Fungos & Fastballs: Baseball History & Trivia

Jerry Dynes

Join us on this podcast exploring baseball's history and lore, plus enjoy some fastball trivia all in under 30 minutes. Topics will be all over the place - players, traditions, baseball lingo, stadiums, baseball movies/books. Like you, we just want to talk baseball! 

  1. E29: Brooks Robinson, Human Vacuum Cleaner & The Warning Track

    22h ago

    E29: Brooks Robinson, Human Vacuum Cleaner & The Warning Track

    Send us Fan Mail The warning track sits in every ballpark like background scenery, yet it has a darker origin story than most fans realize. We start by pulling the camera into the outfield dirt and unpacking why Major League Baseball mandated the warning track in 1949 after a run of frightening wall collisions. We talk about what it’s made of on natural grass versus artificial turf, how wide it’s “supposed” to be, and why the color and texture change is meant to protect outfielders who are sprinting full speed with their eyes locked on the sky.  After the ballpark deep dive, we shift into baseball history and a full career look at Brooks Robinson, the Baltimore Orioles icon often called the greatest defensive third baseman ever. We use WAR and the JAWS stat to frame how Hall of Fame debates happen, then balance the numbers with what opponents actually said and felt when they watched him play. We hit the big milestones, including 16 Gold Gloves, an MVP season, the Orioles’ championship years, and the 1970 World Series defensive highlights that turned the national broadcast into what some called the “Brooks Robinson show.” We also spend time on what made him bigger than baseball: the Roberto Clemente Award, philanthropy, and a Baltimore legacy built on decency as much as greatness.  We wrap with our MLB trivia answer on the most recent perfect game and why it still sticks in our memory. If you like baseball trivia, baseball history, and smart debates about how we measure greatness, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more fans can find Fungos and Fastballs. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

    28 min
  2. E28: The Baseball: Leather, Stitches & Switch Pitchers

    Jun 8

    E28: The Baseball: Leather, Stitches & Switch Pitchers

    Send us Fan Mail The baseball is the only “player” guaranteed to show up for every pitch, and it has a bigger impact on the game than most fans realize. We start with a quick curveball: the switch pitcher, one of the rarest roles in MLB, and the hilarious logic trap that led to the Venditte Rule when a pitcher and a switch hitter kept countering each other. It’s a perfect reminder that baseball’s rulebook often follows the strangest real-world moments.  From there, we follow the ball itself through baseball history, from homemade mid-1800s designs with inconsistent sizes and bizarre cores to the push for standardization once the National League formed in 1876. We dig into the Spalding era, why dead ball conditions happened when soft balls stayed in play too long, and how changes like cork centers and tighter wool winding helped fuel higher offense and the infamous “rabbit ball” feel.  We also get specific about modern MLB baseball manufacturing: Rawlings’ official factory in Turrialba, Costa Rica, the multi-state supply chain that feeds it, and why the iconic 108 double stitches are still done by hand. Then we connect safety and fairness to the ball’s condition, including the Ray Chapman tragedy that accelerated cleaner ball practices, the league’s crackdown on sticky substances like Spider Tack, and the one old-school exception that’s still required, Lena Blackburne’s baseball rubbing mud. Finally, we talk humidors, why every stadium now locks balls up underground, and the lawsuit that helps explain why a caught foul ball can stay in your hands.  If you like baseball trivia, MLB rules, and the hidden engineering behind every game, subscribe, share this with a baseball friend, and leave us a review so more fans can find the show. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

    27 min
  3. E27: Wade Boggs: Contact Hitting and Chicken; Plus The Longest Game and 2026 MLB Update

    Jun 3

    E27: Wade Boggs: Contact Hitting and Chicken; Plus The Longest Game and 2026 MLB Update

    Send us Fan Mail You can measure Wade Boggs with numbers, but you can’t really understand him without the stories. We start by checking the current MLB landscape with our friend Edwin Noland, moving division by division and hitting the surprises, the contenders, and the little controversies that make a long season feel alive. Then we pivot hard into baseball history and trivia with one of the most fascinating profiles we’ve done: Boggs as both a Hall of Fame hitter and a walking collection of routines, rules, and legends.  We talk through his path from a military-family childhood to becoming the centerpiece of elite Red Sox hitting in the 1980s, built on plate discipline, line drives, and getting on base. We trace the contract fallout that pushed him to the Yankees, the championship payoff in 1996, and the late-career homecoming with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, where he joined the 3,000-hit club in the most unexpected way. Along the way, we dig into why his game still matters in modern conversations about contact hitters, on-base percentage, and consistency as a superpower.  And then there’s the mythos: the chicken ritual, the 7:17 timing, the symbols in the batter’s box, the TV cameos, and the legendary “how many beers could a human possibly drink on a flight” tale. We also pay off our opening trivia with the unbelievable true story behind the longest professional baseball game ever played and Boggs’ place in it. Subscribe, share the show with a baseball fan who loves weird history, and leave us a review with your favorite Wade Boggs legend or your own game day superstition. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

