Yogi Berra
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For more information on Yogi Berra, visit Britannica.com.

From our Archives: Today's Highlights, May 12, 2006
Bibliography
See his Ten Rings: My Championship Seasons (2003).
American baseball player and manager. Considered among the best catchers in baseball history, he played for the New York Yankees from 1946 to 1963.
Quotes:
"When you come to a fork in the road, take it."
"You have to give 100 percent in the first half of the game. If that isn't enough, in the second half, you have to give what is left."
"Yogi ordered a pizza. The waitress asked How many pieces do you want your pie cut? Yogi responded, Four. I don't think I could eat eight."
"It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future."
"If you don't know where you are going, you might wind up someplace else."
"I made a wrong mistake"
See more famous quotes by
Yogi Berra
| Yogi Berra | ||
|---|---|---|
| Catcher/Manager | ||
| Born: May 12 1925 | ||
| Batted: Left | Threw: Right | |
| MLB debut | ||
| September 22, 1946 for the New York Yankees |
||
| Final game | ||
| May 9, 1965 for the New York Mets |
||
| Career statistics | ||
| AVG | .285 | |
| HR | 358 | |
| RBI | 1430 | |
| Teams | ||
| Career highlights and awards | ||
|
||
| Member of the National | ||
| Elected | 1972 | |
| Vote | 85.61% (second ballot) | |
Lawrence Peter "Yogi" Berra (born May 12, 1925 in St. Louis, Missouri) is a former Major League Baseball player and manager. He played almost his entire career for the New York Yankees and was elected to the baseball Hall of Fame in 1972. He was one of only four players to be named the Most Valuable Player of the American League three times, and one of only six managers to lead both American and National League teams to the World Series.
Berra, who quit school in the eighth grade, has a tendency toward malapropism and fracturing the English language in highly provocative, interesting ways. Simultaneously denying and confirming his reputation, Berra once stated, "I never said half the things I really said." (See Yogiisms.)
Born in a primarily Italian neighborhood of St. Louis called "The Hill", Berra was the son of Pietro and Paulina Berra, immigrants from Italy. Pietro, originally from Milan in northern Italy, arrived at Ellis Island on October 18, 1909 at the age of 23, and later met Paulina in the United States.[1] Yogi's parents originally nicknamed him "Lawdie," derived from his mother's difficulty pronouncing "Lawrence" or "Larry" correctly. He grew up on Elizabeth Avenue, just a few doors down from his boyhood friend and later competitor Joe Garagiola (that block, also home to the late baseball broadcaster Jack Buck, has subsequently been renamed "Hall of Fame Place"). Berra has been inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame.
He picked up his more famous nickname from a friend who said he resembled a Hindu holy man (yogi) they had seen in a movie, whenever Berra sat around with arms and legs crossed waiting to bat, or while looking sad after a losing game. Years later, the Hanna-Barbera cartoon character Yogi Bear was named after Berra, something Berra did not appreciate after he started being periodically addressed as "Yogi Bear." He began playing baseball in local American Legion leagues, where he learned the basics of play as a catcher.
The St. Louis Cardinals spurned Berra in favor of his boyhood best friend, Joe Garagiola, in 1942. On the surface, the Cardinals seemed to think Garagiola the superior prospect -- but team president Branch Rickey actually had an ulterior motive: knowing he was soon to leave St. Louis to take over the operation of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and more impressed with Berra than he let on, Rickey apparently planned to hold Berra off until he could sign him for the Dodgers. The plan was ruined when the Yankees got to him first, signing him for the same $500 bonus the Cardinals offered Garagiola.
Berra is widely regarded as one of the greatest catchers in baseball history. In fact, according to the win shares formula developed by sabermetrician Bill James, Berra is the greatest catcher of all time and the 52nd greatest non-pitcher in major-league history. Late in his career, some sportswriters affectionately nicknamed Berra "The Little Squat Man."[citation needed]
Following a stint in the U.S. Navy during World War II where he served as a gunner's mate in the D-Day invasion, Berra played minor league baseball with the Newark Bears before being called up for seven games in the major leagues in 1946. The following season he played 86 games for the Yankees, and he would play more than a hundred in each of the following fourteen years. He was affectionately known by the sportswriters as "The Little Squat Man."
