Sports Century - Roberto Clemente

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  • čas přidán 24. 08. 2024
  • life of Roberto Clemente

Komentáře • 176

  • @keithjackson3661
    @keithjackson3661 Před 5 lety +11

    great man my afro Puerto Rican brother gone but never forgotten

  • @MayweatherjrWONandsoTrump
    @MayweatherjrWONandsoTrump Před 9 lety +39

    Clemente enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve after the 1958 season and spent six months on active duty at Parris Island, South Carolina and Camp LeJeune, North Carolina. He served until 1964 and was inducted into the Marine Corps Sports Hall of Fame in 2003.

  • @Sulkanator
    @Sulkanator Před 9 lety +22

    There will never be another like Roberto Clemente. He lead by example and always kept his priorities straight.

  • @ivalat74
    @ivalat74 Před 7 lety +36

    Roberto should have his #21 retired league wide. It would be there when he will get the recognition he truly deserves.

  • @ryanbuikema2137
    @ryanbuikema2137 Před 7 lety +10

    My all time favorite player. To think how good he was yet how much people disrespected him is insane.
    Forever 21

  • @alanladdseinekatze859
    @alanladdseinekatze859 Před 6 lety +12

    Roberto is not only the greatest right fielder of all time, he is the greatest ever playing this game, period.
    People always pull their stats to prove this undeniable fact wrong, but there were always players that made those fanatics of statistics drop their pencils and finally enjoy the game, and Roberto is their leader.
    He left anyone speechless in any park he played.
    In fact, he was on the greatest team of all time, the 1970/71 Pirates.
    They were so ahead of their time on field and off, they are the No. 1 team in team sports for all time.
    This team is the one and only...

  • @hhluvzmagik
    @hhluvzmagik Před 5 lety +6

    It hurts my heart when I hear the stories of how poorly Roberto was treated. People like that should be ashamed of themselves. Roberto, you are the GOAT and a legend and you will never be forgotten!

    • @ManuelGuzman067
      @ManuelGuzman067 Před 5 lety +1

      Leslie Olson racist people dont belong in the 🌎 we live in

  • @ethanarroyo6891
    @ethanarroyo6891 Před 7 lety +18

    A Puerto Rican hero 🇵🇷🇵🇷

    • @anwjuice
      @anwjuice Před 3 lety

      @Biny Beaks he was a great man

  • @donaldkoester9096
    @donaldkoester9096 Před 9 lety +14

    Roberto is my favorite baseball player and unfortunately the victim of great discrimination by the press...Sad. He is a true legend now and deserves to be understood for his greatness!

  • @jerrypetercheff3075
    @jerrypetercheff3075 Před 8 lety +22

    The best I've ever seen. The reason I am a Pirates fan.

  • @richardmorales3871
    @richardmorales3871 Před 7 lety +16

    I still cry to this day when I see this video, he will always be my Idol.R.I.P.Roberto the great one! !!

  • @timebasecorrector5162
    @timebasecorrector5162 Před 8 lety +46

    Thanks for posting this program on one of baseball's all-time greats. The only disappointment and mystery is why ESPN thought Roberto Clemente deserved only a 30 minute SportsCentury program, while Jim McMahon received a 60 minute show. Clemente was a vastly superior player in his sport, and and a much larger impact than McMahon ever had.

    • @cityofchamps66
      @cityofchamps66 Před 8 lety +4

      He hit over 400 against a starting pitching staff with 4,20 game winners and won the WS MVP, what on earth are you talking about????????

    • @joseCruz-zp3bj
      @joseCruz-zp3bj Před 7 lety +5

      is impossible to made an assist when they were afraid to run when he got the ball

    • @jadlersen8709
      @jadlersen8709 Před 7 lety +2

      jesusisnotallright s - What's your point SFB?

    • @lemaxmas
      @lemaxmas Před 7 lety +5

      jesusisnotallright s - What a stupid troll comment. If anyone is not all right it's you Bonehead.
      You can't get assists when the other team is afraid to run on you!
      For example, in the bottom of the 9th when Buford hit a double that would have surely scored Marc Belanger most other times, Belanger was held back on third because of Clemente's lazer-like throw from right field to home that kept the Birds from winning at that time and sent the game into extra innings.
      Later when F. Robinson won the game on a sacrifice fly in left-center field to center fielder Vic Davililo, he made the following comment as quoted in a NY Times article, by Joe Durso on 10/16/71:
      “Would I have taken the risk if Clemente had handled the ball?” Robinson speculated later under mass questioning “Look, not even Clemente can cover two fields at once.”
      Now try praying for some brains before you make your next comment.

    • @jadlersen8709
      @jadlersen8709 Před 7 lety +2

      Well said!

