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was an easy choice :)
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eric p
I must say that your moderation of this thread has been masterful.
Your advocacy for civility and scholarly dialogue is most refreshing. all the best, barry |
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Please accept my sincere thanks for the kind words. Your feedback is truly appreciated. Best Regards, Eric |
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You're utterly spurious in your ASSumption of HITs being the most important aspect of baseball. It is runs. Considering how many precious hits Rose had he still had less scored runs then Ruth or Aaron. Rose also barely makes it into the top 100 for RBIs, Yount and Pudge have more. If Aaron wanted to he could have had 4300 hits while batting over .330. He choose instead to hit for power instead of slapping singles. Ichiro and Pujols are better then Rose. |
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Hank was an overwhelmed kid who broke into the majors hitting cross-handed and actually turned down an offer from the Giants. Had he played for roughly twenty years in the same lineup as Willie Mays, perhaps this conversation would be completely different. He might have had the luxury of hitting .330 and amassing power numbers beyond comprehension...with Mays on the basepaths. Just my humble opinion here...that would have been one amazing outfield. Aaron, Mays, McCovey. Best Regards, Eric |
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Re- Hank vs Willie. I'll never take anything away from Aaron, but he played several years in "the launching pad".. While Mays had to play over a decade in windy Candlestick, before they closed the stadium with an outfield upper deck. That era pre-dates me, but supposedly that '60's Stick was one of the toughest places to hit bombs. Mays, had he not lost virtually two years to military service, and had he played in a hitter friendly park, undoubtedly would have hit more than 700.. And likely passed Ruth first. |
Great thread Eric, I do think Mathewson has to be considered especially if pitchers are allowed into the discussion. His stats are pretty remarkable as are Walter Johnson's.....What amazes me is what Cobb's stats were against Johnson, later on in his career he had amazing success against him....
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Many thanks. Your comments are well received and greatly appreciated. Best Regards, Eric |
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Thank you very much. I appreciate you weighing in with the kind words. As for Mathewson, I agree. Any discussion about pitchers that does not include him is sorely missing something. I am sure that there are many who would argue he is the greatest ever...and they would be making a valid point. Regarding Cobb, I remember a portion of Baseball: A Film by Ken Burns that touched on Cobb's approach to hitting against Johnson. Apparently, Cobb would crowd the plate and Johnson would throw outside on the first couple of pitches, for fear of hitting the batter. Johnson would then ease up a bit and throw the ball over the plate, trying to get a strike. Cobb figured that this was the pitch to hit, knew it was coming, and simply reached out with his bat and let it meet the ball Ty was a brilliant man, no doubt…and one of the greatest players of all time, in my humble opinion. Best Regards, Eric |
The obvious answer is Ruth, and that's how I voted. But it's not as simple as you might think. It all depends on how you define "greatest baseball player." I think Ruth tends to get the nod by a large margin because in addition to being the best hitter (or at the very least in the top 2 ever to pick up a bat) he was also a dominant pitcher. But if we're deciding based on the greatest 2-way players, many all-time greats like Wagner and Cobb would have to take a back seat to guys like Martin Dihigo and Bullet Rogan. In fact, those 3 would probably be the finalists, with Ruth still being on top by a fairly large margin.
