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#1
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Posted By: dennis
this is my list of players i believe attained the most fame by decade,not the best player,but(IMO)ones even a non fan would know of-- these are all 1st ballot hall of famers no overlaps as both the babe and joe d. would definity reign supreme over their entire careers.1876-1890 anson 1890-1900-McGinnity 1900-1910-matty 1910-1920-cobb 1920-1930-the babe 1930-1940-lou gehrig, 1940-1950-joe d. 1950-1960-mickey mantle 1960-1970-willie mays 1970-1980-reggie jackson 1980-1990-pete rose 1990-2000-cal ripken 2000-now-barry bonds |
#2
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Posted By: jay behrens
1876-90: Anson |
#3
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Posted By: Billy
Im going to have to go with Ken Griffey Jr. for 1990-99, with Bonds close behind with 3 MVP's. |
#4
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Posted By: jay behrens
but how many casual or non-fans even knows Griffey anymore? He's pretty much slide of the radar screen when it comes to truely famous players whose name anyone would recognize. Although in the 90s, there probably wasn't a better know player at that time. |
#5
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Posted By: Billy
He was the best in the 90's and most popular. Look at his numbers. He also won the gold glove award EVERY year in the 90's as a center fielder. To me there is no doubt he was the player of the 90's. |
#6
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Posted By: PASJD
Just for "fame" let us not forget the (according to some) underrated McGwire. Even Ted Kennedy heard of him although he botched his name. |
#7
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Posted By: jay behrens
but Griffey's fame today is diminished. If you went out on the street and asked people if they recognize the name Clemens or Griffey, you have more people recognizing Clemens. |
#8
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Posted By: Billy
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#9
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Posted By: Chris
1876-90: Anson |
#10
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Posted By: Billy
I think Aaron vs Mays is close for the 60's, but I guess Willie's fielding and SB's gives him the edge. |
#11
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Posted By: Rhett
I know the thread started as MOST POPULAR players, but since I was not around pre-war these are my BEST PLAYERS/PITCHERS of each pre-war decade. I think you gotta seperate the players from the pitchers, two totally different things... |
#12
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Posted By: Dave Williams
Griffey was the player of the 90's. |
#13
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Posted By: Billy
The thread is most popular players. Griffey was the most popular in the 90's. |
#14
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Posted By: Billy
I'm corrected. Schmidt was by far the best player of the 80's (most popular too?). |
#15
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Posted By: Chris
What about Nolan Ryan being in there somewhere. If for no other reason, kicking Robin Ventura's ass. |
#16
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Posted By: Billy
maybe he's the player of the last half century (joke). |
#17
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Posted By: PASJD
"this is my list of players i believe attained the most fame by decade,not the best player,but(IMO)ones even a non fan would know of" |
#18
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Posted By: Dave Williams
I don't know that Ryan was ever even the best pitcher in baseball. |
#19
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Posted By: jay behrens
I read the question as being the most famous today. It's way to hard to really determine who the most popular players of the game were in the early days, so it's much easier to use a player's fame as of today rather than how famous they might have been during that time. |
#20
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Posted By: Billy
lets have two lists. |
#21
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Posted By: Chris
How many casual fans today know who Honus Wagner is Jay? Or Cap Anson. Casual fans don't know who these players are. IMO I think casual fans still know who Griffey is. Heck, he's on Sportscenter everynight hobbling down the first baseline with his bad hammy. |
#22
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Posted By: dennis
how about bob feller in the 30's straight from high school w/that 100 mph fast ball.also not around then but i've heard joe dimaggio was famous b 4 he put on a yankee uniform. dizzy dean?? in the 30's was a one man show. carl hubble and lefty grove were still big names when i was a kid in the 50's. don mattingly's popularity coincided with the rise of baseball card fad of mid 80's and his stats were unheard of since the 30's.doubles/hits/avg. canseco had his time too,along with ryan (remember the price rise of his rookie card?) |
#23
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Posted By: jay behrens
Chris, the fame of Wagner and Anson has nothing to do with the fame of Griffey. They played in different eras. Yes, the further back you go in time, the less recognizable players are to the casual fan. If you list a bunch players from 1876-1890 and Anson will most likely be recognized more often than anyone else. |
#24
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Posted By: chris cathcart
Billy, you've got in one post saying that Griffey was the best player of the '90s, then you've got in another talking about distinguishing most famous from best (statistically). |
#25
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Posted By: chris cathcart
I didn't live "then," so I'm really just going on my impressions of then-contemporary opinion about who was most famous "then." |
#26
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Posted By: chris cathcart
To answer my own question above, I did a little figuring with another James tool, the Favorite Toy projection method. |
#27
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Posted By: dennis
all what i would call top tier hall of famers.collins is kind of a surprise. as a top 20 greatest i'd add joe dimaggio(lost 3 years to war.)& mike schmidt,jimmy foxx & .i would drop morgan (i happen to think joe morgan is over-rated.but he did put together 6 great years in the midst of a very long career)also i'd lose rose & lajoie. |
#28
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Posted By: Julie
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#29
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Posted By: jay behrens
Dennis, when it comes to fame/infamey, Rose pretty much has the market cornered. There aren't too many people that haven't heard of Pete Rose, either as a player or as the person that is banned from the HOF for betting on baseball. I hate the guy now, but there is no denying his his fame, oe infamey, depending on how you look at it. |
#30
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Posted By: dennis
jay,i was speaking of chris' win share list of the 20 highest win shares(great)--agreew/you 100% rose is infamous, top 10 baseball fame,but not one of the 20 best players ever(imo). |
#31
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Posted By: jay behrens
ahhh, I guess I read a little closer. Yeah, I wouldn't put him in the top 20 either. Probably top 50 though. |
#32
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Posted By: JimB
How about Rod Carew for the 70's? One of the most underrated hitters in the game. |
#33
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Posted By: jay behrens
Carew would only win the title of most famous player in the 70s in MN, ND, SD and maybe Iowa. |
#34
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Posted By: Tim Mayer
I love this, |
#35
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Posted By: Mark
Wasn't Joe Jackson at least as familiar a name to non-sports fans as anyone's once the scandal broke? Is his notoriety compromised in this analysis by the scandal falling within the last year of a decade? Jackson's certainly more known now to the masses than Ty Cobb - even my Dad owns "Field of Dreams." |
#36
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Posted By: Rhys
Since the thread is most FAMOUS by decade, I will thorw mine out there. I am doing this under the assumption that if you took a poll near the end of a decade who people then would rank at the time. My second one is going to throw some people for a loop, but if you do some research on his career you will find that he was the Lebron James of the 1890's. Nobody was more "Famous" in the 1890's. |
#37
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Posted By: Howard W. Rosenberg
Perhaps the "most famous" construct is too limiting. Maybe it can be divided three ways, as follows, for each decade in question: |
#38
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Posted By: Julie
Sorry, but before the first Tuesday in November I was an agnostic; now I'm an athiest. |
#39
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Posted By: Howard W. Rosenberg
As far as the 1880s: |
#40
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
Anson was far and away better than Kelly. Kelly had some decent years from 1884-1890, he was never Ansons equal. He benefitted partly from being a dapper guy, also from dying at the age of 36. I also believe that the timing of his career is part of what makes him so famous to us today. He was most popular during the 1887-90 hey-day of baseball card sets, of which he has a card in nearly all of them. There are other players that had short careers in diffent decades that people know very little of due to their lack of memorabilia, like Bill Lange. He gave up baseball for a girl, in the middle of what would have been a brilliant career (check out his stats-they are unreal). He didn't die at a young age and gain notoiety by it like Kelly, and Joss. |
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