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#1
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Posted By: Wade
I brought this up on the old board about two years ago, but I am still baffled by peoples responses, so maybe someone could shed some light on the situation. |
#2
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Dimaggio---Great hitter but not as great as Williams. Great fielder, much better than Williams. Had the intangibles-much like Jeter today--ability to elevate his game when it meant most. I think Williams was a better player but it is not my that much. |
#3
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Posted By: Dr.Koos
The Yankees couldn't win without him. When Williams was going into his yearly, typical September "snooze", Dimaggio was tearing up the baseball, making sure that his team retained any lead built up during the year. As Lazzeri said, "Your team was down by a run, it would be the bottom of the ninth, and then you'd see Dimagg standing in the on deck circle with 2 men on and you KNEW you had every chance in the world to win it right then and there". Throughout his career, Dimaggio's late inning, team down by a few runs batting average and production stats were enormous. He rose to the occassion. PLUS, keep in mind that Joe WAS somewhat of a power-hitter as well, 360+ Homeruns with only 360+ strikeouts in a short career (6500+ at bats), this accomplished with a 457 foot power-alley for a right hand hitter in HALF of his career games!!!!! Plus, Ted wasn't married to Marilyn Monroe!!! |
#4
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Posted By: Jeff Obermeyer
Let us not forget, my friends, that DiMaggio and Mathewson both played in New York City. |
#5
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Posted By: B Hodes
Jeff's discussion of the benefits of having played for New York dynastys touches on something important. Because baseball is to a large degree an individual game played by teams that yields a vast array of meaningful statistics we often overlook the reason the players play (I know its probably money but indulge me here) --- Winning. |
#6
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
My husband used to say, in the early 80s, that Jackie Robinson was like two Ricky hendersons--he would drive pichers CRAZY--how were you supposed ot know when he WASn'T going to steal a base? |
#7
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Posted By: jay berhens
Every time someone makes an argument that a player was a great late inning hitter, they never provide the stats to back this. Mostly becuase they don't exist for most players or it's becuase it is a favorite player of their's and they tend to romanticize the ability of a given player. |
#8
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Posted By: Dr.Koos
You know Jay, they have these little things called BOXscores of baseball games which show what a player did with every at bat in every inning he made a trip to the plate, and what the score happened to be. It's why Reggie is known as Mr.October, and why Williams was known to go into Sept. hibernation, and why Dimaggio was one of the best MONEY players ever. You have only to study BOXscores. Box scores don't lie. ANY major online library with a large selection of Sports material has records of boxscores going back well into the 1800s. PS: I need your address so I can mail you the Geronimo I won for you! |
#9
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Posted By: jay behrens
Well, you best get to reading your box scores and totaling up the numbers. People tend to remember what they want to remember. I remember back in teh 80s Eddie Murray was considered one of the great clutch hitters in the game, but someone actually ran the numbers and his numbers from the 7th inning on weren't any better than the average player in the league. |
#10
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Posted By: TBob
Matty came in the league at a time when most of the players were farmhands, oil riggers, coal miners, roughnecks, city slickers, etc. and gave the league instant credibility and class. He was a college graduate at a time when you could count the numbers of college educated players on one hand. Before Matty the game was perceived as roughnecked and brawling and definitely not a game you would take the wife/girl friend and family to on an afternoon. matty changed all that. He was THE hero to thousands of kids, the real life Frank Merriwell. He was a great pitcher who suffered quietly and inwardly when some of the greatest freaks in the history of the game happened while he was on the mound: Merkle's Boner, Snodgrass' Muff, Chief Meyer's dropped pop foul. His tragic and senseless accident which hastened his death adds to the mystique. |
#11
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Posted By: TBob
Koufax may be overrated but Joe D., despite his complex and enigmatic personality is NOT overrated. Williams was a better hitter. Joe D. was a better PLAYER. |
#12
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Posted By: scott brockelman
in my last post on this board, i will have to disagree that mantle, or williams or dimaggio were the greatest player, or even ruth or cobb, perhaps all great and charismatic,. but matter of factly, the greatest player was willie mays, he could run, throw, field, steal & hit better than any of the above when all is factored in. his downfall was attitude, not toward the game but towards the fans and management and later, people not willing to accept his position in baseball history. ted williams is second only because he DID lose so much war time, otherwise he would have blown away the others. mantle was great but like so many modern celebs, he could not handle the lime light. except in his day the press and management disguised it as "injury, sickness, illness, etc" he destroyed himself! in todays world he would have been chewed up and spit out by the press in a few seasons. no excuses! as so many of the short term superstars are today. |
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