
02-26-2024, 07:10 PM
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Travis
Tra,vis Tr,ail
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Join Date: Jul 2021
Posts: 2,431
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jingram058
I have to respond. Think what you will of me, I don't care. It would seem that I am the only one in this thread who played real no-shit baseball at a competitive level. I don't know if you folks, who I very highly respect when it comes to all the nuances of baseball cards, realize what you're saying, but you don't know jack about the game itself. Yes, players at the MLB level are bigger, stronger, faster today. And they break down with incredible regularity, protecting their $$$. But. I've played the game. I know all about 85 to 90 mph fastballs. I could hit them pretty well, if I guessed right. I know that there is a WORLD of difference between 85 to 90 to 95 and 95 to 100. Above 95, you will hear the baseball, whizzing. You won't catch up to it, unless you're something special, even if you know it's coming. If you think Walter Johnson topped out at 95 mph, you're delusional. If that was the case, and if I could somehow go back in time, you'd be collecting MY t205 an t206 cards today! I don't give a flying f what idiotic facts you're reading. They're wrong. They called him "The Big Train" because his fastball, when he put on the gas, made noise. I'm done with listening to this goofy, armchair nonsense.
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I respect your opinion, and I understand why you feel that way. I just disagree wholeheartedly. I would wager every penny I'll ever earn and my daughter's inheritance that Walter Johnson, or any of his contemporaries, never touched 100 mph. That's how confident I am. Not a snowball's chance in hell. I'd even go one step further and say that Walter Johnson was the only pitcher of his time who could even touch 90.
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