Yogi Berra, who died on Tuesday, was a Hall of Fame baseball player, but he was also known for his quips and quotes known as "Yogi-isms," the inimitable quotations that turned Berra into an American icon.
Millions of people know the most famous ones: "It ain't over 'til it's over." "It's déjà vu all over again." And, "When you come to a fork in the road, take it."
But few outside Berra's family and friends have heard the one about the water sprinklers, or the 4-foot putt, or the essence of Yogi-isms.
The sprinklers story comes from Rose Cali, founder of the
"We drive up to Yogi's house to pick them up one year and a drought had been declared, a moratorium on sprinkling and using any excess water," Cali told USA TODAY Sports. "It was about 7 in the morning and his whole lawn is wet. All the plants are dripping.
Photos: Yogi in his playing days
"He's walking out of the house with Carmen, and John was outside and he said, 'Yogi, you're not supposed to be sprinkling. We're in a moratorium. You can't sprinkle your lawn now.' And Yogi turns around, looks at the lawn and says, 'John, I don't. It comes on automatically.'"
The golf story comes from from Floyd Hall, a businessman who paid for the construction of
"We were playing golf one day, and I was below the hole with about a 4-foot putt, and it was breaking to the right," Hall told USA TODAY Sports. "Yogi was standing up above the hole looking down at it, and he said, 'No, that doesn't break right. It breaks left.' So I putted the ball and it went right, and I said, 'See, Yogi, it went right.' And he said, 'Yeah, but I'm left-handed.'"
Fran Kirmser, co-producer of Bronx Bombers, a 2014 Broadway play largely about Berra's life, once quizzed Berra about where the Yogi-isms come from: "And without skipping a beat, and with that wink and a smile of his, he said, 'I'm just saying what I saw.'"
Old-Timers' Day
This summer, in the assisted living facility in
During the baseball broadcast, a video clip showed former Yankees slugger
"Hey, look, you're on television," Berra's oldest son, Larry, said before his father replied, "Yeah, there's the old man, right there."
In 2010, after suffering a bad fall on the front steps of his home, Berra missed the Yankees Old-Timers' Day. He missed it again last year, three months after his wife of 65 years died of complications from a stroke. This year Berra was hospitalized with pneumonia-like symptoms, and there's no guarantee he'll make it to this year's Old-Timers' Day on June20.
His stories start on The Hill.
Growing up on The Hill
Lawrence Peter Berra, who acquired his nickname when a friend noted Berra's resemblance to a Hindu yogi, grew up in The Hill, St.Louis' famed Italian-American neighborhood. His closest friend was Joe Garagiola, the former major league catcher and baseball broadcaster who grew up directly across the street from Berra.
"Yogi's got so many good qualities, he ought to have a Good Housekeeping Seal on his butt," Garagiola told USA TODAY Sports. "He was our leader. He was our best hitter. He was our best everything.
"Yogi could've been anything he wanted to be. He could've been a good football player."
Yes, a football player, Garagiola insisted, and he recalled the day Berra transformed their block.
"We make the turn home from school, we look at the street and there were stripes," Garagiola said. "Green stripes, on the street, 10 yards apart.
"Yogi had taken his father's best paintbrush and measured off 10 yards and made it a football field. That's the type of dedication this guy had."
How did Berra's father feel when he saw it?
"Well, his father didn't feel anything," Garagiola said. "It was Yogi who felt it."
Pietro Berra, who emigrated from Italy in 1909 and did not appreciate his best paintbrush being used to create a football field, valued work over sports. Each of Yogi Berra's four older brothers gave up baseball after Pietro Berra ordered them to get jobs. Yogi Berra appeared headed for the same fate when he dropped out of school after the eighth grade and went to work.
But he kept playing baseball, and in 1942 the Yankees offered him a $500 signing bonus and a contract worth $90 a month. Pietro Berra let Yogi — with the support of his brothers and a promise to send home part of his baseball salary — pursue a career in a sport for which he showed unique understanding.
As Yogi Berra later said, "Baseball is 90% mental. The other half is physical."
Can't beat Superman
Berra's baseball career took a detour during World War II. He served for the Navy and was on a small rocket boat off Omaha Beach on D-Day. After the war, he reported to Newark in the middle of the 1946 season with his Superman comic books, squat 5-7 build and cartoonish aura.
The manager of the Newark Bears was so unimpressed, he ordered Berra to shag balls and said there wouldn't be enough time for Berra to take batting practice at the road game. He was told to report early to the team's home park later in the week for a workout. Bobby Brown, Berra's roommate, said he arrived at the park a few hours after Berra and asked the manager about the workout.
"How did he do?" Brown recalled asking.
'Well," Brown said the manager responded as if in disbelief, "he hit some over the light towers."
Added Brown: "Yogi played that night and every night after that."
When the Yankees called him up late in the season, he was ridiculed for his looks — described as an ape by one sportswriter, deemed unfit for Yankees pinstripes by others and even insulted by an umpire who reportedly told Berra he was the ugliest player he'd ever seen. Berra shrugged off the insults in signature fashion.
"So I'm ugly," he said. "I never saw anyone hit with his face."
