Jim Bouton

Jim Bouton
James Alan "Jim" Boutonis an American retired professional baseball player. Bouton played in Major League Baseballas a pitcher for the New York Yankees, Seattle Pilots, Houston Astros, and Atlanta Braves between 1962 and 1978. He has also been a best-selling author, actor, activist, sportscaster and one of the creators of Big League Chew...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionBaseball Player
Date of Birth8 March 1939
CityNewark, NJ
CountryUnited States of America
Most players saw amphetamines as harmless. But the professional athlete does a lot of things to his body that they don't think of as harmful.
Throw him low smoke and we'll go pound some Budweiser.
You spend a good piece of your life gripping a baseball and in the end it turns out that it was the other way around all the time.
We broke in together in 1959. You never know who will make it.
It goes back to the old concept of town teams your guys: the mailman, the milkman, you know, the carpenter, the plumber. The popularity of vintage baseball will thrive on the backlash against the corporate, over-hyped, over-sold Major League Baseball.
It goes back to the old concept of town teams ù your guys: the mailman, the milkman, you know, the carpenter, the plumber. The popularity of vintage baseball will thrive on the backlash against the corporate, over-hyped, over-sold Major League Baseball.
Back then, if you had a sore arm, the only people concerned were you and your wife. Now it's you, your wife, your agent, your investment counselor, your stockbroker, and your publisher.
For a hundred years, the owners screwed the players. For 25 years, the players have screwed the owners-they've got 75 years to go.
The older they get, the better they were when they were younger.
A lot of long relievers are ashamed to tell their parents what they do. The only nice thing about it is that you get to wear a uniform like everbody else.
We were like farm animals compared to today's players who are treated like thoroughbreds.
After I won 21 games, I said, "This isn't that hard actually. I can do this every year for maybe 10, 15 years." To tell you the truth I thought I was going to be in the Hall of Fame. I really thought that. You feel so strong, so powerful walking down the street. You know you can throw a ball harder than any man in the world, or certainly the top five. Sandy Koufax knocked all of us out of the box on that one, so we would think, "I'm the second or third hardest thrower in the game."
Lots of people look up to Billy Martin. That's because he just knocked them down.
Forget goals. Value the process.