  • @andrewcarbajal7358
    @andrewcarbajal7358 Před 8 lety +23

    Much like Stan Musial, very under appreciated. I'm a Cardinals fan but I think it's a crime that Roberto Clemente still doesn't get as much recognition as Mantle or anyone else that played with the Yankees. He was an even better person off the field. Treated very unfairly.

    • @NB-hb3uj
      @NB-hb3uj Před 4 lety

      That Pirates team with Clemente and Maz beat the Yankees with Mantel, Maris, Ford, Berra, Stengal

  • @alansmith8854
    @alansmith8854 Před 6 lety +3

    Easily the greatest all around player baseball player ever. Throwing, catching, hitting and base running. Saw him hundreds of times and sat in right field every time. Graceful, proud and unequaled! Awesome!

  • @oscarmason3252
    @oscarmason3252 Před 8 lety +11

    I was eleven years old when he died, I remember his death like yesterday, and I was full of uncontrollable grief, my parents not knowing what was going on. They soon learned that I was saddened by the death of Roberto Clemente. I am so grateful that I was able to see this amazing baseball player and human being. My young people have no idea who this man was, but I do, and I always will

  • @ManuelGuzman067
    @ManuelGuzman067 Před 8 lety +7

    a legend indeed in mlb this hero is still far the best baseball player that ever lived rip r c

  • @Aforgomon1
    @Aforgomon1 Před 9 lety +8

    My idol growing up. The greatest player I ever saw. Period.

  • @goov47
    @goov47 Před 9 lety +39

    The ones who really looked bad were those moronic sports writers. They were racist and extremely unprofessional. At the end, he proved those imbeciles wrong.

  • @valsobrevilla6157
    @valsobrevilla6157 Před 8 lety +40

    I know there is an award in his honor, but for all he did on and off the field, I feel MLB should also retire his number 21.

  • @sebastian272007
    @sebastian272007 Před 9 lety +7

    He definitely needed to be treated better but change brings, ignorance, arrogance and scares people. He was, still is, a great baseball player and human being. Ill always respect, tip my hat to Roberto for his great baseball, character and mostly for his tough fight to make people open their mind.

  • @depaola63
    @depaola63 Před 8 lety +20

    So, so very sad! A TRUE HERO!

  • @jayvasquez6711
    @jayvasquez6711 Před 7 lety +9

    I cry everytime i see this video. The man could of enjoyed the New Year parties with his family and friends and yet he thought about others first. No greater love no man have than to lay down his life for a friend. Enjoy paradise with our Lord Jesus Christ and save a bench spot for me up in heaven magnificent one.

  • @angelmarte6971
    @angelmarte6971 Před 8 lety +10

    waoooo, growing up in Carolina, P.R. was so special to me!!!! Roberto was the greatest, will always be the greatest... no matter if he doesn't get the recognition, real people knows what's up!!! MlB does not understand what kind of player he was, even if they claim to know. This player was the real deal. I don't remember seeing him playing even though my father took me to the games, I've seen videos and I'm grateful for it, he was so much better than lots of players in MLB even if they do not want to accept it....he will always be the greatest....yesssss!!!!!! and yes, there is, no way he will be on the bench for the ALL CENTURY TEAM...he has to be the starting right fielder, for sure!!!!

  • @MinatoMendoza
    @MinatoMendoza Před 9 lety +18

    The only number I wanted as a kid and as an adult, playing hard ball or soft ball was always the #21. Roberto Clemente is probably the most famous and loved Puertorriqueño ever.

  • @adiaz9201
    @adiaz9201 Před 10 lety +41

    Clemente is the greatest right fielder that ever played the game, he was a 5 tool player, only Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron are ahead of him. The babe because he is Mr. Baseball himself, and Hank Aaron because he is the Home Run King still being recognized. But Clemente is a member of the 3000 hit club which is far more important then HR, after all a homerun is a hit. Clemente won 4 batting titles, 12 gold gloves 2 world series MVP and 1 regular season MVP and had a canon of an arm that no dared to challenge. But he played in an era where prejudice was very high in this country.

    • @cityofchamps66
      @cityofchamps66 Před 10 lety +1

      Clemente only won the WS MVP in 71

    • @lemaxmas
      @lemaxmas Před 10 lety

      ***** Frank Robinson maybe yes by a hair because of his power numbers. Mel Ott, no imho. Look at Ott's power numbers at home vs away. Ott made great use of the incredibly short right field porch which was 258ft!!! If Ott played in another ballpark based on his away numbers he'd have never come close to 500 home runs. Ott hit almost twice as many homers at the Polo Grounds as he did when playing away.
      Clemente had excellent power, but because he played in such a large park for both right handed and left handed players, Roberto learned to it vicious line drives and grounders that put fear in the heart of pitchers and infielders alike. But had he played in a park like Ott did with extremely short foul lines on both sides, you'd have seen a lot more homers.

