red Sox, had more respect for Yankee Stadium than Dion did as a Yankee...

    • @erichaynes7502
      @erichaynes7502 3 роки тому +2

      Fisk got dumped by the Red Sox in 1980 and played for the White Sox for 14 seasons. Fisk HATED the Red Sox for offering him a cheap contract.

  • @baberoot1998
    @baberoot1998 3 роки тому +18

    Love all four of these guys. Yogi, was always my favorite catcher growing up...but the other three were playing at that time. I watched the other three guys as I grew up...and they are now on the same level in my mind...as Yogi was. Johnny Bench...was the greatest catcher I ever saw. An Astros fan here...and my dad made sure, when the Astros played the Reds at the Astrodome...we were there. Johnny Bench was my hero. Then Yogi became a coach for the Astros...and I remember seeing him in the dugout. It thrilled me. Today...I have a Berra Astros replica uniform. It is one of my favorite to wear. These guys were bigger than life to me. Also remember watching the Red Sox/Reds World Series on TV with my dad in 1975, when Carlton Fisk hit that home run. I was 9 years old...and it was like a fairy tale. I wanted to be Carlton Fisk at that moment. Catchers...are the heart of a team. And these four guys...were the Generals on the field.

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому +2

      Thanks, Babe, for sharing your memories of some great players and some great moments in baseball.

    • @HigherPowerWorldWide
      @HigherPowerWorldWide 2 роки тому

      When you watch Fisk and Bench, you have to wonder about the controversy of Thurmon Munson and Johnny Bench in the 1976 World Series, both Johnny Bench and Thurman Munson had great performances that year, with Sparky Anderson commenting that comparing Munson to Johnny Bench was not being fair to Munson.

  • @78tag
    @78tag 3 роки тому +1

    I needed that - thanks.

  • @zekelucente9702
    @zekelucente9702 2 роки тому +1

    I just saw the name Tim Russert and I was immediately was transported to a more civil and rational time.

  • @robdow6348
    @robdow6348 3 роки тому +38

    One of the best baseball interviews of all Time. The iron men of the game. Fisk & Yogi are my favorites. Loved the story of Fisk confronting Sanders about playing the game right.

    • @RichardKoenigsberg
      @RichardKoenigsberg 2 роки тому +4

      Followed baseball all my life, yet learned so much I didn't know.

    • @patrickgray5633
      @patrickgray5633 2 роки тому +3

      I always had major respect for Carlton Fisk confronting Deion Sanders for that BS Deion did.

  • @mdb831
    @mdb831 2 роки тому +11

    Rest in Peace to Gary Carter. I hated that man as a kid. I was a Sox fan and 1986 broke my heart for real.

    • @1999Nickster
      @1999Nickster Рік тому +3

      God bess Carter. On the other side of the fence, I grew up in Montreal and we all wanted to crouch like him behind the plate or lift our sleeves at bat like him. He was our hero. A killer smile on Chrysler ads and such a beautiful wife. I clearly remember the night he was traded to the Mets, crying like a baby. I still hate their jersey to this day ;). With the Expos gone, I've slowly become a Red Sox fan but forgive Gary for killing us in '86....
      What a wonderful gathering of these 4 greatests catchers. Thanks for posting it.

  • @dmaher8774
    @dmaher8774 3 роки тому +44

    One of the best baseball interviews ever. Tremendous stories!

    • @loyaldude10
      @loyaldude10 3 роки тому +2

      and Tim Russert was a news man

  • @jeffsmith2022
    @jeffsmith2022 3 роки тому +108

    Tim Russert was an awesome man in every regard, miss him a lot...

    • @victorkreitner754
      @victorkreitner754 3 роки тому +5

      My half brother Jim was his main camera man on Sundays Meet the Press. He really loved working for Tim.

    • @lesmoore3638
      @lesmoore3638 3 роки тому

      Funny, I read the thumbnail...I click because I want to see Russurt. Hey Tim? What's the best Football team in NY?

    • @mikebradshaw6484
      @mikebradshaw6484 3 роки тому +4

      Now we have Chuck Todd. Life is NOT fair.

