Top 10 MLB Clubhouse CANCERS OF ALL TIME - Anger Management Issues & More!!

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Humm Baby Baseball

Humm Baby Baseball

Күн бұрын

In this week's documentary, we'll be counting down the TOP 10 MLB Clubhouse Cancers! This is just my persona list based on extensive research but there are plenty of "Dishonorable mentions" you can put in the comments section. BTW, Ty Cobb didn't make the list because he is quite misunderstood IMO and I am working on a video dedicated to him coming out soon. Barry Bonds, Manny Ramirez and A-Rod also missed out on the Top 10 but were considered.
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Пікірлер: 2 900
@teachersama
@teachersama Жыл бұрын
Carl Everett played winter ball in Venezuela... one day, he was ejected for protesting a strike call. Carl proceeded to insult the umpire, he went to the dugout and tossed everything he found to the field, took off his team jersey and sat within the crowd arguing that he could stay there since he wasn't playing anymore... He was then banned from ALL winter leagues.
@PaoloJairo
@PaoloJairo Жыл бұрын
That was with Magallanes right? I remember watching that game as a youngster lmao
@teachersama
@teachersama Жыл бұрын
@@PaoloJairo yes, I watched it too.
@PaoloJairo
@PaoloJairo Жыл бұрын
@@teachersama crazy that was I think when Phil Regan was manager and they were chasing after him and the team just gave up lol.
@teachersama
@teachersama Жыл бұрын
@@PaoloJairo yes 🤣
@alexulacio911
@alexulacio911 11 ай бұрын
@@PaoloJairo The Manager was Tim Tolman, by then Phil Regan was managing Caracas. You can find the clip here in youtube, just type "El día que Carl Everett se volvió loco en Maracay"
@10Peter25
@10Peter25 Жыл бұрын
That 2009 Cubs clubhouse must have been a hoot to have BOTH Carlos Zambrano AND Milton Bradley. Their manager, Lou Piniella, was also known to have some anger management issues himself. YIKES!
@leifopstad2972
@leifopstad2972 Жыл бұрын
Lou isn't exactly a mean guy, but man he had some legendary tirades
@FSUFootballman
@FSUFootballman 11 ай бұрын
True WGN was popping back then
@theHeelz7
@theHeelz7 11 ай бұрын
exactly what I was thinking watching this video lol
@williamstricko2594
@williamstricko2594 11 ай бұрын
Only in Chicago!!!!!!!!!!!
@orangehoof
@orangehoof 11 ай бұрын
i was going to say Zambrano and Bradley were so easy to set off that it was an actual strategy of opposing teams. Carlos could be pitching a three-hitter but if you just audibly called him a (gay slur in Spanish) and, immediately, he'd go crazy and get ejected.
@stockyjohn
@stockyjohn 11 ай бұрын
Honestly surprised Barry Bonds wasn't on this list. He was literally forced into retirement because no team would sign him even though he was asking for the league minimum.
@jollyboyjoe8619
@jollyboyjoe8619 3 ай бұрын
That’s because the league/media blackballed him others players where fine with him other then Jeff Kent
@bartdrennon1764
@bartdrennon1764 2 ай бұрын
@@jollyboyjoe8619 He was despised by his teammates for his over the top diva behavior in the clubhouse. .
@woodyreed2882
@woodyreed2882 2 ай бұрын
@@jollyboyjoe8619 Kent was his own kind of ashole though.
@darylmixan8170
@darylmixan8170 2 ай бұрын
probably more valuable than his antics... But it'd be hard to be the guy's teammate... If a player is a dick and doesn't apologize for it, thats one thing... but when a guy is a dick, a narcisst, and diva but he tries to play himself off as a humble common man, then they become disguising.
@CodeBlue_EMT-P
@CodeBlue_EMT-P 2 ай бұрын
@@jollyboyjoe8619In what world do you live?
@randybrooks3031
@randybrooks3031 11 ай бұрын
Fun Fact. I was with Milton Bradley during the day before the night game on June 3rd 2004 when he threw the ballbag on the field. I was working for Albertsons and we had to attend a charity event at a store in Burbank. Milton, Eric Gagne, David Ross and Jose Lima were the Dodger players at the event. It was a fill a grocery cart up in 15 minutes and donate the scanned amount to the charity. I got my pic with all of the players individually and quite a few of the event. They were all super nice but Milton was the most standoff-ish and reserved. Jose Lima was awesome and super outgoing as you would expect. Gagne freaked me out as I was assigned to help him. He grabbed a cart, and on the jarred baby food aisle, jammed his valuable right arm into the back of the shelf and with a huge sweeping motion, pushed all of the glass jars into the cart causing some of the jars to break. I thought he was going to slice his arm. Crazy. What a memory.
@Cinerary
@Cinerary 11 ай бұрын
They sound like degenerate drug addicts.
@trevenirey2354
@trevenirey2354 2 ай бұрын
RIP Jose Lima
@robthames5065
@robthames5065 2 ай бұрын
RIP Lima Time
@joeberg6301
@joeberg6301 2 ай бұрын
I too had a wonderful Jose Lima experience. He signed baseballs and offered to take pictures with my little brother and I when we went to Mets spring training in Florida one year. He was incredibly kind, and especially patient with all of the children who wanted to meet the players. RIP to a guy who seemed like a very kind soul.
@itsmeandnotyou113
@itsmeandnotyou113 Жыл бұрын
Colman throwing a firecracker into a crowd of fans puts him at NO.1 in my book. Great list
@larryridgeway1057
@larryridgeway1057 Жыл бұрын
He should have gone to jail for that. A few of these guys skated on charges that should have been filed.
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
yes, thrown into a crowd consisting largely of young kids asking players for autographs. should have been life in prison.
@donaldcronin3015
@donaldcronin3015 Жыл бұрын
It wasn't JUST a "firecracker "!!!
@donarthiazi2443
@donarthiazi2443 Жыл бұрын
​@@georgial6398 What... _"life in prison"?_ Grow up kid.
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
@@donarthiazi2443 yes, life in prison. he threw a bomb into a group of little children and infants and their parents. injured a 1 year old i believe, among others. i am plenty grown up, kid.
@AJHyoton
@AJHyoton 11 ай бұрын
Dodgers fan here. I remember that Milton Bradley moment with the baseballs, and I just want to say how cool Vin Scully was in that moment. Most former players turned announcers would be stunned silent, or start talking about the low character of the player, but my man Vin said something like, "He is throwing baseballs like he is at a wedding throwing rice. That's not a good sign." Way to rule, Vin! All he did was keep on making announcements
@petebetz5358
@petebetz5358 3 ай бұрын
Well, Vin Scully was perhaps one of the best announcers in the game ever had.
@unclerat2131
@unclerat2131 2 күн бұрын
Vin Scully was the reason I watched Dodgers ball on television. He kept it a game at all times.
@riff2072
@riff2072 2 сағат бұрын
@@unclerat2131 And me watching the NBC Game of the Week.
@davidenger9300
@davidenger9300 11 ай бұрын
Don't forget Jose Guillen - an incredibly talented player who played for 10 teams in 14 years because everyone hated him. Got kicked off the Angels in 2004 as they were moving into the playoffs in spite of his productivity because he was such a clubhouse problem.
@frankie3791
@frankie3791 9 ай бұрын
Wow I didn't know that about him.. No wonder why he was like a Mercenary lol
@bizzles44
@bizzles44 9 ай бұрын
Yea I would probably swap him and Papelbon. Paps was a dick but, wasn't really a problem until his last couple years with Philly and Washington
@mantis10_surf85
@mantis10_surf85 4 ай бұрын
Also, Juan Samuel put the nail in the coffin for the Mets after their amazing run from 1984 to 1990 ish
@allmyteamssuck2706
@allmyteamssuck2706 3 ай бұрын
I did not know that about Guillen. As a lifelong Tigers fan he was great for us play for us way longer than he played for anyone else maybe Jim Leyland and some of the other veteran leaders in that clubhouse were able to keep him in check maybe cuz he was not a problem in Detroit I didn't hear anything about him being a problem in the clubhouse while he was here.
