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#1
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I've always thought the Meusel bros should be in the hof, as well as Garvey. If you take Cepeda, Perez and Garvey's stats side by side I think you can make a great case for Garvey. Anyway, that's my opinion and I know one that's not always shared by the Bill James groupies.
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#2
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. . . is a bunch of phooey, but personally, I give far more consideration to the ballplayer who performs batting within a weak order, and for a less talented team, than the individual who benefits from playing with a team laden with talent, and batting with equally or better hitting ballplayers around them. Bob Meusel was a very talented ballplayer, but how noteworthy would his batting statistics been hitting in Kiner's Pittsburgh line-up, and would Meusel's presence made the Pirates a much better (successful ?) team ? Without the talent playing with him, I doubt it. And without the talent around him in the batting order, I don't think he gets the stats he did with the Yankees. Thanks. |
#3
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I'm admittedly a little biased in favor of Kiner, but in addition to the seven consecutive homerun titles--including twice over 50 (51 in 1947, and 54 in 1949), which is truly impressive in the presteroid era (only Ruth, Foxx, Mantle and Mays had done that, to my recollection)--Kiner drew a veritable ton of walks. If anyone has read Bill James' material, you know that tends to create a lot of runs. Check out his runs scored totals--they are more than good for a player who certainly wasn't blessed with speed! Because of that, my recollection without checking is that his career on-base-percentage was right around .400--extraordinary for a .279 career hitter, and almost certainly better than either Meusel!
Plus, it took me about a decade to find an example of his true rookie, the 1947 Tip-Top Bread issue! Good thread, guys! |
#4
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When Kiner retired, wasn't he behind Ruth, Foxx, Ott, Gehrig and Ted Williams for 6th all time in HRs? To me, that says enough...his other good numbers are gravy.
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My collection: http://imageevent.com/vanslykefan Last edited by Robextend; 01-14-2011 at 05:37 PM. |
#5
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Just feeling kiner ornery!
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#6
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How did Mazerowski (Lifetime; 2,016 hits, .260 BA) get in and Dick Groat (Lifetime; 2,138 hits, .286 BA. plus 1960 NL MVP) didn't? Both played for the Pirates.
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#7
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Mike, 8 gold gloves and that 1960 hr. I'm not sayin' it's right but that is the difference.
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Check out my YouTube Videos highlighting VINTAGE CARDS https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbE..._as=subscriber ebay store: kryvintage-->https://www.ebay.com/sch/kryvintage/...p2047675.l2562 Last edited by rhettyeakley; 01-14-2011 at 07:04 PM. |
#8
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It it well known that Bob had the best throwing arm of his generation, while Irish probably had the worst. An old story repeated many times goes something like this...................Irish is walking down the street with John McGraw, when a one-armed man approaches them. "Pardon me, I had the misfortune to lose my arm....." "Get on your way" McGraw responded. "Irish ain't got it!"
Lovely Day... |
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