But the other way of evaluating it is who is the best all-around 5-tool player. This method still seems inadequate to me, but it changes who belongs in the argument. The discussion should probably include Willie Mays, Honus Wagner, Mickey Mantle, Oscar Charleston, maybe DiMaggio if you want. Even Bonds. Possibly Aaron. I wouldn't have a huge problem with you trying to slip Clemente into the argument in spite of his clear lack of power compared to others. But probably not Ruth. Probably not Josh Gibson. Not Cobb. In my opinion, Oscar Charleston tops this list. The problem is, you can argue that Ruth wasn't a swift runner or great defensive outfielder all you want, but no one in their right mind (that didn't grow up in New York as a kid in the 1950s) would take Mickey Mantle over Babe Ruth. So the only way to really decide is by some other partly subjective manner. For me, I think there are several tiers of players that can all legitimately be included in the discussion of who is the greatest player ever. But I think there are only 4 players in the top tier that should be in the final discussion. Those players are Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Oscar Charleston, and Josh Gibson. It wouldn't offend me to include Willie Mays, but I personally don't put him in the final group. And Cobb simply doesn't belong. Get over it. Of those 4, Babe Ruth is still my pick. But the margin isn't as big for me as it is for most other people. Charleston has a strong argument for greatest "all-around" player ever to step onto a baseball diamond. People forget that Wagner stole over 700 bases and played an important defensive position. Gibson was a better runner and defensive catcher than he gets credit for. Still, two words: Babe Ruth. So that's my long-winded way of agreeing with almost everyone else. I mean, Ruth and the rest of these guys are all behind Frank Baker, of course. Clearly it goes Baker, then everyone else, starting with Ruth. -Ryan |
best player
When it comes to winning the World Series the best player for a manager is probably a pitcher. Would you rather have Tom Seaver on the mound or Babe Ruth in the lineup? You can always just walk Ruth. That's why I voted "other" for Cy Young. In one game I would take Kevin Brown over Babe Ruth.
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NO GEHRIG!? I voted for ruth but still id say the iron horse deserves to at least on the list.
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Gehrig was in the poll choices, if I am not mistaken. Best Regards, Eric |
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You make a valid point regarding Oscar Charlestson. Please see below, from an earlier thread. The post I refer to is #93. http://www.net54baseball.com/showthr...60#post1107860 Best Regards, Eric |
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I still don't understand people who say it is an obvious choice. How can one of the strike out leaders of the pre war era be considered the best player of the pre war era? Even Cobb never struck out more than 55 times in a season, Ruth struck out less than 55 only 5 seasons and 3 of those where when he was a pitcher with Boston. I don't have a gripe if people vote for Ruth, just when they say it is an obvious choice. |
The greatest player of the Dead Ball era is without question Ty Cobb.
Babe Ruth technically wouldn't qualify as a possibility as he played MOST of his career post Dead Ball era with a different baseball. Babe Ruth should be taken off this list. His numbers with Boston as a hitter during the Dead Ball era weren't even close to Cobb's during the years the Dead Ball was being used. In the Dead ball era the best Home run hitters would have only 12-14 homers per year. From 1900 to 1920 there were 13 home run champs that had fewer than 10 home runs in a season. During the years that Ty Cobb played during the Dead Ball era he led the lead in hitting 12 out of 15 years. Unbelievable!!!!!! |
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This. Ruth could have been an HOF pitcher if he hadn't become the hitter we all remember. No other player even comes close to matching that ability. |
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the Babe
In major league history,, only 5 left-handed pitchers have ever compiled an ERA of under 2.00 runs while pitching over 300 innings in one year 2-in pre war
Rube Waddell & The Babe,,,in pos war Koufax, Carlton and V.Blue, so his pitching prowls were up there with the greatest ever!! no need to say anything about his hitting,, most complete baseball player!! with not even a close 2nd. |
Come on, it's still Ty Cobb and won't change no matter how many polls are taken.
Joe |
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Greatest Player?
In the Pre-War era... I'd go Josh Gibson or Babe Ruth...
But Willie Mays was the best ever. Ruth was awesome. But he played in a segregated league. Mays was a baseball genius... playing in the most perfect era of baseball, ever. |
Ed Walsh could have received some consideration. The man threw nearly 3,000 innings and had a career 1.82 ERA.
I'm still trying to figure out how in 1910 Walsh threw 369 2/3 innings, struck out 258 batters, had a 0.820 WHIP and a 1.27 ERA, and went only 18-20! But for the best player, after some careful consideration, I had to vote for Ruth. The guy could have gone down as one of the all-time greatest pitchers, and he was an even better hitter. |
Cobb was the greatest all around player of all time. Not just pre war. Babe Ruth was the most dominate player of all time. There is a difference.