@michaelstein7510
@michaelstein7510 Ай бұрын
I always wondered why he seemed to bounce around so many teams, despite being a good player. That makes sense now. Never realized he was a clubhouse cancer.
@Azian2DaMax
@Azian2DaMax Жыл бұрын
When Milton Bradley was with the Dodgers I met him once at a doctor's office as a kid. It was right after I had just gotten my nose cauterized and was walking out of the building with my mom as he was walking in. I was probably 9 or 10 at the time but was a big enough Dodger fan to be able to instantly recognize him. I asked him for a picture and he was totally nice about it and stood next to me and smiled while my mom got a photo on her old Nokia. I haven't seen that picture in years but I remember how goofy I looked next to him with my nose all stuffed and covered in gauze. At the time I wasn't aware of his reputation. I was just elated to meet a real life MLB player for the first and only time in my life. But looking back, I find it funny that that the only current big leaguer I've ever met in public also happened to be the biggest douchebag in MLB history (according to this video).
@jonathanrice1070
@jonathanrice1070 Жыл бұрын
He had it in him to be a great person. I kinda always looked at his misdeeds and thought “You’re better than that.”
@jmad627
@jmad627 Жыл бұрын
Cool story…hey one never knows.
@andyroid5028
@andyroid5028 Жыл бұрын
*He always carried anger - angry that his parents purposefully named him after a board game company.*
@Heathcoatman
@Heathcoatman Жыл бұрын
I'm a huge Dodgers fan as well. I used to work at this upscale liquor and wine store in the LA area so we would occasionally get celebrities in there. I met 3 Dodgers while at work. The first was Ramon Martinez, starting pitcher and Pedro's older brother. He was super nice and friendly, chatted with me for several minutes. Just a pleasant guy. The second was Jim Gott, a reliever and for a short time their closer. He had just been traded to the Pirates but he still called LA home. He was very friendly as well, and I could tell he wasnt used to being recognized. The 3rd was Bill Russell. He was the manager at the time but when I was a kid and watched games with my dad, he was the SS. Russell was a dick. He was rude to the staff, annoyed when recognized, and he ordered 2 cases of the cheapest dirt wine we had for some party. My boss tried to talk him out of it, saying for just 1$ a bottle more he could get a much better wine. He wasnt having it. Then 2 days later he returned the wine saying it wasnt good, and he was a dick then too. I was bummed, he was a childhood idol, and turns out, not a very good manager, either.
@jmad627
@jmad627 Жыл бұрын
@@Heathcoatman he was also a lousy shortstop.
@javi__...
@javi__... Жыл бұрын
The story about Milton Bradley and the abuse and later death of his girlfriend deserves its own video
@kylenickelberry1602
@kylenickelberry1602 Жыл бұрын
It was his wife who lost her life
@Harpo.jr70
@Harpo.jr70 Жыл бұрын
Sad
@John_Notmylastname
@John_Notmylastname 2 ай бұрын
It was his wife. He also beat up his new girlfriend while he was on probation for beating his wife who died. Truly a piece of shit.
@Mr.NoName1972
@Mr.NoName1972 4 ай бұрын
I remember that firecracker incident. Vince Coleman was quoted saying at the time "It was only a joke. What do you do when you throw a firecracker? You laugh. At least I do."
@DDEENY
@DDEENY 9 ай бұрын
Almost nobody knows the truth about the Yankee great Joe DiMaggio who was also an arrogant, notorious prima donna who wasn't well-liked by his teammates. Mickey Mantle never let on but Mantle noted in a veiled criticism of DiMaggio that Mantle's greatest career accomplishment was that his teammates liked him, and in fact they did. Mantle was a refreshing change for the Yankee players after DiMaggio's career ended. Although he was a superstar, Mantle refused special treatment and liked all of his teammates. He was a player's player.
@daniellinehan63
@daniellinehan63 3 ай бұрын
Joe D.'s treatment of his son was despicable
@williamjconde
@williamjconde 2 ай бұрын
Mantle said that during his 1951 rookie year. Joe D never ever talked to him the whole year.
@DDEENY
@DDEENY 2 ай бұрын
@@williamjconde Sounds about right and speaks to my point. Maybe Joe D. was jealous of Mantle. I'd also heard that a Yankee rookie's job was to have a cigarette lit and ready in the dugout so that Joe D. could drag on it as soon as he returned from the field.
@jirikurto3859
@jirikurto3859 Жыл бұрын
I'd put Vince Coleman above Rocker. Throwing an explosive and injuring a child with lifelong damage is absolutely disgusting.
@jamesesterline
@jamesesterline Жыл бұрын
It's insane how he wasn't banned for life after that
@jirikurto3859
@jirikurto3859 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesesterline The irony is that Vince Coleman was my favorite player when I first started following baseball when I was 8. I loved the Cardinals and for about three years Vince Coleman was my favorite player.
@nuwildcat90
@nuwildcat90 Жыл бұрын
Bret Saberhagen also threw an explosive at reporters as well as spraying bleach into the faces of reporters that same year on the Mets. Yet, Coleman received far more negative publicity than Saberhagen did
@demonkingbadger6689
@demonkingbadger6689 Жыл бұрын
@@jirikurto3859 it did seem Herzog kept him somewhat in control. I also remember the Mets in 1992 with an outfield of Coleman, Bonilla, and Howard Johnson, not realizing that 1 had to play center.
@samuelperezgarcia
@samuelperezgarcia Жыл бұрын
He should be #1 just based on that incident.
@TMC1982Part2
@TMC1982Part2 Жыл бұрын
Milton Bradley's tirade at the 15:21 mark however, did lead to a classic remark by the great Vin Scully: "Milton Bradley...has thrown baseballs like rice at a wedding!"
@rackstraw
@rackstraw Жыл бұрын
5:16 Jimmy Dugan: Rogers Hornsby was my manager, and he called me a talking pile of pigsh*t. And that was when my parents drove all the way down from Michigan to see me play the game. And did I cry? Evelyn Gardner: No, no. Jimmy Dugan: No! No! And you know why? Because there's no crying in baseball.
@Soma2710
@Soma2710 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, whenever I hear Rogers Hornsby’s name, I always think of that line XD
@davidaltman8831
@davidaltman8831 Жыл бұрын
@@Soma2710 actually when i hear his name i remember reading the reds waited till they fired him to bring up chuck harmon because hornsby was such a biggot
@shermswarthau5366
@shermswarthau5366 Жыл бұрын
Evelyn should start using her head. It's that lump that's 3 feet above her a$$!
@ruffkuntry2574
@ruffkuntry2574 Жыл бұрын
Umpire: Jimmy Jimmy: She’s crying, sir! Umpire: Good rule of thumb. Treat each of these girls as you would treat your mother. Jimmy: Did anyone ever tell you, you look like a penis with that little hat on? Umpire: You’re out of here! Jimmy: No, no you misunderstood me. You misunderstood!
@jonstefanik9400
@jonstefanik9400 9 ай бұрын
Treat each of these girls like you would treat your mother
@sethcollens3729
@sethcollens3729 11 ай бұрын
I love the fact you included old school players. Not like these modern so called experts who only know of and chose modern players in their lists. Well done
@jayseaborg3895
@jayseaborg3895 10 ай бұрын
He could have included Dirty Jack Doyle, a very good late 19th century and early 20th century player who finished with a lifetime .299 avg. He played 17 seasons, but never more than 4 for one team.
@Lava1964
@Lava1964 11 ай бұрын
I've read quite a bit about Hal Chase. Everyone knew he was corrupt. The scary thing is that his deliberate dumping of games was tolerated in MLB for so long.
@DemonKingBadger
@DemonKingBadger 4 ай бұрын
Probably helped that he started with the New York Highlanders (future Yankees), whose owners at the time Farrell and Every got rich through New York organized crime. (AL front office were desperate to compete against the NL in NYC, so they made a deal with the devil as it were)
@chainlinkwarden
@chainlinkwarden 3 ай бұрын
The fact they let Hal stay and banned shoeless joe with no real evidence shows the mlb has been batshit with decision making since the beginning.
