Rare Ty Cobb radio interview

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  • Опубліковано 26 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 723

  • @tycobb4631
    @tycobb4631 4 роки тому +74

    I remember this interview!

  • @oldlincolnpipewelder
    @oldlincolnpipewelder 4 роки тому +82

    “If you want good legs. You have to put them to work. I never gave mine any holidays.”- Ty Cobb.

    • @baroqueguitarist5673
      @baroqueguitarist5673 3 роки тому +3

      That's a very eastern style of thought. In music western vocalists coddle there voice. Indian musicians believe you have to "break" your voice regularly to strengthen it and never stop pushing it to improve it. I believe martial arts in Asia have the same philosophy of keeping building the muscle up non stop until it falls off to build maximum strength. Resting to maintain strength has long been a western philosophy. I believe japanese baseball players like sataharo oh the famous japanese homerun hitter had the same philosophy and Ichiro. Ichiro is one of the very few modern players comparable to Ty in my opinion. Similar style of play

    • @roccomarchegiano5990
      @roccomarchegiano5990 3 роки тому +1

      @Angry Grizzly Very funny

    • @wyattmund9286
      @wyattmund9286 3 роки тому +2

      I actually think Ichiro is a good comparison. Not saying he's Cobb's equal, but Ichiro certainly was alegend.

  • @funzo1159
    @funzo1159 8 років тому +181

    One of the 3 greatest ever. No steroids. Just talent and desire.

    • @andykapsar4667
      @andykapsar4667 5 років тому +12

      burning red hot desire. he played to play

    • @allah2108
      @allah2108 5 років тому +2

      Funzo he was a kinda of a dick but he was a beast

    • @SavageCy
      @SavageCy 5 років тому +14

      @rudy melgar it wasn't a popularity contest it was baseball and Cobb was the best to ever do it. Ty Cobb was 100% baseball

    • @TetsuyaEyetoe
      @TetsuyaEyetoe 5 років тому +14

      rudy melgar if you did your research Cobb was NOT a racist. Nice try though.

    • @jamesanthony5681
      @jamesanthony5681 5 років тому +3

      He HAD to succeed in baseball. There was no such thing as going home a failure. His love of the game became an obsession.

  • @dlow53
    @dlow53 5 років тому +72

    GOD please give me a time machine so I can see this guys play

    • @thetimetraveler1344
      @thetimetraveler1344 4 роки тому +5

      Coming right up, Lol!

    • @kumarg3598
      @kumarg3598 3 роки тому +3

      Personally, I'd love to see 1950s nyc with the dodgers, yankees and giants

    • @Monomakh
      @Monomakh 3 роки тому +1

      I would use my time machine to cheer up the Bronte sisters.

    • @gargould7186
      @gargould7186 3 роки тому +1

      Jesus is going to give us the resserrection (John 5:28) so that you can meet Mr. Cobb in the near future, and we can all live together in the New Earth (2Peter 3:13) and meet all of the deceased people from history, going clear back to Seth and Cain & Abel, Adams 3 sons.

    • @louissuppa490
      @louissuppa490 Рік тому

      ​@@gargould7186 yes sire Amen and God bless

  • @pplchamp111
    @pplchamp111 9 років тому +96

    Ty Cobb never skipped leg day

  • @franklinhall3033
    @franklinhall3033 5 років тому +60

    There will never be another Ty Cobb.

    • @fezzik7619
      @fezzik7619 3 роки тому +1

      Thankfully

    • @fezzik7619
      @fezzik7619 3 роки тому

      @Angry Grizzly I’m sure he did, but I certainly didn’t. He may have been a good baseball player, but he beat women, beat up a disabled man in the crowd once and was a horrible racist so I’m glad there will never be another one of him.

    • @generalbullmoose
      @generalbullmoose 3 роки тому +7

      @@fezzik7619 Throw away that Al Stump book & read the real account of his life.

    • @kalebstuckey570
      @kalebstuckey570 3 місяці тому

      @@fezzik7619I’m glad you like to read fiction books.

  • @rogershornsby5730
    @rogershornsby5730 6 років тому +108

    Cobb Was Incredible.

  • @chriskeck3689
    @chriskeck3689 3 роки тому +13

    This interview was absolutely wonderful! I mean, that was "the" Ty Cobb speaking. Wow!

  • @wilrobles5392
    @wilrobles5392 6 років тому +71

    What an articulate man. I heard he was a good investor, as well. Buying stocks in small companies like Coca Cola, etc.

