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Motivation Quote by Casey Stengel

"I don't know if he throws a spitball, but he sure spits on the ball"

About this Quote

Stengel lands the joke with the sideways precision of a dugout comedian who knows baseball’s moral theater is half the sport. On the surface, it’s a one-liner about cheating: the spitball, long outlawed, is the infamous trick pitch that turns saliva into an edge. But Stengel’s wording dodges the prosecutor’s posture. “I don’t know if he throws a spitball” is mock innocence, the manager’s classic hedge: no accusation you can pin to the wall. Then he detonates the follow-up anyway: “but he sure spits on the ball.” The rhythm is the whole gag - a feint, then a fastball of implication.

The intent is less to indict than to brand. Stengel is managing perception: he’s putting a player under a cloud without filing a formal complaint, inviting fans and reporters to do the rest of the work. That’s vintage baseball culture, where everyone knows the game is thick with gray areas (doctoring the ball, scuffing it, stealing signs), but the code is to wink publicly and litigate privately. His line respects that code while also puncturing it.

Subtextually, it’s about the sport’s constant dance between purity and gamesmanship. Stengel isn’t outraged; he’s amused, even admiring. The punchline implies competence: whatever the pitch is called, the guy is doing something effective and a little dirty. It’s also Stengel selling his own persona - the lovable mangler of language who can smuggle a hard claim inside a soft laugh. In baseball, that’s power: say it as a joke, and it still counts.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Verified source: Sports Illustrated: The Curtain Rises (Casey Stengel, 1956)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
"I don't know if he throws a spitball," he said, "but he sure spits on the ball. No, I don't want to say he spits on the ball, but he spits. Then he gives it this, " wiping his hands on his shirt, "and he touches the resin bag and he throws. But I don't want to say that I don't think he's a hell of a pitcher. He pitched good. He beat us. He pitched a good game.". This is a contemporaneous narrative account in Sports Illustrated (Robert Creamer) describing Casey Stengel’s post–Game 1 remarks about Dodgers pitcher Sal Maglie during the 1956 World Series at Ebbets Field. The widely-circulated one-line version (“I don't know if he throws a spitball but he sure spits on the ball.”) appears here embedded in a longer quotation. I have not, in this search pass, located an earlier *verifiable* primary publication (e.g., a dated game-story wire report or stenographic interview transcript from Oct. 1956) that predates this Oct. 15, 1956 SI issue; this SI piece is therefore the earliest solid primary publication I can directly verify from an original period source in the open web results reviewed.
Other candidates (1)
Google Books (David H. Martinez, 2000) compilation95.0%
... Casey STENGEL , Hall of Fame manager and noted linguist . Casey wasn't a buffooon . He was a great story ... I do...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Stengel, Casey. (2026, February 16). I don't know if he throws a spitball, but he sure spits on the ball. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-dont-know-if-he-throws-a-spitball-but-he-sure-30416/

Chicago Style
Stengel, Casey. "I don't know if he throws a spitball, but he sure spits on the ball." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-dont-know-if-he-throws-a-spitball-but-he-sure-30416/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I don't know if he throws a spitball, but he sure spits on the ball." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-dont-know-if-he-throws-a-spitball-but-he-sure-30416/. Accessed 16 Feb. 2026.

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I do not know if he throws a spitball but he sure spits on the ball
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About the Author

Casey Stengel

Casey Stengel (July 30, 1890 - September 29, 1975) was a Athlete from USA.

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