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Ruth
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Ty Cobbs character prevents a lot of people from seeing just how great he was.He may not have been the best person but no doubt he is the best ball player I'm my mind.
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Without question Ty Cobb..not even close.
He's the fiercest most complete player to ever play the game. He DOMINATED the era that he played in. His all-time highest batting average will never be matched. COBB! |
I suppose that if the question is limited to the majors, I'd go with Ruth very narrowly over Cobb. If the question is the best baseball player of that era, I think it is Oscar Charleston. He was a combination of Ruth, Cobb, Speaker and Mays as a player. IMO, he wins best ever, and he was certainly better than Gibson.
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I have to agree with Kenny ... That Oscar would take it... If majors, would have to be Ruth.
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Aside from being a HOF PITCHER, I firmly believe Ruth's stand-alone greatness is confirmed by the FACT that he actually out-homered virtually all of the TEAMS in the league during the early 1920's!!! I will always look at that statistic as one of if not THE most unfathomable feats in Major League history. Babe Ruth will forever stand "above the game" itself! Joe T. |
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Interesting results from this poll.
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Absolutely no surprise looking at the results....
Cobb and Ruth are king, best of the best, with no other comparable players in my opinion. ...it isn't even a contest. |
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Josh Gibson
Actually, I just voted for Josh Gibson, the only guy who can compare with the Babe in my opinion. I remain unconvinced that the Negro Leagues were equal to the major leagues, but even if you discount his 215 OPS+ a little, if you factor in that he was a catcher, that's more impressive than Ruth. Leaving aside pitching at least.
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"Ruth broke the HR record 4 times! and won only 1 MVP."
For a while there was a rule that a player could win the MVP award only once. I don't know if that was holding Ruth back, but it might have been. |
Not only did Ruth change the game, but he saved baseball after the Black Sox scandal. I think Cobb was two and Wagner three. Unfortunately, we will never know how Gibson would have done in the majors but because he never played there I cannot consider him.
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I notice only one pitcher on the original list. In terms of pitchers I would list the top 5 as:
Johnson Grove Young Mathewson Alexander |
Kid Nichols had a short career but certainly deserves to be on any list of pitching greats. He started at the same time as Cy Yound (1890) and had more wins than Young in that decade. I believe he ranks number one in WAR/year played.
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Babe Ruth was the greatest player ever by far. When you combine his batting statistics with his pitching record no one comes close. The one statistic that amazes me was that in 1921 he hit more home run than any team combined. In today's game to accomplish the same feat a player would have to hit more than 200 home runs in a season. After Ruth, I would rank Cobb and then Mays. Rounding out the top ten would be Johnson, Aaron, Wagner, Williams, Gehrig, Musial and Mantle. For the next nine DiMaggio, Mathewson, Hornsby, Foxx, Speaker, Alexander, Grove, Frank Robinson and Young. For number 20 it could be Schmidt, Collins, Lajoie, Clemente, Bench or even Bonds.
You may ask why is Wagner ranked so high, because there really is no other shortstop near him at the game's most difficult position with the possible of catcher. |
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Agree on Nichols. He is very high on the all-time WAR stat. I don't know all the metrics that go in to it, but it seems to churn out the right names. Eddie Collins and Alex Rodriguez are also high on the list, the other names are the ones most would guess.
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When Babe Ruth faced the best Negro League pitcher Satchel Paige, he hit a 500 foot home run off him. Ruth would have dominated any competition. Josh Gibson on the other hand struck out on 3 pitches after Paige intentionally walked 2 guys to face Gibson. Ruth is easily the greatest hitter ever.