    • @jamieround2072
      @jamieround2072 4 роки тому +1

      @MUFC soooo wht in the world does soccer have to do w/ ty cobb's investing in small american company's.........????????? how much did players like ty here make a week or a month or a yr., ..... how he scrap up the extra cash to invest in american small company's like coke & etc.,............ WE ALL KNOW HE DIED IN '61....... & WE ALL KNOW HE WAS THE 1 ST to be in the baseball hall of fame too.... what all else was he into in all honesty................

    • @jonhall9831
      @jonhall9831 4 роки тому

      @MUFC 2070? I'm 43 now in 2021 so.that means ill more than likely be dead and gone by then. And I have to say ,thank the good lord, if what you predict comes to fruition. I got nothing against soccer. Its fun to watch during the world cup every 4 years. I get into it then and am glad that it only happens every 4 years the other 3yrs and 300 or so odd days. Baseball is America's sport buttmunch so.watch your mouth when talking about it. In the meantime go kick the Hackysack around with some women

    • @douglasbath976
      @douglasbath976 3 роки тому +2

      Easy to sound articulate when reading a script.

    • @Cincinnatus1869
      @Cincinnatus1869 3 роки тому +4

      @@douglasbath976 Cobb was always well spoken . He wasn't some backwoods hick like Joe Jackson. His father was a teacher who stressed education

    • @wilrobles5392
      @wilrobles5392 3 роки тому +1

      @@douglasbath976 Well read.

  • @caliente6319
    @caliente6319 8 років тому +80

    This is actually the first time i ever heard ty cobb's voice and I'm really suprised at how little of a southern accent he was, considering he was born in 19th century rural georgia.

    • @JustWinBabee
      @JustWinBabee 4 роки тому +9

      His father was a college professor and he had a lasting influence on him. That's reflected in how he speaks.

    • @caliente6319
      @caliente6319 4 роки тому +14

      @@JustWinBabee he also spend decades living in michigan, so i am sure he had a thicker southern accent when he was younger, he just lost it either on purpose or by accident.

    • @willkittwk
      @willkittwk 4 роки тому +3

      Never heard him drop an R like them old Georgia boys tend to do like Jimmy Cawta. Lol

    • @Garrett1240
      @Garrett1240 4 роки тому +8

      He clearly had a southern register, but as others have noted he lived up north for half his life at this point and that probably had a influence on his accent.

    • @RodAuger
      @RodAuger 3 роки тому +9

      He kind of sounds like Lyndon Johnson with a slightly higher pitch.

  • @charleswinokoor6023
    @charleswinokoor6023 3 роки тому +39

    Surprisingly intelligent and articulate.
    Better command of the English language than many of today’s college athletes and pros.

    • @jasondoe7655
      @jasondoe7655 3 роки тому

      And very racist too

    • @charleswinokoor6023
      @charleswinokoor6023 3 роки тому +7

      @@jasondoe7655 which had no bearing on his athletic abilities as a baseball player.
      And I stand by my comment regarding speaking proper English.

    • @dompolidori5313
      @dompolidori5313 3 роки тому +4

      @@jasondoe7655 not factual. Possible, but no supporting evidence whatsoever.

    • @ElectionFraudHasConsequences
      @ElectionFraudHasConsequences 3 роки тому +4

      @@jasondoe7655 Race baiting zero. Now go put your BLM sign up and shut up clown. 🤡

    • @wvu05
      @wvu05 3 роки тому +2

      @@jasondoe7655 Unlike other southern players, he never disparaged black players, and he fully supported integrating the game. While the late, great Buck O'Neill said that he had prejudices, he treated everyone fairly, and was no more racist than anyone who grew up in a society where beliefs in white supremacy were nearly universal.

  • @louissuppa490
    @louissuppa490 7 років тому +27

    THIS WAS AWESOME
    Never thought id hear his voice

    • @JustWinBabee
      @JustWinBabee 4 роки тому +2

      He also made a cameo appearance in the original Angels in the Outfield, starring Paul Douglas and Janet Leigh (1951).

    • @michaelbright1218
      @michaelbright1218 3 роки тому

      @@JustWinBabee Woah, Really... How Can I Find This Movie

    • @JustWinBabee
      @JustWinBabee 3 роки тому

      @@michaelbright1218 - Not sure. Years ago people were selling the VHS tape on eBay, but I haven't seen it for sale anywhere recently.

    • @JustWinBabee
      @JustWinBabee 3 роки тому

      @@michaelbright1218 - Cobb's voice can also be heard in the Detroit Tigers Movie, made in 1985 and available in VHS.

    • @nadiazahroon6573
      @nadiazahroon6573 3 роки тому +1

      I’ve got a secret, he was on that show 1955.

  • @stevebenton9193
    @stevebenton9193 3 роки тому +6

    This interview is gold!!