    • @dandyjimbuckley
      @dandyjimbuckley 3 роки тому

      He was a huge Bills fan…wish they could’ve brought one home for him in the 90s…Sabres too, if I remember correctly.

    • @benjaminmcalister9567
      @benjaminmcalister9567 2 роки тому

      I agree , I always watched him on Sunday , you knew you’d always get a fair unbiased interview… I never knew his politics

  • @aewea1563
    @aewea1563 3 роки тому +6

    Fiske had to catch two of the most interesting characters in pro baseball (besides Dizzy Dean and Yogi)- Bill "Spaceman" Lee and Luis Tiant. I'm not sure how he dealt with those personalities, much less controlled them! Ooops, I forgot about Mark "The Bird" Fidrych!

  • @brianjschumer
    @brianjschumer 3 роки тому +27

    Not only great players,These are Role Models..big difference. 👍🏻

    • @kenlucas7025
      @kenlucas7025 3 роки тому

      👎

    • @geraldnash4969
      @geraldnash4969 3 роки тому

      And amazing raising 2 young sons at his age...catch that clip

    • @geraldnash4969
      @geraldnash4969 3 роки тому

      How can a kids have role model when they wont pull his pants up over his thinkn cap?

  • @jeffcope7388
    @jeffcope7388 3 роки тому +35

    I'm a Reds fan, but I wish someone had mentioned something about Thurman Munson.

    • @jmad627
      @jmad627 3 роки тому +4

      I’m a Yankees fan, and I agree with you 100%. Johnny Bench is the best catcher I ever saw hands down. The others on this panel are certainly no slouches. However as great as Bench was, I wouldn’t trade Thurman for him.

    • @geraldnash4969
      @geraldnash4969 3 роки тому +2

      One of the great catchers...Thurman/Yanks

    • @porkfrog2785
      @porkfrog2785 3 роки тому +1

      I was at my Uncle's house and heard the adults talking in shock the day he died. I'm an Ohioan and was 10 and had just begun collecting cards, and I remember my Munson card from a season he never got to play. Standing, mask off, big guy with a big mustache, standing on home plate.Sure HOFer

  • @HigherPowerWorldWide
    @HigherPowerWorldWide 2 роки тому +24

    This has to be the best baseball interview I have ever seen. Those 4 Hall of Fame Catchers have encyclopedic knowledge of baseball history. This interview should be in the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. Great inverview.

    • @BillDyszel
      @BillDyszel 2 роки тому +3

      Absolutely! This is a classic piece of broadcasting and an exceptional moment of sports history. Tim Russert at his best, and that's saying something.

    • @user-bo8nb2mi
      @user-bo8nb2mi 2 роки тому

      And your comment included

  • @darrelmorgan6266
    @darrelmorgan6266 3 місяці тому

    What a gem. So glad I found this.

  • @daneromancrane
    @daneromancrane 2 роки тому +27

    Weird knowing 60% of that panel are no longer with us. 5 great men and 4 of the best catchers that will ever live. What a unique and special 45 minutes.

    • @Annbosguy
      @Annbosguy 2 роки тому +3

      Terrific comment, Dane

    • @nstix2009xitsn
      @nstix2009xitsn 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah, but that was 19 years ago. Yogi was already about 77. The Kid and Tim Russert were different stories (the big C and a heart attack).

  • @cubswin3838
    @cubswin3838 4 місяці тому +3

    Speaking of the "war". Yogi was at Normandy. He actually did get wounded, but never submitted the Purple Heart paperwork because he didn't want his mother to worry upon her getting the notification telegram.

  • @oughtssought1198
    @oughtssought1198 2 місяці тому

    this was a lot of fun for all
    thanks

  • @butchjones1690
    @butchjones1690 2 роки тому +10

    As a catcher myself I’m happy as hell to see tim(RIP) interview 4 of the best ever….I’ve seen them all play and they all had different styles but they all worked…they took command….🔥⚾⚾⚾⚾

  • @thadstudebaker3370
    @thadstudebaker3370 2 роки тому +12

    Johnny Bench is my favorite ballplayer of all time. Yogi was the same for my Dad. It was great to see those two together like this. I loved hearing Fisk’s story about that one clown’s antics at Yankee Stadium. All four of these men exhibited a true love of the game. I admired them all.