    • @adiaz9201
      @adiaz9201 Před 10 lety +5

      Clemente is the best all around 5 tool player in right field! When Clemente and frank Robinson play at the all star Robinson was placed in left field. Enough said.

    • @lemaxmas
      @lemaxmas Před 10 lety +3

      Angel Diaz My friend, I'm a life long Clemente fan. No other player has ever meant as much to me as he did. I saw the man often and imho no one brought so much excitement to the game as he did. Even watching Roberto hit batting practice took your breath away. And as much as he had this graceful and regal nature, he was the most approachable and kind man. He loved the fans and we loved him.
      There is no one close to Roberto as a fielder in right field when he played or ever, which was why Clemente often displaced both Robinson and Aaron in right field for the all-star games. Now because the manager replaced Hammerin Hank with Roberto doesn't mean that Roberto in his whole career was better than the Home Run King. To me it is not a knock to my hero to consider that others were as good as he was in some areas and better. Just as he excelled in areas where no one could touch him like that howitzer arm he had and the way he could play the ball off the wall and get to balls that few others could and those scorching line drives up the middle that in the case of Don Drysdale scared him so much that he retired within a few days of a Clemente liner that took off the top of Drysdale's right ear.
      The managers of those all star games wanted the "Great One" roaming right field with that speed and arm that no one else had. Robinson though had much better power, obp and was not far off in batting average. F. Robby like Roberto was a great base runner and strong leader. He falls way short compared to Roberto as a fielder.
      Now had Roberto played in a smaller ball park like Crosley field he'd have hit many more homers. And ultimately had he never destroyed his back and neck in that car accident in 1954 Clemente might have been a 30 home run a year player even in such a large park as Forbes Field and then we'd be talking a different story. Amazingly despite that injury Roberto hit a number of tape measure shots, including a blast at Wrigley Field that the greatest right handed hitter of all-time Rogers Hornsby said was the longest home run he ever saw.
      Ralph Kiner is the only Pirate ever known for hitting consistently year after year 40-50 homers. He had a big advantage when he played there due to the fact that the management had pulled the fences in from left and left center by 30ft! When Branch Ricky took over before Clemente became a Pirate, he traded away Kiner and brought the fences out back to their cavernous dimensions.
      Realize too that Wille Stargell's season best while he played in Forbes Field at 33 homers isn't much better than Clemente's 29,
      To me it's a toss up as to who is better than who and at that level and splitting some seriously thin hairs. They were all great and Roberto will always be number one to me as a player and as a man. His life and death still resounds in my life and his deeds are a constant reminder as to how to live.

    • @lemaxmas
      @lemaxmas Před 10 lety +1

      ***** To compare who had it worse doesn't make one man's burden more significant than the other. Jackie Robinson also a contemporary of both Clemente and Aaron had it worse than anyone, that doesn't make what Aaron and Clemente went through any less.
      Virtually ALL the black players who came up after Jackie Robinson and into the 50's and 60's faced an enormous amount of racism and abuse, especially in the minor leagues and spring training when they were in the, then Jim Crow south. The latin players had to deal with the prejudice that existed towards them as well as the language and cultural barrier. For black latinos this meant that their treatment was coming from both sides.
      Hundreds, perhaps thousands of aspiring latin and black athletes suffered greatly. Many names we'll never know.
      And some who never got a fair shot because of the unofficial quotas that ball clubs had back then as to the number of Black players they could have, were good enough to have possibly had excellent careers in the MLB.
      But one man's pain doesn't nullify another man's pain. So your point is kind of moot.

  • @francescoarellano7513
    @francescoarellano7513 Před 9 lety +10

    Seen him as a kid...Miss him much. Great human...

  • @norbertocarmona4753
    @norbertocarmona4753 Před 9 lety +16

    Gracias mi querido hermano Borriqua por tu gloria y tu bondad.Nunca te orvidare en mi corazon

  • @MikeHF
    @MikeHF Před 11 lety +5

    This guy used to kill the Cubs back in the day. What a talent he was!

  • @NickPR87
    @NickPR87 Před 11 lety +11

    Yes, Clemente definitely meant to us what Jackie Robinson meant to african americans!

  • @lemaxmas
    @lemaxmas Před 10 lety +8

    Roberto Clemente el mejor jardinero derecho que haya jugado! Su memoria brillará para siempre en los corazones de los pueblos latinos y los que de todo en todo el continente americano lo amaban.
    Él es verdaderamente el "Grande"!

