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As far as control and stuff is concerned, I never had any more in my life than for that All-Star game in 1934.
Carl Hubbell -
Striking out Ruth and Gehrig in succession was too big an order.
Carl Hubbell
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Well, I could imagine how they felt with two on, nobody out and Ruth at bat. To strike him out was the last thought in my mind.
Carl Hubbell -
They talk about those All-Star Games being exhibition affairs, and maybe they are, but I've seen very few players in my life who didn't want to win, no matter whom they were playing or what for.
Carl Hubbell -
I had no chance of controlling a ball game until I first controlled myself.
Carl Hubbell -
Besides, there were 50,000 fans or more there, and they wanted to see the best you've got. There was an obligation to the people, as well as to ourselves, to go all out.
Carl Hubbell -
A fellow doesn't last long on what he has done. He has to keep on delivering.
Carl Hubbell -
I slipped and the ball got away from me with nothing on it. Maybe it's lucky it hit Lou, instead of going over the plate.
Carl Hubbell
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It was funny, when I thought of it afterward, how Ruth and Gehrig looked as they stood there. The Babe must have been waiting for me to get the ball up a little so he could get his bat under it.
Carl Hubbell -
If I'm playing cards for pennies, I want to win.
Carl Hubbell -
The screwball's an unnatural pitch. Nature never intended a man to turn his hand like that throwing rocks at a bear.
Carl Hubbell -
But I never was a strikeout pitcher like Bob Feller or Dizzy Dean or Dazzy Vance.
Carl Hubbell -
My style of pitching was to make the other team hit the ball, but on the ground.
Carl Hubbell -
So up came Gehrig. He was a sharp hitter. You could double him, too, now and then, if the ball was hit hard and straight at an infielder.
Carl Hubbell