During his nineteen-year career as a Yankee, Berra's teams dominated baseball. Berra appeared in fourteen World Series, winning ten championships, both of which are records. Because Berra's playing career coincided with the Yankees' most consistent period, it enabled him to establish the major league records for World Series games (75), at-bats (259), hits (71), doubles (10), singles (49), games caught (63), and catcher putouts (457). In Game 3 of the 1947 World Series, Berra hit the first pinch-hit home run in World Series history off Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Ralph Branca (who later served up Bobby Thomson's famous home run in 1951). Though Berra played in 14 World Series, he played every game in just nine of them, one fewer than Joe DiMaggio, who played every game in all ten of his Series appearances.
Berra has become a beloved, cuddly figure in American sport, which in some ways has obscured his immense talents as a competitive athlete. Berra was a fifteen-time All-Star, and won the league's MVP award three times, in 1951, 1954 and 1955. From 1950 to 1957, Berra never finished lower than 4th in the voting. He received MVP votes in fifteen consecutive seasons, tied with Barry Bonds and second only to Hank Aaron's nineteen straight seasons with MVP support. (Ted Williams also received MVP votes in every year of his career, but it was twice interrupted by military service.) Between 1949 and 1955, on a team filled with stars such as Mickey Mantle and Joe DiMaggio, it was Berra who led the Yankees in RBI for seven consecutive seasons.
Berra was excellent at hitting bad pitches, covering all areas of the strike zone (as well as beyond) with great extension. He was simultaneously able to swing the bat like a golf club to hit low pitches for deep home runs, and chop at high pitches for line drives. However, despite this wide plate coverage, he also had great bat control. Five times, Berra had more home runs in a season than strikeouts. In 1950, Berra struck out twelve times in 597 at-bats. This combination made him a feared "clutch hitter"; rival manager Paul Richards once called Berra "the toughest man in the league in the last three innings."
As a fielder, Berra was truly outstanding. Quick, mobile, and a great handler of pitchers, Berra led all American League catchers eight times in games caught and in chances accepted, six times in double plays (a major league record), eight times in putouts, three times in assists, and once in fielding percentage. Berra left the game with the AL records for catcher putouts (8,723) and chances accepted (9,520). He was also one of only four catchers to ever field 1.000 for a season, playing 88 errorless games in 1958. Later in his career, he became a good defensive outfielder in Yankee Stadium's notoriously difficult left field. In June 1962, at the age of 37, Berra showed his superb physical endurance by catching an entire 22-inning, seven-hour game against the Tigers.
One of the most notable days of Berra's playing career came when he caught Don Larsen's perfect game in the 1956 World Series, the only no-hitter ever thrown in postseason play. The pictures of Berra leaping into Larsen's arms following the 27th out are among the game's most memorable images.
On 18 July, 1999, Larsen and Berra celebrated the feat with a ceremonial pitch for "Yogi Berra Day" at Yankee Stadium (the 74-year-old Berra did not jump into the 70-year-old Larsen's arms, though). This was a part of the celebration to mark the return of Berra to the Stadium, which ended his 14-year feud with Yankees' owner George Steinbrenner. The feud started in 1985 when Steinbrenner promised Berra a full chance as manager, then fired him in the third week of the season. Berra vowed to never return to Yankee Stadium so long as Steinbrenner owned the team. Amazingly, Yankees pitcher David Cone then hurled his own perfect game against Montreal Expos, only the 16th time it had ever been done in Major League history. The coincidence served to illustrate one of the more famous Yogiisms – "It's like déjà vu all over again".
In 1946, Berra wore uniform No. 38 on the Yankees, switching to 35 the next year. In 1948, he changed to No. 8, which he kept for the rest of his career on the Yankees (and later, the Mets). The No. 8 was retired in 1972 by the Yankees, jointly honoring Berra and Bill Dickey, his predecessor as the Yankees' star catcher. Berra's uniform number and stocky build were familiar enough to baseball fans that Sports Illustrated once used a photo of Berra facing away from the camera as its cover, with the blurb "YOGI'S BACK." Yankee television announcer Michael Kay has introduced Berra on Old Timers Day as "one of the best known faces on the planet."
After Berra's Yankee playing career ended with the 1963 World Series, he was hired as the manager of the New York Yankees. Much was made of an incident on board the team bus in August. Following a loss, infielder Phil Linz was playing his harmonica, and Berra ordered him to stop. Seated on the other end of the bus, Linz couldn't hear what Berra had said, and Mickey Mantle impishly informed Linz, "He said to play it louder." When Linz did so, an angry Berra slapped the harmonica out of his hands. All was apparently forgotten when Berra's Yankees rode a September surge to return to the World Series. But the team lost to the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games, after which Berra was fired. It was later learned that general manager Ralph Houk had been ready to discharge Berra since midseason, apparently for a perceived loss of control over the team.
