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#1
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Talking about all facets of the game. This has always been an intriguing discussion with all of my older family members. Please weigh in with your opinions
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#2
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Ted Williams all day long!
Ted is IMO one of the few (5-10) that is in the argument of "greatest baseball player ever" and if he didn't miss as much time as he did by being in the military he would be even higher on most peoples lists.
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#3
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Personally, I would take DiMaggio.
Williams may lay claim to the best hitter of all time, or maybe second best behind Ruth. However, his fielding was not nearly so good. DiMaggio excelled in all aspects of the game. Just my opinion...I am sure others will disagree, and that's fine. Best Regards, Eric |
#4
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Joltin Joe All The Way! Plus he bagged Marilyn, that alone would be enough to rank him far above the splinter.
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#5
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Ted, but Joe has better cards.
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#6
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Williams!!! Best swing in baseball EVER!!!! No contest IMO
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#7
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![]() Last edited by Eric72; 04-21-2013 at 06:07 PM. Reason: punctuation |
#8
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#9
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When I was a sophomore in college, a 102 English teacher told us to write a 5 page persuasive paper on any subject. My paper was titled "Ted Williams is the greatest hitter of all time". I got an "A", but she wasn't a baseball fan and was known for handing out a lot of "A"'s
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#10
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Having never seen either play and not going strictly by stats I would choose DiMaggio for his championship pedigree, respected as a teammate, beloved by the fans and the media. Ted was from all reports, surly, unapproachable and a general douche to everyone. I really think the off field stuff should be taken into account, not just record book stuff.
Just my opinion, take it or leave it. ![]()
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#11
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I agree. Though I've always liked Williams more, his crazy bad ass military record included (flew combat in the same squadron as astronaut John Glenn!!), I'd have to take Joe D's all around game. If I could know in advance Williams would play into his 40s, I'd probably change my mind.. But if we're talking peak 5-7 years, or basing this on a GM making a decision at the beginning of their careers, its Joe D. DiMaggio by all accounts was a tremendous outfielder, and playing center made him the anchor of that outfield. Too much value added there to overlook. |
#12
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Isn't it always that whoever is the best Yankee at the time is the greatest living baseball player by the media and fans of the period (of whom a majority are/were Yankee fans)...
Babe Ruth (probably accurate) followed by Lou Gehrig, followed by Joe DiMaggio, followed by Mickey Mantle, then some lean years, followed by Don Mattingly for a short time, followed by Derek Jeter! Joe benefitted from being a media darling in the media center of the world, while the same didn't hold true for Williams. Williams started out as a surly guy, Joe just died that way.
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#13
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TSW was loud, obnoxious, and decidedly anti-establishment, but I don't recall hearing his teammates say they wouldn't want him on the team. Sure, Joe's teammates wouldn't say that, either, but that's because they enjoyed those WS checks. While we're on the topic, can someone explain to me how "DiMaggio never had to dive for a ball" is a positive thing. Sure, I understand positioning and speed, but I'm supposed to believe that a ball never dropped just out of his reach? Think of all those fantastic diving plays Jim Edmonds used to make; are you telling me Joe would've gotten those without diving just because of his "positioning"?? TSW, for the sheer offense he provided, plus he might actually make you laugh in the dugout. Ken |
#14
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I don't think you could go wrong with either. Dimaggio lost 3 years to Military service in his prime plus retired at 36, so it's not hard to imagine him getting 500 hr's without that...yes yes, plus he bagged Marilyn and I shook his hand, so I have that connection.
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#15
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You can't really lose if you have the second pick in this draft. Personally I'd take Joe D, but I have a personal connection to him through my grandfather.
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#16
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Lifetime WAR -- http://www.baseball-reference.com/le...t_career.shtml
Williams #11 Dimaggio #41 Single-season WAR -- http://www.baseball-reference.com/le...t_season.shtml Williams top 3: #21, #25, #25 (tie) Dimaggio top 3: #116, #226, #245 Since WAR includes both offensive and defensive statistics, it would seem that Williams, by a significant margin, was the superior player. |
#17
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Ted was the better hitter, by far, but Joe the better fielder and better teammate, but not by much. So all around, it is a close call. I think Terrible Ted gets the edge, but not by much.
To EarlyWynnFan, I don't remember many, if any, outfielders diving for balls like these outfielders have done in this more modern era. I watched Kaline play outfield for almost 20years, and never remember him diving. The shoestring catch and then rolling over was the closest they got. I don't think I can count on one hand, the diving plays made in the 50s 60s era. Willie Mays made one of the best catches ever, with his back to the field, and that was about as far as they went. I am not sure, but I believe they were taught that the ball does not get by them, so they would allow the single instead of taking the chance and letting the ball go through them. A missed play would get you benched. Last edited by billyb; 04-21-2013 at 07:45 PM. |
#18
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Ted would be my choice.
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#19
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Was good but Ted was incredible
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#20
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Williams, clearly.
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#21
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Last edited by MVSNYC; 04-21-2013 at 08:33 PM. |
#22
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Mantle
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#23
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Williams has my vote.
