Top 115 Quotes & Sayings by Mickey Mantle

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American baseball player Mickey Mantle.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Mickey Mantle

Mickey Charles Mantle, nicknamed "the Commerce Comet" and "the Mick", was an American professional baseball player. Mantle played his entire Major League Baseball (MLB) career (1951–1968) with the New York Yankees as a center fielder, right fielder, and first baseman. Mantle was one of the best players and sluggers and is regarded by many as the greatest switch hitter in baseball history. Mantle was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1974 and was elected to the Major League Baseball All-Century Team in 1999.

It was all I lived for, to play baseball.
I'll play baseball for the Army or fight for it, whatever they want me to do.
The biggest game I ever played in was probably Don Larsen's perfect game. — © Mickey Mantle
The biggest game I ever played in was probably Don Larsen's perfect game.
When I hit a home run I usually didn't care where it went. So long as it was a home run was all that mattered.
It's unbelievable how much you don't know about the game you've been playing all your life.
A team is where a boy can prove his courage on his own. A gang is where a coward goes to hide.
The only thing I can do is play baseball. I have to play ball. It's the only thing I know.
My views are just about the same as Casey's.
I always loved the game, but when my legs weren't hurting it was a lot easier to love.
I don't care who you are, you hear those boos.
As far as I'm concerned, Aaron is the best ball player of my era. He is to baseball of the last fifteen years what Joe DiMaggio was before him. He's never received the credit he's due.
Sometimes I think if I had the same body and the same natural ability and someone else's brain, who knows how good a player I might have been.
You don't realize how easy this game is until you get up in that broadcasting booth. — © Mickey Mantle
You don't realize how easy this game is until you get up in that broadcasting booth.
I could never be a manager. All I have is natural ability.
Roger Maris was as good a man and as good a ballplayer as there ever was.
Today's Little Leaguers, and there are millions of them each year, pick up how to hit and throw and field just by watching games on TV. By the time they're out of high school, the good ones are almost ready to play professional ball.
To play 18 years in Yankee Stadium is the best thing that could ever happen to a ballplayer.
I guess you could say I'm what this country is all about.
He who has the fastest golf cart never has a bad lie.
If I knew I was going to live this long, I'd have taken better care of myself.
Somebody once asked me if I ever went up to the plate trying to hit a home run. I said, 'Sure, every time.'
After I hit a home run I had a habit of running the bases with my head down. I figured the pitcher already felt bad enough without me showing him up rounding the bases.
Hitting the ball was easy. Running around the bases was the tough part.
Heroes are people who are all good with no bad in them. That's the way I always saw Joe DiMaggio. He was beyond question one of the greatest players of the century.
Well, baseball was my whole life. Nothing's ever been as fun as baseball.
They should have come out of the dugout on tippy-toes, holding hands and singing.
The best team I ever saw, and I really mean this, was the '61 Yankees.
I hated to bat against Drysdale. After he hit you he'd come around, look at the bruise on your arm and say, 'Do you want me to sign it?'
When I first came to Yankee Stadium I used to feel like the ghosts of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig were walking around in there.
When I'm hitting, I'd play for nothing. When I'm not, any kind of money I receive makes me feel as if I'm stealing.
I leaned on him for support when I got out of the cab, and he just crumpled to the ground. That's how we found out.
If I were playing today I'd do what Joe DiMaggio said. I'd go knock on the door at Yankee Stadium and when George Steinbrenner answered I'd say, 'Howdy, pardner.'
No man in the history of baseball had as much power as . No man.
It gave me a second chance. I'd like everybody to have a second chance if they need it, so I'm trying to let people know how important it is to become an organ donor.
Don't do as I did. I'm living proof of how not to live.
Thank God for baseball.
Hey Yog, what time is it? You mean right now?
The thing I really liked about Mickey was the way he treated everyone the same. — © Mickey Mantle
The thing I really liked about Mickey was the way he treated everyone the same.
To get a better piece of chicken, you'd have to be a rooster.
I've often wondered how a man who knew he was going to die could stand here and say he was the luckiest man on the face of the earth, but now I guess I know how he felt.
Bravery is a complicated thing to describe. You can't say it's three feet long and two feet wide and that it weighs four hundred pounds or that it's colored bright blue or that it sounds like a piano or that it smells like roses. It's a quality, not a thing.
If I had played my career hitting singles like Pete (Rose), I'd wear a dress.
If the World Series was on the line and I could pick one pitcher to pitch the game, I'd choose Whitey Ford every time.
I had it all and blew it.
All the ballparks and the big crowds have a certain mystique. You feel attached, permanently wedded to the sounds that ring out, to the fans chanting your name, even when there are only four or five thousand in the stands on a Wednesday afternoon.
At my best I was as good as anyone.
Every time I see his name (Dean Chance) on a lineup card, I feel like throwing up.
He foresaw the platooning that managers like Casey Stengel used years before it happened. He told me I had to be a switch-hitter if I was going to play. — © Mickey Mantle
He foresaw the platooning that managers like Casey Stengel used years before it happened. He told me I had to be a switch-hitter if I was going to play.
All I have is natural ability.
I never understood how someone who was dying could say he was the luckiest man in the world, but now I understand.
I thought I raised a ballplayer. You're nothing but a coward and a quitter.
You never have to wait long, or look far, to be reminded of how thin the line is between being a hero or a goat.
Stay away from drugs and alcohol. Listen to your moms and dads. In this great country of ours you do whatever you set your mind to. Make us proud of you.
Watch the old man. Watch how the old man keeps the guys who aren't playing happy.
My dad taught me to switch-hit. He and my grandfather, who was left-handed, pitched to me every day after school in the back yard. I batted lefty against my dad and righty against my granddad.
In 1961 somebody could've hit a home run to win the game and the next day the headline was about the M&M boys not hitting a home run. But everyone was real good about it. Instead of getting mad they joked about it.
If you want to know who was better, me or Willie Mays, you have to look at our career stats. And Willie's bottom line was better.
During my 18 years I came to bat almost 10,000 times. I struck out about 1,700 times and walked maybe 1,800 times. You figure a ballplayer will average about 500 at-bats a season. That means I played 7 years without ever hitting the ball.
If I hadn't met those two guys (Billy Martin and Whitey Ford) at the start of my career, I would have lasted another five years.
The strain on Roger (Maris) was unbelievable. After I dropped out the reporters only had one guy to go to. They surrounded him everywhere he went. He had big clumps of hair falling out. That he went ahead and did it was unbelievable.
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