Baseball
Related: About this forumRecalling the great Bob Gibson, the only of the part the plate owned by the batter
was of the post-game crockery variety.
CaptYossarian
(6,448 posts)And nobody charged the mound.
Blue_true
(31,261 posts)CaptYossarian
(6,448 posts)I remember the Nolan Ryan incident with Robin Ventura, but Gibson? Wow.
Blue_true
(31,261 posts)Blue_true
(31,261 posts)CaptYossarian
(6,448 posts)for the Cubs between 1972 and 1976, before going to the Royals. His playing size was 6' 2" and 200#, so that would've given him enough confidence to charge Gibby.
His birth name is Ralph Pierre LaCock Jr. and his dad is Hollywood Squares host Peter Marshall.
Blue_true
(31,261 posts)After reading your first post and trying to find the person that wanted to take on Bob Gibson at the mound, I went and read more. Apparently Bob Gibson is why modern Pitchers pitch from a lower mound. Imagine a guy like Bob Gibson throwing heat at you from uphill.
CaptYossarian
(6,448 posts)I've been a Cub fan since 1968, when I would come home from second grade and find my mom watching WGN and Jack Brickhouse.
That's how I remember the existence of ex-Cub Pete LaCock. And what young teenage boy would forget a new Topps card with THAT name on it?
Gibson's and Denny McLain's (the last 30-game winner) seasons were so dominant that they had to change the rules. That doesn't happen often for individual players. Eddie Gaedel may have been the previous "player" to have that happen. That could manufacture an entire thread.
MakeTXBlue2020
(133 posts)I actually grew up in the St. Louis area and am still a huge Cardinals fan. Although Gibson's playing days were before my time, the stories of his dominance and incredible mound presence are legendary. A pitcher so good MLB had to change the rules by lowering the mound on account of his ridiculous 1.12 ERA! He won't be forgotten.
oswaldactedalone
(3,557 posts)and, of course, was a big fan of Gibson. I watched Game One of the 68 Series with Gibsons dominating 17 strikeout performance. Tiger batters called Gibbys pitches that day radio pitches because they couldnt see them, could only hear them.
From 6-2 through 9-2 that season, a stretch of 19 starts, his W-L record was 17-1 with an ERA of 0.57!!😳 He also averaged more than nine innings per start.😳😳 Surely the most dominant three month stretch of pitching ever. There are a number of really good extended interviews with Gibson and other Cardinal teammates on youtube. Definitely worth a listen.
rsdsharp
(10,118 posts)Gibson. Don Drysdale set a record for consecutive scoreless innings (which Bobby Kennedy acknowledged in his last speech), Denny McClain won 31 games, and only Carl Yastrzemski hit .300 in the AL (.301).