Top 73 Quotes & Sayings by Earl Weaver

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American coach Earl Weaver.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Earl Weaver

Earl Sidney Weaver was an American professional baseball manager, author, and television broadcaster. After playing in minor league baseball, he retired without playing in Major League Baseball (MLB). He became a minor league manager, and then managed in MLB for 17 years with the Baltimore Orioles. Weaver's style of managing was summed up in the quote: "pitching, defense, and the three-run homer." He did not believe in placing emphasis on "small ball" tactics such as stolen bases, hit and run plays, or sacrifice bunts. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996.

The key to winning baseball games is pitching, fundamentals, and three run homers.
Playing baseball is fun. If I could play, I'd never retire. But managing is work. It's constant decisions of whose feelings you want to hurt all the time.
I think there should be bad blood between all clubs. — © Earl Weaver
I think there should be bad blood between all clubs.
The key step for an infielder is the first one, to the left or right, but before the ball is hit.
Most of the umpires, it's amazing: 98 percent of them will not hold a grudge. I always felt a couple of them did. I never wanted to argue with an umpire in my life.
I really don't like confrontations. One of the reasons I'm retiring is that I'm tired of hurting people's feelings.
In baseball, you can't kill the clock. You've got to give the other man his chance. That's why this is the greatest game.
There ain't no genius here. Strategy in baseball is overrated. People say, 'That Weaver, he plays for the long ball too much.' You bet I do. Hit 'em out. Then I got no worry about somebody lousing up a bunt, I got no worry about the hit and run - and that's really overrated - I got no worry about base-running errors. And I can't screw it up myself.
In my mind, the home run is paramount because it means instant runs.
A winning player is nothing more than a player on a winning team. A losing player is a guy who played on a losing team that year.
You must remember that anyone under 30 - especially a ballplayer - is an adolescent. I never got close to being an adult until I was 32. Even though I was married and had a son at 20, I was a kid at 32, living at home with my parents. Sure, I was a manager then. That doesn't mean you're grown up.
If an umpire misses a called third strike and the other side ends up scoring because of it, I'm not going to forget it. If there are runners on second and third and two out, and if the umpire has just given the hitter an extra strike and the next pitch goes into the hole and both runs score, I've got to say something to the guy.
The job of arguing with the umpire belongs to the manager, because it won't hurt the team if he gets thrown out of the game. — © Earl Weaver
The job of arguing with the umpire belongs to the manager, because it won't hurt the team if he gets thrown out of the game.
The worst thing about being on the road is all you want to do when you get home is to stay home, but as soon as you get back, all the wife wants to do is go out because she's been stuck home all the time you've been stuck on the road.
The only thing that matters is what happens on the little hump out in the middle of the field.
This ain't a football game, we do this every day.
You can't sit on a lead and run a few plays into the line and just kill the clock. You've got to throw the ball over the damn plate and five the other man his chance. That's why baseball is the greatest game of them all.
Coaches are an integral part of any manager's team, especially if they are good pinochle players.
If you want to steal a base, steal a base. Don't make the hitter swing at a bad pitch trying to protect the runner.
Don't play for one run unless you know that run will win a ballgame.
There are only three outs an inning, and they should be treasured. Give one away, and you're making everything harder for yourself.
No one's gonna give a damn in July if you lost a game in March.
Until you're the person that other people fall back on, until you're the one that's leaned on, not the person doing the leaning, you're not an adult.
I used to be a pretty good hit-and-run man when I played in the minors. I handled the bat well and could hit the ball to the right side of the infield. Nevertheless, I know that you often give the opposition an out on the hit-and-run play.
The key step for an infielder is the first one... but before the ball is hit.
Don't worry, the fans don't start booing until July.
Your most precious possessions on offense are your twenty-seven outs.
Momentum? Momentum is the next day's starting pitcher.
The guy who says, 'I love the challenge of managing,' is one step from being out of a job.
The only thing I'd ever wanted in my life was to be a major-league ballplayer, but I had to admit to myself that I wasn't good enough. It broke my heart.
A manager has to convince his hitters that they have to get on base for the next guy and that no player can do it by himself. Sometimes that isn't easy. In the playoffs, you can get into trouble because everybody wants to be a hero.
You win pennants in the off season when you build your teams with trades and free agents.
I wanted no part of losing. Why play if you can't beat the other guys more often than they beat you?
Judging ballplayers and turning in reports, giving my opinion of who will get to the big leagues and who will not... I think my baseball judgment was really good.
When you play for one run, that's usually all you get. I have nothing against the bunt in its place, but most of the time, that place is in the bottom of a long-forgotten closet.
The easiest way around the bases is with one swing of the bat.
Bad ballplayers make good managers.
A manager should stay as far away as possible from his players. I don't know if I said ten words to Frank Robinson while he played for me. — © Earl Weaver
A manager should stay as far away as possible from his players. I don't know if I said ten words to Frank Robinson while he played for me.
I stand by my belief that individual performances are the most important part of baseball.
Pitching keeps you in the games. Home runs win the game.
A manager gets in the Hall of Fame by what his players have done for him.
I think the National League has better biorhythms in July.
What else does a manager do but push buttons? He doesn't hit, he doesn't run, he doesn't throw, and he doesn't catch the ball. A manager has twenty-five players, or twenty-five buttons, and he selects which one he'll use, or push, that day. The manager who presses the right buttons most often is the one who wins the most games.
People always make a lot about how I don't carry grudges. That's my religious upbringing. I went nine years without missing Sunday school. Lutheran. I can't live with hatred inside of me. That's what I learned. I ain't scared of dying, either.
A manager wins games in the winter when he picks his team.
I had a successful career: not necessarily a Hall of Fame career, but a successful one.
Nobody likes to hear it, because it's dull, but the reason you win or lose is darn near always the same - pitching.
I don't want to spend my whole life watching the sun go down behind the left field bleachers. — © Earl Weaver
I don't want to spend my whole life watching the sun go down behind the left field bleachers.
I became an optimist when I discovered that I wasn't going to win any more games by being anything else.
On my tombstone just write, 'The sorest loser that ever lived.'
To keep your job, you fire others or bench them or trade them. You have to do the thinking for 25 guys, and you can't be too close to any of them.
The Orioles made me. I didn't make the Orioles.
A manager's job is simple. For one hundred sixty-two games you try not to screw up all that smart stuff your organization did last December.
I'd rather you walk with the bases loaded.
Economics played a role. Raleighs have gone from six fifty to nine dollars a carton, but there's a three-quarter cent coupon on the back. You can get all kinds of things with them, blenders, everything. I saved up enough one time and got Al Bumbry.
Optimism is the cheerful frame of mind that enables a teakettle to sing, though in hot water up to its nose.
Do the dull things right so the extraordinary things will not be required too often.
Team speed for Christ's sake. You got bleeping' bleep bleep little fleas on the bleeping' bases getting picked off, trying to steal, getting thrown out, taking runs away from you. You get some big bleep bleepers that can hit the bleeping ball out of ballpark and you can't make any bleep bleeping mistakes.
My best game plan is to sit on the bench and call out specific instructions like 'C'mon Boog,' 'Get a hold of one, Frank,' or 'Let's go, Brooks.'
I gave (pitcher) Mike Cuellar more chances than I gave my first wife.
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