@DemonKingBadger
@DemonKingBadger 3 ай бұрын
@@chainlinkwarden Hal Chase did get banned about a year after the Black Sox
@ByTheSpirit84
@ByTheSpirit84 3 ай бұрын
They only started to care because their product was being threatened. The Black Sox scandal nearly ended professional baseball, and because of that, they suddenly had a care about it. I would almost certainly bet some of the powers that existed in early MLB knew and benefitted from Hal Chase's behavior which is why it was allowed.
@scottblackwell1215
@scottblackwell1215 3 ай бұрын
Kinda like Angel Hernandez and Dan Bellino in the present time.
@elc1960
@elc1960 Жыл бұрын
I have my own story about Milton Bradley: I was a member of a men's chorus in Rhode Island in the early 2000s when he was in the Indians' system, and their AAA affiliate was in Pawtucket for a series when we were scheduled to sing the anthem before a game at McCoy Stadium. While we were waiting to go on the field, several players and their manager at the time, Eric Wedge, were in the visitors' dugout near where we were, and some of us spoke with Wedge briefly (a nice guy, btw). Bradley saw us talking and he said something like "Get the fuck outta here, we got a game to play!" He also gave us a look that suggested that if we didn't move away quickly, he would make us. Keep in mind that this was about 15 minutes before the pre-game ceremonies, and we were in a waiting area outside the dugout, a good 10-12 feet from Wedge and his players. A little over a year later I believe there was a story about Bradley hitting an umpire while he was in the minors, so this behavior was always in him, and he likely never should have played professional team sports at all.
@johnpastore7685
@johnpastore7685 Жыл бұрын
So sorry, he was a dick. He is a board game. Milton Bradley.
@erickh82082
@erickh82082 Жыл бұрын
He’s a mental case
@johnnygunzfilmbuff7821
@johnnygunzfilmbuff7821 Жыл бұрын
That's awful. Heard stories about him on not being a nice guy.
@BrettShadow
@BrettShadow Жыл бұрын
I mean... ok sure he had a bad day... but he invented friggin Monopoly! So ....
@ldo1308
@ldo1308 Жыл бұрын
@@BrettShadow and the ouiji board too, don't forget.
@PrimarySweeper13
@PrimarySweeper13 Жыл бұрын
Fun story My dads friends sister was actually proposed to by Albert Belle. When asked why she didn’t marry Albert, IN THE MIDDLE OF HIS PRIME, she said it was “because he was an asshole.”
@ryancrawford8042
@ryancrawford8042 11 ай бұрын
Met rocker once. For some inconceivable reason, Honda brought him in to work a booth at the little league world series. He was a headcase. He ended up leaving after getting in an argument with a kid about 12 years old.
@wookiee_beard
@wookiee_beard 3 ай бұрын
really? I cannot find a clip or even a mention of him being there lol, not saying its untrue just wished they had the video LOL.
@woodyreed2882
@woodyreed2882 2 ай бұрын
Well he often acted like a 12 year old himself. Steroids are a powerful drug. I'm sure a lot of these modern day guys were under the influence.
@Heathcoatman
@Heathcoatman 2 ай бұрын
@@woodyreed2882 His 'ideas' didnt come from steroids, they came from being taught how to hate everyone not exactly like him in the small town in Georgia he grew up in. Steroids might make you angry, but being a bigot takes indoctrination.
@wolftmfg
@wolftmfg 2 ай бұрын
@@Heathcoatmanwell said
@brtecson
@brtecson 2 ай бұрын
Wth was honda thinking😅.. when you pay for a John Rocker, you get a John Rocker
@SportsBoss999
@SportsBoss999 5 ай бұрын
Really good list. You did your research. Being a Red Sox fan, I didn't remember his comments about Red Sox fans. He's actually loved in the city now, doing Red Sox pre and post game analysis. I'm very familiar with Carl Everett as well. His temper was legendary. I never knew Vince Coleman was that bad. Good comprehensive and fact filled video. Well done!
@unkledoda420
@unkledoda420 Жыл бұрын
I like this top10 topic, it's different. Most channels just do the usual top10 lists like "worst/best free agent signings or trade deals" or "best/worse players at whatever position or from whatever era of time". When you've seen enough of those lists tou realize they're all basically the same with a player or two or the ordering changed up a bit. This kept me interested.
@higgy04
@higgy04 Жыл бұрын
Every time I saw Milton Bradley 'play', all I could think about was the board game company that made 'Operation' and numerous other games
@dirtylemon3379
@dirtylemon3379 Жыл бұрын
Remove funny bone.
@sukhastings4200
@sukhastings4200 Жыл бұрын
His nickname was game board
@IdliAmin_TheLastKingofSambar
@IdliAmin_TheLastKingofSambar Жыл бұрын
If only there had been an opposing pitcher named Parker Brothers.
@MillerGenuineDraft1980
@MillerGenuineDraft1980 Ай бұрын
The red nose lighting up and that god damn noise it makes when you miss still haunts me
@mrpayne123
@mrpayne123 10 ай бұрын
Carl Everett: “Somebody actually saw Adam and Eve eating apples. No one ever saw a T Rex." Who saw Adam & Eve?
@ktbeatty
@ktbeatty 3 ай бұрын
Carl has never heard of The Flinstones it seems. Somebody gotta educate the man.
@MrSpongemike44
@MrSpongemike44 2 ай бұрын
a talking snake
@SunglassSensei
@SunglassSensei Ай бұрын
​@@MrSpongemike44 Jewish myth
@joey2beers
@joey2beers 11 ай бұрын
I really appreciate that you looked at more historical players instead of just guys who played in the last 12 or so years. Great video
@dustinsilver7818
@dustinsilver7818 Жыл бұрын
Nyjer Morgan should definitely be on this list as well. Also Shea Hillibrand.
@slydanno70
@slydanno70 Жыл бұрын
Don’t you mean Tony Plush?
@johnpastore7685
@johnpastore7685 Жыл бұрын
Ozzie Geion. The player and later Marlins Manger
@johnpastore7685
@johnpastore7685 Жыл бұрын
Lasting Millage. Total A hole
@johnpastore7685
@johnpastore7685 Жыл бұрын
His farther was even annoying, too
@WildfireWiffler44
@WildfireWiffler44 Жыл бұрын
I remember watchin Shea Hillibrand in Affiliate Ball when I went to a Bridgeport Bluefish game like 10 years ago..dude was nasty to the fans and played very lazy.
@mattdavis4248
@mattdavis4248 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised Ty Cobb & Barry Bonds were not on this list
@TMC1982Part2
@TMC1982Part2 Жыл бұрын
Ty Cobb is a very complex case. His defenders will say that his biographer, Al Stump sensationalized and exaggerated the more unsavory aspects of Cobb's life, and the general public pretty much accepted that what Stump wrote was truly reflective of the real man.
@sortofanoakyafterbirth3661
@sortofanoakyafterbirth3661 Жыл бұрын
I also bet Ty Cobb was probably a great teammate, but his opponents hated him. Just a guess though. Maybe some sportswriters hated how he played a bit too rough and the reputation stuck that he was an ass.
@donarthiazi2443
@donarthiazi2443 Жыл бұрын
​​@@sortofanoakyafterbirth3661Ty Cobb was hated by teammates. The PBS documentary on baseball made that clear. The only time they took his side was when he was absolutely beating the hell out of a fan for calling him a halfnigger. When Ty was told by other fans that the man was stomping was a cripple... Cobb beat him even harder. His teammates, though they hated Cobb, all agreed that _"being called something that despicable was an insult too great to bear"._ Unreal Edit: As an aside: I can't get over Rocker being number 2? He didn't do anything even close to what the others on this list did?
@LogicallyKnot
@LogicallyKnot Жыл бұрын
@@donarthiazi2443 Rocker spoke the truth. Truth hurts. The narrator seems to be a soft ass liberal. Probably from Seattle.
@chadhoy7489
@chadhoy7489 11 ай бұрын
Cobb was a bastard
@bulldscw
@bulldscw 11 ай бұрын
Albert Belle was my favorite player growing up. I never knew this stuff back then obviously. Just saw a big dude who hit lots of home runs.