Berra made a very brief return to the field as a player-coach for the crosstown Mets, playing in just four games. His last at-bat came on May 9, 1965, just three days shy of his 40th birthday. Berra stayed with the Mets as a coach for the next eight seasons, becoming the team's manager in 1972, following the death of manager Gil Hodges. That same year, he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. The following season, his Mets won the NL East division despite winning just 82 games, and eventually lost that year's World Series in seven games. Berra remained the team's manager for two more seasons. In 1976, he rejoined the Yankees as a coach. The team won its first of three consecutive AL titles, and (as had been the case throughout his playing days) Berra's reputation as a lucky charm was reinforced. (Casey Stengel once said of his catcher, "He'd fall in a sewer and come up with a gold watch.") Berra was eventually elevated to Yankee manager before the 1984 season. Berra agreed to stay in the job for 1985 after receiving assurances that he would not be fired, but the impatient Steinbrenner did fire Berra after the 16th game of the season. Instead of firing him personally, Steinbrenner dispatched Clyde King to deliver the news for him [1]. This caused a rift between the two men that would not be mended for almost 15 years.
On August 22, 1988, Berra and Dickey were honored with plaques to be hung in Monument Park at Yankee Stadium. Berra's plaque calls him "A legendary Yankee" and cites his most frequent quote, "It ain't over till it's over." However, the honor was not enough to shake Berra's conviction that Steinbrenner had broken their personal agreement; Berra would not set foot in the Stadium for another decade, after Steinbrenner publicly apologized to Berra.
In 1999, Berra appeared at No. 40 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players, and fan balloting elected him to the Major League Baseball All-Century Team.
Yogi also played for a Cranston, RI team during the WWII years under an assumed name.
| G | AB | R | H | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | SB | BB | SO | BA | OBP | SLG | TB | SH | HBP |
| 2,120 | 7,555 | 1,175 | 2,150 | 321 | 49 | 358 | 1,430 | 33 | 704 | 414 | .285 | .348 | .482 | 3,643 | 9 | 52 |
Berra married his wife Carmen in 1949. They have three children and have lived in Montclair, New Jersey since Berra's playing days. Two of Berra's sons also played professional sports - his son Dale Berra played shortstop for the Pittsburgh Pirates, New York Yankees, and Houston Astros, and his son Tim Berra played American football for the New York Jets.
In 1998, the Yogi Berra Museum and Learning Center [2] and Yogi Berra Stadium (home to the New Jersey Jackals
baseball team) opened on the campus of
Berra is very involved with the project, and frequents the museum for signings, discussions, and other events. It is his intention to teach children important values such as sportsmanship and dedication, both on and off the baseball diamond. When asked "So, what is it you do here?" Yogi, without missing a beat, replied convincingly, "It's my museum."
Berra is a recipient of the Boy Scouts of America's highest adult award, the Silver Buffalo Award.
In February 2005 Berra filed a lawsuit against Turner Broadcasting System. He alleges that they used his name in a racy advertisement for Sex and the City. The advertisement asked what the definition of a "yogasm" is: a) a type of yo-yo trick; (b) sex with Yogi Berra; or c) what Samantha has with a guy from yoga class. (The answer given was C.) This case was settled out of court for an undisclosed sum of money.
Berra has frequently appeared in advertisements for Yoo-hoo, AFLAC, Entenmann's, and Stovetop stuffing, among others, frequently demonstrating his famous "yogiisms." He is among the longest running commercial pitchman in the U.S.; his television commercials span from the early 1950s to the present day. Based on his style of speaking, Yogi was named Wisest Fool of the Past 50 Years by the Economist magazine in January 2005.
In an article in 1976 in Esquire magazine, sportswriter Harry Stein published an "All Time All-Star Argument Starter," consisting of five ethnic baseball teams. Berra was the catcher on Stein's Italian team.
Berra is famous around the non-baseball world for his pithy comments and witticisms, known as Yogiisms.
Similar utterances are called "Colemanisms" or "Colemanballs" in the United Kingdom, "Cruijffiaans" in The Netherlands, "Perronismes" in the French speaking part of Canada and "Trapattonismi" in Italy. In Australia they are called "Dyerisms," after Australian rules football legend Jack Dyer. Movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn is also the source for several humorous "Goldwynisms."