Bill James ranks Honus Wagner #2. Although Wagner wasn't the hitter that Ruth was, he was the best hitter in the NL from 1900-1912 and was a gold glove level fielder at the most difficult position, shortstop. James has Willie Mays at #3. |
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PLus added his pitching acumen and no one is even close |
Babe Ruth
" Who is the greatest player of the Pre-War Era? "
Why is this poll limited to just the "Pre-War Era" ? BABE RUTH is the greatest in Baseball in any era....19th Century, Pre-WWII, Post-WWII. I believe in Divine Intervention.....George Herman Ruth was considered an "incorrigible" youngster; and, Brother Matthias at St. Mary’s Industrial School straightened him out. And, introduced the young Ruth to Baseball and showed him how to play the game. Then, when the game of Baseball was in serious trouble after the 1919 World Series, the Good Lord, in a dream, inspired Miller Huggins to persuade Col. Jacob Ruppert (Yankees owner) to acquire Babe Ruth from Boston in December 1919.....and, the rest is history. https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...abeRuth149.jpg . https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...beruth49_1.jpg https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...BabeRuth50.jpg . http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...Hcaption18.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
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As I said, I haven't seen any unbiased studies proving that the Negro Leagues were equal to the major leagues. But it's clear that they were at least high minor league quality. Roy Campanella, Jackie Robinson, Willie Mays, Luke Easter, Monte Irvin, Larry Doby, Satchell Paige, and others all played in the Negro Leagues at the same time as Gibson. Gibson led his league in home runs 11 times, and for his career had an OPS+ of 215. Bill James in his 1985 abstract estimates that a player moving from AAA to the majors would retain about 82% of their offensive production. I think the true number for the Negro Leagues would be between 82% and 100%. 90% seems reasonable to me. That would result in a career OPS+ of 194, four points higher than Ruth. Part of this is just me being contrarian. I'm not certain of how good the Negro Leagues were, just having fun arguing. |
I think it is fruitless and unfair to try to compare baseball players from different eras, especially wildly different eras. Comparing guys from the 1800s, when they pitched from 45 or 50 feet away and players didnt wear gloves, to guys playing today, just seems unreasonable. Its like asking which mode of transportation is better, the wagon or a Porsche. When it was either take a horse/wagon or walk, the wagon seems like the best idea ever. But now, if I offered you either a wagon or a Porsche, you'd probably take the Porsche, if time was any kind of consideration.
The game of baseball was completely different in 1905 than what it is today. Mostly because humans are different and they have evolved, alongside technology. Babe Ruth is amazing, but did he ever actually face any lefthanded pitcher who threw what is accepted today as a slider? He wasn't facing lefties throwing 96-98 consistently with 88-91 mph sliders. Equipment was different, the game was played differently, and players were not built like they are today. Matty was 6'1/195, WaJo was 6'1/200, they were two of the most dominant pitchers of their era, and by today's standards, they'd be undersized righties. I understand that there are statistics like ERA+ and OPS+ that adjust for era, but I don't think they can truly adjust and allow for direct 1 to 1 comparisons. The mound was different, park dimensions were a lot different, and the players themselves were a lot different. I mean, there were no night games until 1935. I think its easy to compare WaJo and Matty and Plank and Cy Young to each other, or Wagner to Eddie Collins. I think its a lot harder, and pretty pointless, to compare Mike Trout to Ty Cobb. Different games, different eras. Just my $0.02 |
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But it is baseball and we always compare players and teams across different era in baseball It is part of the Allure of baseball and the history of baseball that makes it fun but also endless debates. WE all use different criteria, we use different stats, we use the same stats but use it differently. |
Cobb was actually a big dude. Had he come along later, developed different hitting style more tailored to the long ball, wonder how it would have worked out.
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I vote for the Babe, I may be a little biased.
