Posted on 09/22/2015 11:29:17 PM PDT by musicman
Edited on 09/23/2015 2:25:58 AM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
A loss that unquestionably transcends the game has sent all of baseball into deep mourning. Yogi Berra -- Hall of Famer, all-time Yankees legend, three-time Most Valuable Player, master of misstatement and beloved international icon, is gone. Berra died Tuesday night at age 90.
The announcement came early Wednesday morning and was announced via the Yogi Berra Museum's Twitter account.
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"Nobody goes there anymore, it's always too crowded." - Yogi Berra
There are some people that are simply one-of-a-kind and Yogi was one of them.
My favorite story was about those live tv shows before and after games where they gave the player some token for appearing for the interview. In those low-def early tv years, props had to be huge so Phil Rizzuto hands Yogi an oversized check for $50 that said in large letters “PAY TO BEARER” at which Yogi cracked “Hey, Phil! How long ya know me? You can’t spell my name???”
A champion - A wonderful life thank you Yogi for sharing it with all of us and for so long. His modern use of epigram rivals that Chesterton and Shakespeare. Now Mark Twain will finally have someone to make him laugh in the here after. Condolences to his family as they must be grieving as he seems like he was substantial in every way of his life. Sad to see you go but looking forward to new material when I see you again.
Let us not soon forget this man of common sense who taught us in cheer. Rest in peace Yogi
That was a good!!
Was just a kid, we saw him in a Old-Timers game at the stadium. Everyone loved him. What a guy!
Yogi Berra has done everything: He's been in movies and commercials. He's had an equally famous cartoon character named after him. He's in "Bartlett's Familiar Quotations," as well as baseball's Hall of Fame.
But a little-known fact is that on June 6, 1944, he was just Seaman 1st class Berra.
The famed Yankee catcher sat down with Keith Olbermann in his baseball museum at Montclair State University in New Jersey to speak about his experiences in Normandy Invasion.
Trained at Little Creek Base in Norfolk, Virginia, Berra proudly served the U.S. Navy from 1944-1945 when he was just 18. Berra helped soften up German defenses and ran messages from Omaha Beach to Utah Beach. He also participated in a second attack on France, receiving a medal from the French government for his efforts.
Oh, and he also coined the phrase, It aint over till its over!
KEITH OLBERMANN, HOST: Tell us a little about your experience on D-Day.
YOGI BERRA, WORLD WAR II VETERAN: Well, being a young guy, I thought it was like the Fourth of July, to tell you the truth. I said, "Boy, it looks pretty, all the planes coming over." And I was looking out and my officer said, "you better get your head down in here, if you want it on.:
Being a young guy, you didnt think nothing of it until you got in it. And so we went off 300 yards off beach. We protect the troops. If they ran into any trouble, we would fire the rockets over. We had a lead boat that would fire one rocket. If it hits the beach, then everybody opens up. We could fire one rocket if we wanted to, or we could fire off 24 or them, 12 on each side. We stretched out 50 yards apart. And that was the invasion.
Nothing happened to us. That's one good thing. Our boat could go anywhere, though. We were pretty good, flat bottom, 36-footer.
OLBERMANN: What was that boat called?
BERRA: Landing craft support small (LCSS), but we used say landing craft suicide squad. We had the nicknames for all. We called a LSD, a large stationary target.
A lot of our guys wanted to get off to go on the beach. I said, "No, Im staying on the boat." And so I didnt go on the beach. We lost one guy. He went on the beach and lost his life.
OLBERMANN: What happened during the next 12 days you were stationed on the LCSS, continuing to run interference for Army personnel?
BERRA: We had orders to shoot anything that came below the clouds. One of our own planes came down over the clouds and we shot it down. W were the closest to him to pick up the pilot. And you should have heard the words he was saying.
OLBERMANN: What kind of reception did you receive upon returning to Little Creek?
BERRA: We came back on an LSD, same way we went over. It took us 19 or 20 days both ways. When we got there, they took us in to see the doctors. Doctors asked us if it was scary going overseas and all and I said, "Well, it was, a little bit." But later on when it sinks in, you get scared. Ive seen guys drown. We would pick them up and everything.
OLBERMANN: How did you know that we had won at D-Day? Did you sense that from being there, that it had been a success?
BERRA: I thought we were going to win because I'd never seen so many planes in my life that came over for the invasion of Normandy.
I sit and I thank the good lord I was in the Navy. We ate good, clean clothes, clean bed. You see some of these Army men, what they went through, that's the one I felt for.
OLBERMANN: What would happen to all of us if D-Day had failed, if it hadnt worked, if the Germans had held the invasion off? Have you ever thought about what our lives would have been like?
BERRA: No, I never did think about it. I thought we had good generals there. Eisenhower was great. Everyone said, go ahead on the invasion.
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/5210564/ns/msnbc-countdown_with_keith_olbermann/t/yogi-berra-was-d-day/#.VgJfbn0lnBc
Yogi, the only Yankee you couldn’t hate.
The man gave more than he ever took out of baseball and life.
Thanks for that pic also!!!
PFL
“When you come to the Y in the road, take it.”
RIP.
One of the all-time greats. Prayers up.
(I still drink Yoo-hoo because of the commercials he did for them back in the early 60’s)
RIP Yogi.
“It is not over until it is over.”
That is the saying I tried to post!
Well...then I guess it’s over.
RIP Yogi.
A: "I don't know, surprise me."
ROFL
A true legend. R.I.P.
:(
Add Phil Rizzuto to that list.
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