Showing 9551–9600 of 9954 entries

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"When I put on my uniform, I feel I am the proudest man on earth. The players should pay the people to come and see us play."
Roberto Clemente / From his 1971 World Series MVP acceptance speech, as quoted in "Pittsburgh's Clemente Honored"

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"I think he had the best eye, best stance and sharpest cut of all the big leaguers playing in Puerto Rico. He also field real good and throw like a bullet."
Roberto Clemente / Recalling his boyhood idol Monte Irvin, as quoted in "CHANGE OF PACE: Scribes Now Rate Clemente as 'Best" by Bill Nunn, Jr., in The New Pittsburgh Courier (February 24, 1962)

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"If I had not won the MVP, I would not have been mad, because Sandy Koufax was a great pitcher and he deserved it. Besides, I know I would have been close and not snubbed like I was in 1960. And I tell you one thing. I didn't win the MVP alone. I couldn't win it without having a good team, without men getting on base an without us winning. I was sad because we didn't win the pennant. But I thought the MVP was something the ball club could be proud of because it gave our whole team recognition."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Why the Pirates Love the New Roberto Clemente" by Lou Prato, in Sport (August 1967), p. 81

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"With my eyes blind I can throw to the base. I know that. If Mantle have the arm I have you will put it in headlines because he is an American. You never give me credit. How many players in history have three batting titles? The sportswriters don't mention that. They ask me, "What you think about dis? What you think about dat?"
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Aches and Pains and Three Batting Titles" by Myron Cope, in Sports Illustrated (March 7, 1966), p. 33

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"I've had two lives: the first one when I was born in Puerto Rico in 1935 [sic] and the second when I came to Pittsburgh to play baseball in 1955. I have been very lucky and I feel gifted to be able to play well."
Roberto Clemente / Addressing fans at Three Rivers Stadium on Roberto Clemente Day, as quoted in "Pirates, Puerto Rico Pay Clemente Honors" by Vito Stellino (UPI), in The El Paso Herald-Post (July 25, 1970)

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"I couldn't stand the pain. All the doctors said there was nothing wrong with my spine because there was nothing they could see. But the chiropractors said they thought they could help and they did."
Roberto Clemente / From his 1971 World Series MVP acceptance speech, recalling the time in 1957 when he considered quitting baseball, as quoted in "Pittsburgh's Clemente Honored" by United {Press International, in The Wilmington Star-News (Thursday, October 2

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"What I did was mild compared to what Durocher did to Conlan. I don't see how what I did can be called more serious than the Durocher incident. I had good reason to lose my head. That was the second time they call me out on a play I thought I had beat. That's enough to make anybody mad."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Fined, Suspended: Clemente Hit Hard By Giles" by Bill Nunn, Jr. in The New Pittsburgh Courier (June 8, 1963), p. 23

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"Look, here is the way I swing. I swing hard. I don’t punch the ball. I have bat control, and I don’t go for home runs, but I still swing as hard as some fellows who swing for the fences. My back is practically to first base when I finish the swing. I have to turn around before I can start running. Sometimes the ball is in the fielder’s hands before I drop the bat."
Roberto Clemente / On how being right-handed negatively impacted his chances of batting .400, as quoted in "Aches, Pains... and Base Hits" by Jim Murray, in The Los Angeles Times (August 10, 1971). Also see the above comment (August 11, 1964) re "stepping in

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"A lot of my countrymen are here tonight, and I don't really know whether I love you more or them more, but I do know this: you people in Pittsburgh are the greatest fans in the world!"
Roberto Clemente / Addressing fans at Three Rivers Stadium on Roberto Clemente Day, as quoted in "Bear-ly Speaking: World's Greatest Fans Thanked by Clemente" by Sam 'Bear' Bechtel, in The Indiana Gazette (July 25, 1970)

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"I tell you, I'd be lucky to hit .280 in New York. There are too many people in New York, and if you don't want to be a bad guy, you must go to all the dinners and meetings. How could I concentrate on baseball? I have so many good friends in New York that it is hard to turn them down. But it is that way every place on the road. I tell the hotel that I will not be disturb,[sic] but people find me anyway."
Roberto Clemente / Speaking after the 1972 NLCS, as quoted in "Puerto Rico Has Lost a Hero"

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"I love the game too much to quit. But right now I can't run or swing a bat too well. I had my tonsils out two weeks ago in Pittsburgh and that helped, but I still have the pain. I am studying to be a civil engineer in Puerto Rico, so that's what I'll do if I have to give up baseball."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted and paraphrased in "Not to Quit, Clemente Says" by the Associated Press, in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Friday, July 26, 1957), p. 14