  • @fr6313
    @fr6313 8 років тому +83

    Many people don't know this but Cobb used to send many ex ballplayers money who were down on their luck . A number of retired payers did not invest and fell on hard times after their playing days were over . Cobb invested his money and did so wisely. He helped those in need. In fact as I recall he helped pay for the medical bills for some of those players who could not afford them .
    . Another great story about Cobb was that there as a young player who tied out for the Tigers and was cut. In a show of compassion Cobb gave the man his jersey to help sooth the young man's disappointment

    • @drvn8
      @drvn8 5 років тому +2

      @Craig Colby Actually an interesting story about those two well after their baseball days.

    • @christian4u69
      @christian4u69 5 років тому +3

      At the time of his death, he was also a MAJOR stockholder in that little known soft drink called....Coca Cola.

    • @BamaFanUSMC
      @BamaFanUSMC 5 років тому

      He also supported a widow of a former player. He never asked for publicity from this.

    • @terminallumbago6465
      @terminallumbago6465 5 років тому +4

      drvn8 Shoeless Joe owned a liquor store. Ty Cobb visited the store. At first neither of them acted like they recognized each other. Before he left, Ty asked Joe if he knew him (Ty). Joe said he did, but he wasn't sure that Ty wanted to know him because a lot of people didn't following the scandal.

    • @Beck-Stein
      @Beck-Stein 4 роки тому

      He helped Alex Bregman because his bitch ass got screwed.

  • @PennsylvaniaHistoryBuff
    @PennsylvaniaHistoryBuff 3 роки тому +10

    If I were a coach, of any sport not just baseball, I’d have my players listen to this and take notes. Cobb stresses how important it is to cover all the little angles of the game. He dispenses some of the most valuable and unique advice any player would pay to hear.

  • @ronniebishop2496
    @ronniebishop2496 6 років тому +74

    He's not arrogant and gave other players their due. lol

  • @lukehauser1182
    @lukehauser1182 4 роки тому +7

    This is amazing! I love the part where he says quitting baseball gave him his own life back. Every comment here is a gem.

  • @peted7602
    @peted7602 9 років тому +43

    Always admired his records and how he played the game. After learning of the hatchet job Stump made on him, I love Cobb even more.

    • @SuperIliad
      @SuperIliad 3 роки тому +1

      Truth will out.

    • @chris2302
      @chris2302 4 місяці тому

      Same here. The Peach had his flaws like everyone else but the more truths that I discover about him, the more likable and decent of a person he is in my book.

  • @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN
    @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN 9 років тому +144

    Say what you will about Ty Cobb, but there's not one "uh, you know," or "it is what it is" uttered in this entire interview.

    • @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN
      @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN 9 років тому

      +Sabbra Cadabbra Yeah, hahahaha!

    • @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN
      @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN 9 років тому +7

      +Steven Yourke Yes, I'm very aware of Cobb's background. I am also aware of the inner turmoil he must have felt knowing that either his mother or his mother's lover murdered his father. He had inner demons, and was by today's standards a bigot, but he was a very intelligent man and moderated in his views as he aged.

    • @TheGodYouWishYouKnew
      @TheGodYouWishYouKnew 9 років тому +14

      +michael Sowell At the end of the day, it sounds like he's reading a script. It is what it is though.

    • @jvcomedy
      @jvcomedy 9 років тому +14

      +MICHAEL SOWELL It sounds to me as if he's reading his answers in the interview. As if he had been given the questions in advance and was reading his prepared answers.

    • @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN
      @APOCALYPSE_X-MEN 9 років тому +1

      Jeff Vaughn You may be correct.

  • @connorgould3153
    @connorgould3153 3 роки тому +14

    Interesting stuff hearing him talk about conditioning, reading eyes, and trying certain plays in blowouts in preparation for future games. Sounds like he played really smartly.

    • @wvu05
      @wvu05 3 роки тому +1

      I'm reading the biography by Charles Leehrsen, and it goes into detail about how hard he worked. He would have been great in any era.

  • @GoBigBlue80
    @GoBigBlue80 5 років тому +6

    Just absolutely amazing.

  • @daveinmilwaukee
    @daveinmilwaukee 6 років тому +2

    Thanks for posting this. Amazing to hear the voices of these two legenday sports figures.

  • @bigbadwolf381
    @bigbadwolf381 6 років тому +11

    TY COBB-THE GREATEST CENTERFIELDER THE GAME HAS EVER KNOWN!

  • @perfectsense3240
    @perfectsense3240 9 років тому +59

    Ty Cobb was the best there EVER was!