  • @MrJeffreyfurlong
    @MrJeffreyfurlong  Před 11 lety +5

    he will always be a big part of the city of pittsburgh and a part of puerto rico 4ever

  • @JonDoe-fo3kl
    @JonDoe-fo3kl Před 8 lety +12

    great baseball player,greater human being!

  • @daniesharivera9944
    @daniesharivera9944 Před 8 lety +15

    It's sad that I didn't even get to see my great grandfather :(

  • @benaiah93
    @benaiah93 Před 8 lety +12

    Well, cool. Now I'm crying.

  • @annettetorres7914
    @annettetorres7914 Před 6 lety +1

    How people dislike this video ..When this man was a excelente human being..Is not going to be a baseball player like Roberto Clemente ..🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷RIP

  • @clintnorthwoods
    @clintnorthwoods Před 9 lety +12

    Actually as a kid, I always thought Clemente was equal to the best of the best. Another skill he had he was a great bad-ball hitter- he could really throw the other team off that way.

  • @ghill628
    @ghill628 Před 8 lety +13

    Roberto was the greatest. I grew up a Reds fan (still am) and I used to hate how he always seemed to do something to win the game for the Pirates when the two teams played. I now just feel so fortunate to have seen such an incredible player and man play the game the way it should be played.

    • @JonDoe-fo3kl
      @JonDoe-fo3kl Před 8 lety

      my uncles tell me there was a big rumor in puerto rico that roberto's wife vera cheated on him with his best friend manny sanguillen

    • @lemaxmas
      @lemaxmas Před 7 lety

      Lol, no way. I knew Sangy. He loved Roberto deeply and Sangy is a very kind and humble man.

    • @jadlersen8709
      @jadlersen8709 Před 7 lety +3

      Do you remember that incredible game where Clemente hit 3 homers, a double and had 7rbi's in an 8-7 Pirate loss to your team? Amazing but ultimately frustrating for Clemente.
      Pete Rose said it was the greatest display of hitting her ever saw.
      Those great Red's teams were amazing in those days. From the great 61 team with Frank and Vada right on to the Red Machine who had an awesome line up from top to bottom and an often excellent pitching staff.

    • @lemaxmas
      @lemaxmas Před 7 lety +1

      I know you weren't writing to me, but just have to say I so wish I'd seen that game or that there was some footage of it. It must have been something to see. And it was among the many proofs that Clemente indeed had awesome power. He did have another 3 homer game against the SF Giants two years later as well and as many fans know, Clemente hit some tape measure shots including a blast that went out of Wrigley Field in Chicago that Ernie Banks said was about the longest homer he ever saw hit at Wrigley and Rogers Hornsby said was the longest homer he ever saw hit anywhere. Clemente also nearly accomplished a feet reserved for (if memory serves) three of the greatest left handed (one was a switch hitter, but was hitting lefty that day) power hitters in baseball ever did. And that was hitting a ball over the roof in right field which was a gargantuan shot. Willie Stargell did it I think 18 times! The Babe I believe did it at the end of his career in that amazing 3 home run game of his. And the Mick did it as well, I'm thinking in the 1960 World Series. But Clemente missed hitting it at least on the roof by about a foot or so in 1962-- that's an opposite field blast by a right handed batter! Nearly unheard of for someone to have opposite field power like that! About 30 of Clemente's career homers were 400ft plus blasts to the opposite field.
      Clemente had many record blasts for sure, but one that may have been the most amazing was one he hit into the famous swirling winds at Candlestick Park in left field. These winds were so constant and deadly to even the greatest right handed power hitters that even saw the likes of Willie Mays to have many homers die at and caused the great player to learn a la Roberto to hit homers to the opposite field. (There's no telling how many homers Mays would have hit were it not for those winds).
      Again, if memory serves four players had hit the longest homers out to that area, at least at that time. Orlando Cepeda and Ernie Banks did so, but under rare conditions where there was no wind. Clemente's however was hit in the winds at their worst and went at least 450ft. To quote sports writer Arnold Hano;
      "Clemente's bat hit the ball, and the result absolutely clubbed the crowd into awed silence for a long moment. Right into that wet whipping wind the ball carried. Right on through, hit 120 feet high in a long soaring majestic parabola that came down finally over 450 feet away. There is just no way of telling how far Clemente’s home run blast would have traveled had it not been for that wind. Suffice it to say partisan Giant fans suddenly broke their shell-shocked silence and let loose a gagantic roar. For two innings the stadium buzzed. For days the Giants talked about it. Even today if you slip up behind a Giant pitcher and suddenly whisper in his ear: ‘Remember the home run Clemente hit?’ he’s likely to jump as high as if he’d been caught putting spit on baseballs."
      As Hank Aaron said in 1967 when Clemente was at still playing; "Clemente has the misfortune of playing in a big park. If he played in a smaller one, there’s no telling how many home runs he’d hit."