  • @spy1965
    @spy1965 2 роки тому +7

    Any interview including Berra is a treat. In his prime in today's salaries? Forget about it !

  • @rolandocardonamonge9048
    @rolandocardonamonge9048 3 роки тому +56

    RIP Yogi and Gary two truly a gentlemen.

    • @jamesbuckley8917
      @jamesbuckley8917 3 роки тому +7

      and Tim Russert

    • @85geoffm
      @85geoffm 3 роки тому +3

      I had totally forgot that Gary Cafter passed away :(

  • @tonylaguna9060
    @tonylaguna9060 3 роки тому +5

    That was Great...R.I.P....Yogi...an The Kid

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому

      Glad you enjoyed it, Tony - and thanks for your comment!

    • @mmaranta785
      @mmaranta785 3 роки тому

      And Russert

  • @kevinw8688
    @kevinw8688 Рік тому +10

    Such absolute genius of baseball on one stage. Goodness.

  • @toddm9501
    @toddm9501 Рік тому +6

    As a Republican. I miss Tim. A Great Jounalist. And a true American. Very fair and saw both sides of the aisle. Wasn't afraid to call out his party.

  • @pathammerfall
    @pathammerfall 2 роки тому +9

    what a nice pleasure to watch!!! Really great interview!!! Those 4 were untouchable !!!

  • @waynewootton5385
    @waynewootton5385 3 роки тому +12

    i wish baseball and news crews would do more of this with pro players with all sports players

  • @garybryson1900
    @garybryson1900 3 роки тому +14

    Love this interview. Tim was a good interviewer and those four great players were fun to listen to.

  • @jimquantic
    @jimquantic Рік тому +2

    I suppose everyone has a favorite "yogiism", mine is the teacher who gave him an F on something and said "Berra, you don't know anything" and he reportedly replied "don't know anything?? I don't even SUSPECT anything"

  • @robsanz9746
    @robsanz9746 2 роки тому +5

    This was in 2003? Its amazing it's in such an intimate venue. I would think it would have been in an auditorium, getting 4 Hall of Famers (especially of This magnitude) together is very rare. Great moments in time. 🧡

  • @chrissmith355
    @chrissmith355 2 роки тому +4

    Tim Russert was the last great newsman. He had a fairness and toughness that is long gone in network news.

  • @senior_ranger
    @senior_ranger 3 роки тому +16

    Loved this. Takes me back to when baseball was honorable and played by real men.

    • @chrissmith355
      @chrissmith355 2 роки тому

      Still a few left, but admittedly not as many as there used to be.

    • @Bill_N_ATX
      @Bill_N_ATX 2 роки тому +1

      I feel sorry for kids. I grew up listening to baseball on the radio mostly. I lived in East Texas and only got to see a few Astros games at the Astrodome but maybe a half frozen as a kid. But todays kids get to mostly watch a bunch of spoiled overgrown children. A few still have it. I moved to
      Maryland later and got to watch Cal Ripken Jr play in a great ball park. Then a real asshole bought the team and ruined them. That was when I really stopped following baseball on a daily basis.

  • @JABARDELLI
    @JABARDELLI 3 роки тому +7

    Yogi Berra MVP Stats
    1948 -- 29th
    1949 -- 15th
    1950 -- 3rd
    1951 -- 1st MVP
    1952 -- 4th
    1953 -- 2nd
    1954 -- 1st MVP
    1955 -- 1st MVP
    1956 -- 2nd MVP (Mantle wins Triple Crown)
    1957 -- 14th
    1958 -- 18th
    1959 -- 12th
    1960 -- 15th
    1961 -- 23rd
    Berra was in the running for 7 MVP Awards .... Stengel knew who was behind the Yankee domination.

    • @oldtimer794
      @oldtimer794 2 роки тому +2

      He always said Yogi was his leader on the field.