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"I was too aggressive. I should not have been so foolish. I am a craftsman in baseball. I look like rookie."
Roberto Clemente / Speaking after the 1972 NLCS, as quoted in "Puerto Rico Has Lost a Hero" by Bob Addie, in The Washington Post (Tuesday, January 2, 1973), p. D2

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"My body is old and tired, but I'll bounce back. I think Mazeroski can do the same if he takes off a few pounds and gives them to me. I need them."
Roberto Clemente / On being informed that Mazeroski had claimed he wouldn't be retiring if he had Clemente's body; as quoted in "Sidelights on Sports: Monday Morning's Sports Wash" by Al Abrams, in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Monday, October 2, 1972), p. 24

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"How do you measure a man? How can you compare one man with another unless you’ve seen them both? I cannot tell about other men who played long ago. I saw Mays. To me, Willie Mays is the greatest who ever played. But he is forty and has had his days – he is tired. San Francisco is all tired. For them it was not easy. For twenty days, they were in a tight pennant race and don’t know where they are. Mentally, they were going to be tight. You could see Mays is tired."
Roberto Clemente / Speaking with reporters after the 1971 NLCS, as quoted in Clemente! (1973) by Kal Wagenheim, pp. 194-195

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"I owe a lot to the opportunities I have had. I think we have a great country, and the day that all people of all races have equal opportunity to be useful to their community, we're going to have a better country."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Tech, Pirates Share Man of Year Honors; Jaycees Cite Carnegie Chief Dr. Stever, Give Clemente Sports, Lawrence Awards" by Robert Johnson, in The Pittsburgh Press (Tuesday, January 24, 1967), p. 20

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"I'm no fighter. Besides, Willie is too big. And he is a real nice man. All those big fellows—Ted Kluszewski, Gil Hodges, Frank Howard—they're nice fellows. I saw Howard get mad only once. He picked up an umpire by his ears and held him like a puppy!"
Roberto Clemente / Responding to a fellow diner's tongue-in-cheek suggestion that Clemente turn to boxing, with teammate Willie Stargell as his first opponent; as quoted in "Sidelights on Sports: Whirl Around the World of Sports" by Al Abrams, in The Pittsbur

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"The more sleep and rest you get, the prettier you become. Like me."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted by in "Roberto Clemente: Bucs' Houdini" by Arnold Hano, in Baseball Stars of 1965 (March 1965), edited by Ray Robinson, p. 40

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"I believe I can hit with anybody in baseball. Maybe I can’t hit with the power of a Mays or a Frank Robinson or a Hank Aaron, but I can hit. As long as I play in Forbes Field, I can’t go for home runs. Line drives, yes, but not home runs."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in “Clouter Clemente: Popular Buc; Rifle-Armed Flyhawk Aims At Second Bat Crown” by Les Biederman, in The Sporting News (September 5, 1964)

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"Clendenon isn't like he was last year. If he comes back again, I'll start punching the ball again. But I've been taking a good cut and swinging hard."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in “Donn Drags, Not Clemente” by Murray Chass (AP), in The Tuscaloosa News (Tuesday, June 14, 1966), p. 5

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"Everything is so new in Puerto Rico. I wanted to build something the way Puerto Rico started, something from the old land."
Roberto Clemente / Discussing his recently opened restaurant, El Carretero (roughly translated as "one who leads the ox-drawn cart"), as quoted in "Roberto Clemente Baseball's Brightest Superstar" by Arnold Hano, in Boy's Life (March 1968), pp. 25 and 54

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"If a Latin player is sick, they said it is all in their head. I'm sick of these people who make these statements. They call me 'Jake.' It is Roberto ... Roberto Walker Clemente."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Sidelights on Sports: I Remember Roberto" by Al Abrams, in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Tuesday, January 2, 1973), pp. 14 and 17

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"Blass, I'm going to tell you something: You pitch me inside, I hit the ball to Harrisburg."
Roberto Clemente / Circa 1970, '71 or '72; as quoted by Blass in "40 years later, Clemente remains man for all time" by Martin Fennelly in The Tampa Bay Tribune (September 28, 2012)

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"There was no use for me to say yes because I am not a politician. Say, for example, I was elected and a situation came up where I was told I had to compromise. I could never do that; I can't compromise."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Roberto Clemente for Mayor?" by Milton Richman, in The New Castle News (Tuesday, July 8, 1969), p. 17

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"I was so anxious for this season to start when I was at home last winter. I was thinking in terms of a big year for myself—moneywise. I had batted .357 last year and I thought that if I had another big year I might get paid more money than anybody ever did in baseball. Then I fell and then I wonder if I will be able to play at all."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Top Salary Vision of Clemente Dims; Subpar Season Hurts" by Charley Feeney, in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Friday, September 27, 1968), p. 23