    • @jadlersen8709
      @jadlersen8709 Před 7 lety +3

      I knew Clemente had great power to right, but didn't know he nearly cleared the right field roof in Forbes Field. In the David Maraniss bio I think he joked that in the MLB Clemente was known as the third strongest or fiercest left-handed batter after McCovey and Billy Williams due to Roberto's power line drives that would scare the crap out of infielders and pitchers.

  • @TheOBpotter
    @TheOBpotter Před 10 lety +3

    He was the best I ever saw.

  • @carmelo1966
    @carmelo1966 Před 8 lety +11

    I remember the day he died, we lived about 40 miles from San Juan. our baseball field was located near the coast of the atlantic ocean. it was a misty day and there were about 200 people including my family looking at the ocean, we were looking for the plane wreckage 40 miles away from the original crash site. that's how important he was to us.

    • @keyvan-268
      @keyvan-268 Před 6 lety

      Carmelo, en qué pueblo está ese campo? We're doing a documentary, and maybe we can shoot it. Sign up on this page: facebook.com/PuertoRicoLaPatriaDeportiva/

  • @bigdaddycmoney
    @bigdaddycmoney Před 11 lety +3

    Great man, great story. I had never known much about him before watching this.

  • @deathkrutcher
    @deathkrutcher Před 10 lety +5

    He's simply the best to ever play the right field position. Nobody had the arm like him.

  • @patrickgray5633
    @patrickgray5633 Před 5 lety +3

    He & Frank Robinson are so underappreciated by baseball fans.

  • @sandramcollazo6641
    @sandramcollazo6641 Před 10 lety +8

    Roberto clemente the best of the best ever

  • @tomhernonjr
    @tomhernonjr Před 6 lety +3

    he was my favorite player growing up..

  • @DianaGonzalez-wh7ul
    @DianaGonzalez-wh7ul Před 10 lety +8

    Fué muy triste su partida y triste cuando se supo el porque nuestro Roberto Clemente Walker deseaba ir esta vez ya que el gobierno de Nicaragua y militares tomaron los alimentos, medicinas y dinero que el pueblo de Puerto Rico habia enviado. Es por eso que entonces nuestro Roberto Clemente Walker decidio ir el mismo para que el pueblo de Nicaragua esta vez si recibiera los alimentos, medicinas y dinero que era para ellos y no para el gobierno de Nicaragua ni sus militares. Así que el pueblo de Nicaragua no vio el primer cargamento de alimentos, medicinas y dinero por parte de PR pero tampoco pudieron tener las otras donaciones de PR debido a que en este avion cayo y nunca se recupero a nuestro Roberto Clemente, ni la tripulación y mucho menos las donaciones de miles de dolares, alimentos y medicinas que iba para nuestro hermano pueblo de Nicaragua.

  • @Aesop101
    @Aesop101 Před 9 lety +21

    BEST RIGHT FIELDER EVER...LEGEND

    • @JC-eg1zu
      @JC-eg1zu Před 9 lety

      +jay love not even close...ruth, aaron, robinson and ott are better

    • @Aesop101
      @Aesop101 Před 9 lety +5

      Clemente the BEST

    • @JC-eg1zu
      @JC-eg1zu Před 9 lety

      jay love numbers prove otherwise

    • @Aesop101
      @Aesop101 Před 9 lety +2

      suck it easy smitty.

    • @patrickgray1438
      @patrickgray1438 Před 8 lety +4

      a ton of great ones Clemente is one of them Hank Aaron & Frank Robinson are other ones.

  • @ryanrosado6334
    @ryanrosado6334 Před 5 lety +2

    I am proud guy of my compatriot RC21as a player but more as a human,thanks for each person for take some time and talk at less about Roberto cuz are own leaders in Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 forget about him😔💯Thanks Clemente r.i.p big as Mantle,Mays or Aaron💯

  • @carlosmcanino3826
    @carlosmcanino3826 Před 7 lety +4

    he is and forever will THE GREAT ONE and never will be another one like him.

  • @jorgegutierrez4654
    @jorgegutierrez4654 Před 7 lety +8

    His Heart, was so Huge, So Great that it wouldn't fit in his Chest...Jorge A. Gutierrez...

