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#1
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Posted By: Anonymous
http://www.concentric.net/~Jkubatko/baseballsurvivor/index.html |
#2
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Posted By: Jay Miller
This list makes no sense to me. How can you rate Wagner ahead of Cobb; Mantle ahead of Gehrig and Joe D.; Clemens ahead of Mathewson; Bonds ahead of Mays and Robinson ahead of Joe D. Any thoughts? |
#3
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
right before Ruth and Wagner were named to the top spots. I was disappointed at how few 19th century players there were, and I still don't know about Bonds being better than Mays. Or some other people, either. |
#4
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Posted By: Dr.Koos
...and just maybe TOO many "Old-Timers" are on the list as a homage to the "Good Old Days". Ruth on top?? |
#5
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Posted By: runscott
I don't have a problem with the list either. Wagner was frequently given the nod over Cobb as greatest player of all time. If you listen to the "Glory of Their Times" tapes, the players who played with both of them seem split on the issue, but possibly because they disliked Cobb so much as a person - I don't think any of them picked Ruth, mainly because Cobb and Wagner were so much better runners and fielders. The 1961 Spinks (Sporting News) "Daguerreo Types of Great Stars of Baseball", came up with this team: |
#6
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Posted By: Dr.Koos
...just give me some time Scott and soon you'll see the light and agree with me on everything!! You need a Guru, a Promethius, and I am he. |
#7
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Posted By: David Vargha
Because he was not only a heckuva hitter, but a pretty darned good pitcher as well. In fact, he may have been a HOF pitcher if he had continued with it. From 1914 to 1919 he was 89-46 and that includes only 20 starts in 1918 and 17 in 1919. (He was 5-0 in 5 games in the four seasons after that.) He may very well have been a career 200+ win pitcher and 400+ HR player had he continued to split duty as he did his last two seasons with the Sox. |
#8
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Posted By: Cy
I have been giving this a little thought myself. I realize that many people on the board want to think that the players of the 19th and early 20th centuries were better than the ballplayers of the last 30 years. But it seems to me that it probably isn't true. ![]() Three shutouts in four days! Now tell me how bad were the ball players back then if he could do that? Can you think of anyone who could do that in the last 40 years against the teams that are around now? He would never have a chance. No pitcher could make it through all three games. Even if his arm could take it, the stuff on his pitches would be hammered by the modern player after a game and a half, no matter how good he is. Another argument that is brought up that modern baseball is weak is the fact that the pitching is diluted. But, back in the "good old days", being a relief pitcher meant that you were a scrub. And most teams only had two, maybe three solid starters. So how many good pitchers could have been around? The fact is that for these pitchers to pitch so many games throughout many years, they had to have played against very weak overall batting. Of course there were standouts, Cobb, Speaker, Wagner, etc. But when one compares these stars to the remaining players, how good did they have to be? How good does a player have to be to be viewed as a star when he played against a team was shut out by a pitcher that pitched his third game in four days. It is a wonderful thought to think that these players were the absolute greatest. But just like other sports, they probably couldn't hold a candle to the modern player. I know the arguments. The ball is juiced. Fields are smaller. The jokes made that Ty Cobb could have batted .321 at age 70. But if anyone does believe that it is way too easy for the modern hitter these days, then you have to agree on one thing. Greg Maddux would be the greatest pitcher of all time, bar none. If hitting is so easy these days, much easier than back in the early 1900's, then with Maddux's numbers of the 1990's, he is easily the greatest pitcher of all time. You can't have it both ways. If the hitting is too easy today, then today's