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T206 518/518 |
#24
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I'm more of a Joe D guy, probably the SF ties and what not, both greats, but you made me choose
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#25
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![]() Easily Ted, even overcoming the fact that he was not approachable by the media. Had he been, or played in NY, it wouldn't even be a question. |
#26
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#27
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Oy. Splitting hairs here. Williams was a better hitter hands down. Joe edges out Ted as an overall player. That said, DiMaggio pussied out at age 36 before he started to decline whereas as Williams stuck it out to age 42. Maybe that makes Joe smarter or maybe it makes him a pansy....your decision. However, if we're strictly comparing their respective primes, I would take Williams and sacrifice a little defense for arguably the best hitter of all time.
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#28
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I completely agree with this. Best, Eric |
#29
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I'm a Yankee fan but I'd pick Williams. He lasted a lot longer than DiMaggio did.
14 years (minus war years) vs 21 years (minus war years) and was productive all the way to the end of his career.
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#30
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I'll take Ted hitting .406 all day long.
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#31
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This isn't even close.....Teddy F'kn Ballgame every time.
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#32
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#33
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Joe had bad heel problems, and other leg problems which prompted him to retire at a young age. But mainly, his power was to left-center, and the home runs he lost in Yankee Stadium were a killer.
I'll take Joe in the outfield, and Ted as my DH. ![]()
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#34
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Ted's bat far out shadowed the difference in their fielding ability. Williams is the easy pick for this reason.
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#35
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Williams +++. Lost almost 5 prime years to 2 wars, by far the best hitter of my lifetime. Played Left Field in Fenway pretty well. I saw his last HR when I was a MIT freshman, and got a hands on fly fishing lessen from him at the sportman's show in 1954 or 1955. I miss him and so do the sox.
Last edited by Peter W Thomas; 04-22-2013 at 01:13 PM. |
#36
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As a life-long Yankee fan...I have to get honest and answer Williams. When you can hit like...WOW!!
Last edited by Paul S; 04-22-2013 at 07:20 AM. |
#37
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Of the two, Ted Williams, but I prefer Stan the Man Musial. Stan was a class act to the game of baseball.
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#38
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Though I am a life long Yankee fan, I would pick Ted Williams. Better hitter. Much longer career. Neither was a really personable guy. The media kissed up to DiMaggio and hated Williams, with good reason I guess. I attended a lot of old-timers games in the sixties and seventies and it always annoyed me that Joe D insisted on being announced as "the greatest living ballplayer. When was he ever that? Babe Ruth died in 1948 but Cobb lived to 1961 and certainly by the late 60s, Willie Mays was clearly better than DiMaggio.
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#39
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I know Dimaggio and Mantle has been well documented. Read the article on post #657. I think this is how these guys truly were. http://www.net54baseball.com/showthr...=117391&page=2 real 657
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#40
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#41
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In 1969 he was voted the greatest living player.
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#42
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And he insisted on being described that way during introductions.
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#43
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Ted. And he's coming back too, you'll see.
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#44
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If Ted came back today he'd only be a .280 hitter...of course, he'd be 95.
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#45
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Another Yankee fan here, with a little bit more respect for Williams.
Sure, Ted was surly with the media during the time he was playing ball, but I believe a good lot of Boston athletes had a tough time with the media up there. When you're not winning and you have an inferiority complex with New York, I think it breeds contempt towards their own when you're not bringing home titles. Just think of all the athletes they've alienated over the years since Ted retired. Jim Rice, Roger Clemens, Wade Boggs..........they completely picked apart the historic seasons Wes Welker had for them, because anointed god, Tom Brady overthrew a pass to him once, they never really forgave Ray Bourque for never winning a Stanley Cup for them and winning one in Colorado instead.............and look what they've done to Bill Buckner and even Tito Francona, who they ran out of town after winning two longed for World Series titles for them. Please be aware, this is not a slam on Boston fans either, just what I've observed with their media over the years. Joe D. was fawned over by the New York media, because of the titles, and the 56 game hit streak, and the obliging team-mates who put up with him and his superiority complex. They over-looked a lot of flaws in him, I don't think the Boston media would have been so kindly about, if the situations had been reversed. I think Ted redeemed himself quite well, once the spotlight of playing on the field was not a factor in his life. Joe D. was quite happy with just being an icon, and not feeling as if he had to give anything back to anyone, including respect. I think Ted lived his life in quite a different and more respectful way then Joe D.. |
#46
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I would take Ted Williams, but Joe's fielding ability is often underplayed. DiMaggio didn't have all the spectacular catches of some outfielders because he was such a good judge of where the ball would be.
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#47
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Williams. Give him the time missed during war(s) his stats would have put him solidly in the greatest ever conversation IMO. Even without those years, Ted >> DiMaggio
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#48
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Agreed... and those were is prime years.
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#49
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Ted, by a wide margin.
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#50
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Teddy ballgame. Fun fact: during his '41 campaign he obviously hit .406 in 606 plate appearances, nobody talks about how he only struck out only 27 times.
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