![]() |
Top 30 Pre-WWII Players
Rank them. If we get enough replies we can force rank based off people's lists. Should be a fun debate.
LIST UPDATED 3/20 01. Babe Ruth 02. Ty Cobb 03. Walter Johnson 04. Honus Wagner 05. Lou Gehrig 06. Rogers Hornsby 07. Cy Young 08. Christy Mathewson 09. Tris Speaker 10. Eddie Collins 11. Jimmie Foxx 12. Nap Lajoie 13. Pete Alexander 14. Lefty Grove 15. Joe Jackson 16. 17. 18. 19. 20 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. |
How do you classify guys that overlapped both eras, like DiMaggio and Williams etc...?
|
Might as well include them, would be a whole other debate on how to define eligibility.
|
I think Rogers Hornsby should be in the top 10. Honus Wagner also
|
I'd consider The Splendid Splinter to be post-WWII. He did most of his damage from 1946-60. That's fifteen years after the war, and only four years pre-war. Joe D is a 7/5 ratio, however, so that's more of a gray area.
|
Steady...Eddie Colllins for sure...underrated inaugural inductee to HOF...#15-20?
|
Ty Cobb would be #1 or #2 for me. Honus Wagner , Walter Johnson and Mickey Cochrane would be a couple of others.
Joe |
batters Ruth Cobb Wagner Gehrig Hornsby Speaker Foxx Collins Lajoie Jackson Anson Ott
pitchers Johnson Alexander Young Mathewson Grove Hubbell Paige |
I'm putting Cobb in that first slot no doubt.
|
Ok let's throw Williams and DiMaggio out.
|
Ruth is my #1! Cobb is #2. If cobb could pitch...then it'd be close!!!
|
Cobb and Wagner should be 1 and 2. Ruth ahead of either of them is a mistake. I may even put Matty and Cy Young ahead of Ruth.
Rich |
Ruth-Cobb-Walter Johnson then everyone else. If DiMaggio was eligible I'd have him top 10. I'd probably have Ed Delehanty up there to, he was Gehrig-like during a dead ball era.
|
My quick stab at it...not necessarily in order.
1. Babe Ruth
2. Ty Cobb 3. Joe Jackson 4. Lou Gehrig 5. Christy Mathewson 6. Honus Wagner 6. Rogers Hornsby 7. Cy Young 8. Nap Lajoie 9. Tris Speaker 10. Jimmy Foxx 11. George Sisler 12. Walter Johnson 13. Eddie Collins 14. Joe DiMaggio 15. Ted Williams 16. Cap Anson 17. Rube Waddell 18. Wee Willie Keeler 19. Mel Ott 20 Zack Wheat 21. Jesse Burkett 22. Hank Greenberg 23. Smoky Joe Wood 24. Grover Cleveland Alexander 25. Lefty Grove 26. Pud Galvin 27. Al Simmons 28. Wahoo Sam Crawford 29. Paul Waner 30. Ed Delahanty |
Quote:
|
Quote:
If you weren't kidding, how could you possibly reach that conclusion? It would be a reach to throw Babe out of 1st slot in an all-time context IMO. Very interested in hearing your thoughts.... Thanks |
So, you're one of two coaches picking teams and all these guys are lined up waiting to be picked and all are in top form...you decide to bypass Ruth? Who would do that? For one of the slap hitters? Very interesting and a good topic. Thanks
|
Yes, I will take a great, fierce all-around player over a great power hitter any day of the week and twice on Sunday.
|
People not picking Babe #1 surely are joking. Hell, he'd bat cleanup and then come on and pitch the final 3 innings to save the game for Matty.
|
1. Babe Ruth
2. Ty Cobb 3. Rogers Hornsby 4. Nap Lajoie 5. Christy Mathewson 6. Walter Johnson 7. Lou Gehrig 8. Honus Wagner 9. Jimmie Foxx 10. Cy Young |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Oh... you have two Sam Crawfords. :cool: |
Quote:
|
Quote:
In other words, Cobb was nowhere nearly as good as Ruth, and in fact, if we were to count him, Ted Williams would come out ahead of Cobb as well. Then, if you were to consider that Cobb was a despicable human being, there is nothing great about that, either. |
Another way to look at this...like putting together a fantasy league team...all time.
Who would be YOUR #1 pick, etc. Are ya gonna go with the old addage "good pitching stops good hitting" or the eveyday position player?? A little different twist on this subject. |
Quote:
|
yeah, i am sure we can swap out several guys for others...i actually have Tris Already tho...
i just took out my second Wahoo and traded him for Rube Waddell. this is fun! PS- Josh Gibson & Satch are some serious players...i might need to really shake up my list |
Quote:
Let's just call it a managerial difference :) |
Quote:
Let me also say that Ruth had a World Series OPS of 1.211, while Cobb's was a miniscule .668. Talk about coming up small in the bigtime! If that's your definition of "small ball", then Cobb's a perfect fit. :) |
I'm dividing mine into hitters and pitchers.
