"Even Napoleon had his Watergate"
About this Quote
Yogi Berra’s genius is that he makes history feel like a clubhouse story, then slips a knife of skepticism between the ribs. “Even Napoleon had his Watergate” takes a very American scandal - shorthand for arrogance, secrecy, and the moment power gets caught lying - and retrofits it onto a world-historical figure who predates tape recorders by a century and a half. The factual mismatch is the point. Berra is doing pop-culture time travel to argue that downfall isn’t an exception; it’s the job hazard of greatness.
The line works because it collapses two mythologies at once. Napoleon is the grand man of textbooks, the kind of leader we’re trained to imagine as singular. Watergate is the opposite: petty crime with epic consequences, a burglary turned constitutional crisis, a story where the banality of the misconduct is what makes it so damning. By yoking them together, Berra drags empire down to the level of human error. He’s basically saying: stop acting surprised when titans trip over their own schemes.
There’s also a sly cultural wink in the “even.” It’s not sympathy; it’s deflation. Berra, the athlete, understands reputations as fragile constructions - the same way a season can flip on one bad inning. In the post-Watergate era, the sentence doubles as a democratic reminder: if our leaders want to be treated like legends, they’ll still be judged like people.
The line works because it collapses two mythologies at once. Napoleon is the grand man of textbooks, the kind of leader we’re trained to imagine as singular. Watergate is the opposite: petty crime with epic consequences, a burglary turned constitutional crisis, a story where the banality of the misconduct is what makes it so damning. By yoking them together, Berra drags empire down to the level of human error. He’s basically saying: stop acting surprised when titans trip over their own schemes.
There’s also a sly cultural wink in the “even.” It’s not sympathy; it’s deflation. Berra, the athlete, understands reputations as fragile constructions - the same way a season can flip on one bad inning. In the post-Watergate era, the sentence doubles as a democratic reminder: if our leaders want to be treated like legends, they’ll still be judged like people.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
|---|
More Quotes by Yogi
Add to List