    • @mikeschultz6383
      @mikeschultz6383 6 років тому +3

      Perfect Sense George Herman Ruth was period

    • @bobroberts135
      @bobroberts135 6 років тому +2

      He couldn’t pitch at all, like Ruth. Ruth was the greatest ever and look at all the pennants and World Series he won. For Cobb, it was all about him and he didn’t even enjoy the game; he thought of it as work, as a job! He always had to be first in everything.

    • @elfuego233
      @elfuego233 4 роки тому

      This coment will be summed up ur biased because ur a tigers fan babe was the best and ty Cobb was sort of like wilt chamberlain but not really

    • @perfectsense3240
      @perfectsense3240 4 роки тому +5

      @@elfuego233 Trust me, me being a Tigers fan doesn't change the facts. I don't seem to remember reading anywhere that Babe Ruth stole 900 bases, do you? What about just under 4,200 hits? No disrespect to Bambino whatsoever because Ruth was an all time great, and both are on the Mount Rushmore of baseball but he was also a benefactor of the "live ball" (where Cobb was already 34 when that era started) and still didn't have the average or hit count that Ty Cobb had. All-around best player was Ty Cobb, no question. There is a reason why Cobb was the first inductee into the Baseball Hall of Fame going up against Ruth and Honus Wagner. We know Cooperstown, NY doesn't have a Detroit bias.

    • @elfuego233
      @elfuego233 4 роки тому +1

      @@perfectsense3240 agreed but did ty Cobb lead all time in slugging and ops what about power numbers which does not being down ty he is the vest at that craft

  • @nbhoser
    @nbhoser 5 років тому +14

    You can also find Cobb on a "What's My Line" episode on UA-cam.

  • @dariowiter3078
    @dariowiter3078 8 років тому +10

    This radio interview is from 1930; I first heard this on a public radio show over 12 years ago.

  • @orangejuicejones6075
    @orangejuicejones6075 6 років тому +20

    The man waited TWO YEARS to pull off a baserunning strategy on a pitcher. Unbelievable.

    • @petemeis234
      @petemeis234 5 років тому +3

      -OJJ--I would read about Cobb when I was 16 or 17, and always admired him. I read that one time that he was on second, he noticed that when the 3rd baseman got the ball from the catcher, the 3rd baseman would walk halfway to the mound, and toss up a lob, then walk back. Cobb waited for the guy to do it again, was strolling off 2nd, pretending to be just standing there, and when the ball was lobbed to the pitcher, Cobb was off like a shot, went into third standing up.
      The trouble for the 3rd baseman was that, when Cobb came down the path, the guy had to try and get back to third, wait for the throw from the pitcher, and still worry about Cobb coming in like a freight train on the loose. The 3rd baseman never lobbed the ball that way again.
      When I was about 34 or so, and playing semi-pro, I was on 2nd one night, and saw the 3rd baseman do the same thing that I had read about when I was 16.
      He walked halfway to the mound, and lobbed it to the pitcher. I instantly recalled what I had read about Cobb when I was 16, and took my lead off 2nd. My gosh, the 3rd baseman did the same exact thing again, and I went into 3rd standing up. The 3rd baseman's dad was in the 3rd base dugout and also the manager. he really chewed his kid out, and I was laughing. It took me about 18 years to pull the trick, but then, how often does that situation come up, and you are on 2nd? I would guess about once every 18 years.
      Best players--1--Cobb--2--Musial--3--Pujols. Everyone else get in line.

    • @714cjp
      @714cjp 3 роки тому +1

      Why would the catcher be throwing the ball to the 3rd baseman instead of back to the pitcher with a runner on base ?

  • @rsilb
    @rsilb 6 років тому +1

    That was a fantastic interview! Thank you very much for sharing.

  • @JamieSmith-fz2mz
    @JamieSmith-fz2mz 4 роки тому +8

    I ride my bike into downtown Detroit frequently and pass Ty's old house in Boston Edison on Atkinson every time.

  • @thereilneid2868
    @thereilneid2868 4 роки тому +32

    Anyone with a dislike doesn't know baseball at all. On the field it's Ruth, Cobb
    or Cobb, Ruth. Either way

    • @roccomarchegiano5990
      @roccomarchegiano5990 3 роки тому

      @JD M Cobb and Ruth have never been, nor will they ever be surpassed.

    • @roccomarchegiano5990
      @roccomarchegiano5990 3 роки тому

      @JD M The numbers do not lie. They were the most dominant baseball players ever, and two of the most dominant athletes of all time. Point proven.

    • @roccomarchegiano5990
      @roccomarchegiano5990 3 роки тому

      @JD M They were not inferior, but rather superior. Bringing in people from other countries does not make it better, but worse. Quantity is not quality. the passing of time does not make one throw better than before. People do no mutate. Drugs do no make one better. Nor does smaller parks, and juiced up balls. You argument is lame. In 100 years They will still be considered the best. These folks today will not even be mentioned.