  • @WornoutRNPARAMEDIC
    @WornoutRNPARAMEDIC 2 роки тому +8

    Love all four but Yogi has to be my all time favorite even though I'm a St. Louis Cardinal fan and love Yadier Molina devotedly. In time I believe Yadi will also be in the Hall of Fame. As this post is written it's 2022 in August and Yadi is playing in his announced final year of baseball. Thanks for this video. OH and as an admirer of catchers, the amount they are paid could never be enough compared to the beating they take back there.

    • @arkhllraiser
      @arkhllraiser 2 роки тому +1

      Yadi should make the HOF. One of the best...a beast behind the Plate

  • @mikspapa
    @mikspapa 3 роки тому +10

    There is nothing better, than watching a true baseball fan interview some of the best in the game. Heroes one and all....

  • @philipfm
    @philipfm 3 роки тому +13

    Great show from a great news person. RIP Tim Russett

    • @fernandoifill-ruiz3475
      @fernandoifill-ruiz3475 3 роки тому +1

      After Tim Russert died on Friday June 13th, 2008 Meet The Press on Sundays hasn’t been the same without him.

  • @TEXCAP
    @TEXCAP 2 роки тому +3

    Yogi was playing left field when Bill Mazeroski hit his homerun in the 9th inning of the 7th game of the 1960 World Series. Mickey was in Centerfield that day too

  • @denr6508
    @denr6508 2 роки тому +6

    Wonderful interview by Tim of the Titans of Baseball They were the best of the game and leaders of every game

  • @cdub531
    @cdub531 3 роки тому +7

    Yogi was playing left field when Mazeroski hit 1960 home run to win the World Series.

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому

      Thanks for your remembrance, C DUB. When Berra went back to the wall, and when he saw that he wouldn't be able to catch Maz's drive, he turned to be in position to play the ball off the wall. But, we both know what happened to it. I was in college at the time; and, a schoolmate of mine, a freshman from Pittsburgh, bet heavily at the beginning of the Series that the Pirates would win it. Because the Yankees' three wins were by such lop-sided scores, this poor guy was on a emotional roller coaster as the series wore on. Did I say "poor" guy? Mazeroski (and catcher Hal Smith, who also hit a late-inning key home run) made him a lot of $$$.

    • @cdub531
      @cdub531 3 роки тому +1

      @@pianopappy thanks I’ll correct that .

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому

      @@cdub531 And I rewrote my comment.

    • @jmad627
      @jmad627 3 роки тому +1

      He sure was. A friend of mine got a Mazerowski autographed baseball for me when he saw him at a card show.

    • @reccesixty6322
      @reccesixty6322 3 роки тому +1

      I was serving in the Canadian army as part of the UN Force in Egypt in 1960. I could only receive that Game via short wave radio in one particular spot, at night, in the middle of a sand field. When the home run was hit by Mazeroski I jumped up and did a war dance. Great memory & a great interview.

  • @jameswinslow29
    @jameswinslow29 2 роки тому +3

    Damn, that was cool as hell. JB was always my favorite but good to see the interactions of those guys and you can tell Russert was just in heaven!

  • @rayharter3884
    @rayharter3884 2 роки тому +5

    I was a catcher growing up with Bench and Pudge as my heros . This was such a treat for me to watch!!

  • @Andy-ty2ni
    @Andy-ty2ni 3 роки тому +19

    speaking as a Montrealer...i can tell you Gary Carter was such a class act!!!

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому +5

      A member of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, right Andy? I remember "the Kid" better in the 1980's when I was a resident of the Garden State and he was with the Mets. I can still see in my mind's-eye the TV-replay closeups where we could see his eyes open wide to almost twice their size, when he saw a fat pitch on its way that he was going to clobber. Thanks for your comment.