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"Bragan and Walker talked to me the most. The fellow who helped me most of all was Buck Clarkson. I think he lives in Donora. He managed me in the Puerto Rican League when I was a boy. He used to see me throw a ball from the outfield 400 feet on the line, most of the time wild. And I hit good. Buck Clarkson used to tell me I am as good as anybody in big leagues. That helped me a lot."
Roberto Clemente / Evaluating previous managers, as quoted in "Sidelight on Sports: Roberto Remembers" by Al Abrams, in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Friday, March 31, 1972), p. 10

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"Bobby, it don't matter how you stand; it matter where you end up!"
Roberto Clemente / Circa 1956 or 1957, regarding his failure to find one consistent batting stance; as quoted by Pirate reliever Art Swanson in Remember Roberto: Clemente Recalled by Teammates, Family, Friends and Fans (1994) by Jim O'Brien, p. 348

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"My name eet is Roberto Enricque Clemente Walker. I no use Enricque—spell him E–n–r–i–c–q–u–e —and I no use Walker. Him make too long for name. Just Roberto Clemente, thas all. This Enricque is middle name. Walker eet is my mother's name. In Puerto Rico, people she use father's and mother's name. I use Roberto Clemente in thees country."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Sidelight on Sports: A Baseball Star is Born" by Al Abrams, in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (June 7, 1955), p. 20

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"I hit many what you call the "bad bol" pitches, and get good wood. The bol' travel like bullet. That remind me, I hit 565 foote hum-rum in Chicaga last year; the bol' disappear from centerfield, and Raj Hornsby tell me it longest drive he ever saw hit out of Wrigley Field. The bol' feel good on the bat but I feel bad at heart, when no writer with our team play up the big drive. I feel effort not appreciated."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted by Bill Nunn, Jr. in The New Pittsburgh Courier (June 25, 1960); reproduced in Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball's Last Hero (2006) by David Maraniss, p. 98

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"I threw the javelin in high school, but that’s only part of the reason for my good arm. I got my good arm from my mother. Today she’s 73, yet she can throw a ball from second base to home plate with something on it. Last year, when they opened the amateur winter league in Puerto Rico, she threw out the first ball from a box seat to home plate. She had something on it, too. She’s in good health."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in “Clouter Clemente: Popular Buc; Rifle-Armed Flyhawk Aims At Second Bat Crown”

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"The American League must be that fountain of youth they talk about. A lot of National League pitchers did pretty good in the American League this year."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "D.C. Money Will Talk" by Bob Addie, in The Washington Post (Wednesday, October 11, 1972), p. D4

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"It seems to me they like to play up my faults. If I make a bad play, it seems to get more publicity than the good things I do. They always compare me with Paul Waner and things in the past. I didn't play ball 25 years ago. I'm playing now. I think I should be judged on this basis. I get tired of hearing that Waner was a better hitter than me. A lot of old fans tell me I field better, run faster and throw harder than Waner. Nobody says anything about that."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Change of Pace" by Bill Nunn, Jr. in The New Pittsburgh Courier (August 10, 1963), p. 22

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"I no play so gut yet," the Puerto Rican star tried to explain yesterday. "Me like hot weather, veree hot. I no run fast cold weather. No get warm in cold. No get warm, no play gut. You see." Clemente likes Forbes Field and Connie Mack Stadium the best of all the parks he's played in but has a strong dislike for Ebbets Field and the Polo Grounds because of the crazy bounces the balls take as they ricochet off the walls."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted and paraphrased in "The Scoreboard" by Les Biederman, in The Pittsburgh Press (Friday, June 10, 1955), p. 30

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"Willie Mays is the greatest ball player I've ever seen. I never saw Joe DiMaggio play, but if Joe DiMaggio was better than Willie Mays, he belongs in Heaven."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "For Clemente After 3,000ː Saturday Cheers Linger" by Charley Feeney, in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Monday, October 2, 1972), p. 24

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"I would like to be remembered as a player who gave all he had to give. I am no idol, but America needs idols. And don't talk 'Latin America' to me because I was born in Puerto Rico and that is America."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Roberto Clemente, The Pirates' Thorobred

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"Why you think I play this game? I play to win. Competition is the thing. I want to play on a winning team. I don't want to play for sixth place. I like to play for all the marbles, where every game means something. I like to play for real, not for fun."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Clemente Says Hitting Does Not Come Easy"

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"Clemente, who says Josh Gibson is the best hitter he ever saw, is anxious to see Ted Williams when the slugger comes here a week from Monday for the benefit exhibition between the Pirates and Red Sox."
Roberto Clemente / As paraphrased in "The Scoreboard: Thursday" by Les Biederman, in The Pittsburgh Press (Saturday, June 11, 1955), p. 6

