― Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 27 December 2004 17:29 (twenty years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 17:43 (twenty years ago)
― Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 27 December 2004 17:55 (twenty years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 18:05 (twenty years ago)
― Riot Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 27 December 2004 18:22 (twenty years ago)
― MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 18:27 (twenty years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 18:38 (twenty years ago)
― Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:15 (twenty years ago)
My general point is that "b...b...but he was a bit of an asshole" is a criticism that's used far too often despite being irrelevant most of the time. As long as the guy didn't compromise the game of baseball (Pete Rose being the most obvious example) then I couldn't care less if he was moody and didn't get along with everybody. If he could bring it on the field, then that's the most important thing.
(xpost)
― MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:16 (twenty years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:21 (twenty years ago)
Haha I need to learn to check baseballreference.com before I say stuff sometimes.
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:23 (twenty years ago)
― MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:33 (twenty years ago)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 20:32 (twenty years ago)
Example #2: replace "Reggie Jackson" with "Barry Bonds" in the above paragraph.
Or consider the Yankees and Red Sox of the last few years. When the Yankees were winning, they were "professional" and "disciplined". Their lack of comaraderie was viewed as an asset, i.e. "they're all business when they take the field". OTOH, the Sox were drama queens who didn't know how to win when it counts.
Fast forward to this past year. The Yanks are up 3-0 and they're winning because they're the professionals who respect the game and know how to win. Five days later, the exact same guys are described as "cold" and "unemotional" and that's why they lost. In the meantime, Manny and Pedro's weird quirks and selfishness are ignored, and suddenly all the drama becomes an asset because the Sox are "loose", "having fun", and "relaxed", and that's why they won.
― MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 23:47 (twenty years ago)
"So we're supposed to believe that Reggie was a poison when his team lost, and a leader when they won?"
I don't think anyone really said Reggie (or Barry or Albert Belle) was a leader at any point though (well maybe Reggie when he got older.) They just said when they won that they were very good players (which obv all three were) and at times very clutch players. That doesn't mean that they also didn't cause some problems in their respective clubhouses/franchises (which all three obv did.)
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 00:59 (twenty years ago)
― Riot Gear! (Gear!), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 01:22 (twenty years ago)
Great players are great players irrespective of their teams. You can be a great player on a good team or on a bad team. Similarly, if someone is a clubhouse cancer, then that should also be independent of the quality of the team. But it isn't. The same guy who is a cancer when the team loses is a leader when the team wins.
This doesn't mean that team chemistry doesn't count for anything. But it counts for a lot less than player performance.
Haha watch out conventional wisdom! Barry's coming after ya!
Next thing you know, I'll be claiming that there's no such thing as a clutch hitter!!
― MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 01:56 (twenty years ago)
Reggie's championship teams in both Oakland and the Bronx were filled with hot heads, both on the team, the managers and owners. It was a crazy atmosphere, yet they won, mostly because they were freakin' loaded with talent top to bottom. One thing I find interesting about both of those clubs is that they both won titles with two managers, the A's with Dick Williams and Alvin Dark, the Yanks with Billy Martin and Bob Lemon. Both clubs had complete freak owners with big checkbooks with King George and Charlie Finley.
70s baseball was cool. You had both of these clubs and the Big Red Machine. KC, Baltimore, Philly, LA and Pittsburgh all also won their division more than once in 70s.
― Earl Nash (earlnash), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 06:07 (twenty years ago)
― Riot Gear! (Gear!), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 09:56 (twenty years ago)
Yeah, for purpose of analyzing a player's career worth, it all should come down to stats, or as I prefer to call them, FACTS. We can all spin our own fantasies of who's a "clubhouse cancer" -- one of my first choices would be late-career Saint Cal Ripken -- and it doesn't prove a damn thing.
― Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 15:16 (twenty years ago)
I agree Mr. Cal could be pretty detrimental to his team by that point too, but Mr. Morb WHY if everything is so easy to calculate based on the "facts" (haha) do we even bother having votes then? Why isn't there just a formula?
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 16:12 (twenty years ago)
2. I'm not advocating a fucking formula, but INTERPRETING the record of the player's career.
― Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 29 December 2004 14:25 (twenty years ago)
Took me a second to figure this out--I thought he was still playing for somebody--but I-Rod's "officially" retiring:
http://cnnsi.com/2012/baseball/mlb/04/19/rodriguez.retires.ap/index.html#?sct=mlb_t11_a2
I guess he goes into the Bagwell group: automatic first-ballot if they vote on stats alone, some undetermined amount of time in limbo otherwise.