    28 min
  4. E26: King Kelly, Baseball’s First Rock Star & The 1984 Bean Brawl

    May 28

    E26: King Kelly, Baseball’s First Rock Star & The 1984 Bean Brawl

    Send us Fan Mail Seventeen ejections in one night should be impossible, yet baseball found a way. We start with the 1984 Braves Padres beanball brawl, where one hit-by-pitch spirals into pitcher retaliation, managers getting ejected, and a benches-clearing pileup that somehow doesn’t even end the game. We walk through how “beaning” worked as baseball’s old language of payback, why umpires kept tossing players and coaches, and how the chaos spreads from the field to the stands with fans throwing objects, pouring drinks, and pushing the night toward real danger. Then we flip the calendar back a century to meet Michael Joseph “King” Kelly, the late-1800s phenomenon who helps invent what a baseball celebrity looks like. We talk through the record-breaking $10,000 contract sale, the crowds that follow him across cities, and the mix of skill and swagger that makes him must-see entertainment. Along the way we dig into 19th century baseball strategy and tactics that still matter today: the hook slide, daring steals, the hit-and-run, and early ideas that resemble modern defensive shifts. We also get into the trickster side of early pro ball, when fewer umpires and looser enforcement made rule bending tempting, and legends like Kelly helped force the sport to tighten its rules. We cap it all off with a Hall of Fame trivia answer about how many women are in Cooperstown. If you like baseball history, MLB fights, forgotten legends, and sharp trivia, hit play, then subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave us a review. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

    29 min
  5. E25: Vintage Base Ball Brings The 19th Century Back To Life

    May 25

    E25: Vintage Base Ball Brings The 19th Century Back To Life

    Send us Fan Mail Link to the National Assoc of Historic Base Ball Clubs  Baseball changes completely when you strip away gloves, modern habits, and the assumptions we’ve all carried since Little League and it becomes Base Ball (two words!). We sit down with Tom “Big Bat” Fesolowich, a 30-year veteran of vintage 19th century baseball, coordinator at Old Bethpage Village Restoration in New York, and the longtime force behind the New York Mutuals. He walks us through how “vintage baseball” isn’t theater, it’s competitive ball played under carefully researched rules from a specific year, often 1864, with teams working hard to keep the language, uniforms, and on-field behavior historically accurate. We get into the fan experience first: old benches, blankets, picnics, and a rare setting where you can look around and see almost nothing modern. Then we hit the big shockers, like playing without gloves (Tom has the broken fingers to prove it), using a softer “lemon peel” baseball, and even playing with rules that feel upside down today. One bounce can be an out. You can’t overrun first base. Fair or foul depends on where the ball first hits the ground. Even the umpire’s approach to balls and strikes can start with a warning before anything is called. Along the way we trade nickname stories, talk about keeping anachronisms off the field, and hear an all-time tale featuring Bill “Spaceman” Lee that captures how funny and fiercely competitive this game still is. If you’ve ever wanted a hands-on way to connect with baseball history, this is your roadmap. Subscribe, share with a baseball fan who loves the old game, and leave a review with the strangest vintage rule you’d want to bring back. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

    40 min
  6. Ep 24: Kitchen Sink Episode: LOOGY Explained, The Kissing Bandit, Eephus (film), & '70 East West Classic,

    May 20

    Ep 24: Kitchen Sink Episode: LOOGY Explained, The Kissing Bandit, Eephus (film), & '70 East West Classic,