    • @angelramirez5417
      @angelramirez5417 3 роки тому

      Shoeless 🙆🏻‍♂️

  • @timetraveler7065
    @timetraveler7065 5 років тому +22

    The Georgia Peach.

  • @chris2302
    @chris2302 8 років тому +13

    The Georgia Peach is one of my favorite baseball players of all-time.

  • @hardcoredoom5892
    @hardcoredoom5892 9 років тому +4

    Thank you for this.

    • @royrezek231
      @royrezek231 6 років тому

      Alex Banuelos are you serious

  • @urdivine
    @urdivine 6 років тому +4

    As a life-long Tiger fan, Ty Cobb [and of course Al Kaline ], have always been my "main men". I cannot begin to tell you how unbelievably interesting this is. Thank you for the upload

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 6 років тому

      urdivine I saw Willie Horton hit the longest ball in history in Kansas City one day. Even Kurt Gowdy was there and he said the same thing. The ball went over the center field fence over what they called lamb chop hill and bounced off the score board 700ft away and up. I'm very surprised nobody has picked that up. Oh Willie was with Detroit.

    • @urdivine
      @urdivine 6 років тому

      Holy Cowhide !! It seems to me, that would be the longest in ANY ballpark. Good for you that you got to see it. You're a KC fan?

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 6 років тому

      urdivine I saw them as a kid every summer. Roy Mantle, Mickeys brother worked for my dad, in a pipeline company and he said he could have gotten all the autographs of all those hall of famers but didn't think about it back then in the fifties and sixties. My dads company had season tickets. I got a foul ball from Brooks Robinson. Great times. Willie said he had never gotten a solid hit. Ever.

    • @jaybrick8973
      @jaybrick8973 5 років тому

      Miggy is a great tiger to

  • @DickJohnson3434
    @DickJohnson3434 7 років тому +36

    3:03
    "I'd try some wild play, like going from first to home on a single"
    LOL!!!!!!!

    • @griv-jr12
      @griv-jr12 4 роки тому

      Lmao

    • @t-bo2734
      @t-bo2734 4 роки тому

      Kirk Gibson once scored from first base on a single during the '88 season (can't remember who hit the single but I think it's uploaded here). He also scored from second base on a wild pitch.

    • @Garrett1240
      @Garrett1240 4 роки тому

      T-Bo Jacoby Ellsbury did it in 2014 I believe.

    • @sammyweed4771
      @sammyweed4771 3 роки тому +1

      He has the most stolen bases from third to home I know that. By a mile, like 70

    • @roccomarchegiano5990
      @roccomarchegiano5990 3 роки тому

      @@sammyweed4771 54

  • @WEBALON12
    @WEBALON12 8 років тому +24

    Ty was the greatest baseball player who ever played the game and at the time he played loved by his teammates and respected by his opponents. He was not a racist. He was brought up by family that favored abolition (while living in Georgia!) before the Civil war and who taught him that skin color did not matter. Cobb was one of the few ball players who spoke out in favor of full integration long before the great Jackie Robinson was allowed to play in the major leagues. All of the myths about Cobb were created out of whole cloth by hack sportswriter Al Stump and parroted by others, including Charles Alexander and Ken Burns, who never did the research and relied on Stump's fabricated history. To learn about the real Ty Cobb, I suggest the book "Ty Cobb: A Terrible Beauty," written by respected author and sportswriter Charles Leerhsen. Before writing his book, Leershen was convinced he would be writing a book about a homicidal racist ball player in keeping with conventional wisdom perpetrated by Stump's fabricated biography. While researching the book, he discovered the real Cobb, a credit to the game and a decent man.

    • @Garrett1240
      @Garrett1240 4 роки тому +2

      True, but Cobb was respected by opponents only in that he was a superior player. He wasn’t exactly well-liked or befriended by other players because he was competitive to a fault and at times a dirty player.

    • @newerafrican
      @newerafrican 3 роки тому +1

      @@Garrett1240 I would submit that there are Michael Jordan haters, too.

  • @ZippyDChimp-mr1tf
    @ZippyDChimp-mr1tf 3 роки тому +5

    Not only an incredible ballplayer but a very intelligent man.

  • @gmanning4881
    @gmanning4881 8 років тому +34

    .367 lifetime batting average in the deadball era.. no one else has come close, even the great willie mays and no steroids needed.

    • @tommyfu9271
      @tommyfu9271 8 років тому +3

      you do realize batting averages were a lot higher in the dead ball era right? obviously .367 is absurd but you say it like it was harder to hit for a high avg back then.

    • @dingers5days
      @dingers5days 8 років тому +1

      G Manning they actually proved it was .366, but yeah, your point is valid.

