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  #1  
Old 07-16-2015, 08:08 AM
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1. Cobb HANDS DOWN
2. Walter Johnson
3. Willie Mays
4. Babe Ruth
5. Stan Musial
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  #2  
Old 07-16-2015, 09:41 AM
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This was an interesting question for me. As far as batters are concerned, I had a pretty definitive list in my head. That said, I am also from the school of thought that OPS is the greatest indicator of a batter's value. So I looked up the career leaders in OPS and found an interesting top 5. (and yes I realize that defense and steals are not accounted for in OPS, but defense is hard as hell to quantify and I never saw any of these guys with my own eyes so the eyeball test is out the window, I will focus on hitting)

1. Ruth
2. Williams
3. Gehrig
4. Foxx (skipped Bonds)
5. Greenberg


Now I am looking at a top 5 list and saying to myself, really, Greenberg and Foxx in my top 5? So I consider the following question, aren't hits and steals combined just as valuable as a double, if not more so? So I do the following:

Ty Cobb has 3053 total singles in his career and 897 total stolen bases. Why not subtract the total stolen bases from the number of singles and give those hits plus singles the value of a double in the slugging percentage equation. So I do this, and it works out as follows.

Ty Cobb

Total 1B - 2156 (singles minus stolen bases)
Total 2B - 1621 (doubles plus stolen bases)
Total 3B - 295
Total HR - 117
Total AB - 11434

With these numbers, Cobb's career SLG% is elevated from .512 to .590. When combined with his career OBP of .433 you get an OPS (adjusted for steals) of 1.023, which is good enough for 5th place (excluding Bonds) on the all time OPS list.

I know there all holes in this logic, like the fact that every SB is not combined with a hit, many are after walks or HBP, but this was just my attempt to make OPS fair to the base thief. The ability to turn a walk, HBP, or single into a runner in scoring position is invaluable, so I had to account for it somehow. I'm sure if I added Greenberg or Hornsby's steals to their slugging calculation, they might overtake Cobb on the OPS list, but Cobb belongs IMO and this is how I reconciled it.

1. Ruth
2. Williams
3. Gehrig
4. Foxx
5. Cobb


Not sure if this is a novel idea or if someone is going to tell me OPS adjusted for steals is already a thing, but either way, I like it quite a lot.
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  #3  
Old 07-16-2015, 10:16 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chipperhank44 View Post
This was an interesting question for me. As far as batters are concerned, I had a pretty definitive list in my head. That said, I am also from the school of thought that OPS is the greatest indicator of a batter's value. So I looked up the career leaders in OPS and found an interesting top 5. (and yes I realize that defense and steals are not accounted for in OPS, but defense is hard as hell to quantify and I never saw any of these guys with my own eyes so the eyeball test is out the window, I will focus on hitting)

1. Ruth
2. Williams
3. Gehrig
4. Foxx (skipped Bonds)
5. Greenberg


Now I am looking at a top 5 list and saying to myself, really, Greenberg and Foxx in my top 5? So I consider the following question, aren't hits and steals combined just as valuable as a double, if not more so? So I do the following:

Ty Cobb has 3053 total singles in his career and 897 total stolen bases. Why not subtract the total stolen bases from the number of singles and give those hits plus singles the value of a double in the slugging percentage equation. So I do this, and it works out as follows.

Ty Cobb

Total 1B - 2156 (singles minus stolen bases)
Total 2B - 1621 (doubles plus stolen bases)
Total 3B - 295
Total HR - 117
Total AB - 11434

With these numbers, Cobb's career SLG% is elevated from .512 to .590. When combined with his career OBP of .433 you get an OPS (adjusted for steals) of 1.023, which is good enough for 5th place (excluding Bonds) on the all time OPS list.

I know there all holes in this logic, like the fact that every SB is not combined with a hit, many are after walks or HBP, but this was just my attempt to make OPS fair to the base thief. The ability to turn a walk, HBP, or single into a runner in scoring position is invaluable, so I had to account for it somehow. I'm sure if I added Greenberg or Hornsby's steals to their slugging calculation, they might overtake Cobb on the OPS list, but Cobb belongs IMO and this is how I reconciled it.

1. Ruth
2. Williams
3. Gehrig
4. Foxx
5. Cobb


Not sure if this is a novel idea or if someone is going to tell me OPS adjusted for steals is already a thing, but either way, I like it quite a lot.

Interesting way of looking at his singles to Stolen Bases. Though I'm sure a lot of Stolen Bases were to Third After a Double too or to Home after a Triple.

I like your interpretation of converting his stolen bases into doubles just not where you placed Cobb
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  #4  
Old 07-16-2015, 12:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Joshchisox08 View Post
Interesting way of looking at his singles to Stolen Bases. Though I'm sure a lot of Stolen Bases were to Third After a Double too or to Home after a Triple.

