there has never been a better teammate in bench-clearing situations than Daryl Strawberry. He was baseball's version of a hockey enforcer - old school. ALWAYS defended his mates and took some shots doing it. So happy to see the man he has become.
Orioles Right fielder Jeffrey Hammonds older brother Reginald was my U.S History teacher in high school when I was in my sophomore year in 2000 here in Jersey City, NJ he was a good teacher and some female students had a crush on him, I wasn't one of them even though he was handsome and dark skinned. I'm not lying about this.
Every time I re-watch the brawl game on May 19th, it really baffles me how much of an A-HOLE Benitez was. Bernie Williams was the class of all class acts in baseball. Yes, he hit the home run to give the Yankees the lead in the game. Did he show the pitcher up? Did he bat flip? No, he hit the home run, ran around the bases with dignity, and celebrated with his teammates after crossing home plate, like a PROFESSIONAL ballplayer should. Benitez was a chump. He was lucky to get out of that brawl alive after the deliberate hit on Tino. Five minutes alone with Paul O'Neill, Darryl Strawberry, and of course Graeme Lloyd wouldn't have gone too well for him.
And Jeff Nelson. It was his idea to kick his ass by going around the scrum to get him. He told Graeme Lloyd that Benitez had hit Tino before after giving a homer when they were teammates elsewhere [three years earlier, Edgar Martinez hit a grand slam and Tino got nailed next pitch] Nelson says "He's gonna do it again. If he does, we get him"
@@ahogg5960 I'd wish they'd show that game as a Yankee Classic, complete with George Steinbrenner's press comments after the game. I can't imagine any owner in baseball being more proud of his team; defending their actions in a brawl like that after what Benitez had done.
there has never been a better teammate in bench-clearing situations than Daryl Strawberry. He was baseball's version of a hockey enforcer - old school. ALWAYS defended his mates and took some shots doing it. So happy to see the man he has become.
I love how he looks like he's ready to disembowel Benitez. He did get in that sucker punch later on as Benitez was going back to the dugout.
@@Jon_from_LI : I was at this game in the right-field bleachers, and it was impossible to see what was going on. It was just bodies on bodies!
Wilfred Benitez - the greatest argument against the DH.
Orioles Right fielder Jeffrey Hammonds older brother Reginald was my U.S History teacher in high school when I was in my sophomore year in 2000 here in Jersey City, NJ he was a good teacher and some female students had a crush on him, I wasn't one of them even though he was handsome and dark skinned. I'm not lying about this.
2:36:05 is what I came here for
What website did you edit those videos like how did you convert them and put it on YT?
I download them from youtube with 4K Video Downloader and edit them with VideoPad Pro
@@falco2911 Thank You So Much
Every time I re-watch the brawl game on May 19th, it really baffles me how much of an A-HOLE Benitez was. Bernie Williams was the class of all class acts in baseball. Yes, he hit the home run to give the Yankees the lead in the game. Did he show the pitcher up? Did he bat flip?
No, he hit the home run, ran around the bases with dignity, and celebrated with his teammates after crossing home plate, like a PROFESSIONAL ballplayer should.
Benitez was a chump. He was lucky to get out of that brawl alive after the deliberate hit on Tino. Five minutes alone with Paul O'Neill, Darryl Strawberry, and of course Graeme Lloyd wouldn't have gone too well for him.
And Jeff Nelson. It was his idea to kick his ass by going around the scrum to get him. He told Graeme Lloyd that Benitez had hit Tino before after giving a homer when they were teammates elsewhere [three years earlier, Edgar Martinez hit a grand slam and Tino got nailed next pitch]
Nelson says "He's gonna do it again. If he does, we get him"
@@ahogg5960 I'd wish they'd show that game as a Yankee Classic, complete with George Steinbrenner's press comments after the game. I can't imagine any owner in baseball being more proud of his team; defending their actions in a brawl like that after what Benitez had done.