Frases de Sandy Koufax

Sanford Koufax é um ex-jogador de beisebol que atuou como arremessador canhoto na Major League Baseball . Passou seus 12 anos de carreira jogando pelo Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers, de 1955 até 1966. Koufax, aos 36 anos de idade, em 1972, se tornou o mais jovem jogador selecionado para o Hall of Fame.O auge da carreira de Koufax foi de 1961 até 1966, antes da artrite em seu ombro esquerdo fazê-lo encerrar sua carreira prematuramente aos 30 anos de idade. Foi convocado seis vezes para o All-Star Game e foi o MVP da National League em 1963. Venceu o prêmio Cy Young Award em 1963, 1965 e 1966, por votação unânime, fazendo dele o primeiro vencedor do prêmio Cy Young por três vezes na história do beisebol. Koufax também venceu Tríplice Coroa entre arremessadores nos mesmos três anos, liderando a NL em vitórias, strikeouts e ERA.Koufax foi o primeiro arremessador a conseguir quatro no-hitters e o oitavo a arremessar um jogo perfeito na história do beisebol. Apesar de sua carreira relativamente curta, os 2396 strikeouts de Koufax o colocam em 7º da história na época de sua aposentadoria, atrás apenas de Warren Spahn entre canhotos. Koufax, Randy Johnson, Pedro Martínez e Nolan Ryan são os únicos arremessadores eleitos para o Hall of Fame que tem mais strikeouts do que entradas arremessadas.

Koufax é também lembrado por ser um dos mais incríveis atletas judeus na história dos esportes americanos. Sua decisão de não arremessar no Jogo 1 da World Series de 1965, pois caía na data do Yom Kippur ganhou atenção nacional como um exemplo do conflito entre as pressões profissionais e crenças pessoais. Wikipedia  

✵ 30. Dezembro 1935
Sandy Koufax photo
Sandy Koufax: 13   citações 0   Curtidas

Sandy Koufax: Frases em inglês

“Sure, nice guys can win — if they're nice guys with a lot of talent. Nice guys with a little talent finish fourth, and nice guys with no talent finish last.”

As quoted in Total Baseball : The Official Encyclopedia of Major League Baseball (2001) by John Thorn, p. 2468
Contexto: In the end it all comes down to talent. You can talk all you want about intangibles, I just don't know what that means. Talent makes winners, not intangibles. Can nice guys win? Sure, nice guys can win — if they're nice guys with a lot of talent. Nice guys with a little talent finish fourth, and nice guys with no talent finish last.

“I don't regret one minute of the twelve years I've spent in baseball, but I could regret one season too many.”

1966 press conference announcing retirement, as quoted by UPI, in "Sandy Koufax Announces Retirement from Baseball at News Meeting" https://newspaperarchive.com/pittsfield-berkshire-eagle-nov-19-1966-p-30/ by Alex Kahn (UPI), in The Pittsfield Berkshire Eagle (November 19, 1966)
Contexto: I don't regret one minute of the twelve years I've spent in baseball, but I could regret one season too many. [... ] I've got a lot of years to live after baseball and I would like to live them with complete use of my body.

“I don't regret one minute of the last 12 years but I think I would regret the one year that was too many.”

Excerpts from 1966 press conference, in Baseball: 8th Inning – A Whole New Ballgame https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ouIk6RvUl8 (1994) by Ken Burns, Geoffrey C. Ward
Contexto: I don’t know if cortisone is good for you or not. But to take a shot every other ball game is more than I wanted to do and to walk around with a constant upset stomach because of the pills and to be high half the time during a ball game because you’re taking painkillers … I don’t want to have to do that [... ] I don't regret one minute of the last 12 years but I think I would regret the one year that was too many.

“The only time I really try for a strikeout is when I'm in a jam.”

As quoted by Jack Orr in My Greatest Day in Baseball, and Baseball's Greatest Quotations : An Illustrated Treasury (2008) by Paul Dickson, p. 302
Contexto: The only time I really try for a strikeout is when I'm in a jam. If the bases are loaded with none out, for example, then I'll go for a strikeout. But most of the time I try to throw to spots. I try to get them to pop up or ground out. On a strikeout I might have to throw five or six pitches, sometimes more if there are foul-offs. That tires me. So I just try to get outs. That's what counts — outs. You win with outs, not strikeouts.

“A guy that throws what he intends to throw, that's the definition of a good pitcher.”

As quoted in 22 Success Lessons from Baseball (2003) by Ron White, p. 43

“The game has a cleanness. If you do a good job, the numbers say so. You don't have to ask anyone or play politics. You don't have to wait for the reviews.”

As quoted in "Koufax" https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1979/03/21/koufax/3139f66f-996a-485f-8cce-8f7671152136/?utm_term=.174cfc71ede2) by Thomas Boswell, in The Washington Post (March 21, 1979)

“Show me a guy who can't pitch inside and I'll show you a loser.”

Fonte: As quoted in "One Hard Way to Make a Living" https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1981/05/04/one-hard-way-to-make-a-living by Roger Angell, in The New Yorker (May 4, 1981), p. 96; reprinted in Late Innings (1982) by Roger Angell, p. 358

“Pitching is the art of instilling fear.”

As quoted in Involvements : One Journalist's Place in the World (1984) by Colman McCarthy, p. 243

“You've got to be lucky to pitch a no-hitter, and if you have good stuff, it's easier to be lucky.”

Speaking on July 1, 1990, at Chavez Ravine, in reference to a no-hitter thrown there just two days before by the Dodgers' Fernando Valuenzela (and, coincidentally, just hours before the Yankees' Andy Hawkins would, thanks to three 8th-inning Bomber miscues, famously record a 4-0, complete-game loss to Chicago, despite giving up no hits ); as quoted in "Notes on a Scorecard" https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-07-02-sp-474-story.html by Allan Malamud, in The Los Angeles Times (July 2, 1990)

“I'll never know. I've never been in a fight. But I doubt whether pitching speed would have any significance. You can't go into a windup in the ring.”

As quoted in "Stuart's Problem; Suppose Sandy Had Become a Boxer" by Sid Ziff, in The Los Angeles Times (July 7, 1966)

“People who write about spring training not being necessary have never tried to throw a baseball.”

As quoted in "Sandy Began Slowly and Then Got Worse; At Tired Arm Stage" by Charles Maher, in The Los Angeles Times (April 14, 1966)

“I became a good pitcher when I stopped trying to make them miss the ball and started trying to make them hit it.”

As quote in "Quote... : Father knows best; Soviet hindsight; Life in the NBA: Koufax strategy," The Christian Science Monitor (June 24, 1976), p. 11

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