great pitchers are much better than their earlier counterparts. If you compare the 1930's to the past 10 to 15 years, you will note a very close correlation to the brand of baseball. The offense went up almost exponentially and the pitching was not strong at all, except for a few stellar players of that time. If you do compare these eras and you think that the modern player is overrated, then let's take away the merits of many of the stars of that era, Foxx, Gehrig, Cochrane, etc., because the style of ball was nearly identical to today's ball. I also don't understand how one can argue so vehemently that Cobb was the greatest player of all time without ever seeing him play. That is like saying that a particular PSA 10 card is the finest looking card of all without looking at it, but stating this fact merely because of the number of the grade on the holder. I believe that Clemente was the greatest player of all time. I saw him play many times and even though others (Mays, Mantle) may have had better numbers during the same era, I am not going to let the facts sway my opinion. ![]() I believe that Cobb, Wagner, Ruth etc. were great players. But frankly, the competition that they were up against was not that keen. The players, overall, weren't that keen. We have all heard stories of players who played ball merely because they didn't want to work on a farm or in a steel mill. Imagine a high school grad coming out of high school and deciding then that he wants to play ball because there are no satisfying jobs. He wouldn't have a chance in the world if he just decided then to start to play baseball. But back then, it happened all of the time. Once again I pose the question, how good could these marginal players be? The fact of the matter probably is that if the truly best players of all time were put on the greatest team, by talent and not by numbers, it would be very difficult to place anyone on the team that didn't play after 1950. Thanks for this thread. I always enjoy thinking about this and writing a message about it allows me to ponder it even a little more stringently. Cy |
#9
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Posted By: runscott
because I didn't want to detract attention from Wagner! |
#10
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Posted By: Dr.Koos
...against his peers, in his own time. In the early 20's, correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think man had even traveled at 200mph as of yet in the fastest of planes. Today's planes take off at 200 mph, and top fuel dragsters routinely run a quarter mile going 0 to 330 mph. over a quarter mile in under 5 seconds. Could you imagine Bronco Nagurski (a GIANT in his day) trying to crash his way through lines of scrimmage riddled with 6'6" 325 pounders that squat 750lbs, bench 500+ and run 40s in under 5 seconds!!! This is the age of specialization. The first 400 pound bench press wasn't achieved until well into the 1930s and it was purely GYM feats without rules. Today, there's been almost 50 men who have benched 700+ in competition, with two men achieving 800 lbs. If you could take Kiu Tuita, at 5'10", 365 lbs. and 13% bodyfat and send him back to compete against strength athletes of the 20s, he would so not resemble any living man that anyone at that time had ever seen, that they would think a Silver-backed Gorilla escaped from the zoo and mated with a human! Even 30 years ago, for a man under 200 pounds to bench 500, was an impossible dream! Today, George "Superman" Halbert, at 193 pounds has benched 710 pounds in sanctioned competition!!! 60 home runs, no problem..how about 70..how about 80!!! (right around the corner I'll wager). And I can well imagine that Bonds would have hit 100! ..hitting against the average pitchers of the 1910's to 1930's (the Bonds of today). But see, that's the drawback, the hole card, the unseen..you CAN'T displace these athletes through time because they would become a PRODUCT OF THEIR TIME'S ATHLETICISM. |
#11
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Posted By: Cy
I was just looking ay the Jeff Sagarin ratings for current Major League ballplayers. Barry Bond's rating is 16.62. The next player is Larry Walker with a 9.34 rating. That means that his rating is 1.77 times better than the 2nd best batter in baseball! I know a lot of people just don't like Bonds. But these are Ruthian comparisons in an era where the standard deviation between batters is much smaller than way back when.