Just love the pitching pose!!! |
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I disagree with your assertions about the Negro Leagues. Only 8% of MLB today is African Americans. In 1960 when every team was integrated it was only 9%. Even a decade later it was less than 15%. It peaked at 18.7% in 1981. If the Negro Leagues were at the same level as MLB, that number would have approached 50%. Especially after expansion in 1961-62 and 1969. I believe the level of play was far below that of MLB and even AAA. The top level of players were of MLB quality but the vast majority were not. |
Wagner
As a kid I would have said Ruth... I didn't see them play. I did read Mr Ritter's book, The Glory Of Their Times, listened to the album, and have repeatedly listened to the CD's that have more material. I've read old, contemporary articles in old Baseball Magazines. Again and again, from the minds of the people that played with Ruth, Cobb, Young, Mathewson, Johnson, Jackson, Lajoie, and the rest, the player that rises to the top is Honus Wagner. Branch Rickey knew a right smart about baseball, he says Wagner. Sam Crawford played beside Cobb and he says it was Wagner. I'm inclined to believe the many who were there and oughta know. Aaron was a great player, but he didn't have much of an impact on baseball in the Pre War era. Neither did Mays. Pre-War. |
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My vote went to Ruth. I've read some good arguments for Wagner and Cobb but, in the end, to my mind they don't overshadow the case for Ruth. Maybe it's just how I think about greatness.... Sadly, we will never really know about the Negro League players. I'm not an expert, but I suspect that Oscar Charleston and Josh Gibson (and Martin Dihigo) would have excelled in the majors, not just survived there but been star players. There's really no way to know if either of them could have matched the babe, but since (to my mind) no one else in that era did, I think the inconclusive result should go in Ruth's favor. Also, for what it's worth, with respect to NL players vs Satchel Paige for a few at bats, etc., I don't think we can draw much in the way of useful conclusions. There just isn't enough data. If we were able to make those extrapolations, then the greatest Pre-War player might be Eiji Sawamura.... |
Many, many, (MANY!) years ago, a college friend, who was an outstanding logician, answered this question thusly:
Babe Ruth was the greatest player who ever lived, because if someone asks you who the greatest player who ever lived was, and your answer ISN'T Babe Ruth, your first job is to explain why your answer isn't Babe Ruth. I can't improve on that. Alan |
At first, I thought it was a trick question... :p
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More than most on the list, Ruth benefited from the end of the dead ball era. Considering that Wagner and Cobb played most of thier career when conditions were harder for batters and they have greater all around stats/skills... Cobb and Wagner are clearly ahead of Cobb. I know the modern romanticism is all about Ruth...but that doesn't make him the best. For me, the list goes Cobb, Wagner then Ruth. |
#1 Ruth
#2 WaJo |
Yeah, I can't really see how the answer would be anybody but Ruth. He destroyed pretty much every hitting record - other than average. He had an OBP over .500 five times. FIVE different seasons he was on base more often than not. And had four other seasons of .486 or above. He was on base nearly 10% more often than Cobb (.474 vs .433) AND slugged 35% higher than Cobb (.690 vs .512). AND he had 3+ outstanding seasons as a pitcher.
I'm a big fan of Ty Cobb and Honus Wagner but Ruth is so far out in front of both of them, they're fighting for 3rd place behind him*. * - to be honest, I'd probably put Rogers Hornsby ahead of both Cobb and Ruth, too. Averaging .402 over a 5-year stretch while hitting for power tops anything Wagner or Cobb did. |
In fairness to Wagner and Cobb, they slugged a lot lower than Ruth because they were hitting a dead ball and Ruth was hitting a juiced ball. I know I am one of the few that considers parks, but Ruth had a hitters friendly park 314 to right 385 to right center. Wagner 360 to left 462 to left center and 400 to left and 450 to center.
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Amazing how many members didn't see 'Pre-War' in the poll's title.
Are we ALL home-skooled? . |
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And remember that the rules changed in 1921 so that balls were changed when they got dirty or worn or damaged. That combined with a "juiced" ball and smaller parks helps to explain some of Ruth's success. Have a look at this comparison of Cobb and Ruth's stats. https://mlbcomparisons.com/babe-ruth...bb-comparison/ Except for the categories influenced by being a home run hitter, Cobb wins on almost all counts. That says to me that if you take away the benefits that Ruth had (fresh balls, juiced balls, parks etc) then Cobb is clearly the better player. Put it another way, if Cobb played ball from 1918-1938, his stats would be even better! Ruth most definitely transformed baseball but that doesn't make him the best. As an analogy, I'm a huge Beatles fan. They changed music when they came along. Like Ruth, they were the right people at the right time. But would I say that they were bigger musical geniuses than Mozart? Nope. |
Ruth came along at the absolute perfect time for his skills and style. This timing allowed him to become the larger than life player we all know and grant him title of best ever. What if Ruth came along 20 years earlier, or 20 years later - while still would have been awesome, probably not quite as awesome as it was. Ruth blossomed at the single biggest change ever to occur in the entire history of baseball.