@bryansherman9414
@bryansherman9414 3 ай бұрын
Well, done! A couple of those players could be rearranged in different orders, but overall very spot on with those 10 players. And I like the fact that he backed everything up with facts for each player to support his reasoning.
@finetoothcombpickers9916
@finetoothcombpickers9916 Жыл бұрын
Shocked not to see Yasiel Puig on the list.
@AEMoreira81
@AEMoreira81 Жыл бұрын
Could have been an honorable mention. He's looking at prison time as I type.
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
i really hated Puig. and he would do stuff every game, every AB. constant drama and attention seeking stuff and not in a fun Javy Baez on the Cubs way either. made the games very much not fun but of course the leftists wanted to convince us he was making the game fun. no.
@sengle928
@sengle928 Жыл бұрын
Dodger fans seem to love him, But then again, it’s Dodger fans.
@ocasio3024
@ocasio3024 11 ай бұрын
@@georgial6398 Nevermind you’re warped jaded bullshit politics you F ing retard! Stick to the topic moron!
@metadreamland
@metadreamland 10 ай бұрын
@@georgial6398why are you bringing politics into baseball pretty gay
@Tafsman
@Tafsman Жыл бұрын
The worst part about Milton Bradley is, he had sooooo much talent and would've been a perennial all-star.
@UnicornOfDepression
@UnicornOfDepression Жыл бұрын
I was at the game where he tore his ACL. That dude was talented as hell, but after a month, you wanted him traded fast.
@piplh
@piplh Жыл бұрын
The strangest thing about Milton Bradley is he was a patient hitter with an 11.9% walk rate. If he was only that patient in every other aspect of his life.
@beaboss4yourself251
@beaboss4yourself251 Жыл бұрын
I couldn't believe the Cubs Signed Bradley 😂😂
@beaboss4yourself251
@beaboss4yourself251 Жыл бұрын
@@RapIsDeadly U have More sir? Or no
@donizzo30
@donizzo30 Жыл бұрын
@@RapIsDeadly miserable white hater … lots of these types 🤧
@adammccartin7000
@adammccartin7000 Ай бұрын
Great video!! Some I had forgot and a few I didn't even kno were such high quality people! 😂
@lindabeaman9779
@lindabeaman9779 11 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this podcast. My first time listening. Very eye-opening! Thank you!
@SportsBoss999
@SportsBoss999 5 ай бұрын
Podcast? This is not a podcast. Sorry.
@jamesesterline
@jamesesterline Жыл бұрын
Honestly surprised Elijah Dukes wasn't on the list even though he only played 3 seasons
@ajenning85
@ajenning85 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. His name was on the tip of my tongue. Short, uneventful MLB career but Hall Of Fame caliber cancer.
@GeeEm1313
@GeeEm1313 Жыл бұрын
I thought he would be #1!
@Echognomics101
@Echognomics101 Жыл бұрын
​@@ajenning85Hall of SHAME 😅
@internetperson9121
@internetperson9121 3 ай бұрын
He was notorious!!! I guess he didn’t stick in the league long enough but you’re right
@Seamhead1967
@Seamhead1967 Жыл бұрын
Since Hornsby is on the list, I'm going to go even more old school and nominate Carl Mays, who not only threw the pitch that killed Ray Chapman in 1920 but was despised by pretty much everyone, including teammates. Whether Mays purposely hit Chapman is debatable, but he was a horse's ass well before that tragic event. In 1919, Mays tired of getting little run support from his Red Sox teammates and second baseman Jack Barry's penchant for making errors with Mays on the mound (I checked, and eight of Barry's 12 errors in 1919 came when Mays pitched). The final straw came on July 13, 1919, when catcher Wally Schang accidentally hit Mays with a throw to second base on an attempted steal. Mays stormed off the field and refused to play for the Red Sox again. The Sox traded him to the Yankees, much to the chagrin of Yankees manager Miller Huggins, who couldn't stand Mays. Huggins once left Mays in a game in which the Indians pounded him for 13 runs on 20 hits. Of Mays, Huggins said "if he was in a gutter, I'd kick him." In Philadelphia, a warrant was issued for Mays's arrest after he threw a ball into the stands as hard as he could and hit a fan. He fled the city and avoided pitching there again for fear that he'd be arrested and charged with assault. He was also accused of throwing World Series games, but the charges were never proved. From Mays's SABR biography: "Mays was once described by F.C. Lane as 'a strange, cynical figure' who 'aroused more ill will, more positive resentment than any other ballplayer on record.'
@sirlawrence9161
@sirlawrence9161 Жыл бұрын
Good call
@brucebostick2521
@brucebostick2521 Жыл бұрын
wouldve LOVED to see the "you fucking just stay in there, asshole---see how U like a 12.00 ERA tomorrow!" game! lol
@10Peter25
@10Peter25 Жыл бұрын
Some of the factors I'd read that contributed to Chapman's fatal beaning included the following: the use of one baseball for the whole game, even after it had become filthy with dirt and whatever foreign substances had been applied to the ball; the common but since-banned practice of doctoring the ball with a wide variety of substances (spit, grease, dirt, scuffs, etc.), the darkness of playing the game into the sunset hours without lights; Carl Mays's submarine pitch delivery; the non-use of batting helmets, which wouldn't be required for another few decades; etc. Mays may have also tried to hit Chapman, but I've never seen that cited as a factor in the beaning. Chapman didn't even see the pitch that killed him. I do believe that Mays was horrified to learn that his pitch actually killed Chapman.
@brucebostick2521
@brucebostick2521 Жыл бұрын
@@10Peter25 good points, from all ive read/heard!
@crawjo
@crawjo 11 ай бұрын
It's been my understanding that the allegations of throwing the World Series, though never proven, were serious enough to prevent Mays from reaching the Hall of Fame. With a record of 207-126, he's the type of pitcher that probably could have reached the HOF if everyone didn't hate him so much.
@toddcogswell9470
@toddcogswell9470 11 ай бұрын
You went back into history good for you. I would add honorable mentions of Manny no hustle Machado and Yasial Puig
@redrum0929
@redrum0929 10 ай бұрын
Brilliant Jacob! Love your channel!
@jimray2281
@jimray2281 Жыл бұрын
Loved when a caller would respond to Howard Eskin’s “I haven’t had a bad day in my life” with “mmmm, what about the time you sent flowers to that married lady?”
@matthewandress1229
@matthewandress1229 Жыл бұрын
Such a great channel and I love that you do follow up videos all the time because it tells me you read comments research stories! In the next one you should include Rob Dibble for any number of reasons, as well as Matt Garza. I watched a Rangers game in person and he shook off his catcher enough times that I started noticing it. He would give up a hard hit after and his catcher (Navarro I believe) came out to the mound and they ended up having to be separated as most of the Tampa Bay team ran on the field.
@susantownsend8397
@susantownsend8397 4 ай бұрын
I’d like to see a study on clubhouse relationships in winning teams.
@clintdiaz5604
@clintdiaz5604 Ай бұрын
I was a little surprised that Jose Conseco was not on this list.
@Dunkaroos248
@Dunkaroos248 Жыл бұрын
Just when I thought bonds was gonna be number 1, you rewarded my patience and listed my man Milton. This guy had the talent to be something special but was batshit crazy and couldn’t get his life together.
@justinfowich6662
@justinfowich6662 Жыл бұрын
The Papelbon / Harper fight really hurt Harper's image at the time because he was more of a high-profile guy than Papelbon, and everyone wanted to believe that Harper was the problem. Turns out, Harper is a really cool dude, and Papelbon was the jackass.
@cappy2282
@cappy2282 11 ай бұрын
Ya Harper is awesome dude and great player 😎
@kendallevans4079
@kendallevans4079 11 ай бұрын
They both were a-holes
@staffsaber534
@staffsaber534 11 ай бұрын
Nah, Harper was pretty stupid and immature too when he was in Washington. He finally grew up when he moved to Philly. DC still has a HUGE grudge against him. He still gets booed at Nats Park when he comes up to bat.