I like your interpretation of converting his stolen bases into doubles just not where you placed Cobb
Oh trust me, I think Cobb belongs at the top of the list, but was trying a purely statistical way of ranking hitters. I would have also had Aaron in my top 5. Tough to keep the HR champ and RBI champ off the list, but "greatest" can be based on a number of things, longevity vs dominance is a tough argument.
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Last edited by chipperhank44; 07-16-2015 at 12:29 PM.
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  #5  
Old 07-17-2015, 10:24 AM
Greg Sonk Greg Sonk is offline
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Ruth

Bonds
Cobb
Mays
Walter Johnson

I am so happy to see a lack of unobjective Jeteresque occurrences in these lists.

Quote:
Originally Posted by chipperhank44 View Post
This was an interesting question for me. As far as batters are concerned, I had a pretty definitive list in my head. That said, I am also from the school of thought that OPS is the greatest indicator of a batter's value. So I looked up the career leaders in OPS and found an interesting top 5. (and yes I realize that defense and steals are not accounted for in OPS, but defense is hard as hell to quantify and I never saw any of these guys with my own eyes so the eyeball test is out the window, I will focus on hitting)

1. Ruth
2. Williams
3. Gehrig
4. Foxx (skipped Bonds)
5. Greenberg


Now I am looking at a top 5 list and saying to myself, really, Greenberg and Foxx in my top 5? So I consider the following question, aren't hits and steals combined just as valuable as a double, if not more so? So I do the following:

Ty Cobb has 3053 total singles in his career and 897 total stolen bases. Why not subtract the total stolen bases from the number of singles and give those hits plus singles the value of a double in the slugging percentage equation. So I do this, and it works out as follows.

Ty Cobb

Total 1B - 2156 (singles minus stolen bases)
Total 2B - 1621 (doubles plus stolen bases)
Total 3B - 295
Total HR - 117
Total AB - 11434

With these numbers, Cobb's career SLG% is elevated from .512 to .590. When combined with his career OBP of .433 you get an OPS (adjusted for steals) of 1.023, which is good enough for 5th place (excluding Bonds) on the all time OPS list.

I know there all holes in this logic, like the fact that every SB is not combined with a hit, many are after walks or HBP, but this was just my attempt to make OPS fair to the base thief. The ability to turn a walk, HBP, or single into a runner in scoring position is invaluable, so I had to account for it somehow. I'm sure if I added Greenberg or Hornsby's steals to their slugging calculation, they might overtake Cobb on the OPS list, but Cobb belongs IMO and this is how I reconciled it.

1. Ruth
2. Williams
3. Gehrig
4. Foxx
5. Cobb


Not sure if this is a novel idea or if someone is going to tell me OPS adjusted for steals is already a thing, but either way, I like it quite a lot.
I like this post so much and I don't even agree with some of the logic.

Sabermetrics are not a boogeyman come to carelessly toss away the history of the game, they are simply attempts to more accurately quantify performance. You had the logical thought that a weakness with OPS is its ignoracne of speed and set out to fix it.

For the record, if you're looking for something that accounts for speed in a similar way, check out wOBA. It's an excellent attempt to iron out the combined flaws of OPS, SLG, and AVG.
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  #6  
Old 07-17-2015, 10:47 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chipperhank44 View Post
This was an interesting question for me. As far as batters are concerned, I had a pretty definitive list in my head. That said, I am also from the school of thought that OPS is the greatest indicator of a batter's value. So I looked up the career leaders in OPS and found an interesting top 5. (and yes I realize that defense and steals are not accounted for in OPS, but defense is hard as hell to quantify and I never saw any of these guys with my own eyes so the eyeball test is out the window, I will focus on hitting)

1. Ruth
2. Williams
3. Gehrig
4. Foxx (skipped Bonds)
5. Greenberg


Now I am looking at a top 5 list and saying to myself, really, Greenberg and Foxx in my top 5? So I consider the following question, aren't hits and steals combined just as valuable as a double, if not more so? So I do the following:

Ty Cobb has 3053 total singles in his career and 897 total stolen bases. Why not subtract the total stolen bases from the number of singles and give those hits plus singles the value of a double in the slugging percentage equation. So I do this, and it works out as follows.

Ty Cobb

Total 1B - 2156 (singles minus stolen bases)
Total 2B - 1621 (doubles plus stolen bases)
Total 3B - 295
Total HR - 117
Total AB - 11434

With these numbers, Cobb's career SLG% is elevated from .512 to .590. When combined with his career OBP of .433 you get an OPS (adjusted for steals) of 1.023, which is good enough for 5th place (excluding Bonds) on the all time OPS list.

