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#1
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Posted By: Jay Miller
At the Ft Washington show this weekend I had the pleasure of spending some time talking to Derek Grady. One of the things that we talked about for a while was where Joe Jackson ranks on the all time list of great hitters. I was looking on baseball reference.com today where they statistically analyze hitters and here is their ranking: |
#2
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Posted By: steve f
Morality?.. Joe did it for the money, Wade did it for a Honey. |
#3
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Posted By: warshawlaw
after all, you can always get money but how hard is it sometimes to get honey? |
#4
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Posted By: jay behrens
baseball has been around for 132 years. I can't imagine that almost every year, someone entered the league that was a better hitter than Joe Jax. He's certainly overhyped today, but I'd imagine he is at least in the top 50. |
#5
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Posted By: dd
I agree Jay,,,Joe is in my top 25,,,,,stats are a big part of the picture, but not the whole. |
#6
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Posted By: Chris Counts
Joe hit .356 lifetime (number three all-time) and remarkably played only one season (1920) in the live ball era. That's mighty impressive. You can keep him out of the Hall of Fame (although I personally would like to see him enshrined), but you can't keep him off the list of the greatest hitters who ever lived. Are there even 10 hitters out there who matched him? |
#7
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Posted By: Max Weder
Didn't Wade do it for the chicken? |
#8
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Posted By: dd
Hey Max, |
#9
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Posted By: David Smith
If that is the case, then we have a better idea why the chicken crossed the road! |
#10
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Fred)
Joe Jackson hit .356 lifetime. How many times did he lead the league in batting average? None! |
#11
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Posted By: leon
I would always opt for slow and steady over fast and furious. One of the keys to success is to be consistently good. I see too many flashes in the pan...one or two great years and fizzle........The fact Joe never won a batting crown doesn't matter to me..... |
#12
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Posted By: jay behrens
When you hit .400 and don't win a batting title, you can't hold that against the guy. It's not like he finished second to Yaz in 1968. |
#13
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Max-Go to Leaders and then near the bottom of the page click on HOF Monitor. It ranks players, both HOF and non-HOF, according to several categories, including batting. |
#14
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Posted By: dennis
jackson played in the dead ball era so all we can do is rank him with his peers of that era.(1901-1920) then he would be in my opinion top 5 with the likes of wagner, cobb, speaker, lajoie, c collins . i think to rank hitters (or pitchers) it must be done within specific eras. |
#15
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Posted By: Ryan Christoff
You can add Josh Gibson and Oscar Charleston to the top 10 list. Maybe Pop Lloyd, too. |
#16
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Posted By: Brian Lindholme
The best way to "rate" a player is to look at what he has done, not what could have been. |
#17
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Posted By: Cat
All I can say is since I have been watching the sport..roughly 35 years...Tony Gwynn was the greatest hitter I saw during this time. I won't spew stats or legend...only what I saw. It seems the less we actually saw of certain hitters, the more the myth grows about their place in history. Tony would of hit .400 at least one year during our era if you gave the infielders those hoaky gloves and he played on the unkept infields of the early part of the century. |
#18
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Posted By: identify7
How do you rank Cobb? |
#19
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Cobb played 24 years and had 1937 RBIs or 81 per year. Jackson played 13 seasons and had 785 RBIs or 60 per year. I don't know about you but 60 RBIs per year, even in that era, is not very impressive to me. |
#20
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Posted By: identify7
I have to agree with that, Jay. However, I am uncertain what to conclude. Perhaps some research would indicate whether Jackson was less of a clutch hitter, whether Cobb more frequently had runners in scoring position, or whether some other factors were in play. |
#21
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Posted By: Brian
The first place I look when comparing players of different time periods is OPS+. While certainly not perfect, I find it more meaningful in comparing players than counting stats, etc. |
#22
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Posted By: identify7
Jay: Of Jackson's 13 seasons, 4 were partials (amounting to 180 ABs for the four years combined). If you look at only his complete seasons, Jackson's RBIs are similar per year to those of Cobb. 83/yr. Jackson, 81/yr Cobb |
#23
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Fred)
To take that point a bit further: |
#24
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Posted By: identify7
Woulda been nice to see Jackson in the AL vs. Hornsby in the NL. As it was, the AL could only come up with Ruth. |
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