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(I even ran a hand timed 4.6 40 yarder once, but I know damn well I was never truly 4.6 fast) I still vote Mays by a long shot. |
Mickey Mantle once admitted that Mays was the better of the two - or was Mickey just being overly modest?
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11.2 1965 mays best season
11.3 1956 and 57, mantles best seasons Mays a better career. mantle had more talent, just out partying too much and injury prone. mays didnt have the same off the field issues. if mantle used his head like mays, this wouldnt have been a conversation. mantle would be the BEST ATHLETE OF ALL TIME. when the mick was healthy and sober there was no one better, ever. |
While you were busy assembling the case for Mays, Mantle homered twice and tore up Broadway.
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Drinking/partying/injuries have to be fully taken into account when reviewing players' careers (unless the question were to specify, "who would you take at the beginning of their careers based on potential?", or "during their peak years". Mantle/Ruth and others were able to overcome their vices and have amazing HOF careers... But guys like Bobby Bonds (alcoholism), pegged as Willie Mays' heir, and countless others were not able to realize their full potential due to lifestyle/fluke injuries/death. I mean Brien Taylor might have been the next Sandy Koufax if he hadn't torn his rotator cuff in a bar brawl.
Adding- Still vote Mays. |
Mays had 2 mvp's and 12 gold gloves, while Mantle had 3 mvps 1 gold glove and a major league triple crown. Mays made the WS catch that took the wind out of Cleveland before they could even get going. Mantle made the WS catch to save Larson's perfect game.
I think either one would be a nice addition to your team as a centerfielder...until Paul Blair came along :D |
I would rather have Mickey. Besides being a great player and folk hero, he seems like he would have been fun to hang out with. Plus Willie played for the Mets rather than retire, so he doesn't have good judgement.
Edited to add I would definitely take Ken Griffey Jr. over both of them and we'd probably have a good time talking about that Simpsons episode. |
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Can't go wrong with either guy....:D I'm still amazed Willie racked up a lot of impressive numbers stat wise and also played pretty good defense and catching a lot of tough balls playing in crappy, blustery Candlestick Park for all those years...
Ricky Y |
7 over 24
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Mays IMO was the better player, but thats no knock on mick.
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The question is context-dependent. If you are asking me to evaluate the Mickey Mantle and Willie Mays as prospects, I would take Mantle every time. He was rocket-fast and could hit with power from both sides. As a prospect he was a once in a lifetime player. After he tore up his knee, became an alcoholic, and started the cycle of abuse and injuries, his value sank quickly. Mays was not as great a prospect as Mantle but by the late 1950s had eclipsed Mantle in terms of value. Mantle's WAR numbers fell off dramatically after 1957. Mantle had 5 seasons with WAR > 8. Mays had 11 seasons with WAR > 8. By the time Mantle was 30 he was basically a good starting player. Mays was an exceptional player until he was 35 and a good starting player until he reached 40. As peak players, Mantle was measurably better. Mays's line for his greatest year [1954]:
1954 151 641 565 119 195 33 13 41 110 8 5 66 57 .345 .411 .667 1.078 WAR: 10.6 Mays had a higher WAR in 1965 [11.2] and his line there wasn't too shabby either: 1965 157 638 558 118 177 21 3 52 112 9 4 76 71 .317 .398 .645 1.043 Mantle's line for his [1956]: 1956 150 652 533 132 188 22 5 52 130 10 1 112 99 .353 .464 .705 1.169 WAR: 11.3 Of course, until either of them can go 18-8, 23-12 and 24-13 and pitch 31 innings with a 0.87 ERA in the World Series, and hit .342 with 714 HRs, neither of them is fit to carry Babe Ruth's bag. |
I'd rather have Mays on my team and rather go drinking with Mickey.
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Man, this is tough. I'm going with Mantle because his triple crown year was amazing. I have to keep it that simple or I'll change my mind.
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Thanks for posting. |
One was a champion and the other wasn't
i saw them both play a lot however i did see Willie more often! that's right i saw the Dodgers consistently take out Willie and go out to loose to Mickey. |
C'mon Jose, it is a team sport. Dimaggio's Yankees won 10 pennants in his 13 active years. Is he better than Mays?
By that logic, Ernie Banks and Ted Willams stank on ice. |
The Yankees won 3 championships in the 4 years immediately PRIOR to Mantle's arrival. So they were kinda good without him.
