Lou Gehrig’s Farewell to Baseball Address Saying goodbye to an athlete you have been watching is always difficult to do. Even though we see our favorite football, baseball, or basketball athletes retire and leave their sport, it isn’t the end of the road for them. However, Lou Gehrig was faced with a deadly disease that would kill him two years later. He still managed to address his fans and is still remembered for not only by excelling on the Baseball Diamond, but by delivering a speech that still touches a lot of people’s hearts to this day.
Lou Gehrig had to retire from the MLB because he was diagnosed with ALS, a disease that slowly starts to make every muscle in your body fail, until you pass away. To this day, there is
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By saying this phrase at the start of his speech, because he wants his audience to know that all though his faced with this deadly disease, he believes all the positive experiences out weigh the negative ones. Throughout the speech, he acknowledges his teammates and people he met through the MLB. However, his primary audiences are baseball fans in general. Throughout his speech, Lou calls ALS a “bad break” and only mentions this phrase two times in his speech. He states “ I might have been given a bad break, but I’ve got an awful lot to live for,” (2) by saying this, he is convincing the audience that they don’t need to feel pity or sorrow because “life goes on and he was proud of his life.” (DeCesare 3). In his speech, he mentions how the New York Giants, his biggest rival, sends him a gift. He says, “When the New York Giants, a team you would give your right arm to beat, and vice versa, sends you a gift – that’s something” …show more content…
The Babe walked over to the stooped figure at the microphone and threw his arms around Lou's neck. Photographers froze the embrace in time.”(Wulf 4) According to ESPN, Lou's speech became known as, “Baseball's Gettysburg Address.” Many people find it remarkable that during his speech, Lou hardly showed any signs of slurred speech, which is a characteristic of ALS. “The words had been written down by Lou, as he worked on the speech the night before. But when it came time to deliver them, he spoke from memory. ‘He was groping for some way to phrase the emotions that usually were kept securely locked up,’ said Eleanor Gehrig, his wife.”(1) “The reaction to his simple, honest words by those who listened in over the radio or later read the lines in the newspapers was any indication, Lou had succeeded more than he could have imagined.”(1) Lou’s words were the most memorable he ever spoke, because he was a man who didn’t speak
(Biography) After a terrible start to the 1939 season, he ended up benching himself and on June 19th, 1939 after 6 days of testing it was determined that Lou Gehrig the Iron Horse had ALS ending his baseball career. (American Classic) His consecutive game streak of 2,130 ended on May 2, 1939 when he didn’t feel like playing
Jackie Robinson - Breaking Boundaries The screaming cuss-words coming from the stands while the civil rights leader Jackie Robinson is on the baseball diamond was what they thought was the right thing to do at the moment. But, what the fans didn't realize was that they were criticizing one of the best baseball players to play the game. After Jackie attended John Muir High School in California, he went on to the University of California, Los Angeles to pursue basketball, track, baseball and football. All those sports he did extremely well in.
Ludwig Heinrich Gehrig was born in Yorkville, New York ( New York City) on June 19, 1903. During his career in baseball, Lou was a legendary player averaging .340 batting, 2721 hits, and 1995 RBI’s ( runs batted in) with the Yankees. Sadly his career and life ended too early because he was diagnosed with the disease ALS, which is a disease that weakens the muscles and hurts physical function. The disease is now called Lou Gehrig’s Disease. Lou Gehrig was a great man and baseball player because he grew up poor, strived to be better, created a legacy, and after baseball was an active man in the community.
Jackie Robinson was someone who changed and impacted baseball history. On April 15th 1947, he became the first African American player in the major leagues, signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers. He faced racial abuse and harassment throughout his career but put it aside and showed everyone how talented he really was. Robinson was named Rookie of the Year in 1947, a World Series champion in 1955, and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1962. He became the vocal champion for African American athletes and civil rights.
In this case, Ray Lewis’s delivery made the speech so memorable and impactful for all. For example he walked in clapping and high-fiving each player. He continues this by using lots of hand motions that included pointing and staring at each and everyone of the basketball players. The floor was fully commanded by him as his voice would reach different volume levels depending on how intense the words were. He did not pace very much as he would take a step in one direction staring at half of the team and then a step to the other half doing the same.
Gehrig's speech inspired millions and also raised awareness for the crippling and sometimes life threatening disease that is ALS. Lou Gehrig forever changed the lives of the people at Yankee stadium that day by giving a speech that showed that the man known as the “Iron Horse” was truly made of
Jackie Robinson overcame his struggles that he experienced in his life and still became one of the greatest baseball players of all time. Jackie Robinson was born in Cairo, Georgia on January 31, 1919. He was the youngest of five children. His mother’s name was Mollie and his father’s name was Jessie. His parents worked on a plantation in the fields.
An icon is a person or thing regarded as a representative symbol of something. This man was not only an Icon in baseball, but a civil rights leader, a father of three, and a role model for all young adults. Jackie Robinson was a small town boy who had big-time dreams. He was from a small city in Georgia and always had outstanding athletic abilities. Not only was Jackie a baseball player, but he also played a major role in breaking the color barrier.
Yogi Berra 's life was so much more than baseball he served in the Navy and stormed the beach at Normandy on D-Day. Thinking about his country before himself a quality he exhibited every day in his life. When he talked you listened so many yogi-isms that not only were related to baseball, but life itself every time you hear these a smile should come across your face remembering Barra and his influence on the field and off! Thank you, Yogi Berra Rest in Peace
People of all ethnicities would flock to games just to see Babe swing a bat, bringing a whole new social life to baseball. Men and women of different ages as well as races would all visit Babe’s baseball games, and he changed the way baseball is played as well as watched today. The Great Bambino was such an astonishing baseball player
As Jackie Robinson once said “A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives”. There is no doubt that Jackie Robinson has been one of most impactful baseball players to ever play the sport. For reasons such as pushing himself to reach his goals, facing many hardships, and being the first African American to play in the MLB, he has shown perseverance and been a role model to everyone. The first reason how Jackie Robinson has impacted society is how he worked hard to reach his goals.
On July 4, 1939, at the Yankee Stadium a man conveyed a standout amongst the most moving and powerful addresses. He was substantially more gifted on the baseball field as opposed to conveying speeches. His name is Lou Gehrig's in his 272 word speech which lasted about two minutes. Gehrig's farewell speech included rhetorical stratigies. Gehrig firmly used ethos and pathos to state his case.
In this heartfelt speech, Lou Gehrig expresses his gratitude for all of the positive things that have occured in his life, despite his recent diagnosis of ALS, in order to convey that he is still lucky even though he is now unable to play baseball. Of course the speaker of this speech is Lou Gehrig, who begins by addressing his fans because he wants to start by thanking them all for the good they have put into his life. He states his argument right away by saying that he
One of the most important rhetorical devices in Lou Gehrig ’s Farewell Address is ethos. Ethos is the attributes and credibility of the speaker. Lou Gehrig was a beloved and famous baseball player for the New York Yankees. Lou Gehrig was the only son of two hardworking German immigrants.
In fact, the first word in Gehrig’s speech is “Fans.” He immediately directly addresses the fans and by doing this, he is unselfishly noting that this speech is for them, the people who had always been there for him. Already, Gehrig had established the setting for his speech; although on the surface, was a retirement speech, it immediately became a speech about being grateful and giving thanks to the people who got him to where he was. Furthermore, by his first word as an address to the fans, Gehrig abolishes the hierarchical