@frankie3791
@frankie3791 9 ай бұрын
Pap was a top serious hothead smh
@kendallevans4079
@kendallevans4079 9 ай бұрын
@@staffsaber534 Good! I hate the guy and always will. I hope he suffers a career ending injury soon.
@jeffquinn5653
@jeffquinn5653 11 ай бұрын
What strikes me is the fact these cancers are given chance after chance. If nobody would pick them up, maybe their behavior would change.
@evanthesquirrel
@evanthesquirrel 11 ай бұрын
I met Pap when I worked at best buy next to Fenway. He had a pair of fan girls with him. They were paying for their stuff and he was standing off to the side with sunglasses on acting like he wasn't there. I told him his posture gave him away.
@alansaltzman6933
@alansaltzman6933 Жыл бұрын
Who remembers when Jose Offerman went after an opposing team's pitcher with a baseball bat? He was with the Long Island Ducks at the time.
@harrylook7810
@harrylook7810 Жыл бұрын
Awfulman. Wasn't nearly good enough to be doing stuff that crazy.
@MrOccyc
@MrOccyc 9 ай бұрын
Yep, I remember that nutcase.
@fratzogmopars
@fratzogmopars 17 күн бұрын
Juan Marichal actually clubbed Johnny Roseboro on the head with a bat during a brawl in the 1960’s. Those darn firey latins.
@wiley666
@wiley666 Жыл бұрын
How did Barry Bonds and A.J. Pierzynski not make this list?
@mattm7798
@mattm7798 Жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly!
@AEMoreira81
@AEMoreira81 Жыл бұрын
Pierzynski was generally liked in his clubhouse. Bonds had beef primarily with Jeff Kent (Secret Base did a Beef History on him).
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
@@AEMoreira81 And so was Carlos Zambrano, yet here he is on this list. Big Z was no cancer.
@arizonawrestlinginterviews1040
@arizonawrestlinginterviews1040 Жыл бұрын
@@AEMoreira81 I actually just watched that episode of Beef History
@cod16p
@cod16p Жыл бұрын
@@georgial6398 big z was a huge cancer nobody in Chicago liked him the fans hated him I mean just watch this video 😂
@staringatthesun861
@staringatthesun861 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for including Hornsby and Chase, from the distant past. Too often these "all-time" videos only focus on very recent history.
@SportsBoss999
@SportsBoss999 5 ай бұрын
Surprised that Ty Cobb wasn't included. Sliding in spikes up all the time. Disgusting.
@daniellinehan63
@daniellinehan63 3 ай бұрын
Hornsby- great hitter/ Lousy human He chased Hack Wilson & Danny Taylor out of baseball
@JoshHonaker-nm3ch
@JoshHonaker-nm3ch 11 ай бұрын
Great job on this piece
@CWREDnYELLA816
@CWREDnYELLA816 Жыл бұрын
At the end of his career while I’m Seattle, Milton Bradley was in KC playing the Royals at Kauffman Stadium. My two buddies and I had tickets in the front row of 103, the sonic slam section. We always go early for BP and like to joke around with those shagging hoping to make someone laugh and get some balls for kids sitting around us. This kid next to us was a Mariners fan and wanted his autograph so we hollered to show him the kids sign only for him to tell us “I’m not blind or deaf, you dumb motherfuckas…” So then we were all in making him as mad as we could. Finally in the 6th with 2 outs, a ball gets hit right at us and off the bat looks like a HR ends up dying just short on the track. We screamed practically right in his ears and he caught it, looked up at us and for a couple seconds I thought for certain he was jump into the row and gonna start fighting us, but he called us “pussies” and for a second time acter like he was tossing a ball to another kid only to fake it and put it in his back pocket. Next half inning, he was nearly ejected for bat flipping strike 3 that he though was ball 4. He didn’t get ran but they did replace him right then which ended up being the straw that broke the camels back and landed him on the suspended list which he never returned from!
@chrislewis5069
@chrislewis5069 Жыл бұрын
I had no idea about Vince Coleman. I can’t believe he threw an m100 into a crowd. I’ve done some really bad stuff myself. That could be considered aggravated assault at best and attempted murder at the worst
@susanmenegus5543
@susanmenegus5543 Жыл бұрын
Me to .
@ingenito919
@ingenito919 Жыл бұрын
When the Mets signed him he also set firecrackers in the stadium injuring a kid
@davidhull1481
@davidhull1481 Жыл бұрын
This is news to me too. I wonder to what extent he was protected by the media. I think a lot of bad behavior went without comment- players didn’t want to rat out other players, home town sports writers didn’t want to piss off the owners, etc.
@drizzle452
@drizzle452 Жыл бұрын
That’s really wild
@Kingbossdon
@Kingbossdon Жыл бұрын
Wow I didn't know this about him
@zakdean3002
@zakdean3002 10 ай бұрын
Rogers Hornsby always reminds me of that line in A League of their own where Tom Hanks talks about him humiliating him when his parents where in the stand. Lol
@peterlombardo4301
@peterlombardo4301 11 ай бұрын
I personally know Nyjer Morgan and am shocked he didn’t make the list. We had a house party one night. He had caught wind of it while buying weed from my roommate earlier in the day. He just showed up uninvited and started harassing some girls. We had to physically remove him. He wanted to fight all 10 of us that threw him out lol. He kept saying “I fought against real men, hockey players.” Also that “ten regular guys was nothing to him.” He was spitting and even bit one guy as we dragged him out. He was truly insane and out of control. Then when I saw his on the field antics it totally made sense. Maybe he wasn’t around long enough to make this list, but judging by the few times I met him I and saw his on the field tantrums, I am sure he was a locker room cancer. I actually have a few more stories about him acting crazy, but nothing like the house party situation.
@Classicrocker6119
@Classicrocker6119 Жыл бұрын
It’s really pathetic that the guys on this list just don’t get it. Being an MLB player is a privilege not a right. All of them had talent but wasted their careers away with unruly and disrespectful behaviour. As a big baseball fan in Western Canada I can’t wait for the 2023 season (especially after a frigid winter!). Thanks for sharing and I have already subscribed.
@unclesamowitz9922
@unclesamowitz9922 11 ай бұрын
What did John Rocker do that was "unruly" or "disprespectful"? He simply engaged in his First Amendment right to Free Speech. And was correct to boot.
@symptomofsouls
@symptomofsouls 11 ай бұрын
​@@unclesamowitz9922I got suspended from a team for 2 games in HS (football) for bringing up the anunaki during practice. They had to make a rule "no talking about lizard people" Because I kept bringing them up and one of the kids (a LB) couldn't stand it. I would talk about them and skinwalkers until he would scream at me to shut up. When I switched schools I managed to get him ejected for throwing a punch at me because every time I beat him on a route for the whole game I would taunt him and call him "lizard man"
@jayclean5653
@jayclean5653 6 күн бұрын
​@@symptomofsouls You sound like an absolute clown.
@Mpetey123
@Mpetey123 15 сағат бұрын
It's not a privilege. It's a job.
@diabolico394
@diabolico394 Жыл бұрын
My memorable Carl Everett story occurred during a mid 90s minor league game against the Padres AAA team, the Las Vegas Stars. I recall him getting into an altercation at 2nd base (I don’t remember what happened.). What I do remember is him yelling at fans in the stands as he was walking back to the dugout. Things got heated really quick. He had to be pulled back by his teammates as he attempted to go into the stands. I can remember seeing his meltdowns on the field years after. Wasn’t surprised about any of it. He was a nutcase
@martindupont521
@martindupont521 9 ай бұрын
Looks like roid rage on a low IQ individual
@bryangolnick8663
@bryangolnick8663 11 ай бұрын
Absolutely love the disclaimer at the beginning that you don’t know any of the players. That was my assumption but i guess you never know lol
@bryangolnick8663
@bryangolnick8663 11 ай бұрын
and another at the end?! this guy is awesome
@GregTheTerrible
@GregTheTerrible 11 ай бұрын
I would definitely put Chad Curtis on a list like this. Long before he was sexually assaulting teenage girls, Curtis was getting into scraps with his teammates over the music they were playing in the clubhouse and overall espousing a “holier than thou” attitude towards players and coaches.