    • @bobroberts135
      @bobroberts135 6 років тому +2

      He played for 9 years in the live ball era!

    • @jeffgreen7499
      @jeffgreen7499 6 років тому +3

      Yeah sure... American League Batting Leaders #1 through #5 1907: Cobb .350, Crawford .323, Stone .320, Leach .303, Flick .302. 1908 Cobb .324, Delahanty .317, Crawford .311, Gessler .308, Hemphill .297 Results: The examples show it as obviously more difficult to hit in the deadball era.

    • @TonyGilbert1
      @TonyGilbert1 5 років тому +1

      @@jeffgreen7499 it wasn't necessarily harder the parks where bigger

  • @causticchameleon7861
    @causticchameleon7861 3 роки тому +1

    Ty Cobb and my great grandfather grew up together in Royston, GA. There is a Ty Cobb museum in Royston, GA if any of you ever want to stop by.

  • @steventesta6782
    @steventesta6782 3 роки тому +10

    Hands down the greatest hitter that ever played the game.

    • @roccomarchegiano5990
      @roccomarchegiano5990 3 роки тому +2

      Sure, right after the Babe.

    • @yuriburkel686
      @yuriburkel686 3 роки тому +1

      He played in a segregated League and the a competition was better when they integrated

    • @yuriburkel686
      @yuriburkel686 2 роки тому

      @alien observer ua-cam.com/video/4LWYuoFUoJ4/v-deo.html

    • @Doug19752533
      @Doug19752533 Рік тому

      @@roccomarchegiano5990 have to say Ruth is best hitter. how can you compete with a career slugging of .690? but i call Cobb the best overall player

  • @JBoles-pb9nc
    @JBoles-pb9nc 3 роки тому

    GREAT content and advice from a legend. THANK YOU

  • @chuckmorton8823
    @chuckmorton8823 5 років тому +18

    "If you want good legs, you have to put them to work" ... so true

  • @christopherchris8980
    @christopherchris8980 6 років тому +4

    I wonder what year this interview was? My guess would be 1930 because Cobb was talking about a repeat of the previous year's pennant winners, the Cubs and Athletics. Also, this was done not long after he retired, which was in 1928 (from the Major Leagues, and maybe 1929 from Pro baseball). Great interview, especially about the hard work of baseball on a day to day basis, and even in the offseason. One of the all-time greats.

  • @mofr4747
    @mofr4747 3 роки тому

    That was great thanks to whoever posted it

  • @andykapsar4667
    @andykapsar4667 5 років тому +3

    this is sick. what makes it better is hes not wasted like that 1951 tv interview

  • @Normalhowaboutyou
    @Normalhowaboutyou 3 роки тому

    Thank you. Sometimes it’s better to be feared and respected than liked

  • @thomasholler8149
    @thomasholler8149 3 роки тому +5

    Cool hearing him talking about Babe being the greatest while Babe was still an active player

  • @999therocker
    @999therocker 8 років тому +13

    He once told an umpire during an argument to see him under the stands after the game. The Tigers pulled Cobb off him when he was choking the ump. They don't have real ball games like that anymore. Its all corporate, fortune 500 stuff.

    • @joeferguson2606
      @joeferguson2606 5 років тому +4

      threatening an ump is considered part of a "real ball game"? something tells me you dont even watch baseball

  • @andersonandersom2685
    @andersonandersom2685 3 роки тому +1

    I put him out in center on my starting all time lineup.

  • @langwell21
    @langwell21 4 роки тому +1

    Amazing footage!

  • @xcaluhbration
    @xcaluhbration 8 років тому +30

    Lol reading these comments are funny, here we are judging a man we never knew or where he came from, only focusing on the wrong he MIGHT have done but I'm interested in this... what is it that OUR generation is doing now, that future generations will only look down on us for? What is normal and acceptable now to us but in 30 years or even a short 10 years will cause us to be ostracized and outcast? Any wrong Cobb might have done I'm not excusing but who are WE to speak so cruelly of him, especially now that he's dead?

    • @breakthroughmadeinusa9184
      @breakthroughmadeinusa9184 3 роки тому +3

      You are a very wise man.

    • @brucedufelmeier8718
      @brucedufelmeier8718 3 роки тому +3

      He was not a bad guy at all. His reputation as a racist and mean person are lies. His ancestors were abolitionists. He left a perpetual funding for black college scholarships, built an integrated hospital during Jim Crow times, staffed by black and white doctors and open to all patients regardless of race. He advocated for the integration of baseball long before 1947. Roy Campanella was his favorite player in the 50’s. All the untrue myths of his racism and vile character were totally fabricated by Al Stump in a book written as an autobiography that Cobb detested and denounced (Cobb funded the book). Unfortunately, Cobb died shortly after reading the book and his false legacy was sealed. Charles Leerhsen corrected the wrong with the flawlessly researched biography “Ty Cobb the Terrible Beauty”.

