white is right
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He is probably the first great high school pitching prospect. In today's era where everything is money. It's almost unbelievable that he would give up his career for his country but he did it for 4 years and when he came back he didn't lose a step. Here is USA TodayBob Feller: Hall of Fame storyteller to the end
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Cleveland Indians legend Bob Feller, who died Wednesday night at 92, never stopped attending Tribe games and never tired of talking baseball with interested guests.
USA TODAY sat with him for several innings during Stephen Strasburg's second major-league start last June at Progressive Field. Strasburg's velocity was all the buzz, so the conversation turned to Feller's speed. He is believed to have been the first pitcher ever to have his fastball scientifically clocked from the mound to the plate and he recounted the circumstances.
It was August 1946, before modern radar. Promoters used a photo-electric cell device and clocked his pitches crossing the plate at 98.6 miles per hour. Modern radar guns register pitches leaving the pitcher's hand or just in front of the mound, so Feller's reading translated to 107.9 mph.
"It was after the war. I was 27," Feller recalled. "Clark Griffith (Washington Senators' owner) thought it would be a good idea to draw people to the ballpark. He sold the ballpark out that night and I went out before (the game). I had to pitch that night.
"They brought (the device) in from the Aberdeen (MD) Proving Grounds and put it right over home plate. Two photo-electric cells were about four feet apart -- what it checks is the muzzle velocity of the guns. It converted immediately to miles per hour."
After the exhibition, in which he threw 30-40 pitches at top speed, Feller went out and pitched a complete game against the Senators (giving up three earned runs on six hits, but losing, according to baseball-reference.com).
The World War II hero and baseball Hall of Famer was mentally sharp until the end and accurately recalled his then-record 18-strikeout game on Oct. 2, 1938 -- a month before his 20th birthday. Victim No. 18 was Tigers' centerfielder Chet Laabs, who struck out five times that afternoon.
"He's the last hitter of the ballgame. I needed to strike him out to break the major-league record at that time," Feller recalled. "I get two strikes to him and the last pitch was a called third strike, so he yelled at the umpire, and the umpire said, 'You missed 14, I missed one.' "
By Mike Dodd
01:21 PM
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Share6
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Cleveland Indians legend Bob Feller, who died Wednesday night at 92, never stopped attending Tribe games and never tired of talking baseball with interested guests.
USA TODAY sat with him for several innings during Stephen Strasburg's second major-league start last June at Progressive Field. Strasburg's velocity was all the buzz, so the conversation turned to Feller's speed. He is believed to have been the first pitcher ever to have his fastball scientifically clocked from the mound to the plate and he recounted the circumstances.
It was August 1946, before modern radar. Promoters used a photo-electric cell device and clocked his pitches crossing the plate at 98.6 miles per hour. Modern radar guns register pitches leaving the pitcher's hand or just in front of the mound, so Feller's reading translated to 107.9 mph.
"It was after the war. I was 27," Feller recalled. "Clark Griffith (Washington Senators' owner) thought it would be a good idea to draw people to the ballpark. He sold the ballpark out that night and I went out before (the game). I had to pitch that night.
"They brought (the device) in from the Aberdeen (MD) Proving Grounds and put it right over home plate. Two photo-electric cells were about four feet apart -- what it checks is the muzzle velocity of the guns. It converted immediately to miles per hour."
After the exhibition, in which he threw 30-40 pitches at top speed, Feller went out and pitched a complete game against the Senators (giving up three earned runs on six hits, but losing, according to baseball-reference.com).
The World War II hero and baseball Hall of Famer was mentally sharp until the end and accurately recalled his then-record 18-strikeout game on Oct. 2, 1938 -- a month before his 20th birthday. Victim No. 18 was Tigers' centerfielder Chet Laabs, who struck out five times that afternoon.
"He's the last hitter of the ballgame. I needed to strike him out to break the major-league record at that time," Feller recalled. "I get two strikes to him and the last pitch was a called third strike, so he yelled at the umpire, and the umpire said, 'You missed 14, I missed one.' "
By Mike Dodd