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The PCL may have been better than a minor league. That doesn't change the fact that he wasn't able to make the jump to the majors until being sent down for 2 years and then landing in a favorable stadium that allowed him inflate his stats. This sounds to me like a good but not great player who has no business in the HOF. 7 full years just isn't enough for a guy who struggled to make the big leagues and was average away from the Baker Bowl. |
Just curious if you were aware that Cravath was a right handed batter hitting his homeruns to right field? It takes tremendous ability to do that. Also, the original Yankee Stadium dimensions were 295 feet to right field and only 281 feet to left field. Do you discount Ruth and Gehrig's totals knowing that?
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Very rarely do I support short career players. Cravath is a rare exception. |
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Cravath should be in Dinneen probably should be as well for his all round How about Fielder Jones???? |
Sorry if I missed them above, but I don't think anyone's mentioned Overall, Schulte, or Latham. Not that I really think they belong in the Hall (Overall isn't even eligible), but I think they were as good as most of the folks that have been mentioned in this thread.
Dahlen is the only one in T206 who deserves it as a player and hasn't been enshrined yet. Dinneen is a good pick for total contributions to the game. The best pre-steroid era guys who haven't gotten in yet are Jim McCormick, Bob Caruthers, and Shoeless Joe. |
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Like Dinneen I'm for his interactions in baseball besides a player. Donie Bush????? No love for him? Considered one of the top fielding SS's in baseball in his day over 1,800 hits. A Manager A Owner A Scout An Executive You can't get more versatile than that can you? |
Jimmy Sheckard? .270 career batting average with just over 2,000 hits in 17 years? Really? You were the guys busting my balls about Ed Reulbach, better re-group.....I dont get this choice at all.....
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So, going back to the first page of the thread, many have been listed from the T206 set potentially being HOF worthy. I'm going to split this up in different categories. These are only my opinions.
Hall of Fame worthy Bill Dahlen - One of the best players not in the Hall of Fame from any era at any position. The VC really messed up in December. Was terrific offensively and defensively and helped his teams win four pennants in his career. His 44 game hitting streak is second only to Joe DiMaggio among right handed batters. Nobody in history played more games at the time he retired and his longevity still holds today. Sherry Magee - 4x RBI champ, hit very well in all of those seasons. Metrics rank him well and it can be argued he's better than many leftfielders already in. He could do it all and has been erroneously overlooked. Larry Doyle - The best second baseman in the National League during his time. He was also the best position player on the Giants during their winning of multiple pennants. One came during an MVP season in 1912 and would probably be a World Champion had it not been for Snodgrass' Muff. Just as how Sherry Magee is arguably a top 15 leftfielder ever, I think Doyle could be top 15 all time at second. Gavvy Cravath - I get the argument against him, but he absolutely dominated during his short peak. Bill Dinneen - As a pitcher alone he is not a Hall of Famer, but when you combine his pitching career with his umpiring career, it's hard to justify his exclusion. Could go either way Jimmy Sheckard - He wasn't that bad of a player and worth doing more research on. No way should he get in before Sherry Magee, but a future induction would hardly taint Cooperstown. Not Hall of Fame worthy Deacon Philippe - I changed my mind here I think Reulbach was better and I wouldn't put Reulbach in. Out of those Pirate teams, only Babe Adams deserves it and he's not in the set. Ed Reulbach - Just falls short for me. George Mullin - Would challenge Rube Marquard for the title of the worst pitcher inducted. Fielder Jones - Nothing stands out. Wildfire Schulte - If one season made you a Hall of Famer, he'd have been one of the earliest inductees of an overcrowded Hall. Chief Meyers - Good, just below ten seasons, however. Tommy Leach - You could pretty much categorize him in the Hall of Mistakes that the Frisch Committee monopolized. Though Cuyler could stay in my personal Hall. Johnny Kling - He could be the worst catcher in the HOF and would be one of the worst players at any position. Hal Chase and Ed Konetchy - I would just focus on modern era first basemen, with Konetchy probably being closer to deserving. George Gibson and Jimmy Archer - You know have no business being worthy of Hall discussion when Johnny Kling looks good by comparison. Again, these are only my opinions. I thought I'd respond to a majority of the names listed here. |
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121 OPS+ Not the worst batting average or OBP in the world. One of the better leftfielders not in Fast indivual and a key part of the Cubs title wins Hall of Merit Someone many pages back name dropped Chase. |
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Bill Dineen umpired 8 World Series and was behind the plate for the original All Star game. His 8 World Series is a mark held by him and Tommy Connolly, a HOFer. So what makes him not a HOF umpire?
