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Catcher and philosopher: Yogi Berra gets his due

You might think it impossible that someone as celebrated as New York Yankees superstar Yogi Berra, whose career stretched from the 1940s to the 1980s, could ever be undervalued as a player and manager. But that’s precisely the assessment that Sean Mullin, the director of the affectionate documentary “It Ain’t Over,” aims to correct.  

The film begins with a clip from a ceremony at the 2015 All-Star Game where fans had voted in the four “greatest living players” – Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Johnny Bench, and Sandy Koufax. As Berra’s doting granddaughter and the film’s co-producer, Lindsay Berra, tells it, she was in the stadium watching the event with her still very-much-alive grandfather. They were unamused. 

As recounted in the film by interviewees such as sportscasters Bob Costas and the late Vin Scully, and Yankees shortstop great Derek Jeter, Yogi’s goofy, companionable demeanor as player and, later, commercial pitchman, may have worked against people taking him seriously, at least outside the baseball world. In fact, his Hall of Fame statistics – including 10 World Series rings, three Most Valuable Player awards, a lifetime batting average of .285, and 358 home runs – mark him as perhaps the greatest major league catcher of all time.

Why We Wrote This

When one of baseball’s greats seems to be overlooked, what’s the best way to correct that? The director of “It Ain’t Over” offers a documentary that looks fondly at famous Hall of Famer Yogi Berra.

He grew up in an Italian neighborhood in St. Louis as Lawrence Peter Berra and got his nickname as a teenager from a friend who pointed out that, seated on the ground, legs and arms crossed, his posture resembled a yogi.

Berra’s short, stocky build – one commentator fondly observed that he looked like a fire hydrant – didn’t remind people of a professional baseball player, let alone a mighty New York Yankee taking the field with the likes of Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle. But looks can be misleading. In Berra’s case, they were downright deceiving.

Daniel Vecchione/Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics

Joe Torre, a former Yankees manager and longtime friend of Yogi Berra’s, is featured in “It Ain’t Over.”

He had his pride. Unceremoniously fired as manager in 1985 after just 16 games by owner George Steinbrenner, after having won the pennant for the team the year before, Berra refused to step inside Yankee stadium for 14 years until the boss personally apologized to him. 

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