  • @samsever69
    @samsever69 9 років тому +7

    This is Awesome!

  • @patrickgenovese2594
    @patrickgenovese2594 3 роки тому +4

    This is American poetry. This is amazing

  • @jeffdevine6903
    @jeffdevine6903 8 років тому +5

    With Grantland Rice. Recorded March 19, 1930.

  • @kingbabe1829
    @kingbabe1829 5 років тому +12

    Cobb could just flat out hit!

  • @sassafrassjane8839
    @sassafrassjane8839 5 років тому +4

    Helluvva player.

  • @morrisheinersz2005
    @morrisheinersz2005 3 роки тому +7

    He said Babe Ruth was the greatest batter ever.

  • @forallthatisunreal
    @forallthatisunreal 4 роки тому

    Wow. Thank you for posting this

  • @andrewallen4910
    @andrewallen4910 3 роки тому

    To see him was to remember him forever

  • @eddelahanty3901
    @eddelahanty3901 5 років тому +10

    Cobb was smart.Very.

  • @DeViLzzz2006
    @DeViLzzz2006 6 років тому +5

    Amazing to hear this. This is why we need UA-cam, Many times you can only hear stuff like this here.

  • @BmanIsHere
    @BmanIsHere 5 років тому +22

    Even better, Cobb was a Detroit Tiger

  • @Nolan-fg7wx
    @Nolan-fg7wx 7 років тому +4

    GOAT

  • @tmac8892
    @tmac8892 6 років тому +6

    Grantland rice. Great sports writer. Wrote the four horseman lead.

  • @realistindenial
    @realistindenial 6 років тому +3

    It's interesting to hear how so much the baseball nomenclature remains the same over a century later.

  • @toomanyminds1212
    @toomanyminds1212 8 років тому +2

    what a fascinating player!

  • @travisedwardmiller
    @travisedwardmiller 8 років тому +1

    this is great. thanks for posting.

  • @marcusdupree8209
    @marcusdupree8209 2 роки тому +1

    "Well, you can't beat the Babe". RESPECT

  • @roypiper581
    @roypiper581 4 роки тому +6

    I thought Ted Williams was the ultimate science based player.... until I heard this.

  • @tomservo5347
    @tomservo5347 3 роки тому +4

    I'd love to see those old 'deadball era' games where getting on base and driving in runners was more important than any home run. I could imagine the mental games were top notch during this era when games were usually close as Cobb stated. Wouldn't it be something to see what these legendary hitters could do against modern pitchers?

  • @candlemichele3153
    @candlemichele3153 4 роки тому +2

    What a player he was!

  • @quadtran
    @quadtran 3 роки тому +3

    Guys that attain that level of excellence (Cobb, Jordan, Tiger...) seem to have so much drive, competitiveness and intense focus that they probably aren't the most likeable during their heyday. Glad to see the Stump's account getting more scrutiny and that some of the more disparaging characterizations are now getting debunked.

  • @edwardanthony7283
    @edwardanthony7283 3 роки тому +1

    Great interview with an intense player.

  • @youarerightboss
    @youarerightboss 4 роки тому +1

    Ty Cobb, Greatest Baseball Player, ever.

  • @chynnadoll3277
    @chynnadoll3277 3 роки тому +3

    Lou Gehrig spoke favorably of Ty as well.

  • @langwell21
    @langwell21 9 років тому +2

    Outstanding!

  • @matthewlittle1595
    @matthewlittle1595 4 роки тому +3

    Damn - this is Grantland Rice! Clicked on it to hear Cobb, but to me, Rice is - if anything - more legendary.

  • @angrygrizzly7125
    @angrygrizzly7125 6 років тому +22

    The Georgia Peach Himself.
    😎

  • @msbng
    @msbng 7 років тому +2

    Cobb interview with Grantland Rice and Graham McNamee, at some point between the end of the 1929 World Series and the beginning of the 1930 season.

  • @brookkklan75
    @brookkklan75 4 роки тому +4

    LOVE TY COBB!!!!

