Minor League Ball: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:


Sports blogs for fans, by fans.
Around SBN: Spencer Hall's Sports Meme Power Rankings

Bo Jackson

I got into baseball right around 1986 when Bo was really coming on.  I don't know if he was really good or really just hyped as a baseball player.  I would LOVE to hear some opinions on how he projected through the minor leagues and on to the pros.  

Really if you ask me it is a great candidate for Prospect Retro.

0 recs  |  Comment 23 comments

Story-email Email Printer Print

Comments

Display:

best two way player of all time if Healthy
He could of hit 500 HRs and steal 400 if he didn't play football.  

by Bravesin07 on Jun 22, 2007 8:12 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

yeah but...
he couldn't say 4 words without a stutter.  

jk.....

by LipstickOnDipstick on Jun 22, 2007 8:22 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Best Ever?
I was just a kid when Bo went pro, but from things i've read or pieces i've seen, there are a lot of people who would make the argument that bo jackson was the best athlete they have ever seen.  Just an unbelievable package of speed, power and hand/eye cordination.

by jlost284 on Jun 22, 2007 8:27 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

He wasn't really a statistically impressive player
but he was very exciting to watch because he was so athletic that you never knew what to expect from him. He was doing things that you just didn't see baseball players do often if at all.

I remember an allstar game he was in where he led the game off with a center field homer, then made a great defensive play in the next half inning, running up the wall to steal a homer, if memory serves. It was just awesome.

But he was a far far better football player than baseball player. Struck out too much, didn't walk enough. Almost kinda like a Cameron-type, but about a billion times more interesting to watch.

He MIGHT have made the 400-400 club, if he'd been healthy.

http://www.thebaseballcube.com/players/J/Bo-Jackson.shtml

by beastball on Jun 22, 2007 8:45 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Great athlete
ran the fastest 40 yard dah ever at the NFL combine a 4.12 (unofficial since it was hand timed)

by nyy601 on Jun 22, 2007 9:27 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

heh
Gotta love football 40 times.  When some sprinter set the 100-yard dash world record, the super-precise split clocks had him running the 40 in 4.38 seconds.

by limozeen on Jun 23, 2007 12:51 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

sprinters run 100 meters
it is about a 10 yard difference.

by BIgMax on Jun 23, 2007 10:12 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

dude, i'm not retarded
From the USOC:

There is no official world record for 40 yards.

The shortest distance that the IAAF, track and field's international governing body, recognizes for world-record purposes is an indoor 50 meters, or about 54 yards. It is 5.56 seconds and it was set by Canadian sprinter Donovan Bailey in 1996. There is also a world record for 60 meters -- 6.39 seconds by American Maurice Greene in 1998.

But it is another Canadian, Ben Johnson, who is believed to have run 40 yards faster than any human in history. Johnson is best known for injecting copious amounts of steroids and winning the 100 meters at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul in 9.79 seconds, only to have his gold medal and world record stripped after failing a post-race drug test.

Timing officials have since broken down that famed race into 10-meter increments, and Johnson was so preposterously fast that he went through 50 meters in 5.52 seconds and 60 meters in 6.37 -- both under the current world records at those distances. He went through 40 yards that day in 4.38 seconds.

He was running in spikes . . . on a warm afternoon perfectly suited for sprinting . . . with a slight tailwind . . . with years of training from arguably track's top coach, Charlie Francis . . . with Carl Lewis and six others of the fastest men on the planet chasing him . . . with 69,000 people roaring at Seoul's Olympic Stadium . . . with hundreds of millions of people watching on TV . . . with the ultimate prize in sports, an Olympic gold medal, at stake.

And, as we learned later, with muscles built with the assistance of the anabolic steroid stanazolol.

Four-point-three-eight seconds.

Then again, maybe Ben Johnson isn't the fastest 40-yard man in the world.

Maybe half the NFL is faster.

by limozeen on Jun 24, 2007 3:02 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

Personal Stories
I played college ball at IIT, 5 blocks from Comiskey Park when Bo was getting ready to make his comeback from hip replacement.  At the same time Ozzie Guillen was rehabbing a knee injury.

Rather than opening up Comiskey for them to work out, they would come over to our gym.  The first time I ever met them two things stood out, one, every other word from Ozzie was an f-bomb.  Two, Bo was short (5'8?).  That first day they go up stairs and Bo looks around for a bit, then stands under a basketball hoop flat footed and jumped up and grabbed the rim with both hands.  This was shortly AFTER hip replacement surgery.

The next time I had a chance to meet Bo was my senior year he came out to throw out the first pitch for us.  We actually got alot of time to talk to him in dugout, he loved talking about flying his plane.  That's harsh to talk about his stutter, but it is pretty bad.  I guess he was 3 years removed from playing at this point.  He took no warmups what so ever, walked out to the mound and pumped one 85 right down the middle.  No ordinary first pitch.

Lex clavatoris designati rescindenda est.

by HuskerBob on Jun 22, 2007 11:51 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

ha ha
There's little doubt in my mind that this is one fo your favorite stories to tel... I dunno how many times I've heard it.  I was wondering when you'd tell it here.