Yogiisms should not be confused with Farberisms (popularized by Prof. David J. Farber). The former are typically either pleonastic or oxymoronic redundancies, while the latter are most often non-sequiturial mondegreens, though both usually share the goal of making a point through surreally humorous, absurdist mis-use of language, especially the alteration of clichés through malapropism and mixed metaphor.
Four books by Yogi Berra (with co-authors):
| Accomplishments | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| New York Yankees 1947 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Snuffy
Stirnweiss | 3 Allie Clark | 5 Joe DiMaggio | 6
Bobby Brown | 8 Aaron Robinson | 10
Phil Rizzuto | 11 Joe Page | 14 Lonny Frey | 15 Tommy Henrich | 16 Bill
Bevens | 20 Spec Shea | 21 Spud Chandler | 22
Allie Reynolds | 24 Billy
Johnson | 27 Johnny Lindell | 29 Sherm
Lollar | 34 Bobo Newsom | 35 Yogi Berra | 36
Jack Phillips | 38 Karl Drews | 42 Butch
Wensloff | 43 Vic Raschi | 50 Ralph Houk | 51
George McQuinn Manager Bucky Harris |
| New York Yankees 1949 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Snuffy
Stirnweiss | 5 Joe DiMaggio | 6 Bobby
Brown | 7 Cliff Mapes | 8 Yogi Berra | 10
Phil Rizzuto | 11 Joe Page | 14 Gene Woodling | 15 Tommy Henrich | 17 Vic Raschi | 22 Allie Reynolds | 24 Billy Johnson | 25 Hank Bauer | 27 Johnny Lindell | 28 Tommy Byrne | 29 Charlie Silvera | 30 Ed Lopat | 36 Johnny
Mize | 38 Gus Niarhos | 42 Jerry Coleman Manager Casey Stengel |
| New York Yankees 1950 World Series roster |
|---|
| 5 Joe DiMaggio | 6
Bobby Brown | 7 Cliff Mapes | 8 Yogi Berra | 10 Phil Rizzuto | 14 Gene
Woodling | 17 Vic Raschi | 19 Whitey Ford | 22
Allie Reynolds | 24 Billy
Johnson | 25 Hank Bauer | 26 Tom Ferrick | 30
Ed Lopat | 36 Johnny Mize | 38 Johnny Hopp | 40 Jackie Jensen | 41 Joe
Collins | 42 Jerry Coleman | 52 Tom
Morgan Manager Casey Stengel |
| New York Yankees 1951 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Billy Martin | 5
Joe DiMaggio | 7 Mickey Mantle | 8 Yogi Berra | 9 Bobby Brown | 10 Phil Rizzuto | 11 Johnny Sain | 12 Gil
McDougald | 14 Gene Woodling | 17 Vic Raschi |
21 Bob Kuzava | 22 Allie Reynolds | 25
Hank Bauer | 30 Ed Lopat | 35 Joe Ostrowski | 36 Johnny Mize | 38 Johnny
Hopp | 40 Bobby Hogue | 41 Joe Collins | 42
Jerry Coleman | 52 Tom Morgan Manager Casey Stengel |
| New York Yankees 1952 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Billy Martin | 7
Mickey Mantle | 8 Yogi Berra | 9 Hank Bauer | 10 Phil Rizzuto | 11 Johnny
Sain | 12 Gil McDougald | 14 Gene Woodling |
17 Vic Raschi | 18 Ray Scarborough | 21
Bob Kuzava | 22 Allie Reynolds | 24 Tom Gorman | 25 Irv Noren | 30 Ed
Lopat | 32 Ralph Houk | 36 Johnny Mize | 40
Ewell Blackwell | 41 Joe Collins Manager Casey Stengel |
| New York Yankees 1953 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Billy Martin | 7
Mickey Mantle | 8 Yogi Berra | 9 Hank Bauer | 10 Phil Rizzuto | 11 Johnny
Sain | 12 Gil McDougald | 14 Gene Woodling |
15 Joe Collins | 16 Whitey Ford | 17 Vic Raschi | 18 Jim McDonald | 21 Bob Kuzava | 22 Allie Reynolds | 24 Tom