  • @markmccreary9605
    @markmccreary9605 Před 9 lety +12

    much like puerto rico in pittsburgh the name clemente is spoken with almost god like reverence. before every game at pnc park fans patiently wait their turn to get a snapshot in front of his statue. you can hear the stories of mythic feats roberto performed in right field. my favorite story was recounted by the late pirates announcer bob prince. he said he was chatting with clemente before warm-ups the day after he had thrown a guy out at the plate from deep right field. prince asked "how good IS your arm, bobby?" (prince was the only person he ever let call him bobby.) roberto picked up a ball near-by and standing on home plate fired a missile to center field. (forbes field had a cavernous center) the ball ticked off the top of the wall and back into the field. prince, bug eyed, looked over to clemete who was shaking his head. roberto said "you know bobby, i thought that was going out." the only other person i ever heard doing something similar was when elway tossed one out in yankee stadium but he took a run up and three tries. of his 260 outfield assists 40 were double plays. one of his contemporaries said " when you hit a single to right field you hustled up the line like it was a two hopper to short because if you didn't he would throw you out." the late earl weaver said the 1971 world series was lost in game 3 when he tossed out merv rettmund at third because the orioles never took an extra base or tried to tag and moved up. paul blair was nearly thrown out going back to second on a fly out and mark belanger was famously left stranded at third when clemente threw a perfect one hop to manny sanguillien. i have seen many great baseball players in my life but roberto clemente was the best i have ever seen.

    • @samsever69
      @samsever69 Před 9 lety +1

      Mark McCreary Thank you for sharing..

    • @samreddick1783
      @samreddick1783 Před 9 lety +2

      +Mark McCreary Absolutely!

    • @jeffdickerson9482
      @jeffdickerson9482 Před 7 lety +2

      Yea,Thanks Mark. Your vivid and enlightening accounts of Clemente enrich us all.

    • @Popeye-ck6cr
      @Popeye-ck6cr Před 7 lety +1

      Thank you Mark. I'm a life long pirate/Clemente fan.Love the story.

  • @vicschannelthevictor6851
    @vicschannelthevictor6851 Před 4 lety +2

    The best all around baseball player of all time!!

  • @13THPR0PH37
    @13THPR0PH37 Před 11 lety +3

    That's right. He represents the Puerto Rican. Heartfelt, honest, working man always misunderstood, always unappreciated. But that is our problem. Our feelings. Americans can let go of their feelings and just let their actions do the talking. Anyways, Roberto Clemente is a hero.

  • @TheCia999
    @TheCia999 Před 11 lety +3

    The BEST. RIP Sir Clemente.

  • @ladeviousblanton111
    @ladeviousblanton111 Před 2 lety +1

    The greatest Latino baseball player of all time hands down no questions about it!!!!!!!

  • @jayvasquez6711
    @jayvasquez6711 Před 5 lety +2

    A beautiful man no doubt. I wish the best for his family.

  • @albertcolonlee426
    @albertcolonlee426 Před 3 lety +2

    Saludos cordiales desde mí pequeña isla de
    🇵🇷 Puerto Rico 🇵🇷
    La leyenda de Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 Roberto Clemente 🇵🇷
    Imposible olvidar, lo que ISO, Por 🇵🇷 Puerto Rico 🇵🇷
    Y la humanidad, murió para ayudar a nuestros hermanos de Nicaragua .
    Su Número 21, está retirado de cualquier deporte de mi país
    🇵🇷 Puerto Rico 🇵🇷
    Y el único ser humano, que yo conozco, que
    👉 NADIE 👈 habla nada malo, de Él, 👉 NADIE 👈
    🇵🇷 Roberto Clemente 🇵🇷
    Que DIOS lo tenga en la gloria, 🙏 Bendiciones 🙏
    Atte🇵🇷Albert Colón Lee🇵🇷

  • @thestranger79x
    @thestranger79x Před 6 lety +1

    Roberto died before I was born, and though I never saw him play, until CZcams came out, I idolized him as I grew up, he was my dad's favorite player and would always tell me stories about him, I played baseball most of my youth, first 3 years I played I couldn't get number 21 as other player had it and I was garbage those 3 years, on my fourth year I changed teams and was able to get #21 and I don't know if it was the number but from that year on I became a beast, best player on my league and one of the best if not the best player in all of Puerto Rico, then I met the wrong people and started smoking cigarettes and that led to weed and there went my baseball future

  • @2mu12
    @2mu12 Před 10 lety +8

    Hero!

  • @patrickgray1438
    @patrickgray1438 Před 8 lety +3

    my mother was at his last game the 1972 NLCS Game 5 in Cincinnati I also had a buddy who worked as a Batboy & Clubhouse guy for the Visitors at Riverfront Stadium in 1972 he said that Pirates clubhouse was like a morgue after that game 5 loss said the room was so quiet!!!

  • @johnrutz2818
    @johnrutz2818 Před 6 lety +1

    This film always made me.cry. Im sooo proud that he was born in the same place I look for the first time the sun light.

  • @mannymarrero2735
    @mannymarrero2735 Před 2 měsíci +1

    "If the ball is in the park, and the game is on the line...I WILL CATCH THE BALL"
    Roberto "The Great One" Clemente.