Still, Mantle's World Series hitting should absolutely be considered. And being the best player on the best team does mean something. But none of that, or having been a great prospect at one point, adds up to him being better than Mays. And for the record, I am not a Mays guy. Career WAR: Mays 156.1 Mantle 109.7 -Ryan |
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Cy Young has the second highest career WAR, not many would argue he is the second best player ever. |
I wouldn't even argue that Cy Young is one of the top 10 pitchers of all-time. The first part of his career was spent in a statistically different era. The second part in the dead ball era. His numbers should be taken with a grain of salt. One of the greats, without question. Doesn't even belong in the discussion of "greatest," in my opinion. I know that will be an unpopular view on this board.
I get the point about looking at average yearly performance vs. aggregate numbers, but there is also something to be said for sustained excellence. I'm not talking about mere longevity. No one is trying to say Jim Kaat was better than Sandy Koufax. But Mantle would have to have been MUCH better than Mays on the average to make up for how far behind his career numbers are. And he just wasn't. I'm assuming you consider Mark McGwire to be the all-time home run king, right? He's the all-time career leader in HR per AB. -Ryan |
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I guess the question might need some refinement. Does Better=Talent? If so the answer is Mantle. Or is it more total numbers/career based? If we were to give Mays a polygraph test and ask him if he would rather have 600+ HRs 3000+ hits and one championship or Mantle's numbers and seven championships what do you think his answer would be? |
In the 1950's i lived across the street from a scout for the Phillies, and this was before Mantle's leg got really bad, and he said the word in baseball was that Mickey was better than Mays, but it was damn close.
Obviously once Mantle's legs got almost crippled, Mays was better. I feel a healthy Mantle was a little bit better than Mays. But as a Yankee fan i admit that i am prejudiced. |
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Even as a Yankee fan, I still say Mays
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Mays
Mantle MIGHT have had more talent and MIGHT have accomplished more if he'd taken better care of himself. But he didn't |
Nice cards, Sean! You've inspired me, too. :)
http://photos.imageevent.com/ltsgall...tle%20mays.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/ltsgall...s%20mantle.jpg |
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I agree with much that has been said...mickey was more dominant when healthy...and did have how many world series rings? 7 or 8?...but Mays had a longer...more fruitful career numberswise!
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Saw them both play and hard to say
Both great players, but Mays did it much longer, Mantle was and is more of a legend based on yankee status. Had I had to choose one in their prime I would take Mantle. Of course Mays stayed great into his late 30's, Mantle lost his skills at 34 or so.
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I don't really have a dog in this hunt, but I recently learned of Mantle's medical condition that was discovered in high school. He was playing football when he got kicked in the shin. If it weren't for the newly available antibiotic penicillin, his leg would have been amputated. Osteomyelitis is a bone disease that he struggled with his entire career. In those days, he self medicated with booze (it was that, or morphine). Not trying to glorify him over Mays (and definitely not his drinking), but they were both truly great. I feel this is important information about the Mick that I have not seen anyone else bring up.
I hit a triple once. I felt pretty good about that. |
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Sports are full of the "what if" arguments, but because of WHAT Mickey accomplished w/ the bad health he had from Day One to the end of his career, it just doesn't apply here.
It's a "given" that he would have overshadowed Mays in just about every category had he had the health that Aaron, Mays, Musial, Banks, Kaline, et al. were blessed with because of what he DID do for 18 yrs. (Another example where the "what if" doesn't apply is the career of Ted Williams and the 5 yrs lost while in service. Because of what he DID do from beginning to end, you can safely add figures for those 5 yrs and know it would have happened.) Mickey over Mays and maybe the most electrifying player ever! |
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How about looking at their 162 game averages? They are virtually deadlocked in this regard, with numbers so similar it is almost eerie-- except Mantle has a pretty substantial lead in OBP, BB, OPS(+). |
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HR R RBI AVE. SB OBP SLUG 40 118 109 .318 22 .392 .605 -- Mays 40 119 101 .314 14 .445 .616 -- Mantle You can say Mantle had a slight edge because he got on base more often, but his peak is not "notably better" (responding to quote that's quoted in above post)... and Mays did more once he got on base, averaging 8 more steals per year. Just for fun, if you count an SB as a total base (a steal is just as valuable as a double), it would raise his OPS by more than 10 points. Then shift to defense and take a look at outfield assists during their respective peak years. Mantle had highs of 11 and 10 assists, which is respectable, but Mays had highs of 23, 17, 15, 14, 13, 12 and 11 during his peak seasons. His 5th tool definitely came in handy... and I'm guessing saved several runs. I think had Mays played in 12 WS, he might have compiled more respectable postseason numbers. However, during his peak years the NL was absolutely LOADED. The Giants were always good, but had to content yearly with the Dodgers, Cards, Braves among others, while the Yankees were unparallelled in the AL during Mantle's prime. As is, Mays played in 4 series and batted .247... as compared to Mantle's .257 (give me Ruth or Reggie over both of them:D). Regardless it is a very very close call. |
Longevity as well as Excellence gets the nod!