The transition from Dead Ball era to Live Ball era makes it so very difficult, if not impossible to lump all Pre-War players together. Stats aside, lets look at what the baseball community thought of the top players when the first Hall of Fame voting happened. 1. Cobb - 222 votes 2, tie. Ruth - 215 votes 2, tie. Wagner - 215 votes 4. Mathewson - 205 votes 5. Walter Johnson - 189 votes. The largest percentage difference in voting was with Mathewson over Johnson. Does this mean Cobb was better than Ruth - we don't really know, but overall the votes would put the feather in Cobb's cap. Same with Matty vs. Johnson. |
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While he may not have ended up with 714 homers if they hadn't changed the ball, there's no reason to think he wouldn't have continued to dominate. Look at 1919 - his first full season as something resembling a full-time outfielder and he set the single season home run record. Hitting a dead ball. Yes, the HOF voting had Cobb ahead of Ruth. I'm not sure I'd put a whole lot of stock in that. Voters were picking from every player ever and Ruth had just retired. Plus, let's be honest, there were a lot of voters with bias against the modern style of play, favoring the high average and steals style of Cobb. Bottom line, Ruth was a better hitter than Cobb even in the dead ball era. |
The dead ball era concluded at the end of the 1918 season. That year Ruth hit 11 total home runs - one per every 28.8 at-bats.
The next year, 1919, Ruth hit 29 home runs - one per every 14.8 at-bats. Yes, Ruth may have been the better hitter. However, the OP was "who was the greatest player." Hitting aside, looking at all the other things that go into making a great player, Cobb might have the nod. |
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It was great meeting you at the Philly Show this weekend, and we did have a very interesting conversation.....especially on this topic. https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...abeRuth149.jpg . TED Z T206 Reference . |
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https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Deadball_Era https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead-ball_era |
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Sorry, I was off a tad saying deadball era ended at conclusion of 1918 season, should of said 1919 (based on Wikipedia).
Per Wikipedia - first line: "In baseball the deadball era was the period from around 1900 to the emergence of Babe Ruth as a power hitter in 1919." Also from same Wikipedia: "The yarn used to wrap the core of the ball was changed prior to the 1920 season." And yeah, Ruth was the man, all others fall short. |
Hey guys,
Specifically, those of you who favor Cobb over Ruth. Cobb was about the same height as Ruth, but he didn't have the weight to generate the power in his swing that Ruth had. Besides, if I recall correctly, Cobb held his bat with sort of a "choked-up" grip. No-way, with that kind of grip, could match the long-distance drives that Ruth hit. Furthermore, Cobb's impressive Batting Average would not be the topps in the Majors if Ted Williams had not been so "stubborn" by constantly pulling his drives to Right-Field. With the "Williams' O-F shift", Ted could have sliced the ball into the gap in Left-Field 440 times instead of taking a Walk. Then Ted would have hit an amazing .400 career BA. And, Cobb would not be the leader in that stat. In 1919, Ruth hit 29 HR's (the last year of the "Dead Ball" era). Then followed that up in 1920 with 54 HR's, and 59 HR's in 1921. Me thinks that Cobb is overrated :) Whatever, there is an excellent book by Tom Stanton titled "Ty and the Babe". I highly recommend it. In the Appendix you'll find all the At-Bats of Ty Cobb versus Babe Ruth pitching to him. 1949 LEAF https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...beruth49_1.jpg . . https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...BabeRuth50.jpg . http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...Hcaption18.jpg--------https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...obbandruth.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
