Centerfield

Album: Centerfield (1985)
Charted: 44
Play Video
  • Well, I beat the drum and hold the phone
    The sun came out today
    We're born again, there's new grass on the field
    A-roundin' third and headed for home
    It's a brown-eyed handsome man
    Anyone can understand the way I feel

    Oh, put me in, coach, I'm ready to play today
    Put me in, coach, I'm ready to play today
    Look at me, I can be centerfield

    Well, I spent some time in the Mudville Nine
    Watching it from the bench
    You know I took some lumps, when the mighty Case struck out
    So say hey, Willie, tell the Cobb
    And Joe DiMaggio
    Don't say it ain't so, you know the time is now

    Oh, put me in, coach, I'm ready to play today
    Put me in, coach, I'm ready to play today
    Look at me, I can be centerfield

    Yeah, got it, I got it

    Got a beat-up glove, a home-made bat
    And a brand new pair of shoes
    You know I think it's time to give this game a ride
    Just to hit the ball and touch 'em all
    A moment in the sun
    It's a-gone and you can tell that one good-bye

    Oh, put me in, coach, I'm ready to play today
    Put me in, coach, I'm ready to play today
    Look at me (yeah), I can be centerfield

    Oh, put me in, coach, I'm ready to play today
    Put me in, coach, I'm ready to play today
    Look at me, gotta be, centerfield
    Yeah Writer/s: John Fogerty
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 28

  • Melva Hume Hill from Shelbyville KyEver since I got an Alexa, I listen to Centerfield because it makes me dance, sing and up lifts me. I tell my friends and family that one day John Fogerty is going to knock on my door and asks me why I listen to his song everyday.

    I played softball until I was 45 and I love the game of baseball so I can relate to the lyrics. Great song !
  • Ryan J Mcminn from Sequatchie Tnam from flint Mi have so many found memories and hearing this song at old tigers stadium brings me back every time i hear it.
  • Rusty Russell from Apex NcI think as much as this song is about baseball I think it is as much about life. John had be tied up in legal hell for several years and he clearly was "out of the rock and roll ballgame". I think John was convincing himself and others that he was ready to prove his metal again as a songwriter and guitar hero. The Coach was the World and he was ready to dig in and be counted again.
  • Matthew Mitchell from Memphis, TnA great story behind the writing of this song. However, it is a song that we all can relate too somewhere is life. It may not be a baseball game but other things....."Put me in Coach I'm ready to Play"
  • Terry Ott from Savannah, GaThe CD stays in my car, and when baseball spring training starts, until Opening Day, it gets played … a lot … and loud. It is my own personal “rite of spring”.
  • Susan from Atlanta, GeorgiaI love baseball and I love John Fogerty -- what can be better than a combination of both?! I truly love this song. Thanks for the info about who wrote "Brown-Eyed Handsome Man". The first version I heard was by Johnny Rivers, and I always thought it was written about Jackie Robinson. So tickled to hear it referenced in Fogerty's song, along with all the other fabulous baseball references. Anyone CAN understand the way he feels.
    I love seeing him play his six-string Louisville slugger when he does this song. I hope someday I'll get to see it in person. I've loved John Fogerty longer than I've loved baseball, and that's a long time. As someone else said, long live John Fogerty.
  • Camille from Toronto, OhJohn Fogarty's voice is great and the song upbeat, but what makes this tune stand out above the crowd is the hand-clapping! You always find yourself clapping along! It's contageous! And, as a side note, I think the song could have some kind of symbolism for Fogarty's nine year absence from the music scene.
  • Jay from Brooklyn, NyDan, were you an English major? The trouble with English majors is that they are taught to look for symbolism wherever they can find it, and if no symbolism exists, to invent it. "Centerfield" is about baseball. There is no deep meaning, no hidden context, no subtle shades of truth. Fogerty loves baseball and is writing of his love for the game. The "Brown-eyed handsome man" is a reference to a Chuck Berry song of the same name. Berry was singing about Jackie Robinson. The line "I spent some time with the Mudville Nine...You know I took some lumps when the Mighty Case struck out" refers to the poem "Casey at the Bat." In the poem, Casey, the star of the Mudville Nine, strikes out when he overconfidently allows two pitches to go by and swings and misses at the third. Google it to get the complete poem.
    Actually, Dan, I hope you are joking. I hope you made up your bizarre interpritation so people will post comments on your madness. If you truly believe "Centerfield" is about John Fogerty's public exile and court case, you are a strange man who cannot see the obvious.
  • Josh from Omaha, NeI love this song because it is about baseball and i love baseball
  • Woody from Bartlett, TnLove CCR. John stay well and live long, love your
    music. Centerfield is the only song I think of
    when I think of my absolute most favorite game of
    all - bseball. But I am a Cubs fans through and
    through.
  • Wendy from Los Angeles, CaI love this song, too, but I could swear he says "Say-Hey Willie, tell THE Cobb", not Ty Cobb. I've only seen the Lyrics that say "The Cobb" once in a sheet music book. Does it sound like that to anyone else?