Excellence and longevity wins for me! If I were a club owner or general manager, I'd take the guy who was outstanding for the longest period. In this debate, it would clearly be Willie Mays. In another posting, Ted Williams (over Joe DiMaggio).
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Mick put more fans in the seats, I think. I'll go with Mick.
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Unfortunately for my hero, Mays wins by statistics... Still think Mantle is better
WILLIE MAYS
Hall Of Fame StatisticsPlayer rank in (·) Black Ink Batting - 57 (21), Average HOFer ≈ 27 Gray Ink Batting - 337 (8), Average HOFer ≈ 144 Hall of Fame Monitor Batting - 376 (5), Likely HOFer ≈ 100 Hall of Fame Standards Batting - 76 (3), Average HOFer ≈ 50 JAWS Center Field (1st), 156.1 career WAR/73.6 7yr-peak WAR/114.8 JAWS Average HOF CF (out of 18) = 70.5 career WAR/44.1 7yr-peak WAR/57.3 JAWS VS. MICKEY MANTLE Hall Of Fame StatisticsPlayer rank in (·) Black Ink Batting - 62 (15), Average HOFer ≈ 27 Gray Ink Batting - 272 (17), Average HOFer ≈ 144 Hall of Fame Monitor Batting - 300 (15), Likely HOFer ≈ 100 Hall of Fame Standards Batting - 65 (22), Average HOFer ≈ 50 JAWS Center Field (4th), 109.7 career WAR/64.8 7yr-peak WAR/87.2 JAWS Average HOF CF (out of 18) = 70.5 career WAR/44.1 7yr-peak WAR/57.3 JAWS (JAWS is what I go off of) |
Mickey mantle was one of the fastest players to ever play major league baseball.
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Mays and it's not all that close. His WARP # is so high because he was hitting like a demon against National League pitching during the 1960's.
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I think it is also silly that the author conveniently choses the 9 seasons Mantle was at his "physical peak" for comparison with Mays. Unfortunately those 9 seasons happen to exclude Mays' 1965 MVP season. This was possibly his best year ever, one in which he hit 52 HRs in a very tough HR ballpark, against guys like Drysdale/Koufax/Gibson/Bunning/etc. Seems like a pretty skewed comparison when you exclude a players' best year. It also starts in 1954, basically Mays' 2nd season (following nearly 2 years military service). Mays did win the MVP and a WS in his 2nd full season, so it clearly didn't take him long to acclimate to the ML and become a top 3-5 player. I suspect however that the author chose these years not simply because both players were at their "physical peak", but mostly because they are clearly the years when Mantle was at peak production. If "physical peak" is the key, then why not start right in 1951 before Mantle's first major knee injury in that year's WS? Why exclude Mantle's healthy 1951/1952/1953 seasons? They were respectable seasons and he got better each year, eventually progressing into player he'd become. Probably because Mantle didn't begin producing at an MVP caliber until 1955. Per my earlier post, if you want to compare their peak production, just take Mantle's 1955-1962 and Mays' 1954-1965 average seasons. They're nearly dead on, Mantle beats him in OPS.. Mays steals more bases and does a whole lot more in CF. Don't get me wrong, I love Mantle. My dad grew up in Oklahoma, watched him play minor league ball and from the time I was about 6, told me stories about about how amazing an athlete he was before his knees went on him. I also think at peak production, he compares well with Mays... but this article uses very one sided tactics to make its point. |
Mays.
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If the question is who had the better stats at the end of the day, then yes Mays wins hands down. If, however, you're looking for the player you'd want on your team, then it's Mantle all the way. Johnny Blanchard once said, and I'll paraphrase, "you knew you could never be as good as him, but brother, he made you want to go out and try". I've never heard anyone say that of Mays.
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I wanna see Mays bat lefthanded.
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Hands down Mays was a better player and excelled for a much longer time then Mantle. He had 5 tool skills and hit for power and average. Mantle was a stud in his own right and could hit the ball a ton. Mays was quicker, the better fielder and had greater career longevity. Mantle had the health and drinking problems the latter of which was his own doing. So many "what-ifs" unfortunately for his career.
In terms of who I would rather have on my team it would have to be the Mick, great character, very personable and was just an all around great dude. New York fans loved him like a god. |
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