1. Babe Ruth- he was both. 2. Honus Wagner 3. Rogers Hornsby 4. Ty Cobb 2,3,4 very close. I could flip flop 5. Eddie Collins 6. Tris Speaker 7. Lou Gehrig 8. Nap Lajoie 9. Joe Jackson- he would have hammered the ball for another 5 years 10. Jimmy Foxx 11. Arky Vaughan-way underrated 12. George Davis- ditto 13. Mickey Cochrane 14. Bill Dickey- Gotta get catchers in there somewhere They don't always show their value in stats. Cochrane and Dickey were pretty close. I could take either. 15. Frank Frisch 16. Bobby Wallace 17. Cap Anson 18. Joe Cronin 19. Ed Delahanty 20. 50 guys could take this spot. Pitchers 1. Walter Johnson 2. Cy Young 3. Pete Alexander 4. Christy Mathewson 5. Lefty Grove 6. Kid Nichols 7. Carl Hubbell 8. Dazzy Vance 9. Addie Joss 10. Mordecai Brown Probably left out out some greats and will have to edit |
IMO I think a more fair way to rank players is Dead Ball Era and Pre WWII Live Ball era. Too many things changed after 1920 in favor of the batters, hence the obvious sudden explosion in home runs.
Dead Ball Era Batters: 1.) Ty Cobb 2.) Honus Wagner 3.) Joe Jackson 4.) Tris Speaker 5.) Nap Lajoie 6.) Eddie Collins 7.) Sam Crawford 8.) Zack Wheat 9.) Willie Keeler 10.) Home Run Baker Dead Ball Pitchers: 1.) Walter Johnson 2.) Christy Mathewson 3.) Eddie Plank 4.) Grover Alexander 5.) Cy Young 6.) Mordecai Brown 7.) Ed Walsh 8.) Chief Bender 9.) Rube Waddell 10.) Addie Joss |
This is a great topic. It reminds me of how I used to argue with my father about the merits of Cobb (his choice) and Ruth. He passed away four years ago, so I'll have to argue with some of you instead.:)
1. Babe Ruth 2. Honus Wagner 3. Ty Cobb (I've read many articles and never saw anyone praise his defense). 4. Walter Johnson 5. Oscar Charleston (Buck O'Neil told me he was the best he ever saw). 6. Lou Gehrig 7. Lefty Grove 8. Josh Gibson 9. Joe Dimaggio (his best years were all pre-WWII). 10. Jimmie Foxx 11. Christy Mathewson 12. Tris Speaker 13. Eddie Collins 14. John Henry Lloyd 15. Cy Young 16. Rogers Hornsby 17. Napoleon Lajoie 18. Grover Cleveland Alexander 19. Ed Delahanty 20. Satchell Paige 21. Mickey Cochrane 22. Arky Vaughn 23. Kid Nichols 24. Shoeless Joe Jackson 25. Sam Crawford 26. Carl Hubbell 27. Dizzy Dean 28. Zack Wheat 29. Mordecai Brown 30. Mike Donlin (Sentimental pick. He's my favorite T206 player. I always like drunken Irishmen). |
Where would Home Run Baker fit?
|
It seems like the first 29 years of major league baseball virtually didn't exist when looking at the lists.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Great lists so far! I'll do my best to force rank/compile what people have posted so far and add to the OP tonight. Then we can continue to debate/revise.
Keep'em comin! |
Quote:
But what a four years it was... |
Quote:
This is the only position where you can't go back before WWII and find at least one or two of the all time greats who played the position IMHO.:) |
Quote:
Hello, Sean. Hope all is well. Definitely the best third baseman before 1950 before the sluggers came along, and that warrants his HOF status. Not sure I'd have him on my top 30 list though. I guess I'd better actually do one and find out. |
Great topic, would have to give quite a bit of thought to 2-20, but without question Ruth is #1, comparing his hitting (OPS, OPS+, there's more to hitting than batting average) to Cobb, its not even close.
|
Organization
Exciting topic. 40 replies before I had a chance to even see this thread! I like the posters who have already named their top 30, ranked or not. However, before we get into debates about ranking top 3, top 5, etc., (and that's fun)shouldn't we know the players we are dealiing with? Can I be so bold to suggest everyone just list their 30 players? Then tally the names and the ones that appear most are the list. If one of my players is not on it, tough luck for me. Then we can post our ranked lists and go from there.
As far as players on the cusp like Williams and Joe D, I say they're fair game, Let the people speak. My guess is that they won't even make it in the first cut anyway, due to the bias of board members, myself included. Anyway, that's my 3 cents. |
Quote:
|
Rather than just list the top 30, I went with building a team. 2 at each infield position, five outfielders, 10 pitchers and five wildcards for my top 30 list.
Ruth is my clear #1, I'll list my guys by position: Catchers Mickey Cochrane Josh Gibson First Basemen Lou Gehrig George Sisler Second Basemen Rogers Hornsby Eddie Collins Shortstops Honus Wagner John Henry Lloyd Third Basemen Home Run Baker Judy Johnson Outfielders Babe Ruth Ty Cobb Tris Speaker Mel Ott Oscar Charleston Pitchers Kid Nichols Cy Young Walter Johnson Christy Mathewson Three-Finger Brown (Got to pick the local boy!) G.C. Alexander Lefty Grove Satchel Paige Martin Dihigo Victor Starffin Wildcards Jimmie Foxx Nap Lajoie Cap Anson Joe Jackson Charlie Gehringer Fun exercise. I look forward to the debate. |
Mike- killer list! i like the way you broke it down.
|
Eras don't matter if the players' accomplishments are compared to each players' individual performances throughout the league(s) in each respective year(s). For example, Ruth's 1921 season - who was close and how much was the difference? Cobb's best season - same question....The same can be done for an entire decade or career.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Great topic! It's been fun to follow. Rich |
Love everyones lists!!
My one comment would be that had the color barrier been broken thirty years sooner, we might be talking Oscar Charleston as the greatest of all time.
|
Quote:
Nice list, btw. I'd make a couple personal preference changes but but theres nothing to argue with there (except your #1 :) ) |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 08:44 AM. |