
407: Baseball's "Dangerous" Danny Gardella - With Rob Elias
Published on Aug 11
1小时32分钟
0:000:00
<div> <div> <p><span style= "font-size: 12pt; font-family: verdana, geneva, sans-serif;">Baseball's <strong>Danny Gardella</strong> was no ordinary ballplayer. A compact powerhouse — "not much taller than a fire hydrant," yet a left-handed pull hitter with undeniable talent — he hit .267 with 24 homers and 85 RBIs in just 169 <strong>Major League Baseball</strong> games. That blazing two-year stretch with the <strong>New York Giants</strong> in 1944–45 proved his major-league mettle.</span></p> <p><span style= "font-size: 12pt; font-family: verdana, geneva, sans-serif;">But Gardella's story didn't end in the box score. Humble and working-class, he was a true Renaissance man — writing poetry, quoting Shakespeare, Freud, and Dewey, singing opera and vaudeville, boxing Golden Gloves, and defying gravity with acrobatic stunts in the clubhouse and on the field.</span></p> <p><span style= "font-size: 12pt; font-family: verdana, geneva, sans-serif;">When many veterans returned after World War...