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Willie Mays Quotes - IQDb - Internet Quotes Database

Quotes from Willie Mays


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If you can do that - if you run, hit, run the bases, hit with power, field, throw and do all other things that are part of the game - then you're a good ballplayer.


In 1950, when the Giants signed me, they gave me $15,000. I bought a 1950 Mercury. I couldn't drive, but I had it in the parking lot there, and everybody that could drive would drive the car. So it was like a community thing.


When I was in Birmingham I used to go to a place called Redwood Field. I used to get there for a two o'clock game. Where can you make this kind of money playing sports? It was just a pleasure to go out and enjoy myself and get paid for it.


That's how easy baseball was for me. I'm not trying to brag or anything, but I had the knowledge before I became a professional baseball player to do all these things and know what each guy would hit.


And my father didn't have money for me to go to college. And at that particular time they didn't have black quarterbacks, and I don't think I could have made it in basketball, because I was only 5' 11". So I just picked baseball.


When I got to professional ball I used to play 150 games every year. It depends on how many games there was.


I would try and help everybody, because the game was so easy for me. It was just like walking in the park.


I think I was programmed to do good things when I came into the majors. I knew how to play.


I played with the Birmingham Black Barons. I was making 500 at 14. That was a lot of money in those days.


Every time I look at my pocketbook, I see Jackie Robinson.


I was very blessed with a good body. Never got hurt. Never was in the hospital. The only time I was in the hospital was when I would get exhausted a little bit, and go in for a check-up or something.


It's not hard. When I'm not hitting, I don't hit nobody. But when I'm hitting, I hit anybody.


I don't mean to be bashful, but I was.


Maybe I was born to play ball. Maybe I truly was.


When I'm not hitting, I don't hit nobody. But, when I'm hitting, I hit anybody.


The greatest challenge I think is adjusting to not playing baseball. The reason for that is I had to come out of baseball and come into the business world, not being a college graduate, not being educated to come into the business world the way I should have.


They throw the ball, I hit it. They hit the ball, I catch it.


I was a baseball player, I taught baseball, and all of a sudden I was in the business world. Now I used the baseball world to talk about their product. Not too much, just enough to keep going. Just be yourself and you'll never have a problem. That's what I did.


I always enjoyed playing ball, and it didn't matter to me whether I played with white kids or black. I never understood why an issue was made of who I played with, and I never felt comfortable, when I grew up, telling other people how to act.


At ten I was playing against 18-year-old guys. At 15 I was playing professional ball with the Birmingham Black Barons, so I really came very quickly in all sports.