Cy |
#12
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
.... |
#13
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Koos--No one would argue that today's athletes are not bigger, stronger and faster than athletes of 75 years ago. If Babe Ruth could be magically transported to 2002 would he be the dominating player that we was in the 20s---almost surely not. However, players can be compared to players from their era and how they rank against these peers helps determine their place in history. Compare the average number of home runs Babe Ruth hit in a season to the average number hit by players in his day. I would bet no one has ever come close to him in this respect. Compare Babe Ruth's lifetime average to the lifetime average of players during his era. Make a series of these comparisons and then see where Ruth ranks in the history of baseball. I believe the numbers will show that he was clearly the greatest player ever. The arguement that players were not as good relative to the rest of society at their time as compared to today is also wrong, I believe, although it is not a clear cut arguement. Today several major sports compete for athletes. Do the best athletes in your local high school become baseball players. Not in mine---they become football players or basketball players or lacrosse players. In the 20s the best athletes gravitated towards baseball. The other sports were secondary. The offsetting arguement is that in the 20s only whites could play in the major leagues. The worldwide integration of professional baseball has certainly widened the talent pool. |
#14
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Posted By: Dr.Koos
...or Radatz!! That's another big difference, the comfort zone at the plate. 70 years ago, the average ballplayer was worth less than $5,000 per year, not exactly a huge owner investment. Umpires weren't too quick to tell a pitcher, "Even though he hit a homer and a double off you today, Don't you dare do that...you can't throw at his head". Today, there's far more of a mutual respect between pitchers and batsmen, who at any one time can both be representative of a combined 100 million dollar or more lifetime investment to their respective owners! |
#15
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Posted By: Elliot
Cy, I agree with you, Bonds' last two years have been absolutely unbelievable on a historical basis. Just a small nitpicking point on your stats----isn't total bases/ab the exact same thing as slugging pctg......therefore it doesn't really add anything. |
#16
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Posted By: MW
Cy & Koos -- |
#17
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Posted By: jay behrens
If anyone has read Bill James Historical Abstract, you will remember that he said, I agre with him, that the truly great players from early baseball would be great baseball players today. |
#18
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Posted By: ty_cobb
Strangely enough I didn't see Satchel Paige on the list |
#19
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Posted By: jay behrens
This one player, more than any other really irks me when talk of great players some up. Want to talk about a player being romantized by the press. Koufax was a mediocre pitcher until Chavez Ravine was built. Sorry, but 5 great years doesn't make a great player. Especially when he played in a park that magnified his talents. |
#20
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Posted By: Jeff Obermeyer
... in this debate is that if you took one of the all-time greats and just transported them through time to today, they certainly would struggle against today's athletes. |
#21
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Posted By: Jay Miller
For the second half of his career Sandy Koufax was probably the greatest lefty ever. Period, end of statement! He wasn't just a product of his home ballpark---check his road record. Besides, when you strike guys out it doesn't matter what park you are pitching in. Again, compare him to his peers. With the exception of Gibson, no one was close. Was Koufax a late bloomer---absolutely. However, during the second half of his career he was the best pitcher I have ever seen. |
#22
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Posted By: Dr.Koos
..of Ruth laying under a diathermy machine, which did little more than putting a heating pad on an injured area that should have been treated with electro-stim, active release therapy, other chiropractic manipulations, or anti-inflammatory steroids. With only X-rays available and later, the fluoroscope, potentially career ending or career hampering injuries necessitating more radical treatments and rest couldn't be diagnosed with today's precision internal imaging equipment. Many pre-30s players got in shape each spring for the upcoming season by SWEATING off the excess pounds gained during a Winter's over-indulgence rather than a progressively structured exercise and nutritional regimen under constant Professional supervision. |
#23
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Posted By: Dr.Koos
...is a yardstick of greatness, Reggie Jackson said this of Nolan Ryan in a magazine interview, "How fast is Nolan Ryan? There's no way to describe it. He threw an inside head-high fastball that came real close about two years ago, that if he HAD hit me, there wouldn't have BEEN a Reggie Jackson anymore. I like fastballs, and I like ice-cream, but trying to hit a Nolan Ryan fastball is like trying to eat ice cream with a fork!" |
#24
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Posted By: jay berhens
but by the same token, Jim Rice was the most feared hitter in baseball for about the same period of time that Koufax was a dominant pitcher, yet Rice is considered a boarderline HOFer. Why is he not held in the same reverence that Koufax is? Until recently, he was the last player to ahve 400 total bases in season among his other accomplishments. |
#25
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
.... |
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