  • Dan from Washington, Dc, MdI have always assumed that the lyrics to this song describe how Fogarty is feeling about getting back into the big time music business with the release of this album after a nine year break. There are many references to this in his lyrics, but some of the most obvious the most obvious ones are:

    "it's a brown-eyed handsome man" - if Fogarty has brown eyes, my guess this refers to him;

    "Well, I spent some time in the Mudville Nine, watchin' it from the bench
    You know I took some lumps when the Mighty Case struck out," - Fogarty didn't appear in public for 9 years, i.e., he was stuck in Mudville for 9 years; he took lumps when his big legal case against his his record company (the Mighty Case) was settled.

    There's more but you can have figuring them out for yourself. Did anyone else see the symbolism in these lyrics. They are pretty obvious.
  • Andrew from Birmingham, United StatesThis song straightforwardly shows that baseball rocks! Literally! I played two years of ballpark baseball. I haven't played centerfield except in a few practices. In the first of those two years I usually played left field. In the other year I tended to play right field. By the way, long live John Fogerty!
  • Sue from Chicago, Il"When citing some of baseballs legends in the second verse, he mentions "Taylor"(?) Cobb"

    He doesn't say that - he says Tell Ty Cobb

    quoted directly from the lyrics link above:

    "So Say Hey Willie, tell Ty Cobb and Joe DiMaggio"
  • Richard from Houston, TxPersonally, I think the 'don't say it ain't so...' line refers to "Shoeless Joe" Jackson of Black Sox infamy.
  • Stefanie from Rock Hill, ScIt's one of the most bizzarre law suits I ve heard of.
  • Sean from Brockton, MaWhen citing some of baseballs legends in the second verse, he mentions "Taylor"(?) Cobb, perhaps "Tyler" with his southern accent. Ty Cobb's given first name was "Tyrus".
  • James from Tracy, CaShortly after this album was released, John Fogerty was sued for allegedly plagarizing himself. The lawsuit that was filed claimed that "The Old Man Down the Road" was too close to "Run Through the Jungle."
  • Carolyn from Morganville, NjThis song inspires my son Joe Willie to get in the centerfield groove and kick some boody all over New Jersey!
  • Howard from St. Louis Park, MnAs a long time baseball fan, this song hits a homerun. It joins Terry Cashman's "Willie, Mickey and the Duke" as one of the great baseball songs ever recorded.
  • Ken from Louisville, KyJohn Fogerty records the entire alubum - vocals and all instruments, including the sax solos - at his home studio in Northern California over the course of many, many years. Fogerty was quoted as saying they only reason he finished it was because he was driving his children crazy having to hear it over and over! He said he mixed it down, dubbed it onto a cassette, then gave it to a Warner Brothers Records executive and said "here's my next album" (he had a record deal with Warners, but hadn't released an album in almost 10 years!). Fogerty said about his playing all instruments himself: "I'm a pretty good bar band."
  • David from Middletown, CtThere are some who think that the phrase "Brown Eyed Handsome Man" refers to Jackie Robinson.
  • Luke from Pittsburgh, PaTruly a great song! John Fogerty, one of the best singer/songwriters EVER, epitomizes America through our national pasttime in this song! This song always makes me proud to be a baseball-playin', flag-wavin' American! Check out CCR, too. Amazing!
  • AnonymousBetween October 1 and October 8 (2004), Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band will perform at five Vote for Change concerts, sharing the bill with R.E.M., and Bright Eyes with a special appearance by John Fogerty. These artists plan to target key battleground states where voters could tip the upcoming presidential election in favor of Democratic candidate John Kerry or President George W. Bush.
  • Patrick from Conyers, GaRight after the crack of the bat sound, some radio stations may mix in a recording of the previous night's broadcast of the local team, during a major winning moment.
  • Steve from San Jose, CaOn his television special, Fogarty plays a guitar made out of what appears to be a baseball bat!
  • Gene from Hammond, InWhen "JCF" plays this song in concert, he often uses a custom made guitar made in the shape of a "Louisville Slugger" baseball bat!
  • Patrick from Conyers, GaThe lyrics "...a homemade bat..." could refer to the movie "The Natural" where Roy Hobbs made a bat from a tree limb that was hit by lightning.
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Al Kooper

Al KooperSongwriter Interviews

Kooper produced Lynyrd Skynyrd, played with Dylan and the Stones, and formed BS&T.

Maxi Priest

Maxi PriestSongwriter Interviews

The British reggae legend tells the story of his #1 hit "Close To You," talks about his groundbreaking Shabba Ranks collaboration "Housecall," and discusses his latest project with Robin Trower.

David Gray

David GraySongwriter Interviews

David Gray explains the significance of the word "Babylon," and talks about how songs are a form of active imagination, with lyrics that reveal what's inside us.

Kim Thayil of Soundgarden

Kim Thayil of SoundgardenSongwriter Interviews

Their frontman (Chris Cornell) started out as their drummer, so Soundgarden takes a linear approach when it comes to songwriting. Kim explains how they do it.

P.F. Sloan

P.F. SloanSongwriter Interviews

P.F. was a teenager writing hits and playing on tracks for Jan & Dean when he wrote a #1 hit that got him blackballed.

Jello Biafra

Jello BiafraSongwriter Interviews

The former Dead Kennedys frontman on the past, present and future of the band, what music makes us "pliant and stupid," and what he learned from Alice Cooper.