I know there all holes in this logic, like the fact that every SB is not combined with a hit, many are after walks or HBP, but this was just my attempt to make OPS fair to the base thief. The ability to turn a walk, HBP, or single into a runner in scoring position is invaluable, so I had to account for it somehow. I'm sure if I added Greenberg or Hornsby's steals to their slugging calculation, they might overtake Cobb on the OPS list, but Cobb belongs IMO and this is how I reconciled it.

1. Ruth
2. Williams
3. Gehrig
4. Foxx
5. Cobb


Not sure if this is a novel idea or if someone is going to tell me OPS adjusted for steals is already a thing, but either way, I like it quite a lot.
If you count a single followed by a stolen base as a double then you should also count a single followed by a caught stealing as an out instead of a hit. In Cobb's case that would probably be in the neighborhood of 400 fewer hits.
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  #7  
Old 07-26-2015, 11:00 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chipperhank44 View Post
This was an interesting question for me. As far as batters are concerned, I had a pretty definitive list in my head. That said, I am also from the school of thought that OPS is the greatest indicator of a batter's value. So I looked up the career leaders in OPS and found an interesting top 5. (and yes I realize that defense and steals are not accounted for in OPS, but defense is hard as hell to quantify and I never saw any of these guys with my own eyes so the eyeball test is out the window, I will focus on hitting)



1. Ruth

2. Williams

3. Gehrig

4. Foxx (skipped Bonds)

5. Greenberg





Now I am looking at a top 5 list and saying to myself, really, Greenberg and Foxx in my top 5? So I consider the following question, aren't hits and steals combined just as valuable as a double, if not more so? So I do the following:



Ty Cobb has 3053 total singles in his career and 897 total stolen bases. Why not subtract the total stolen bases from the number of singles and give those hits plus singles the value of a double in the slugging percentage equation. So I do this, and it works out as follows.



Ty Cobb



Total 1B - 2156 (singles minus stolen bases)

Total 2B - 1621 (doubles plus stolen bases)

Total 3B - 295

Total HR - 117

Total AB - 11434



With these numbers, Cobb's career SLG% is elevated from .512 to .590. When combined with his career OBP of .433 you get an OPS (adjusted for steals) of 1.023, which is good enough for 5th place (excluding Bonds) on the all time OPS list.



I know there all holes in this logic, like the fact that every SB is not combined with a hit, many are after walks or HBP, but this was just my attempt to make OPS fair to the base thief. The ability to turn a walk, HBP, or single into a runner in scoring position is invaluable, so I had to account for it somehow. I'm sure if I added Greenberg or Hornsby's steals to their slugging calculation, they might overtake Cobb on the OPS list, but Cobb belongs IMO and this is how I reconciled it.



1. Ruth

2. Williams

3. Gehrig

4. Foxx

5. Cobb





Not sure if this is a novel idea or if someone is going to tell me OPS adjusted for steals is already a thing, but either way, I like it quite a lot.

Quit pretending like Bonds never played, geez.

He's a part of the games history, grow up and deal with it.


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Last edited by HOF Auto Rookies; 07-26-2015 at 11:01 PM.
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  #8  
Old 07-29-2015, 06:59 PM
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Quit pretending like Bonds never played, geez.

He's a part of the games history, grow up and deal with it.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Quit being ignorant and calling Bonds the greatest of all time and I'll consider it.
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  #9  
Old 07-30-2015, 03:06 PM
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Quit being ignorant and calling Bonds the greatest of all time and I'll consider it.
Barry Bonds was better at baseball than any human being in the history of the sport.
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Old 07-30-2015, 04:01 PM
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Barry Bonds was better at baseball than any human being in the history of the sport.
Hard to argue against that. I personally would go with Mr Ted Williams as the best ever.
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Old 07-30-2015, 04:15 PM
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Ruth, but yeah if you are willing to count his years on juice Bonds has to be part of the discussion and is certainly up there in the top five and maybe as high as second.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 07-30-2015 at 04:17 PM.
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  #12  
Old 08-01-2015, 09:34 AM
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Originally Posted by chipperhank44 View Post
Quit being ignorant and calling Bonds the greatest of all time and I'll consider it.

How is it ignorant? It's my opinion.


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Old 08-12-2015, 09:10 AM
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How is it ignorant? It's my opinion.


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If he was any good, he wouldn't have needed to dope. He was ok with Pitt, but he went to SF and felt he needed to start doping in 1993 to be better. Clean it was questionable if he would have even made the HOF, like Roger Maris or Dale Murphy.
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Old 08-13-2015, 04:04 PM
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If he was any good, he wouldn't have needed to dope. He was ok with Pitt, but he went to SF and felt he needed to start doping in 1993 to be better. Clean it was questionable if he would have even made the HOF, like Roger Maris or Dale Murphy.
He'd won two straight MVPs in Pittsburgh and led the league in OPS three straight years and was considered perhaps the best defensive LF ever. He was quite a bit more than OK.