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I like your format and I'll use the same but switch it up to my picks. I'm a little more lenient. Hall of Fame worthy Bill Dahlen Sherry Magee Larry Doyle Gavvy Cravath Bill Dinneen Ed Reulbach Chase Konetchy --- C'mon guys Deacon Philippe - 1903 WS??? And look at the huge W-L gap decent ERA for his era as well Donie Bush - too much good for this guy, not talked about enough IMO Could go either way Jimmy Sheckard Tommy Leach - I like Leach a lot but his .269 average is what holds him back big time. Chief Meyers Kling Not Hall of Fame worthy George Mullin Fielder Jones Wildfire Schulte George Gibson Jimmy Archer - |
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Dinneen is 100% a HOFer:
-40 Years of contributions to baseball -A no-hitter -4 20-win seasons -Led the league in saves twice. -For many seasons he was at the top of his league for WAR and ERA. -He basically won the World Series for the Americans (1903) -In the 03 Series he won three games and pitched 11 strikeouts in game 2. -28 strikeouts overall in the series, :eek::eek::eek: and two shutouts:eek: -pitched 37 consecutive complete games earning the record for the most consecutive innings without being relieved (337 consecutive) -As said above 8 WS Umpired, and 5 No-no's -Umpired a ton of games (more than O'Day, Conlan and Chylak) -6th for career games a HP Ump -I could have made this list twice as long Also +1 on Donie Bush for the HOF. Fun Fact: He discovered Pee Wee Reese as a scout (one of his lesser known accomplishments) -Owen:) |
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Tom C |
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Not so sure about Orval. |
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I feel like I'm in the middle here on this topic. There are some players not in the Hall from the set I think should be in. Some standards are too stingy. Others advocate for terrible choices, in my opinion.
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as far as the Clemente question you were posed earlier, that dude has a hard time understanding that when you say a player is better at defense than another player (like say Andruw Jones over Clemente) you aren't saying that the former was a better all around player than the latter, just that they were better at defense. He got all bent out of shape over this, for some reason. |
I ssw Doc White here earlier. I see nothing too special. He had a couple nice seasons but a typical deadball player, really.
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p.s. I know none of the above are T206, but, just for the sake of argument...sorry, just not feelin' it for Sheckard - UNLESS I was sittin' on a binder full of T206 Sheckard (there's exceptions to every "accepted" rule, ya know???) JMO DS |
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Honestly before I started collecting the Monster many of these players I never heard of. I knew the big names like Wagner, Cobb, Plank, Mathewson, Johnson, basically all the Hall of Famers. I also knew of the likes of Dahlen, Magee, Cravath. I couldn't tell you anything about them, but I knew the name. I had no clue who Larry Doyle or Jimmy Sheckard were. This set taught me them and also I learned they were fantastic players. |
there are lots of problems with the hall of fame, but that's what makes in interesting. If you use the worst player in the hall of fame as the litmus test for who belongs, pretty much everyone north of David Eckstien has an argument. making it more complex, winning 220 games in the 1980s is very different than willing 220 games in 1910 and will be exceedingly different than winning 220 games in 2020, just as hitting 500 homers in the 1930s or 40s is different than doing it in the 1990s. Plus the argument are you ranking players for their longevity or their pinnacle? That's what makes it a good argument.
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How good were they during their pimnacle? How long enough did they play? What position were they?
These are all questions to ask, too. |
I think the true test should be: was this person one of the three best players at their position during their career? If the answer is yes, then I don't see how that person isn't a HOFer. In the case of Larry Doyle, he was unquestionably the best second baseman of his time. So how is he not a HOFer?
Pitchers would be a different story because at any given time there could be an infinite amount of top pitchers. I wouldn't use the top three as an indicator for them. |
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Also, of the T206 shortstops, I rate Dahlen third behind only Wagner and Davis. |
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Was the player in the top 10-15 all time at their position? If not were they in the top 10 in the game at any position during their career? Does that players stats paint a picture of an all time great? Or just a good player who played a position that had poor depth league wide at the time? |
Please end this thread....3 months is long enough....
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