![]() |
How did the 1950's Dodgers ever manage to lose?
Take for Example the 1953 Dodgers.
Their starting lineup by OBP Jackie Robinson .425 Duke Snider .419 Roy Campanella .395 Gil Hodges .393 Carl Furillo .393 Jim Gilliam .383 Pee Wee Reese .374 Bobby Morgan/Billy Cox .370/.363 The WORST was the 3b platoon at a % that would've led some teams. OPS is more of the same they had 5 guys with a higher OPS than the leader of the Yankees. Of course I'm being a little facetious, their starting pitcher was pretty lackluster, but their offense while not the 1927 Yankees, was one of the best of any team that didn't have Ruth or Gehrig! |
For example, the 1995 Cleveland Indians...
Tony Pena/Sandy Alomar: .262/.302 & .300/.332 BA/OBP respectively Paul Sorrento: .235/.336/.511 BA/OBP/SLG Carlos Baerga: .314/.355 BA/OBP Omar Vizquel: .266/.333 BA/OBP Jim Thome: .314/.438/.558/.996 BA/OBP/SLG/OPS Albert Belle: .317/.401/.690/1.091 BA/OBP/SLG/OPS Kenny Lofton: .310/.362 BA/OBP Manny Ramirez: .308/.402/.558/.960 BA/OBP/SLG/OPS Eddie Murray: .323/.375 BA/OBP Yet they ran into the buzz saw that was the '95 Braves pitching staff. Pitching dominates. Heck, the '96 Indians might have been even better, with two players (Thome & Belle) over 1 in the OPS category. The '53 Dodgers ran into the Yankees, with Ford, Lopat, Reynolds, etc. Their entire staff was solid, not to mention their lineup included the likes of... Mantle: .295/.398 BA/OBP Woodling: .306/.429 BA/OBP Bauer: .304/.394 BA/OBP McDougald: .285/.361 BA/OBP Rizzuto: .271/.383 BA/OBP Collins: .269/365 BA/OBP Berra: .296/.363 BA/OBP You can have a great left hook, but if your opponent boasts an equal or greater left hook with a nice right hook to compliment, it's possible to lose. |
The Big Red Machine had some outrageous lineups, and they certainly were winners, but would have won a lot more with better starting pitching.
|
The Red Sox from the same era had the same problem; a prolific offense with no pitching to back it up. The year they scored over 1,000 runs (1950) they had one pitcher with an ERA below 4.00 (Mel Parnell at 3.61; next closest was Joe Dobson at 4.18. Curiously, that was Dobson’s only All-Star season, despite putting up better numbers other years). The other posters hit it on the head: pitching dominates, and they didn’t have it.
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:37 PM. |