Also, I thought the allegations are that he used steroids after the 1998 season.
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  #15  
Old 07-16-2015, 09:41 AM
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Gehrig
Ruth
Williams
Mantle
Cobb
Shoeless
Musial
Bonds
Aaron
Mays
*Hon Mention Foxx

Last edited by MattyC; 07-16-2015 at 09:41 AM.
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Old 07-16-2015, 09:44 AM
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Ruth
Williams
Mays
Josh Gibson
Bonds
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Old 07-16-2015, 09:51 AM
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1. Babe Ruth
2. Ty Cobb
3. Walter Johnson
4. Barry Bonds
5. Ted Williams

If you asked me in five minutes, I might very well find a place for Christy Mathewson.
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Last edited by Cozumeleno; 07-16-2015 at 09:54 AM. Reason: Switched Cobb and Johnson, on second thought
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Old 07-16-2015, 12:44 PM
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1. Babe Ruth
2. Ty Cobb
3. Walter Johnson
4. Barry Bonds
5. Ted Williams

If you asked me in five minutes, I might very well find a place for Christy Mathewson.

That guy that didn't make the top 4 all time Giants. Maybe you should consider Buster Posey.

Kidding of course.
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Old 07-16-2015, 12:50 PM
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1 Ted Williams
2 Ty Cobb
3 Babe Ruth
4 Barry Bonds
5 Roger Clemens
6 Wade Boggs Ok not really on Boggs but he is my all time favorite player. Show me a man that can drink more Miller Lights on a flight and I will remove him
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Old 07-17-2015, 09:10 AM
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1 Ted Williams
2 Ty Cobb
3 Babe Ruth
4 Barry Bonds
5 Roger Clemens
6 Wade Boggs Ok not really on Boggs but he is my all time favorite player. Show me a man that can drink more Miller Lights on a flight and I will remove him
Sox fan?
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  #21  
Old 07-17-2015, 09:36 AM
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Babe Ruth greatest of all time.
After that mays, bonds, williams, and mantle.

Last edited by Jdoggs; 07-17-2015 at 09:43 AM.
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Old 07-21-2015, 06:02 PM
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Babe Ruth greatest of all time.
After that mays, bonds, williams, and mantle.
I didn't think we compared apples to rotten oranges--don't eat the peel, Barry!
Although I must admit McGwire was a favorite of mine in naive days gone by, and I really don't know exactly how to deal with him mentally.

Great lists,

Larry
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Old 07-16-2015, 01:59 PM
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That guy that didn't make the top 4 all time Giants. Maybe you should consider Buster Posey.

Kidding of course.
Haha, yeah, it was really difficult for me in deciding to include Bonds or not. I had to include him for a bunch of reasons, though.

He was already the best player in baseball before steroids with three (should have been four straight) MVPs. Then there's the eye test - it was ridiculous how dominant he was and for a five-year stretch, you expected him to homer or walk. With eight Gold Gloves, he was a superior defensive player as well. And just for fun, he went out and stole 500 bases. He was quite arguably the most complete player ever.

What bothers me is that he's often lumped in with Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa, who were both breaking down well before they reached 40. Even at 41 and 42 in his last two seasons, he still led the league in walks, intentional walks, and on base percentage. He was so much better than those guys that it's not even funny.

I know the PEDs will keep him off of these types of list for many, and I get that. It's totally fair - dude cheated. But if you're asking me for the list of best players, I have to include him.
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Old 07-23-2015, 10:44 PM
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Ruth
Williams
Gherig
Cobb
Bonds
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Looking for T205's or anything Babe Ruth...email or PM me if you have any to sell.
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  #25  
Old 07-23-2015, 10:47 PM
CMIZ5290 CMIZ5290 is offline
KEVIN MIZE
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Location: VALDOSTA, GA.
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I say again...

Cobb
Mantle
Ruth....any order you see fit....
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  #26  
Old 07-24-2015, 05:18 PM
ls7plus ls7plus is offline
Larry
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Location: Southfield, Michigan
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CMIZ5290 View Post
I say again...

Cobb
Mantle
Ruth....any order you see fit....
I like your thinking, Kevin, but would also add Williams--while Ted's value lay largely in his bat (he became quite adept at playing the green monster very well also), it was a VERY, VERY BIG BAT (one which for his entire career produced 250% of runs created versus league average, the best figure of all time).

Best wishes,

Larry
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  #27  
Old 08-12-2015, 08:10 PM
jessness jessness is offline
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Musial has got to be in this list somewhere. And Williams of course. Think of his numbers if he didn't serve his country twice.
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