    • @Andy-ty2ni
      @Andy-ty2ni 3 роки тому +6

      @@pianopappy the Expos would send Gary across country in the dead of winter....Saskatchewan, Manitoba...etc....to run baseball clinics and pump up interest in the team...Gary did it with a smile...he visited sick kids in hospital....any way he could help the team....he was a southern Cal boy...yes in the Hall of Fame....a rare guy indeed....ironic to me such a great guy got brain cancer....RIP Kid!...he is in God's Hall of Fame NOW!!!!!!!

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому +3

      @@Andy-ty2ni Great story about a great guy, Andy! Yes, I wonder why someone like him would get hit with such an aggressive and inoperable cancer. Thanks for the information about how he gave of himself in the off-seasons. I wasn't aware of it.

    • @bethbogue3742
      @bethbogue3742 Рік тому

      @@pianopappy , the NY sportswriters had a poll going about which of the '86 Mets would be the first to die because several of them were repeatedly engaging in high-risk behaviours. They all lost their bets because Gary went first and no one saw that coming. One of, if not the cleanest guy on that team and he goes first at 57? Things don't always make sense, do they?

  • @chrisdaugherty8265
    @chrisdaugherty8265 Рік тому +12

    You can’t watch this without smiling. Legends of catching. RIP Tim, Yogi, and Gary.

  • @joejordan1259
    @joejordan1259 3 роки тому +7

    Great catchers all of them. Baseball's different today reason not having players like this on the field anymore with respect for the game.

  • @vgrof2315
    @vgrof2315 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks

  • @believeNjesus2day
    @believeNjesus2day 3 роки тому +2

    If you just accept Bill James and the writers' opinion that Bench is the best, who else would you have on your 25-man roster as his back-up? These three: Carter, Yogi and Fisk certainly figure in the conversation. Others under consideration might be Josh Gibson for his power, Roy Camp with several MVPs, Thurman Munson, Bill Dickey, Eddie Cochranne, Freehan, Lance Parrish... Ivan Rodriguez' arm, Salvador Perez' leadership, Yadier Molina's clutch, Piazza's batting average... It's a tough call for #2. I would probably go with Yogi for his left hitting power, funny clubhouse demeanor, and 10 WS. Gotta keep it a little lighter with the pitching staff seeing how intense Johnny really is.

  • @RSMGsndchannel
    @RSMGsndchannel 3 роки тому +10

    My dad saw all these greats, he also saw Josh Gibson and called Josh the GOAT by far!

    • @ice-iu3vv
      @ice-iu3vv 3 роки тому +1

      absolutely. the goat catcher by far.

    • @oldtimer794
      @oldtimer794 2 роки тому +2

      My dad saw Lou Gehrig and Joe DiMaggio on the same day. He thought Gehrig was the GOAT, with DiMaggio a close second.

  • @Thestargazer56
    @Thestargazer56 3 роки тому +3

    I felt like Kevin Costner's character in Bull Durham was based on the real-life "Puge".

  • @hughdismuke4703
    @hughdismuke4703 10 місяців тому +1

    Interesting, Carlton Fisk kind of went to bat for bulking players back in 2003 but now he blasts them as steroid users. Bench always came off as a cocky, idiotic guy. Gary was always a class act (RIP) and Yogi? There is a reason he was more reserved in this interview. He had a lot of respect.

  • @danw.7483
    @danw.7483 2 роки тому +4

    Gotta love Carlton Fisk!!

  • @rickirwin8043
    @rickirwin8043 2 роки тому +5

    I can watch this every year and grin all the way through the show! Great guys and great interviewer in Tim.
    Gone too soon! This is May 2022 and I'll be back again, Lord Willing.

  • @victorkreitner754
    @victorkreitner754 3 роки тому +6

    Tim would of been beside himself with the 2020 Buffalo Bills. He loved his Bills something fierce.

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому

      As I recall, during football season, he usually cheered the Bills on, just before he signed off from "Meet the Press".

  • @stephanejutras7148
    @stephanejutras7148 Рік тому +5

    So amazing seeing 4 hall of famer catcher together. Gary Carter was my idol as a kid growing up in Quebec state in the 70's. He was so passionate playing baseball. What an inspiration for me.

    • @Jack-ms3so
      @Jack-ms3so 4 місяці тому

      He was an idol in Quebec!