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Williams was really more of a post-war player, though he did start in the majors just before WWII began. Always considered him as post-war since that is when he played the bulk of his career. |
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If anything, I was merely pointing out how Cobb and Ruth, though contemporaries, were decidedly different as hitters. And a lot of that may have had to do with choice as opposed to straight-up hitting ability. And what the heck does Cameron have to do with any of this? He isn't even a pre-war player, which is the era this question is about. You totally did not understand the gist and purpose of my post, and made a bad assumption. |
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Saying that Ruth was better than Cobb and Wagner is a valid opinion, but the difference is small. Saying Hornsby was better than Wagner and Cobb is a hot take. Bill James ranks Wagner #2 and Cobb #5, but Hornsby only #22. |
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Now sir, I understand you've been around a while and your opinion carries more weight, and I do, in fact, respect your opinion. However, in this particular instance I think your senility has finally gotten the best of you! ;) If anyone is overrated, it's Ruth not Cobb. I present the following evidence for Cobb: Tris Speaker once said, "Babe was a great ballplayer, but Cobb was even greater. The people who really knew baseball still favored Cobb, according even to Ruth's own manager, Miller Huggins. First Hall of Fame Vote: Cobb received 222 out of a possible 226 votes. Ruth and Wagner each received 215 votes, Mathewson had 205 votes, and Johnson finished with 189. "Make no mistake about that. The old boy was the greatest player I ever saw or hoped to see." - Babe Ruth "I never saw anyone like Ty Cobb. No one even close to him. He was the greatest all time ballplayer. That guy was superhuman, amazing." - Casey Stengel 1961 - "Cobb was the greatest ball player of all time and will never be equaled. Most record books simply talk about his hitting and base stealing. But he was a great outfielder with a great arm." (immediately after Ty died in July,'61) - Rogers Hornsby "I haven't had the chance to see many of the great stars of the other league, but picking the greatest player that ever lived is easy, I think. I pick Ty Cobb. I guess every one will do the same. Cobb was a good fielder, the greatest baserunner in the game's history, the fastest thinker and the most consistent hitter. How can you name any one else? Eddie Collins, the keystone of my great infield of the old Athletics, is my second choice. Eddie was a marvelous ball player. I can't say too much for him. I'll name Lajoie third. Of the present-day players I pick Al Simmons first, and he is my fourth man of all time. I hate to leave off Mickey Cochrane, but I must name Babe Ruth, so he goes fifth. -Connie Mack Cobb received another first-place vote from Walter Johnson. Johnson was lavish in his praise of the "Georgia Peach." He gave Wagner second place and then named Jackson, Ruth and Collins. In July,1931, C. William Duncan conducted survey of Phil. Public Ledger of who is the greatest all-time: B. Shotten: Cobb, Lajoie, Klein, Wagner, Ruth, Cochrane Mack: Cobb, Collins, Lajoie, Simmons, Ruth K. Gleason: Cobb, Wagner B. McKechnie: Wagner, Cobb, Speaker, Lajoie, Hornsby, Ruth J. Burke: Wagner, Cobb, Lajoie, Collins, Hornsby J. Mccarthy: Ruth, Cobb, Wagner, Collins, Lajoie Howley: Cobb, Wagner W. Robinson: Cobb, Keeler, Ruth, Wagner, Ferguson G. Street: Cobb, Wagner, Collins, F.Parent, Chase B. Harris: Ruth, Cobb, Sisler, Simmons, Speaker W. Johnson: Cobb, Wagner, Jackson, Ruth, Collins McGraw: Wagner, Cobb, Keeler, Simmons, Terry Now please stop with this Ruth madness. He was popular - very popular. Mythically popular. And that's great. He may have saved the sport of baseball after the Black Sox scandal. But listen to his contemporaries and please just stop this "Ruth is the Greatest" madness now! :D |
da Babe
Boom!, sir!
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