Gorman | 25 Irv Noren | 30 Ed Lopat | 36
Johnny Mize | 38 Art Schallock | 45 Don Bollweg Manager Casey Stengel |
| New York Yankees 1956 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Billy Martin | 6
Andy Carey | 7 Mickey Mantle | 8 Yogi Berra | 9 Hank Bauer | 12 Gil
McDougald | 14 Bill Skowron | 15 Joe Collins |
16 Whitey Ford | 17 Enos Slaughter | 18
Don Larsen (World Series MVP) | 19
Bob Turley | 22 Mickey McDermott | 23
Tommy Byrne | 28 Tom Morgan | 32
Elston Howard | 36 Norm Siebern | 39
George Wilson | 41 Bob Cerv | 42
Jerry Coleman | 47 Tom Sturdivant | 53
Johnny Kucks Manager Casey Stengel |
| New York Yankees 1958 World Series roster |
|---|
| 1 Bobby Richardson
| 6 Andy Carey | 7 Mickey Mantle | 8 Yogi Berra | 9 Hank Bauer | 10 Tony
Kubek | 11 Jerry Lumpe | 12 Gil McDougald | 14
Bill Skowron | 16 Whitey Ford | 17 Enos Slaughter | 18 Don Larsen | 19 Bob
Turley (World Series MVP) | 20 Marv
Throneberry | 23 Murry Dickson | 24 Duke Maas |
25 Norm Siebern | 26 Ryne Duren | 28 Art Ditmar | 32 Elston Howard | 53 Johnny Kucks | 55 Zach Monroe Manager Casey Stengel |
| New York Yankees 1961 World Series roster |
|---|
| 47 - Luis Arroyo | 8 -
Yogi Berra | 38 - Johnny Blanchard | 6 -
Clete Boyer | 39 - Jim Coates | 28 - Bud Daley | 16 - Whitey Ford (World Series MVP) | 12 - Billy Gardner | 32 -
Elston Howard | 10 - Tony Kubek | 11 -
Héctor López | 7 - Mickey Mantle | 9 -
Roger Maris | 15 - Jack Reed | 1 -
Bobby Richardson | 14 - Bill Skowron | 22 -
Bill Stafford | 23 - Ralph Terry Manager Ralph Houk |
| New York Yankees 1962 World Series roster |
|---|
| 8 - Yogi Berra | 38 -
Johnny Blanchard | 6 - Clete Boyer | 30 -
Marshall Bridges | 39 - Jim Coates | 28 -
Bud Daley | 16 - Whitey Ford | 32 - Elston Howard | 10 - Tony Kubek | 26 - Dale Long | 11 - Héctor López | 7 - Mickey Mantle | 9 - Roger Maris | 1 - Bobby Richardson | 14 - Bill Skowron | 22 - Bill Stafford | 23 - Ralph Terry (World Series MVP) | 15 - Tom Tresh Manager Ralph Houk |
| New York Mets 1969 World Series roster |
|---|
| 20 – Tommie Agee | 12 – Ken Boswell | 27 – Don Cardwell | 5 – Ed Charles | 22 – Donn Clendenon | 10 – Duffy Dyer | 11 – Wayne Garrett | 17 – Rod Gaspar | 39 – Gary Gentry | 15 – Jerry Grote | 3 - Bud Harrelson | 21 – Cleon Jones | 34 – Cal Koonce | 36 – Jerry Koosman | 7 – Ed Kranepool | 9 – J. C. Martin | 43 – Jim McAndrew | 45 – Tug McGraw | 30 – Nolan Ryan | 41 – Tom Seaver | 24 – Art Shamsky | 4 – Ron Swoboda | 42 Ron Taylor | 6 – Al Weis |
| Manager 14 - Gil Hodges; Coaches 8 – Yogi Berra | 52 – Joe Pignatano | 54 – Rube Walker | 53 Eddie Yost |
| Major League Baseball | MLB All-Century Team |
|---|
| Nolan Ryan •
Sandy Koufax • Cy Young • Roger Clemens • Bob Gibson • Walter
Johnson • Warren Spahn • Christy
Mathewson • Lefty Grove Johnny Bench • Yogi Berra • Lou Gehrig • Mark McGwire • Jackie Robinson • Rogers Hornsby • Mike Schmidt • Brooks Robinson • Cal Ripken, Jr. • Ernie Banks • Honus Wagner Babe Ruth • Hank Aaron • Ted Williams • Willie Mays • Joe DiMaggio • Mickey Mantle • Ty Cobb • Ken Griffey, Jr. • Pete Rose • Stan Musial |
| New York Yankees managers |
|---|