OT: RIP Willie Mays

eco's bones

Registered User
Jul 21, 2005
26,788
13,728
Elmira NY
My dad was a New York Giants baseball fan. When they moved to San Francisco he pretty much dropped them and afterwards followed the New York Mets starting when they first came into the National League. Mays career started with the New York Giants and ended with the New York Mets. Anyway I have a book which is about the history of the New York Giants baseball team published I believe in the late 50's or early 60's right around I believe the time that the Giants moved to San Francisco which my dad owned which is kind of a keepsake.

The Giants were his team and the Polo Grounds his favorite stadium. The super wealthy owners who move their teams away to more lucrative horizons are really betraying their fanbase or at least if that fanbase has always been there for them through thick and thin. Wealth in and of itself has almost never had any sense of morality though.

Anyway to Mays---he was a tremendous player but also an example of someone who hangs on too long and who goes well past his sell by date. My dad loved him as a young player but fumed at him his last years with the Mets. The relays from Mays to another outfielder (because Mays throwing arm was shot) so as to get the ball back to the infield would drive him crazy. Singles were turning into doubles and doubles into triples. As a Yankee fan back then his anger about that was very much a source of amusement to me. Growing up in the 60's though that's what I remember most about Mays.....the tail end of his career. We kind of went through some of the same things with Messier and Lindros both banged up towards the ends of their respective careers and more and more perimeter players. Both should have retired before some years before they actually did.
 
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ElLeetch

Registered User
Mar 28, 2018
3,213
3,925
My dad was a New York Giants baseball fan. When they moved to San Francisco he pretty much dropped them and afterwards followed the New York Mets starting when they first came into the National League. Mays career started with the New York Giants and ended with the New York Mets. Anyway I have a book which is about the history of the New York Giants baseball team published I believe in the late 50's or early 60's right around I believe the time that the Giants moved to San Francisco which my dad owned which is kind of a keepsake.

The Giants were his team and the Polo Grounds his favorite stadium. The super wealthy owners who move their teams away to more lucrative horizons are really betraying their fanbase or at least if that fanbase has always been there for them through thick and thin. Wealth in and of itself has almost never had any sense of morality though.

Anyway to Mays---he was a tremendous player but also an example of someone who hangs on too long and who goes well past his sell by date. My dad loved him as a young player but fumed at him his last years with the Mets. The relays from Mays to another outfielder (because Mays throwing arm was shot) so as to get the ball back to the infield would drive him crazy. Singles were turning into doubles and doubles into triples. As a Yankee fan back then his anger about that was very much a source of amusement to me. Growing up in the 60's though that's what I remember most about Mays.....the tail end of his career. We kind of went through some of the same things with Messier and Lindros both banged up towards the ends of their respective careers and more and more perimeter players. Both should have retired before some years before they actually did.

I simply cannot imagine that happening to todays game. No team, no matter the situation, would allow that to occur.
 

KirkAlbuquerque

#WeNeverGetAGoodCoach
Mar 12, 2014
36,174
43,147
New York
Man I had no idea he was still alive, I just assumed he died years ago.

One of the canonical sports legends of the 20th century
 

majordomo

Registered User
Oct 29, 2023
2,162
1,760
NYC
My dad was a New York Giants baseball fan. When they moved to San Francisco he pretty much dropped them and afterwards followed the New York Mets starting when they first came into the National League. Mays career started with the New York Giants and ended with the New York Mets. Anyway I have a book which is about the history of the New York Giants baseball team published I believe in the late 50's or early 60's right around I believe the time that the Giants moved to San Francisco which my dad owned which is kind of a keepsake.

The Giants were his team and the Polo Grounds his favorite stadium. The super wealthy owners who move their teams away to more lucrative horizons are really betraying their fanbase or at least if that fanbase has always been there for them through thick and thin. Wealth in and of itself has almost never had any sense of morality though.

Anyway to Mays---he was a tremendous player but also an example of someone who hangs on too long and who goes well past his sell by date. My dad loved him as a young player but fumed at him his last years with the Mets. The relays from Mays to another outfielder (because Mays throwing arm was shot) so as to get the ball back to the infield would drive him crazy. Singles were turning into doubles and doubles into triples. As a Yankee fan back then his anger about that was very much a source of amusement to me. Growing up in the 60's though that's what I remember most about Mays.....the tail end of his career. We kind of went through some of the same things with Messier and Lindros both banged up towards the ends of their respective careers and more and more perimeter players. Both should have retired before some years before they actually did.
I always felt Mays hung on because he wanted to finish his career in NY......also, Joan Payson (who regretfully NEVER gets any credit from the NY Mets organization -- still think Citi Field should have been called Payson Park) was granted the new NL franchise, she promised Willie that she would do everything she could to bring him back -- and she kept her word.
 

chosen

Registered User
Aug 2, 2005
12,541
5,010
ASPG
I simply cannot imagine that happening to todays game. No team, no matter the situation, would allow that to occur.

I've watched every single baseball team tolerate players not even attempting to play hard. Back then, that wouldn't have been tolerated. I'd rather have a guy trying than collecting millions and turning triples into singles.

Manny Ramirez took it one step farther by not even chasing after fly balls and dropping some on purpose.
 

HFBS

Noted Troublemaker
Jan 18, 2015
2,178
2,219
This is the play that I will always remember Willie Mays for. I was watching this game live (on TV) when I was a kid. I don't remember who the Giants were playing, whether it was a Mets or national telecast. Mays and Bobby Bonds both went for a fly ball near the fence at Candlestick Park. They crashed into each other, Mays was knocked out cold, and still caught the ball.

 

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