@bigrich6075
@bigrich6075 5 ай бұрын
He gave Derek Jeter grief during a brawl with the Seattle Mariners in 1999 when Jeter and A-Rod were just talking to each other like best friends.
@TMC1982Part2
@TMC1982Part2 Ай бұрын
I always think of Chad Curtis for deliberlity and publicly snubbing Jim Gray live on NBC, who wanted to interview him following Curtis' walk off home run in Game 3 of the 1999 World Series against Atlanta. Gray at the time, took a lot of heat for his pregame interview with Pete Rose in Game 2, where Gray basically badgered Rose into confessing that he bet on baseball games prior to his banishment in 1989. Curtis made it look like he was speaking on behalf of the entire team, when he told Gray point blank that he didn't want to talk to him in retaliation for the Rose interview.
@neilmiranda6739
@neilmiranda6739 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video and trip down memory lane. I had forgotten about almost all of these wonderful humans and wasn't even aware Hornsby had such a bad rep.
@sukhastings4200
@sukhastings4200 Жыл бұрын
They missed Ty Cobb, who wasn't exactly loved by anyone. When once asked about Cobb, former teammate Sam Crawford was reputed to say" I or anyone else on this team wants anything to do with him"
@neilmiranda6739
@neilmiranda6739 Жыл бұрын
@Suk Hastings In the description, he mentions leaving Cobb off this list because he believes him to be misunderstood. He says he's planning a separate video on Cobb. I'll be interested to hear his reasoning because, like you, I've heard nothing but toxicity regarding Cobb.
@buckfan1969
@buckfan1969 Жыл бұрын
Surprised to not see Bonds on this list...
@daniellinehan63
@daniellinehan63 3 ай бұрын
He was a racist to other ballplayers
@ilafan
@ilafan 11 ай бұрын
Excellent list!
@misisipimike8020
@misisipimike8020 Ай бұрын
Nice to see Candlestick in the intro. Saw my first MLB games there back in the 90s.
@stevencooke6451
@stevencooke6451 Жыл бұрын
If a non-athlete did even one of the non-game related things mentioned they would be staring at long prison sentences. We really need to stop treating celebrities differently.
@terrenceolivido741
@terrenceolivido741 4 ай бұрын
it gets a lot more uglier. having said that i love when people pipe up with really nice personal encounters with a sports star. however, a lot of these guys are just not very good people. they are average people and now you add money, status and drugs to that.
@elc1960
@elc1960 Жыл бұрын
I don't know if he qualifies for your list, but another interesting character in this realm is the much traveled Jose Offerman (Dodgers, Reds, Royals, Red Sox, and many others). He doesn't have quite the history of some of these guys, but he was a pain in the ass for his teammates and managers. Believe it or not, he's the father of WWE wrestler Bray Wyatt's fiancee, Joseann "JoJo" Offerman.
@Mattyoung5150
@Mattyoung5150 28 күн бұрын
It turned out the women lied about Bauer.
@JLeppert
@JLeppert 11 күн бұрын
Shocker
@fonzworthbentley7455
@fonzworthbentley7455 2 ай бұрын
I don't know anything about baseball, but these videos are entertaining 😊
@TaterChip91
@TaterChip91 Жыл бұрын
Jon Rocker was also the inspiration behind the show East Bound and Down and the personality of Kenny Powers...which if you haven't seen that show, I recommend it
@brucebostick2521
@brucebostick2521 Жыл бұрын
rocker threw personal fits (bad) but bradley did them publicly, stopped games, fought w teamates. Just an ego-driven cancer (w some useless talent)
@tatevancleve1802
@tatevancleve1802 Жыл бұрын
Totally concure, esp the first season... pure gold! In fact my comment on this video was "where is Kenny Fucking Power?" Lol
@gregpettis1113
@gregpettis1113 Жыл бұрын
I agree with everything rocker said
@bertmacklinfbi915
@bertmacklinfbi915 Жыл бұрын
@@gregpettis1113 You must be the life of the party, and not a total douche.
@kennybeans6115
@kennybeans6115 Жыл бұрын
And let’s be honest, his description of NYC was pretty accurate. 😌
@big8dog887
@big8dog887 Жыл бұрын
Quite pleasantly surprised not to see Ty Cobb on this list. He wasn't always the most pleasant person in the world, but his reputation for nastiness is overblown, mainly because of a hack sportswriter that he hired to do his autobiography.
@jaydubaic21
@jaydubaic21 Жыл бұрын
Hornsby has him beat by a mile and seas a good inclusion.
@unkledoda420
@unkledoda420 Жыл бұрын
Didn't Cobb shoot guy then the Tigers owner paid the police so Cobb got off scot free?
@samilles472
@samilles472 Жыл бұрын
I think it was a hack sportswriter that was salty that Cobb didn't hire him to write his autobiography.
@tigercap100
@tigercap100 Жыл бұрын
Agree. But disappointed to see Rocker on this list. Teammates loved him. The media blew it up
@rowdyghost4713
@rowdyghost4713 Жыл бұрын
Lol dude was a flat out baccy chewing racist, and there are countless first hand accounts of his unacceptable behavior.
@jesmitty7639
@jesmitty7639 4 ай бұрын
Where’s Cobb, in all this? I thought he would have certainly been on here? I really enjoyed your work it was entertaining. 👍
@mahtinp
@mahtinp 7 күн бұрын
My other thought ... that entire sequence of clips of Milton Bradley is just Eric Wedge having to try to restrain him at multiple stops through their careers. Like ... Wedge had to try to manage both Milton Bradley AND Brandon Phillips together for a few seasons, and unfortunately Cleveland traded away Phillips first instead.
@stevefaure415
@stevefaure415 Жыл бұрын
Good stuff, I appreciate the effort put into this one.
@henrywallace55555
@henrywallace55555 Жыл бұрын
Great video! Surprised Dave Kingman didn't make the list. Also, according to Bill James, one of the reasons manager Hornsby was voted off the team was because he refused to stop pissing in the showers.
@supham1968
@supham1968 Жыл бұрын
According to his ex-teammates, Kingman was a good teammate but he really hated the media. He was often misquoted (he believed it was deliberate) and he pulled a prank on a reporter by sending her a live rat. He believed women didn’t belong in a men’s locker room.
@sukhastings4200
@sukhastings4200 Жыл бұрын
Kong was a decent teammate when he was with the Cubs. He disliked the NY media, which affected his teammates
@markkaminski2416
@markkaminski2416 Жыл бұрын
Years ago a wise old well respected coworker said "The dumbest man is the guy that gets out of the shower to take a leak". 😊
@charlescap-bu5cn
@charlescap-bu5cn 10 ай бұрын
AND while still in his uniform!
@oldgordo61
@oldgordo61 4 ай бұрын
@@sukhastings4200I can understand his dislike for the media as players managers are often misquoted by the media or are asked the same stupid questions over and over..
@UpdogGolf
@UpdogGolf 10 ай бұрын
Im so glad you didnt do low hanging fruit like a-rod. Solid video
@tomgeauvreau7099
@tomgeauvreau7099 21 күн бұрын
I couldn't understand why so many teams gave Bradley a chance. He was nuts. At a Blue Jays game he took a ball right down the middle for strike 3 and threw his bat up against the backstop. He couldn't blame the umpire but was still tossed.
@komickaze85
@komickaze85 Жыл бұрын
I saw Papelbon and Everett up close when they were with the Red Sox. I'll never forget when Everett headbutted an umpire because the ump said he wasn't fully in the batter's box. And Papelbon didn't have any major incidents in Boston, but him choking Harper was unforgivable.
@thuaug4417
@thuaug4417 Жыл бұрын
I often take these with a grain of salt. I recall when Devon White was traded to the Jays. He had a reputation as “great glove, but a head-case and clubhouse cancer.” All he did in Jays uni was put his head down, played hard, and won championships. Never saw a trace of negative character from him.
@NJGuy1973
@NJGuy1973 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes a player doesn't fit in well one place, but does in another.