  • @MrJazzohjazz
    @MrJazzohjazz 3 роки тому +5

    Dad took me to a night game in 1949 at Comiskey Park. Yankees were in town. I saw Joe D and Tommy Henrich and a fellow with the funniest name ... Yogi Berra.

    • @jmad627
      @jmad627 3 роки тому +1

      Awesome memory. My first major league game was at Comiskey versus the Yankees in 1969. I was 7 at the time.

  • @LordofDublin4
    @LordofDublin4 3 роки тому +21

    Aging Baby Boomer here and lifelong Bronx Bomber fan. Watching and listening to these truly great ballplayers and the also great Tim Russert brought tears to my eyes. All 4 of these men represented an era of baseball play that is sorely missed and needed today. And how very lucky I feel to have been a fan since 1960. In closing, not one Deion Sanders on that stage. 🇺🇸⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️⚾️🇺🇸

    • @bman342a
      @bman342a 3 роки тому +4

      Ditto here. Fan since '64. I grew up in the Bronx and Elston Howard was my man behind the plate back then.

    • @LordofDublin4
      @LordofDublin4 3 роки тому +5

      @@bman342a .... # 32, Elston Howard was a great Yankee and an even better man. A true gentleman. Ahhhhhh, the good ol' days.

    • @moosecat
      @moosecat 2 роки тому

      Missed the "Boomer" cut-off by six years, but still a lifelong Yankees fan. I grew up watching the late, great Thurman Munson as he captained The Bronx Zoo. I always wonder if the Yankees would have had another dynasty had Thurman not been killed in that plane crash.

  • @shadoworksphilosophy120
    @shadoworksphilosophy120 2 роки тому +4

    For years, Yogi hit .400 after the 7th inning.

  • @markeaster737
    @markeaster737 3 роки тому +10

    Great interview! I really got a kick out of Bench…not just an all-time great catcher, but just a super funny guy…
    a real comic…

  • @moeball740
    @moeball740 3 роки тому +8

    Pudge talking about the Neon Deion incident kept referencing the Red Sox/Yankee rivalry but when that actually happened he was no longer playing for Boston, he was with the White Sox at that time.

    • @hiramnoone
      @hiramnoone 3 роки тому

      Being a White Sox fan, I sure noticed that myself.

    • @darrinlindsey
      @darrinlindsey 3 роки тому +1

      But, Deion WAS a Yankee, and Fisk respected that rivalry, even though he was with the White Sox at the time.

    • @peterheiman8621
      @peterheiman8621 3 роки тому +1

      Whatever Pudge said to Deion’s slavery dig, imagine what Jackie Robinson would have said.

    • @claudemayers
      @claudemayers 2 роки тому

      OK everybody you should watch the 'after Jackie' movie released in mid 2022 the full movie is available on the Internet with some very nagging long 2 1/2 minute advertising time -- focuses on the next generation after Jackie Robinson Willie Mays and Hank Aaron Roberto Clemente and highlights especially with Curt flood did, but no mention of that by Carlton Fisk in the interview about the reason Everybody's getting paid what they're worth nowadays. I don't know what that means relative to that incident between Fisk and neon Dion about the numbers in the dirt & the slavery comment by neon Dion timewise in history. Sometimes people do things like recite mantras and important words to focus themselves just like they have certain gestures and movements they make in the batters box before they get ready to hit.

    • @jackcraig4268
      @jackcraig4268 2 роки тому

      And Buck Owens, Josh Gibson and many others.......

  • @Dansharley51
    @Dansharley51 6 місяців тому +2

    Tim Russert was a pro. He was fair to both sides of the aisle.
    He loved sports and especially his Bills.

  • @TheXeniaman
    @TheXeniaman 3 роки тому +7

    Great watch. Like Pudge said, it is tough to take when you know you can't play the game anymore. Old man now, I still miss it and dream of squaring up a baseball with a Louisville Slugger.

    • @patrickgray5633
      @patrickgray5633 3 роки тому

      I had such respect for him was the day he got into it with Deion Sanders. There is a respect for the game & the correct way to play it like Pete Rose you play hard all the time.