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"I could always hit a home run, but if I try to do that all the time, maybe I not hit over .300. I am more valuable to my team hitting .330, .340, than I am swinging for home runs."
Roberto Clemente / Speaking before Game 7 of the 1971 World Series, as quoted in "Numero Uno: Roberto!" (1973) by Bill Christine, p. 141

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"The first thing the average white Latin American player does when he comes to the States is associate with other whites. He doesn't want to be seen with Latin Negroes, even from his own country, because he's afraid people might think he's colored."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in “Roberto Clementeː Pounder from Puerto Rico” by John Devaney, in Baseball Stars of 1964 (1964), edited by Ray Robinson, p. 150

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"You pitch me the fuck inside and I hit the fucking ball to McKeesport."
Roberto Clemente / Circa 1970, '71 or '72; as quoted by Blass in Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball's Last Hero (2006) by David Maraniss, p. 173

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"If you pitch me inside, I will hit the fucking ball to Harrisburg."
Roberto Clemente / Circa 1970, '71 or '72; as quoted by Blass in Clemente: The True Legacy of an Undying Hero (2013) by the Clemente family

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"I had a couple of endorsements but they never came to nothing. I don't want any. I don't need them. If the people who give them don't think Latins are good enough, I don't think they are good enough. The hell with them. I make endorsements in Spanish countries, and give the money to charity."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Nobody Does Anything Better Than Me in Baseball,' Says Roberto Clemente....Well, He's Right," by Roy Blount, Jr. (as C.R. Ways), in The New York Times Magazine (April 9, 1972), p. 42; reprinted as "Clemente's Time of Honor Has

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"I give you bastards four minutes to get outside. They are honoring the greatest second baseman the game has ever known and anyone not out there in four minutes will have to fight me."
Roberto Clemente / Addressing unnamed cards-playing teammates on June 14, 1969, Bill Mazeroski Day; as quoted in Reflections on Roberto (1994) by Phil Musick, p. 29

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"I like to work with kids. I'd like to work with kids all the time, if I live long enough."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Aches and Pains and Three Batting Titles" by Myron Cope, in Sports Illustrated (March 7, 1966), p. 40

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"In Puerto Rico, we like to laugh and talk before a game. Then we go out and play as hard as we can to win. Afterwards, we laugh and talk again. But in America, baseball is much more of a business. Play well and you get pats on the back and congratulations. Play bad and no pats and maybe nobody talks to you."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Roberto Clementeː Pounder from Puerto Rico" by John Devaney, in Baseball Stars of 1964 (1964), edited by Ray Robinson, p. 149

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"We play too many games with too much traveling. We should stay in one city longer and have a day off now and then. It would be beneficial for the teams, keep them in top physical shape more."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Clemente Says Hitting Does Not Come Easy"

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"How you blame Bragan for what we do? He no hit for us, no run for us, no peetch for us, no feeld for us. Bes manager I efer play for."
Roberto Clemente / As quoted in "Murtaugh Takes Pirate Reins" by Les Biederman, in The Pittsburgh Press (Sunday, August 4, 1957), Page 2, Sect. 4

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"They've been knocking me down all season in the National League and I've still gotten my share of base hits."
Roberto Clemente / Commenting on the Yankees' pre-Series scouting report on Clemente ("Knock him down and forget him"); as quoted in "Change of Pace" by Bill Nunn, Jr. in The New Pittsburgh Courier (October 8, 1960), p. 26

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"I felt kind of bashful when the fans cheered. I'm a very quiet, shy person, although you writers might not believe it because I shout sometimes."
Roberto Clemente / Speaking with reporters on October 1, recalling the previous day's fan response to his 3,000th hit; as quoted in "Saturday Cheers Linger (For Clemente After 3,000)" by Charley Feeney, in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (October 2, 1972), p. 24

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"I go up to hit. I hear people say I swing at bad pitches. If I can hit it, it is not a bad pitch."
Roberto Clemente / Speaking on his 25th birthday, after going 0 for 4 in a 3-2 Pirate win over Cincinnati; as quoted in "The Scoreboard: Confident Pirates Now Start Rooting for Yanks to Win" by Les Biederman, in The Pittsburgh Press (August 19, 1960), p. 27

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"I am a very proud person. Baseball has helped send my brothers and nephews to school. But more than that, baseball has become my whole life. Accomplishment is something you cannot buy. If you have a chance and don’t make the most of it, you are wasting your time on this earth. It is not what you do in baseball or sports, but how hard you try. Win or lose, I try my best."
Roberto Clemente / Clemente's oft-cited "wasting your time on this earth" admonition, but in a context quite distinct from that of its ubiquitous counterpart (which is likewise contained in this speech—see below); from the opening of his Tris Speaker Memorial

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