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
there are cases like that in various sports, where a guy has a rep but it's based on one team/situation. then goes somewhere and is fine. it's when it's multiple teams/years/situations that you know it's the guy. but sometimes it just doesn't add up. for example in hockey this year my Blackhawks had Max Domi. who had a negative rep. turned out he was not just 'fine', he was like - an exemplary teammate and clubhouse guy, who gave constant good effort, stuck up for teammates, etc. watching him it was hard to understand where a negative rep could even have come from.
@SmoothCriminal12
@SmoothCriminal12 Жыл бұрын
​@@georgial6398I'd have to guess it's because of the Montreal media. They tried to make PK Subban out to be a cancer too.
@abaofifsz
@abaofifsz 11 ай бұрын
They had him but traded him. Why was that? I am not complaining he was good for the stars
@kendallevans4079
@kendallevans4079 11 ай бұрын
I do to. The media creates most of these. They love white hats/black hats. All it takes is a couple of bad days and the media brands you.
@centerfield34
@centerfield34 3 ай бұрын
No Joaquin Andujar? The man was the Cardinals starting pitcher and literally went Psycho over balls & strikes while pitching during game 7 of the World Series and was ejected...
@TMC1982Part2
@TMC1982Part2 Ай бұрын
And after the game, Joaquin Andujar took a baseball bat and used it to smash a toilet in the clubhouse at Royals Stadium in Kansas City.
@centerfield34
@centerfield34 Ай бұрын
@@TMC1982Part2 It's safe to say he didn't agree with the call 🤣
@RagaBopHepCat
@RagaBopHepCat Күн бұрын
Can't believe y'all included footage of Reggie's confrontation, in the Yankees dugout, with, then Mgr, Billy Martin (who was the one who incited the argument). Reggie won, with every team he ever played for, with 3 straight World Series titles in Oakland, 2 additional titles in NY, and was a key factor in taking perennial losers, the California Angels, to their first ever playoff appearance, late in his career - (Hardly, what you'd call a locker room "cancer"!)
@RagaBopHepCat
@RagaBopHepCat Күн бұрын
...Billy Martin was fired, as Yankees mgr, the following season, and had long been infamous, both for his drinking, and his temper, going all the way back to his time, as a player.
@williamford9564
@williamford9564 Жыл бұрын
It is amazing that teams continued to sign many of these players time and time again when it had to be known what powder kegs they were.
@siler7
@siler7 9 ай бұрын
Tells you a lot about what kind of people sports owners tend to be. Very difficult to become a multi-billionaire without doing a lot of awful things.
@garyskadra5236
@garyskadra5236 Жыл бұрын
As a Cleveland fan I liked having Albert Belle on our team. An argument can be made that his stats make him a Hall Of Famer. I think you left out the time he chased down some trick or treaters in his car 🚗
@jeremyweems4916
@jeremyweems4916 Жыл бұрын
His stats are HOF, he's not though. If Pete Rose can't get in the HOF, then there's zero chance Belle will get there.
@tw5139
@tw5139 Жыл бұрын
He was a steroid cheater, that ends any discussion of the HOF. The fact that he took steroids tells you that he knew he was garbage without them.
@ryanrawlings8670
@ryanrawlings8670 11 ай бұрын
@@tw5139 Albert may have been a jerk and got caught using a corked bat, but he’s never been connected with steroids
@theblackhood4812
@theblackhood4812 9 ай бұрын
Milton Bradley to my knowledge was great to the fans in Oakland. Signed autographs, even parked his car aside after ballgames and would play catch with the kids. It’s a shame he has had so many personal issues that hampered his career and life. He had the talent, but couldn’t get it together. We also traded Andre Eithier for him😭
@mikepersich3148
@mikepersich3148 9 ай бұрын
Insightful, questionable,but intriguing. Hilarious yet scary. Thanks for your efforts
@BennyT_3434
@BennyT_3434 Жыл бұрын
As an Indians/Guardians fan it's awesome that about half these guys spent time in Cleveland! Really the only one worth the trouble was Albert Belle, his stats in a CLE uniform were insane, Belle seems a bit more level-headed now and actually makes regular calls into CLE sports radio
@shanemcnelis2667
@shanemcnelis2667 Жыл бұрын
It's amazing that you can refer to a sex offender and stalker of women as "level-headed".
@BennyT_3434
@BennyT_3434 Жыл бұрын
@@shanemcnelis2667 charges from the 2018 spring training incident were dropped, and I said Belle seemed a bit more level headed, not that the dude was a saint, if he's actually still a huge scumbag then fine, makes no difference to me
@sukhastings4200
@sukhastings4200 Жыл бұрын
Doing time in Maricopa Co jail ( along with Mike Tyson) has apparently mellowed Albert out. Being from the Columbus area when Belle was in Cleveland, no doubt talented, but troubled
@shanemcnelis2667
@shanemcnelis2667 Жыл бұрын
@@BennyT_3434 Of course not. You'll lick the boots of any athlete, won't you? By your logic, I am a saint for not being a sex offending creep, yet I'm pretty sure that I'm just not a fucking wierdo.
@BennyT_3434
@BennyT_3434 Жыл бұрын
@@shanemcnelis2667 Easy killer, Belle was a great baseball player 25 long years ago, hopefully he's changed his ways, but if not then oh well, it has zero impact on my life and isn't worth arguing about, the messed up way he acted in the 90s will always be a part of his story regardless and he def belongs on this list
@EpimethiusPSN
@EpimethiusPSN Жыл бұрын
Vince Coleman had the automatic turf rolling machine accidentally trap his leg. I wonder if he pissed off the guy controlling it and it wasn't an accident.
@TMC1982Part2
@TMC1982Part2 Жыл бұрын
It happened at the worst time that it could happen, which was during the NLCS. He was unable to play in the 1985 World Series against Kansas City due to his freak leg injury.
@nicholasconners1901
@nicholasconners1901 9 ай бұрын
Vince Coleman seems like a good man these days. Observed him at an autograph signing about a year ago and he was very patient and kind with people.
@tomdulle1707
@tomdulle1707 10 ай бұрын
A couple "(dis)honorable mentions": Enos Slaughter and Leo "The Lip" "Nice guys finish last" Durocher. Though mostly forgot, Durocher was released in his rookie season by the Yankees when it was discovered he had been stealing teammates money from the clubhouse. In an incident at the Cadillac Hotel in Detroit, his roommate, none other than Babe Ruth, caught Durocher with two $100 bills Ruth had marked in his wallet. Ruth proceeded to rearrange the room with Durocher's body. Later when he was with the Giants, Durocher, and a woman who was not his wife, ran a gambling operation of their apartment. Durocher would invite players from other teams to take part, and he's scam them as well as his own teammates, in crooked gaming schemes. And let's not forget the true villains of the 1919 Sox; Swede Risberg and Chick Gandil.
@frankie3791
@frankie3791 9 ай бұрын
I remember I read a few times Durocher actually took 5 marked bills and a unreplaceable gold watch among other things from Ruth and it had finally come to a head! Ruth gave him one severe beating
@tomdulle1707
@tomdulle1707 9 ай бұрын
@@frankie3791 there's a book written by Eldon Auker, who pitched for the Tigers and Red Sox in the 30's and 40's that details the incident called "Sleeping Cars and Flannel Uniforms". Great book. I'm sure your recollection is 100% correct.
@frankie3791
@frankie3791 9 ай бұрын
@@tomdulle1707 Very knowledgeable my friend! Us old baseball guys have to stick together haha
@tomdulle1707
@tomdulle1707 9 ай бұрын
@@frankie3791 Thanks! And I agree!
@DemonKingBadger
@DemonKingBadger 4 ай бұрын
Durocher was also banned in 1947 for a year for gambling. Arky Vaughan had retired in 1944, because he hated playing for Durocher and came out of retirement for 1947.
@75aces97
@75aces97 Жыл бұрын
When I saw the title, Carl Everett was the first name I could think of. List did not disappoint.😉 baseball seems to have a lot of characters like these, so there must be more than the ones here. Some of them may not have been "cancers," but weren't beloved by their teammates. Canseco burned bridges, obviously, but it didn't sound like there was any love lost with his mates and managers.