    • @oldtimer794
      @oldtimer794 2 роки тому

      @@patrickgray5633 You bet! Sanders had no business being in MLB, let alone a Yankee.

    • @pigalleycatemanresu7321
      @pigalleycatemanresu7321 2 роки тому

      @@oldtimer794 With all the respect that Paul O'Neill deserves, I once saw him do the same thing. In the Kingdome, he hit a high pop to shallow right, slammed his bat into the ground and didn't run it out. The fielder dropped the ball, but threw out O'Neill at first. The fans were merciless for the rest of the game. Pauly was a great player and a champion, but he was a hothead, and sometimes had trouble controlling his temper. I am in no way comparing him to Deon Sanders. Pudge was the only catcher here that I saw play, when he was with the WhiteSox at the Kingdome, beating up on the M's.

  • @luishumbertovega3900
    @luishumbertovega3900 3 роки тому +4

    Tim Russert knew Baseball, 1-derful interview, and those four guys were great !!!

  • @robertmoser3415
    @robertmoser3415 3 роки тому +7

    Very Awesome show Loved every minute of it

  • @rolandrico3011
    @rolandrico3011 3 роки тому +7

    I always felt bench would of made a good manager

  • @patrickgray5633
    @patrickgray5633 3 роки тому +19

    All great catchers to me Johnny Bench was the greatest catcher of all time.

    • @brianjschumer
      @brianjschumer 3 роки тому

      Be careful..in this "Woke" generation its Josh Gibson..they goingvto add his stats to MLB stats and he will have close to 850 HR's

    • @patrickgray5633
      @patrickgray5633 3 роки тому

      @@brianjschumer I don’t deny that but nobody saw him play.

    • @slundgr
      @slundgr 3 роки тому +3

      @@brianjschumer I can understand recognizing Negro League statistics and players, but how are the statistics validated?

    • @Victoria-ni3tf
      @Victoria-ni3tf 3 роки тому +2

      JB, the General... the way baseball should be. Be where you’re supposed to be at the time you’re supposed be there. My vote for GOAT.

    • @eddierivera1860
      @eddierivera1860 2 роки тому +1

      @@brianjschumer my father saw Gibson play winter ball in PR and told me there was never a better Catcher, and he saw Bench.

  • @c150gpilot
    @c150gpilot 2 роки тому +2

    Yogi in the 50s was my most feared Yankee (I was a Detroit Tigers fan)

  • @charleswinokoor6023
    @charleswinokoor6023 2 роки тому +2

    Fisk called Sanders out for the classless punk he was as a member of the Yankees.
    And that egotistical, bad “attitude” unfortunately since then has to a much greater extent become the norm in the big leagues.

  • @Jugglingtedchannel
    @Jugglingtedchannel 3 роки тому +5

    Great insight into the game of baseball from a catcher's perspective!

  • @johntavary7905
    @johntavary7905 2 роки тому +6

    THIS IS GREAT! Johnnie Bench is so funny

  • @JABARDELLI
    @JABARDELLI 3 роки тому +5

    Too bad Roy Campanella, Josh Gibson, Jim Hegan, Sherman Lollar, weren’t alive to contribute! Berra is a quiet Yogi 🧘‍♀️ and he was the savviest of them all.

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому +3

      Yes. And not to mention, Bill Dickey and Micky Cochrane. (You can tell I'm an old-timer by my UA-cam handle; although, I'm not old enough to have seen those two guys play.) BTW, John, there's a story in today's sports section (3/12/21) reporting the death of catcher Norm Sherry, who was not a Hall of Famer, but who had a great impact on the career of Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax. The article states, "In 1961, Koufax was struggling with his control, something that had plagued the left-hander up to that point. Sherry suggested Koufax take some speed off his fastball to gain control". The article also says that he helped HOF'er Don Sutton. Thanks for your comment.

    • @Tuning_Spork
      @Tuning_Spork 3 роки тому +1

      @@pianopappy So, who is it? Johnny Roseboro? EDIT: Oh, I see, it said "Sherry". Norm Sherry, I presume.