  • @timcallahan6368
    @timcallahan6368 9 років тому +4

    Cobb is my favorite ballplayer, hands-down. He was deadly accurate with his placement of a hit-- a shift would never have worked on him. He manufactured runs in situations that no one else would have recognized. He was a competitor through and through, which many of today's pampered millionaire players have little concept of. THAT SAID, he was in fact a dislikeable character. Though plenty of Stump's "My Life In Baseball" biography was exaggerated or even outright fabricated, he was vehemently disliked by players on both opposing and his own teams. Speculation about jealousy aside, his teammates didn't even like traveling with him, let alone rooming with him. The Claude Lueker incident at Hilltop Park in New York was beyond reprehensible. Ironically, like Rose, he also was busted for betting on baseball and received a ban (lifted a year later). Following the ban, Detroit would not take him back, and he ended his career as a non-starter on Connie Mack's A's. When he died, only 3 people connected with Major League Baseball attended his funeral. How very, very flawed our heroes can be...

    • @jameszinsmeister1515
      @jameszinsmeister1515 8 років тому +3

      imprimis.hillsdale.edu/who-was-ty-cobb-the-history-we-know-thats-wrong/

  • @stevstevhoov8288
    @stevstevhoov8288 5 років тому +2

    The Self Proclaimed Great One really WAS !!!!

  • @jimmyfischbeck9872
    @jimmyfischbeck9872 4 роки тому +4

    Down through time there have always been those who take cheap shots against those who are superior, Ty Cobb was a ferocious competitor, and NOT politically correct, but probably the best player ever!

  • @macandrewes
    @macandrewes 8 років тому +10

    Cobb was not by any means the monster he has been made out to be by writers and media. Was he racist? By today's standards, yes, but so was everyone then - especially if they were from the South. In fact, the term "racism" didn't even exist then. Doesn't make it right, but it is important to exercise a little historical relativism when judging past eras and people's behaviour therein.

    • @bradholbrooks
      @bradholbrooks 6 років тому +2

      He was not a racist.

    • @jazzmanchgo
      @jazzmanchgo 5 років тому +2

      By the 1950s, Cobb was actively endorsing the integration of Major League Baseball. Whatever his views might have been when he was younger, he grew over time -- which is really all you can ask of someone. We're all products of our time, after all.

  • @fakeshemp3807
    @fakeshemp3807 5 років тому +6

    Not too many to the level of this baseball genius!

  • @johnkelley2468
    @johnkelley2468 4 роки тому +1

    I remember Ty' Cobb being interviewed on television.

  • @-C.S.R
    @-C.S.R 5 років тому +4

    ⚾️ He was close! It was the
    Athletics vs Cardinals in the 1930 W.S
    Athletics won in 6

  • @MrStevesLife
    @MrStevesLife 5 років тому

    This was great. Thanks

  • @davidboswell5322
    @davidboswell5322 4 роки тому +1

    Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth; best ever.

  • @bailinnumberguy
    @bailinnumberguy 7 років тому +4

    "Ty, you have asked me not to make this too poysenal."

  • @jmd1935
    @jmd1935 4 роки тому

    Great video thanks 😊

  • @MapleSyrupPoet
    @MapleSyrupPoet 2 роки тому

    Excellent video 📹 👏

  • @roccomarchegiano5990
    @roccomarchegiano5990 3 роки тому

    Nice interview

  • @kenhodge6165
    @kenhodge6165 3 роки тому +1

    Fascinating!

  • @rayoliver6807
    @rayoliver6807 3 роки тому +1

    One of the lefty,s Cobb had trouble with was from Nash,TN.Cobb hated facing left hand pitchers.Lucas was his name!

    • @rayoliver6807
      @rayoliver6807 3 роки тому

      EVERYTIME HE GOT HIS AVG.UP TO 450 A SPORTS WRITER WOULD BRING UP PAST ABOUT HIS MOTHER KILLING HIS FATHER THEY WERE YANKEE SOB'S NO RESPECT,THE SOUTHERN WRITER'S NEVER PULLED SUCH A LOW DOWN STUNT!!

  • @ericluchon5401
    @ericluchon5401 3 роки тому

    Ty Cobb was probably the hardest working baseball player that ever lived. He didn’t like when people told him that he was talented or lucky because he put so much effort into being the best he could be. His baseball IQ was at genius level and that makes him the embodiment of the game in my opinion.

  • @charlesmays2775
    @charlesmays2775 7 років тому +3

    You can say what you want to about Cobb but he still and always will have the highest lifetime Batting Average of any major league.. .367

  • @tedmillion7171
    @tedmillion7171 Рік тому

    I saw footage of Ty Cobb in uniform but can't find it now. Speaking about himself, he said, "Some people say I have some ability."

  • @satelloidmike
    @satelloidmike 5 років тому +1

    Awesome!

  • @ronbonine9555
    @ronbonine9555 4 роки тому

    This interview was in 1930. I know Bill James would see it differently but to me Ty Cobb is the most amazing player of all time, I loved how he mentally handled the game and excelling at a game when you had to scrap for any runs at all, making the game much more exciting.