  • @samsever69
    @samsever69 Před 4 lety +2

    Ball players get defined by there career numbers.. Roberto changed all that. Gave Greatness a new Standard to go by..

  • @williamtorres8641
    @williamtorres8641 Před 6 lety +2

    🇵🇷 Clemente !!! 💪🙌

  • @thomasrose38
    @thomasrose38 Před 6 lety +1

    Two all us young National League fans Clemente could do no wrong he was a god whose name meant greatness at his chosen profession baseball I still Remember fall 1972 as Roberto Drove closer to 3000 hits tuning in on the radio or television that last week trying to find every piece of information how close was he did he get a hit tonight what where when how and that final game when he hit number 3000 the joy we felt brought tears to our eyes we all had a couple of extra beers that night and hoisted them high to one of the greats some may disagree but US national league fans appreciated him more whenever the Pirates came to Shea Stadium I would try to make it to the game but the 1971 World Series was a baseball clinic put on by Clemente that's all I have to say about that

  • @hotsox9117
    @hotsox9117 Před 7 lety +1

    Great ballplayer...great man.

  • @524pmdnyc
    @524pmdnyc Před 11 lety +1

    For those who compare Puig to the great Clemente,,,come back in 20 years,,,,,lets compare them then....something tells me it wont happen.....Nobody compares to Roberto Clemente.

  • @lambert581
    @lambert581 Před 9 lety +3

    Did you know Neil Walker's dad could've been on the plane that crashed that killed Clemente? Mr. Walker helped Roberto load up the food on the plane & was about to fly with Clemente who told him no he will fly alone

  • @blackeducationalnetwork9019

    The greatest basketball player ever I wanted to be like Roberto I lived in Pittsburgh born and raised and I was a very good base ball player my self but he was the great one I loved this man

  • @figgy1million787
    @figgy1million787 Před 7 lety

    His 3k anniversary is here. Roberto thank you for bringing joy to my late grandpa, my father, my sons and me. Every time I see your documentary I tear up, and it just shows how far your legacy has reached. Gracias numero 21, espero que estés jugando en el reino de Dios.

  • @davidorme1993
    @davidorme1993 Před 2 lety +1

    There was one man he would let call him "Bobby." And that was Bob Prince, the longtime Bucs announcer.

  • @lambert581
    @lambert581 Před 9 lety +6

    I heard stories of how Clemente used to throw guys out at the plate from Forbes Field that it had stands that went out almost to the field & Clemente would throw a bullet from right field over the part that went onto the field & nail a runner at the plate

    • @cityofchamps66
      @cityofchamps66 Před 9 lety +4

      The story my dad would tell is he would throw behind guys who had singled to right and because his arm was so strong and accurate he would often get them out, baseball historians often say he had the most powerful and accurate arm in baseball history, he is one of only 3 retired players with 3,000 hits and 10 or more Gold Gloves, Ichiro will be number 4

    • @lemaxmas
      @lemaxmas Před 9 lety +1

      cityofchamps66 True enough. There was at least one occasion as well where Clemente fielded a ball in shallow right and through the runner out before he reached first base! He played with a skill and ferocity I had never seen before and have not seen since.

    • @aFreeThinkingPerson
      @aFreeThinkingPerson Před 9 lety

      lemaxmas There's been about 30 9-3 put outs since 1990.
      Last year in 2014 Blue Jay player Jose Bautista did it against the Royals then 24 hrs later he did it to the Royals again. They both happened differently but still happened. First one his reaction time was fast and he had a great throw.
      Ned Yost KC manager on the second one....'I don't know if you'll see a better play in baseball today than that play right there, Omar hit the ball and lost it, he thought it was foul. For Bautista to come, smother the ball, one,and then still see that he had a play at first base, I don't think I've
      ever seen a play like that. Tremendous play.''

    • @lemaxmas
      @lemaxmas Před 9 lety

      aFreeThinkingPerson
      That is pretty cool. I'll have to check out those plays you mentioned if yt or mlb has the videos. If you come across it let me know! Thanks!

  • @NB-hb3uj
    @NB-hb3uj Před 4 lety +1

    I am Puerto Rican my family is from San Juan and Ponce I love Clemente alot. That Champions Pirates Team with Clemente had 2 Hall of Famers (Clemente and Maz). The Yankees had 5 Hall of Famers with (Stengal,Berra,Mantel, Maris and Ford). Clemente is The best MLB player ever Mays said this only next to Mays. Clemente is known for being the best right fielder period but for beating that Yankees team and the Orioles who had many Hall of Famers as well. Clemente is considered the great one and for me that is the best player ever. #21 should be retired by all teams heck change the MLB logo to Clemente.

  • @Aesop101
    @Aesop101 Před 6 lety

    I breathe 21 I live 21 I love 21 we love you Roberto and we will never forget you. Que viva Puerto Rico...