@larryridgeway1057
@larryridgeway1057 Жыл бұрын
Kind of surprised that Belle yelling at a female reporter before a World Series game, throwing a baseball into a fans chest and chasing kids in his vehicle on Halloween one year weren't mentioned. Of course, it would have taken more time than any of the other players were allotted to get it all in. And the Chicago corked bat incident was not fully explained as the bat that replaced Belles after the locker-room theft was a Paul Sorrento model as there was no Belle bat that wasn't corked.
@inttruders
@inttruders Жыл бұрын
That "Not this shit again" look on the managers face is all you need to know about dealing with Milton Bradley. 16:51.
@sirlawrencet
@sirlawrencet 3 ай бұрын
Harper dogged it that entire season, the season in which Papelbon attacked him. Bryce was protecting his health before free agency, to the detriment of the team.
@Betty-Boop809
@Betty-Boop809 Ай бұрын
Ha, not true, he had a few years until free agency when that happened
@matthewgrabowski2482
@matthewgrabowski2482 11 ай бұрын
What I get a kick out of are the contracts most of these guys got even after teams knew how difficult they were. Talk about turning a blind eye!
@Karmy.
@Karmy. Жыл бұрын
Possible dishonorable mention: Avisail Garcia who allegedly had been caught sleeping with Prince Fielder's wife while playing for the Tigers and it lead to a clubhouse brawl that reinjured Miggy in the process and Garcia was almost immediately traded afterwards Though I'm not sure if this is actually true or not as it's largely just been a rumor for the past almost 10 years now
@antonioreconquistador
@antonioreconquistador Жыл бұрын
Id always heard that was why they traded prince fielder
@alwillk
@alwillk Жыл бұрын
They traded fielder because he was the worst postseason player of all time: 44 games .187 BA .587 ops.
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
happens more often in sports than people realize. Ryne Sandberg/Dave Martinez. Duncan Keith/Patrick Sharp.
@robertkeith7274
@robertkeith7274 Жыл бұрын
@@georgial6398 Sandberg/Martinez??
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
@@robertkeith7274 rumor was always D Martinez bagged Sandberg's wife, got traded immediately after. may have been more than just him, but him for sure. Sandberg would later have an acrimonious divorce that involved among other things him retiring temporarily before coming back. Keith/Sharp was during 2015, Sharp got traded right after the 3rd Cup bc of it. they later made peace apparently but Keith's marriage ended.
@GregJay
@GregJay 9 ай бұрын
Baur has been tempered big time since playing in Japan, he struggled at first but came back strong and has acted with class, when he comes back to the MLB he will be a much different person, There are way to many hotdogs in the bigs now, over celebrating etc. One would never see the Mick act like that
@DemonKingBadger
@DemonKingBadger 4 ай бұрын
I see an unofficial blackballing of him, if he does come back. Manfred definitely doesn't him coming back.
@user-fc1gq5xd9e
@user-fc1gq5xd9e 24 күн бұрын
Imagine if you could round up all those club house cancer guys and make a baseball horror movie? It could be called "Take Me Out to the Ball Game of Insanity" The team could be managed by Pete himself and the umps could wear suits of armor....
@NKdidit.24
@NKdidit.24 Жыл бұрын
Albert Belle's father taught me in high school. His temper was just as bad
@SportsBoss999
@SportsBoss999 5 ай бұрын
Is that right? Oh, that's funny! Like father like son, huh?
@Stussmeister
@Stussmeister Жыл бұрын
I remember when Papelbon was on the Phillies (my hometown team), and while he was a pretty good player, things always seemed just a little...off. As an example of this, my parents and I went to the ballpark one summer evening, and on the ballpark screen, they were asking players who their favorite superheroes were. Some answered with Batman or Superman or Spiderman, but when it came to Papelbon, he said, "...Aquaman?"
@peteyprimo7173
@peteyprimo7173 11 ай бұрын
What’s wrong with aquaman?
@Stussmeister
@Stussmeister 11 ай бұрын
@@peteyprimo7173 Nothing's wrong with Aquaman, it's simply that he doesn't seem to be the first to spring to mind when most think of comic-book superheroes.
@seanheaney8303
@seanheaney8303 9 ай бұрын
So your labeling him as off because he likes a different super hero ? Maybe he doesn't like super heros and mentioned the 1st one to come come his mind maybe he just likes to be different and have his own opinion. It's also possible that an Aquaman movie was coming put that year and he was literally told or paid to say that. I don't see this as the big story your trying to make it to be.
@Stussmeister
@Stussmeister 9 ай бұрын
@@seanheaney8303 I understand and respect your opinion. I'm not saying that Papelbon was wrong for stating Aquaman was his favorite superhero, I'm simply noting that such a choice is a tad outside the norm, which seems to be in line with some of his other behavior. To reiterate, I'm not saying his behavior is wrong, either, it's just a little different/eccentric.
@dodgerblue7381
@dodgerblue7381 11 ай бұрын
I never realized that Vince Coleman was the one that threw the firecracker at Dodger Stadium. Milton Bradley was such a mess, the Dodgers would have taken a box of doorknobs to get rid of him. Honorable Mention should go to Yasiel Puig. A guy who really thought more of himself than he was.
@vincentsaia6545
@vincentsaia6545 9 ай бұрын
Wow. Didn't know that about Rogers Horsby. Surprised Ty Cobb isn't on the list.
@chriskay3058
@chriskay3058 Жыл бұрын
Alot of these players made their way to Cleveland. No wonder we never win shit.
@JulesLeeS
@JulesLeeS Жыл бұрын
As a Cleveland fan myself, I noticed that as well, and came to the comments to see if i was the only 1
@AnthonyAdams
@AnthonyAdams Жыл бұрын
That made me chuckle. Thank you.
@davej.meister5421
@davej.meister5421 Жыл бұрын
Anyone remember Alex Cole? Why couldn't the Tribe keep BOTH him and Kenny Lofton in 1992? Fast base runners.
@stephenkammerling9479
@stephenkammerling9479 Жыл бұрын
Milton Bradley had a brief stint with the Cubs after he conned the Cubs into believing he was "reformed." It was a total disaster from day one, and he was gone by mid-season.
@jimdep6542
@jimdep6542 5 ай бұрын
and then to rub it more, they change the name of the Indians and cave to the woke people ! Cleveland what ?! G...G...G.....Guardians ? What an insult.
@KazeShikamaru
@KazeShikamaru Жыл бұрын
I'm Cubs and but man I loved big Z. Glad he chilled out. My favorite is when he got into Dlee.
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
everyone loved Big Z. him being on this list is absurd.
@sukhastings4200
@sukhastings4200 Жыл бұрын
Big Z was fine until his "tennis elbow" ruined his career. They showed here his dugout fight with Michael Barrett. Most of what I read it was Barrett who escalated the problem
@georgial6398
@georgial6398 Жыл бұрын
@@sukhastings4200 Both Big Z and Barrett were hotheads. Z was well liked by fans and respected by teammates. His performance started to falter bc of wear and tear, and combined w his blowups becoming progressively worse, he kind of got blackballed by the league after Florida. But no never a clubhouse cancer.
@SportsBoss999
@SportsBoss999 5 ай бұрын
Hopefully some of the guys on this list realized some of the mistakes they've made. Sometimes their passion for the game turns into anger. Been there, done that.
@AJ42K
@AJ42K Ай бұрын
I had this gut feeling all this time there were 3 leagues in the MLB. Thank You for this video. American. National. Federal. AL. NL. FL. Only one problem? How will the World Series go with 3 teams?
@deiradinn
@deiradinn Ай бұрын
How Nyjer Morgan didn't end up on this list is wild.
@Rayrard
@Rayrard Жыл бұрын
I think the guy that blew all those games and sabotaged his team's chances to win is the worst... the others had tempers and inappropriate comments, but imagine playing with a guy that bet against your team and stopped playing/trying randomly? I'd think all the teammates would want to beat him up.
@demonkingbadger6689
@demonkingbadger6689 Жыл бұрын
Hal Chase also just randomly went back home in 1908 with about a month left to play, the team was horrible and full of other cancerous players. Of course, the New York Highlanders at the time were owned by Farrell and Devery, who got rich off illegal gambling and a multitide of other organized crime.
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