    Send us Fan Mail A single baseball episode can feel like four different road trips, and that’s exactly the point here. We’re clearing out a backlog of “first pitches” with a grab bag of baseball history, MLB trivia, and the kind of oddball stories you only hear when fans start swapping favorites. Before we dive into the time capsule, our friend Edwin Nolan calls in with a sharp MLB rundown, including what’s happening across the AL and NL, plus a quick moment to remember two huge losses in the baseball world: legendary Yankees broadcaster John Sterling and Hall of Fame manager Bobby Cox. From there, we hit the baseball dictionary with “Loogie” (the left-handed one-out guy) and explain why the tactic thrived, why it slowed games to a crawl, and how the three-batter minimum rule basically pushed it into extinction. Then we step straight into baseball folklore with Morgana Roberts, the Kissing Bandit, whose cheek-kiss field invasions turned into a strange, very real piece of 1970s and 1980s sports culture and earned her a place in conversations about the Shrine of Eternals and baseball’s broader lore. We also go high culture in our own way with a review of the film Ephus, a quiet, quirky baseball movie that ditches the usual underdog formula and instead nails what it feels like to hang onto a field, a team, and a night you don’t want to end. Finally, we tell the story of the 1970 East-West Major League Baseball Classic, a powerful charity game organized in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. that featured an unbelievable lineup of legends, meaningful symbolism, and no known video record. We wrap by answering the Hall of Fame trivia question: the only player inducted without the five-year wait.  Subscribe, share with a baseball-loving friend, and leave a quick review if you want more deep cuts like this. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

    37 min
  7. E23: Talkin’ Ryno: Ryne Sandberg - Heart of the Chicago Cubs

    May 14

    E23: Talkin’ Ryno: Ryne Sandberg - Heart of the Chicago Cubs

    Send us Fan Mail A Cubs legend doesn’t have to be loud to be unforgettable, and Ryne Sandberg is the proof. We sit down with longtime friend and die-hard Cubs fan James Maumus to trace how a kid in New Orleans became devoted to Chicago baseball thanks to cable TV, WGN superstation broadcasts, and the simple magic of day games at Wrigley Field. The result is part baseball history, part fan memory, and a clear case for why Sandberg’s steady, team-first style still resonates. We dig into Sandberg’s path from the Philadelphia Phillies to the Cubs, the infield that helped define early 1980s Chicago, and what it means to win nine straight Gold Gloves as a second baseman. From there we relive the electric 1984 season and the moment that put Sandberg on the national map: June 23, 1984, the “Sandberg Game,” when he took Hall of Fame closer Bruce Sutter deep twice in the biggest spots, with Harry Caray’s call turning it into Cubs folklore. The conversation also follows the full arc: playoff heartbreak, Sandberg’s 1990 power peak, the emotional toll of the 1994 MLB strike, and how fans reconnect to the sport. We close with Cubs retired numbers trivia, Sandberg’s Cooperstown values, the statue outside Wrigley, and the weight of his later battle with metastatic prostate cancer, plus one of the most human fan stories you’ll hear all week. If you care about the Chicago Cubs, baseball history, or what real leadership looks like between the lines, hit play, then subscribe, share the episode with a Cubs fan, and leave us a review. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

    27 min
  8. E22: The Baseball Reliquary: A Fan’s Hall of Fame

    May 11

    E22: The Baseball Reliquary: A Fan’s Hall of Fame

    Send us Fan Mail Cooperstown tells one kind of baseball story. The Baseball Reliquary tells the one that lives in fan memory, strange artifacts, and the people who shaped the game’s lore even if they never fit a Hall of Fame template. We sit down with Joe Price, Professor Emeritus and co-director of the Institute for Baseball Studies at Whittier College, to explore how an “alternate hall of fame” can honor impact, meaning, and cultural weight alongside on-field greatness.  Joe explains what a reliquary is and why the word belongs in baseball, then takes us inside the collection now housed at Whittier: a grassroots museum and archive built from donations, obsession, and love. We get into unforgettable pieces of baseball memorabilia, from perfect game baseballs signed across eras to a one-of-a-kind Tommy John surgery textbook signed by Tommy John on the very page that diagrams the procedure. Along the way, we talk about Joe’s National Anthem Tour and what it reveals about baseball as tradition, ritual, and community.  Then we break down the Shrine of the Eternals, the Reliquary’s fan voted hall that celebrates cultural significance, barrier breakers, and enduring stories, not just career totals. If you’ve ever argued about who really matters to baseball history, this will sharpen your list and probably scramble it too. Subscribe, share this with a baseball friend, and leave us a review with your pick for who belongs in the Shrine next. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

    36 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

Join us on this podcast exploring baseball's history and lore, plus enjoy some fastball trivia all in under 30 minutes. Topics will be all over the place - players, traditions, baseball lingo, stadiums, baseball movies/books. Like you, we just want to talk baseball! 

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