  • @richardwiesemeyer9120
    @richardwiesemeyer9120 Před rokem +1

    Clemente would have hit many more home runs had he not played in spacious Forbes Field . That’s the only difference between him and Mays and Aaron. He was an awesome player!

  • @cmcanino7146
    @cmcanino7146 Před 9 lety +5

    Well at the end after all the bad treatment , he prove how great he was and the discrimination even being robbed of his 3,000 hit the night prior at dodger stadium he ended telling all media Fuck You I am the best and that he prove a WORLD SERIES AVG in 1971 of .444 show me one ever done that

  • @Mulavi
    @Mulavi Před rokem +1

    Clemente was The Great One, number one. Gretzky was the Great One, number two.

  • @Ciscoman4444
    @Ciscoman4444 Před 11 lety +1

    We knew in PR how good he was! And the best part is that He knew that We knew! He knew that we loved the type of person he was, not only how good a player he was. This country has that blemish on his resumé, and I think it won't change.. That no metter how sweet they talk about "how far we have come", this was, is and likely will always be one of the most racist places in earth!

  • @rapgamepapi
    @rapgamepapi Před 7 lety +1

    A True Legend

  • @ivanrodriguez92
    @ivanrodriguez92 Před 23 dny

    #21 forever… king Clemente 🇺🇸🇵🇷

  • @raulayala874
    @raulayala874 Před 11 lety +2

    "THE GREAT ONE".. #21

  • @bailinnumberguy
    @bailinnumberguy Před 6 lety

    You know that guys like Clemente and Mays were great the first time they ever picked up a bat and glove. With a performance for the ages, Clemente almost single-handedly won the 1971 World Series.

  • @jayvasquez1958
    @jayvasquez1958 Před 5 lety

    Great ball player. Even greater human being. Rest in peace Roberto a true hero for all to follow.

  • @depaola63
    @depaola63 Před 11 lety +2

    Shame he never got the respect he should have!!

  • @jpm4444
    @jpm4444 Před 7 lety

    as he got older the Pittsburgh media came to love him. They were so cruel to him in the media literally making fun of him. They wouldn't even use Roberto on his baseball cards calling him Bob or Bobby. Through it all he helped people from all over and among ball players, they loved him.

  • @jjdsports
    @jjdsports Před 10 lety +1

    Great upload.

  • @Aesop101
    @Aesop101 Před 6 lety +1

    If the ball is in the park and the game is on the line I will catch the ball
    RC#21

  • @R3dgrave
    @R3dgrave Před 11 lety

    its pretty hard to have english only comments on a documentary about a spanish speaking puertorican athlete.

  • @JoseDiaz-he8ie
    @JoseDiaz-he8ie Před 11 lety +2

    POIG NO E NA. CLEMENTE ES EL MEJOR. COJONES. LOS CUBICHES NI DOMINICANOS SE PUEDEN COMPARAR A ESTE HOMBRE.

  • @Ciscoman4444
    @Ciscoman4444 Před 11 lety

    At the Hiram Bithorn Stadium I took clinics from him and Cepeda in the late 60s. Little did we know what was about to happen!

  • @royrezek231
    @royrezek231 Před 6 lety

    I was at game 7 in Baltimore he hit it over left center wall . It was a sinking feeling

  • @brainsareus
    @brainsareus Před 7 lety

    I understand,what the reporter meant;but,it was not about audacity,re Roberto speaking in Spanish on US TV. it was simply,about something,that should have been allowed and welcomed;without any reservation on the part of the media.

  • @Fallingslowly09
    @Fallingslowly09 Před 11 lety +5

    How could you post a video about Roberto Clemente, a man who was so proud of his Latino culture, and then turn around and tell someone not to speak Spanish? That's just plain disrespectful.

  • @HauserMcQuaid
    @HauserMcQuaid Před 6 lety +1

    MLB should RETIRE #21....Point Blank

  • @SacClass650
    @SacClass650 Před 10 lety

    Very well put.

  • @MrJeffreyfurlong
    @MrJeffreyfurlong  Před 11 lety +1

    truth

  • @thesurvivalistgeek
    @thesurvivalistgeek Před 11 lety +1

    When i was in fifth grade i did a report on him

  • @anwjuice
    @anwjuice Před 3 lety

    Before Kobe there was Roberto

  • @kekojones8055
    @kekojones8055 Před 6 lety +3

    Everyone knows why recognition eluded Roberto Clemente....... AmeriKKKa!

  • @SacClass650
    @SacClass650 Před 10 lety

    Well said.

  • @IAMBENNYBLANCO.
    @IAMBENNYBLANCO. Před 10 lety

    Who can dislike this?