The stutter never struck me as a problem, it made Bo human.

I'd love to see John do a Prospect Retro on him.

God rested one day out of 7, Felix rests 4 out of 5.

by CrimsonLiederhosen on Jun 23, 2007 12:48 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

he's the best athlete i ever saw live
i saw him play several times before his hip injury, watched the football game on tv in which he was hurt, and that was an amazing run.  and i saw him hit a home run at the new comiskey park in the playoffs in 93.  i was just a few rows behind their dugout and didn't budge when he hit it.  i can usually tell when a ball is going out or not.  i never thought this had a chance.  it was sooooo high.  so i look at the left fielder and he's just backing up and backing up and he's at the track still looking...and it was gone.

there are some highlight films of him out there from his time in college and pre-injury.  it's some truly amazing stuff.  if he'd stayed healthy, he would have been jordanesque in stature.  he was a media darling and it would have only grown with longevity.

i've said for a long time that of all the athletes that never had a full career, he's the one i wish i could have seen play the whole way.

http://www.simdynasty.com/index.jsp?refer=mychiefs58

by huckleberry on Jun 23, 2007 1:25 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

memories
I remember the game at Yankee Stadium he homered his first three times up -- and left after getting hurt on an inside-the-park homer by Deion Sanders.  Then there was the game when he tried to call time, didn't get it, and hit one out basically one-handed.  One of a kind.

by whichthat on Jun 23, 2007 3:47 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

Bo Jackson?!?
More like Ben Revere, Sr. amirite?

by limozeen on Jun 23, 2007 12:52 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

ben revere
was never this good in tecmo bowl. i love how he can just plow through tacklers when he's not simply outsprinting them to the endzone.

by jpahk on Jun 23, 2007 2:03 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

I stutter
so I'm allowed to rag on him...seriously, I do....more of a Stuttering John , not Mel tellis.

by LipstickOnDipstick on Jun 23, 2007 2:03 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

How about the numbers
Anyone who can look at these and (other than 1990) say he was a good baseball player ......

Clearly an insane athlete and if he had concentrated on baseball he may have been great.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/j/jacksbo01.shtml

by novaoakland on Jun 23, 2007 4:25 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Breaking his bat
My most vivid memory of the guy is his temper, and how he would break his bat over his knee after striking out.

That and some of his highlight reel stuff - like running on the outfield wall after making a catch.

by FI on Jun 23, 2007 10:33 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Harold Reynolds
It never gets old watching Bo nail Reynolds at home from the warning track.  Harold gets up with this WTF look....it's hilarious.
Founder of the Rowdy Hardy Fan Club

by eazyb81 on Jun 23, 2007 11:53 AM EDT reply actions   0 recs

(ahem)
(files that under Things That Need To Be On YouTube)
"...and the only things I've found better than listening to Vin Scully are listening to Keith Jackson and uncut cocaine." (bleedjaxblue)

by drjayphd on Jun 23, 2007 11:35 PM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

baseball...
... is not really about raw athleticism.  Sure, it's good to have a good throwing arm; it's good to be fast; and it's good to have the strength to hit the ball a mile when you hit it.  But the main aspect of a position player's value is hitting, and the main aspect in turn of hitting is the ability to control the strike zone.  That means not only drawing walks (although that is important), but the ability to recognize pitches and to work the count so that the pitch you do swing at is a better one.  And that's not a question of athleticism, or if it is, certainly not "flashy" athleticism.  It's hand-eye coordination, plus endless practice, plus probably some X-factor for intuitively understanding the physics of a thrown object.  And it's the thing that Bo, as we saw him, was not that great at, rendering him a very exciting but not hugely valuable baseball player.

The really interesting question is not how good Bo would have been had his career gone the exact way he did without the hip injury... but how good he would be if he had fully concentrated on baseball and not played college or pro football.  That's the only chance he would have had to be a truly great baseball player, IMO.

and boom goes the dynamite.

by Mean Dean on Jun 24, 2007 11:42 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

Comments For This Post Are Closed


User Tools

Minor League Ball: Where the Future of Baseball is Discussed
Start posting on Minor League Ball »

Join SB Nation and dive into communities focused on all your favorite teams.

FanPosts

Community blog posts and discussion.

Recommended FanPosts

Small
Arizona Fall League 2009 Video Posted
Small
Top-10 Prospects of the Last 20 years: Hitters

Recent FanPosts

413niegoftl__sl500_aa280__small
Open Thread: Best of the Unprotected; Top Rule V Prospects
Small
Last year's rookies, top community prospects for future performance #11
Adam_jones_small
Dustin Ackley to 2nd base
Super_grover_small
Throwing stuff against the wall: What would it cost the A's to trade for Florida's Josh Johnson?
Small
AFL Championship Game Thread
Small
Last year's rookies, top community prospects for future performance #10
Small
Any surprises with your team's 40 man protection today?
Small
Mock MLB offseason: Should A's trade for Reid Brignac?
Small
This Stephen Strasburg guy

+ New FanPost All FanPosts >


Managers

Carew_small John Sickels


Site Meter