    • @pianopappy
      @pianopappy  3 роки тому

      @@Tuning_Spork Absolutely! Thanks for the "catch", Holdenon (pun intended). I'll fix it.

    • @Mark-sj3xb
      @Mark-sj3xb 3 роки тому

      Thurman Munson as well. Would love to have seen him and Fisk in the same room

    • @JABARDELLI
      @JABARDELLI 2 роки тому +2

      PianoPappy … I saw the Sherry Brothers, Norm and Larry, when they played for the Spokane Indians in the Pacific Coast League. Spokane was a stepping stone to future LA Dodgers and other teams for many including Frank Howard, Maury Wills, Willie Davis, Tommy Davis, Joe Moeller, Jim Baxes, and others I’ve forgotten. Managers included Preston Gomez and the inimitable Bobby Bragan who converted Maury Wills into a switch hitter and, by Wills’ acknowledgement, saved his career and got him into the Big Leagues. Enjoy your days … time is fleeting!

  • @larryb6715
    @larryb6715 2 роки тому +3

    This interview proves that baseball is a game of life. The players speak very frankly about themselves, each other and the game. Being from Detroit, I liked hearing Frank Tanana. Great Interview.

  • @rgb8289
    @rgb8289 3 роки тому +11

    Johnny Bench and Yogi should’ve had a show. Watching Berra here, you can feel that old yankee magic.

    • @fredjennings5312
      @fredjennings5312 3 роки тому

      Johnny Bench DID have his own show. I wonder if he had Yogi on as a guest?

    • @sbswtnchoice
      @sbswtnchoice 2 роки тому

      The Baseball Bunch. : )

  • @bman342a
    @bman342a 3 роки тому +4

    This is pure gold, thanks for posting.

  • @waltbollinger9652
    @waltbollinger9652 3 роки тому +6

    One of the great interviews of all time.

  • @dudleydowrong6095
    @dudleydowrong6095 3 роки тому +3

    This is great! CNBC has changed. For the worst

  • @nicolosito
    @nicolosito 10 місяців тому

    Leaders all of them and very articulate.

  • @Mikepleith
    @Mikepleith 3 роки тому +2

    If you listen closely you can notice that Berra is a very serious person when talking about baseball - I wonder if his public persona was forced on him. I have seen him in other interviews and he doesn’t seem to embrace the lovable yogisims - he almost seems uncomfortable- it get lost on how great the man was at his craft.

    • @ElliottNest41
      @ElliottNest41 2 роки тому +2

      You’re correct - very perceptive observation. He simply had a unique way of communicating which also happened to be funny sometimes. But, he was a very serious, intelligent baseball player. There was an expectation that you played the New York Yankee way and that you won. That’s why Yogi had a long career with several MVPs and World Series rings. He was also a serious manager and coach.

  • @lesevans979
    @lesevans979 3 роки тому +3

    What a ensemble !
    And, still if someone opened the door and said, Mickey Mantle's out here. It would empty last studio in minutes.

  • @paulh.7598
    @paulh.7598 2 роки тому +2

    Fascinating how the Red Sox won the World Series the next year!

  • @orbyfan
    @orbyfan 3 роки тому +4

    I enjoyed this when it first aired; it's nice to finally see it on UA-cam.

  • @Redmenace96
    @Redmenace96 2 роки тому +2

    Nobody is willing to comment @ 37:00 when Deion brings 'racism' into the game?
    Harbinger of our modern doom?
    It's about baseball! Not racism!!

    • @jackcraig4268
      @jackcraig4268 2 роки тому

      It has gotten to the point where an honest conversation is no longer possible without someone being accused of some sort of “ism”! This has to stop.

  • @roysteacysr.6203
    @roysteacysr.6203 10 місяців тому +1

    I'm a bit late watching this but.....BEST45 minutes I have had in quite a while. TYVM

  • @edwinbest9256
    @edwinbest9256 3 роки тому +2

    I was a catcher from little league through college. Wore Yogi’s number throughout