And, boy, could Yogi Berra hit.
Deceptively cerebral
In 19 big-league seasons, Berra pounded out 2,150 hits, including 358 home runs — numbers that helped earn him induction into the Hall of Fame.
Which led to former Yankees pitcher Jim Bouton thinking about another Yogi-ism.
Berra was known as a bad-ball hitter, and former Yankees manager Bucky Harris once called for more discipline as Berra headed to the plate.
"Think when you get up there," the manager reportedly told Berra. "Make the pitcher come in with the ball. … Think. Think."
With those instructions, Berra entered the batter's box, took three called strikes, returned to the bench and grumbled, "How can anybody think and hit at the same time?"
In retrospect, Bouton said, it is clear Berra didn't want the pitchers overthinking on the mound the same way Berra was overthinking at the plate the day he struck out looking.
Pitcher Don Larsen, who with Berra behind the plate threw a perfect game in the 1956 World Series, said he never shook off Berra's pitch selection.
"He knew all the batters," Larsen told USA TODAY Sports, "so you went with what he wanted to do."
Trusted by the likes of Larsen, Berra handled pitching staffs that helped the Yankees win five consecutive World Series titles between 1949 and 1953 and four more World Series titles before 1963, Berra's last season with the Yankees. He played in 15 All-Star Games, won 10 World Series championships and earned three American League MVP awards.
A formula designed by baseball statistics expert Bill James ranks Berra as the greatest catcher of all time.
Yet he drove Chevrolet Corvairs, Ford Escorts and Pintos even when he had more than enough money to buy a sporty Thunderbird and Mercury Cougar like the ones he bought his wife, said Larry Berra.
"From garbageman all the way up to the president of the United States, you got treated the same way," Larry Berra said. "Nobody is better than anybody else … He couldn't understand at all why people would get so hyped to see him."
Berra vs. Steinbrenner
Berra — who managed the New York Mets to the National League pennant in 1973 — returned to the Yankees as manager in 1984, and the club went 87-75 that season and failed to make the playoffs. When the Yankees started the 1985 season 6-10, team owner George Steinbrenner abruptly fired Berra.
Fourteen years later, Berra still refused to step foot in Yankee Stadium. But he begrudgingly agreed to meet with Steinbrenner at the newly opened Yogi Berra Museum. That evening, he paced as he waited on the Yankees owner, who, clad in a turtleneck and sport coat, finally arrived. Cali, the museum founder, recalled what transpired next.
"George, you know you're late," Berra said.
"Yeah," Steinbrenner said. "Fourteen years late."
"Come on," Berra said, "I'm going to take you on a tour of the museum."
The men slipped off together. Steinbrenner apologized to Berra, and one of most memorable days in Yankees history was in the works: Yogi Berra Day on July18, 1999.
A crowd of 41,930 roared for Berra, who caught the ceremonial first pitch from Larsen, into whose arms Berra leaped after the perfect game in the 1956 World Series.
"To see the reception that Yogi got, I mean, it was remarkable," Yankees manager Joe Girardi, who was the team's starting catcher that day, told USA TODAY Sports in a telephone interview. "Just how loud it was and how it seemed to go on forever.
"As he went out to catch the first pitch, I was there and asked him to bless my glove that day. Obviously, it worked."
David Cone pitched a perfect game — only the third in club history — and Girardi's suggestions that Berra's mojo was at work brought to mind how former Yankees manager Casey Stengel once appraised Berra.
"He'd fall in a sewer and come up with a gold watch," Stengel said.
Yogi-isms kept coming
In the days leading up to Berra's 90th birthday, friends and family members described him as humble, kind, devoted, smart — that's right, smart — and they have shared other, less-famous Yogi-isms.
Garagiola said he and Berra decided at spring training one year to meet for Mass at 5:30 a.m. Knowing how important punctuality is to Berra, Garagiola showed up at 5:10 a.m., only to discover Berra waiting.
"Yogi says, 'What took you so long?'" Garagiola recalled. "I said, 'What took me so long? I'm early. I'm 20 minutes early. You said 5:30 a.m. We agreed on it. Here I am and you say, What took him so long?' Then he said, 'That's the earliest you've ever been late.'"
Like father, like son
The Berra name attracted new attention in 1977. Dale Berra, the youngest son of Yogi, had been called up to the Pittsburgh Pirates at age 20 — a year younger than his father was when he was called up by the Yankees.
Said Dale Berra: "One of the writers asked me, 'How are you and you dad alike? And I said, 'All of our similarities are different.' I didn't even know I said it until the writers said, 'Do you realize you said all your similarities are different?'"
Dale Berra, an infielder who was 5 inches taller and 5 pounds lighter than his father was as a major leaguer, retired after 11 years with the following stats: 603 hits, 49 home runs and one Yogi-ism.
So the Berra family continued to rely on its patriarch, who delivered again in January. The NFL had announced it was looking into allegations the New England Patriots intentionally deflated footballs before their AFC Championship Game against the Indianapolis Colts.
Lindsay Berra tweeted her grandfather's reaction to what became known as Deflategate.
"If you're going to cheat, it's better if you don't get caught."