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b i n g o !!!!! |
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First Game I ever saw on TV influenced me a lot:
Attachment 487395 Attachment 487398Attachment 487399 |
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He struck out the first five, but, as the added photo shows, Mickey got him late. Ooops! Tresh got him in the bottom of the eighth in that game, Mickey got him in top of seventh in Game 4. As important as I say this game was to me, I'm getting older...so there...at least I caught it before everyone else did. . |
Koufax apparently really did not like throwing at people or even brushing them back, which played a role in the Roseboro Marichal incident. But, and I think this is from the Leavy book, once he got so angered by Lou Brock's baserunning antics that he drilled him hard in the back. Brock picks himself up, walks slowly to first, and promptly steals second.
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Nostalgia bias.
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Now that it has been definitively established that Grove was the best LHP of all time and Koufax should not even be in the discussion, is there a statistician who can create a formula to determine whether any given poster is either:
A) A common troll B) An insufferable egotist or C) Just generally a complete AH? Bonus points if the algorithm can determine historical Net54 ranking. |
How about everyone self-report which of those three they think they are guilty of being.
I'm definitely a B) but I work hard at taming it. Anyone else wanna be honest? |
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And Scott, I thought you would select C) A complete Auction House. ;) |
I'll nominate myself for C - a complete asshole, as I'm still awaiting a math-based logically consistent argument for Koufax like has been presented for the others.
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I still don't think Warren Spahn gets enough credit when ranking all-time greatest lefties.
I'll be honest and state that I am a nice guy, though, because I detest arrogance, I don't admit it very often. Koufax is my FAVORITE. IMHO, the GOAT for lefties is either Grove or RJ. I'm also a HUGE Billy Wagner fan, but that's another discussion. I loved the fact that 'my' Braves clinched using three left-handers. US LEFTIES RULE! . . |
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Pondering the imponderable is what we do best on this forum.;)
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If one makes an appeal to their own authority, self-granted and thus unquestionable, one need not support anything they say with statistics as we do, even though the root of the fallacious appeal to authority is that no one else can discuss statistics.
I'm starting to think this statistical basis that objectively and conclusively proves Spahn is "above average at best" because he played in the old days and his exact contemporary Koufax is the GOAT, is a complete fiction. Maybe I'm a bit of a cynic, but not a single shred of evidence has been produced to support this stunning claim to total authority. I'd love for it to check out so we can immediately resolve all baseball discussions with this new oracle. |
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But I'll leave you with this. I'd take Hyun Jin Ryu over Warren Spahn any day of the week and twice on Sundays. |
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I think Koufax has received more accolades from his contemporaries and sportswriters of this time than any pitcher I have read about. His last four years are incredible. The guy was inducted to the Hall at the age of 37!!! If that doesn't sway you, nothing will.
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At his zenith, was he as good as anyone? I guess that depends how much weight you put on the disparity between his home and road stats. But I think there are a lot of externalities that have enhanced his reputation. |
I was coming on to point out that people act like Koufax took forever to develop when he was actually incredibly young when he started and stuck on a major league roster because of his bonus baby status, same as his 1954 classmate Harmon Killebrew. Both likely would've benefited by a couple of years in the minors instead of languishing on a major league bench, but both were still a "normal" age when they put it all together.
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We are way overdue for a card picture. Anyone know what this Grove card is. It is large and blank back.
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https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-oquNgUQZA.../Lefties_2.jpg |
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There will be no end to this hot stove league argument. For certain, Lefty Grove shown like a beacon in the hitter's most dominating era. He had the benefit of Connie Mack's best teams behind him, which were made only that more unbeatable because of the presence of Lefty Grove. Sandy Koufax pitched in a pitcher's era, that seemed to become more and more a pitcher's era the better and more dominating Sandy became. Even with the usually anemic-hitting Dodgers of those years, their "smallball" offense was enough to back Sandy. Then again, the '62 Dodgers had career years from Tommy Davis and Maury Wills going for them. Frank Howard couldn't seem to get going in the very spacious Dodger Stadium environs. But I loved Hondo, and he became so good and so adored, during his years with the Senators. All to say, if I was a manager with the likes of Lefty Grove, Sandy Koufax, and Warren Spahn on my staff, my smile would be as big as the 3 of theirs put together!!!:D I know, I'm supposed to continue the arguments and isolate the baseball statistic isotope; I'm getting tired of the whole thing. They were all superb; let's go back to collecting their cards and coins! ---Brian Powell |
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Koufax is in the majors but not producing much at age 19, which I really wouldn't hold him against as he was developing like most players this age. The bonus baby rule kept him on the roster, as someone else noted. Koufax became an above average player at 25. Koufax broke out into a star at age 26 the next year. Koufax was truly great, from ages 26-30. He was done at age 30. Meanwhile: Grove entered the majors at 25, held hostage in Baltimore. He was not very good that season. He became a star at age 26, when he led the league in ERA for the first time. The same exact time Koufax did. Grove was great from ages 26-30. At this point there careers are very similar, Sandy's years probably slightly greater. Koufax has a 167 ERA+ from 26-30, Grove has a 157. Both are absolutely dominating their leagues. This is the point of comparison in their careers most favorable to Koufax, and he is barely winning. After age 30, Grove won 6 more ERA crowns, career years in which Koufax was producing absolutely nothing. He went 185-84 with a 150 ERA+ after age 30. He was a truly great pitcher at age 39, above average at 40, done at 41. I guess if Grove had been sitting at home retired instating of leading the league in ERA 6 times and dominating the AL, he could be the GOAT. By what rational standard can this, that Sandy's early retirement and his career ending at 30, possibly be a point in favor for Koufax? I don't see a winning argument for Koufax, but there are much, much better arguments than this kind of absurd trolling. Can we not ask ourselves "does this make any sense whatsoever?" before making a claim? If press headlines and sportswriters are our determining factor, lets see this applied to every player and position. Jeter is the GOAT shortstop, Dimaggio the greatest CF, Jackie the best 2B of all time by a country mile. The most famous is the best. If it's based on accolades and awards, it's still not Koufax, it's Randy Johnson, 5 time Cy Young winner, 10 time all star, 97.3% Hall of Fame vote receiver (Koufax only got 86.9%), the most decorated lefty in baseball history. This is simply not a point for Koufax if you want to go by the hardware. If it is based on their peers, players from the 30's thought Grove was the toughest lefty they faced, players in the 60's Koufax, and players in the 00's Johnson. Nobody wins this. These arguments are silly and even if they weren't, still don't show Koufax as #1. |
Spahn won …. wait for it.... 250+ games after age 30 lol. Of course, everyone here knows wins don't matter. And he didn't refuse to pitch on Yom Kippur or (as far as I know) make the cover of LIFE.
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nobody won 300 games without being an excellent pitcher. No one won 200 games without being pretty darn good. There's some edge cases of good pitchers on bad teams having a bad record (Bob Friend stands out off the top of my mind), but a pitcher with a lot of wins correlates well to the other value stats. |
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Best Lefty
Warren Spann
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