― clemenza, Friday, 20 April 2012 16:04 (thirteen years ago)
thought the same thing when i saw he's retiring. who else are you putting in this group?
― Porto for Pyros (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Friday, 20 April 2012 16:08 (thirteen years ago)
Bret Boone...just kidding. Those are the first two that come to mind--let me think about it.
― clemenza, Friday, 20 April 2012 16:09 (thirteen years ago)
Thome, too. Got any others? The cloud-of-vague-suspicion group...
― clemenza, Friday, 20 April 2012 16:17 (thirteen years ago)
Piazza?
― Grimy Little Pimp (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Friday, 20 April 2012 17:33 (thirteen years ago)
was Pudge on any sort of nefarious "list"? a coworker of mine seems to think so.
― Porto for Pyros (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Friday, 20 April 2012 17:34 (thirteen years ago)
p sure he was named in the mitchell report but didn't have to testify?
― Grimy Little Pimp (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Friday, 20 April 2012 17:47 (thirteen years ago)
came to camp 30 pounds lighter when they started testing
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 20 April 2012 18:18 (thirteen years ago)
tbh, I just assume anyone on the mid-90s Rangers was using (note: don't care)
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 20 April 2012 18:19 (thirteen years ago)
Canseco said he used too (note: also don't care)
― Godzilla vs. Rodan Rodannadanna (The Yellow Kid), Friday, 20 April 2012 18:22 (thirteen years ago)
I remember people pointing fingers on the basis of some drastic offseason weight loss a few years ago ...
I was looking at his B-R player page and was wondering
1) he had a negative dWAR for three straight years from 2002-4. I don't get it ... he was great defensively, then bad for three years, then great again?
2) he had a 67 career WAR, which barely puts him in the top 100 all-time. I don't know, doesn't that seem a bit low for one of the best catchers ever (and probably the best ever defensively). It would suggest that either a) catchers aren't all that valuable (because they usually aren't among the league's best hitters) or b) a catchers' value isn't well represented by current metrics.
― NoTimeBeforeTime, Friday, 20 April 2012 18:22 (thirteen years ago)
catchers have shorter careers and their position takes a bigger toll when it comes to hittingcomparing his WAR against everyone is less meaningful than comparing him to other catchers
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 20 April 2012 18:26 (thirteen years ago)
BB-Ref ranks his 67 WAR at...67th place, coincidentally. That definitely doesn't seem too low to me.
― Godzilla vs. Rodan Rodannadanna (The Yellow Kid), Friday, 20 April 2012 18:26 (thirteen years ago)
and #2 among catchers, #11 among catcher WAR/game
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 20 April 2012 18:27 (thirteen years ago)
10th if you eliminate Jack Clements since he was pre-modern
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Friday, 20 April 2012 18:28 (thirteen years ago)
tbh, I just assume anyone on the mid-90s Rangers was using
One exception:
http://s.ecrater.com/stores/68455/495a38266a0b5_68455n.jpg
Refused to take anything stronger than Flinstones vitamins.
― clemenza, Friday, 20 April 2012 20:26 (thirteen years ago)
"a catchers' value isn't well represented by current metrics"
From what I understand this is very true on the defensive side of things. All the traditional catcher stats are really hard to isolate as individual achievements (SB, CS, PB/WP) and those are the things that a catcher does that actually appear on a stat sheet.
― Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Friday, 20 April 2012 21:28 (thirteen years ago)
Or the ability to call a game, which, if you accept that there is such an ability in the first place, exists in some grey area that's hard to isolate. (When Piazza lost those close MVP votes, the Dodgers would always be at or near the league lead in team ERA. But they were good staffs pitching in Dodger Stadium--how do you quantify Piazza's role in that? Seeing as he's catching the bulk of the games, comparing him to second- and third-string Dodger catchers doesn't seem to get you anywhere.)
― clemenza, Friday, 20 April 2012 23:28 (thirteen years ago)
I don't think Andre Dawson, Jim Rice, Lee Smith and Bert Blylevyn were Hall of Famers. Morris, Sandberg, Sutter and Goosage have much better arguments in their favor...Morris was a monster and at his best (which he was for a large part of 80s) he was one of the best pitchers in baseball...
― Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, December 22, 2004 6:50 PM (7 years ago)
Wow--in view of some of the arguments I've had with Alex the last couple of years, the assessments of Blyleven and Morris there are surprising, to put it mildly. Where I was around the same time (far as I can tell, I posted this in the spring of 2002).
― clemenza, Saturday, 21 April 2012 02:20 (thirteen years ago)
This is what I'm getting at -- if you are going by career WAR, then only two out of the top one hundred best players were catchers. That doesn't seem right. Maybe 1000 games at catcher are equivalent to 1500 games at first base? If you could choose between having a star catcher for ten years or a star first baseman for ten years, you'd probably choose the catcher because good players at that position are much harder to come by.
Or the ability to call a game, which, if you accept that there is such an ability in the first place, exists in some grey area that's hard to isolate.
The ability to call a game exists, but I don't think it's all that important today. In 1910 when pitchers grew up on farms and had 7th grade educations, a guy with his head in the game at all times who could micromanage the other players was important. Now, I'm sure that the best pitchers know the hitters every bit as well as heir catchers do.
From what I understand this is very true on the defensive side of things.
Yeah, it's accepted that Pudge shut down the opposing team's running game based on reputation alone. How much was that worth to his teams on average?
― NoTimeBeforeTime, Saturday, 21 April 2012 02:36 (thirteen years ago)
I'm sure that the best pitchers know the hitters every bit as well as their catchers do.
With an established starter, I wouldn't doubt that calling a good game basically amounts to being able to guess almost unerringly what the pitcher wants to throw (and is going to throw) anyway; if you're on the same page, and you only get shaken off a handful of times, you've called a good game. With younger pitchers, or guys whose emotions run high on the mound, I'm sure game-calling skill figures much more prominently.
― clemenza, Saturday, 21 April 2012 02:49 (thirteen years ago)
If you could choose between having a star catcher for ten years or a star first baseman for ten years, you'd probably choose the catcher because good players at that position are much harder to come by.
Ok, but what if it's Catcher for 10 years or First Baseman for 15? I mean that's why these guys are lower on a list of career totals, they just don't provide as much career value.
― Godzilla vs. Rodan Rodannadanna (The Yellow Kid), Saturday, 21 April 2012 03:57 (thirteen years ago)
Exactly, then it's a tougher question. But if it's twice as hard to find a star catcher than a star first baseman, then ten great catching years might be worth twenty great 1B years. Career WAR doesn't account for that, even if you only compare players at the same positions, or on a WAR/162G scale.
― NoTimeBeforeTime, Saturday, 21 April 2012 12:53 (thirteen years ago)
"Wow--in view of some of the arguments I've had with Alex the last couple of years, the assessments of Blyleven and Morris there are surprising, to put it mildly."
Alex in SF in 2004 had read a lot less about sabermetrics than Alex in SF in 2006 even.
― Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Saturday, 21 April 2012 15:32 (thirteen years ago)
"With younger pitchers, or guys whose emotions run high on the mound, I'm sure game-calling skill figures much more prominently."
To be honest, I think it's probably a lot less important than a pitching coach or even a general organizational pitching philosophy i.e. pitch to contact or whatever (which are other things that are really hard to quantify.)
― Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Saturday, 21 April 2012 15:40 (thirteen years ago)
I-Rod had pretty much a rifle when he was young as a catcher. I remember in an article about I-Rod back in the early 90s and it had a quote with Sparky Anderson pretty much saying he was the best he had seen since Bench.
Mike Piazza is a better all around hitter, but I'd say Rodriquez might be the better all around player (but it's slight either way). Both of them are the two best catchers of their time and probably on the first hand list of top catchers ever.
Pudge definitely has more guilt by associations on the roids issues than Piazza, but for some reason I got a feeling he might will end up being on that gets a hall pass on the issue faster than the others.
― earlnash, Sunday, 22 April 2012 20:33 (thirteen years ago)
Yeah, I bet Piazza gets more of a steroids penalty from Hall voters than Pudge will
― Godzilla vs. Rodan Rodannadanna (The Yellow Kid), Monday, 23 April 2012 04:16 (thirteen years ago)
I think Rodriguez is going to be treated with more suspicion. The arc of his career seems more in line with PEDs to me--he had this four- or five-year burst of offensive production starting in '99 that didn't quite fit with the rest of his career. (Looked at one way; you could also argue that there was steady improvement over a number of years leading up to 1999.) Piazza was pretty great right off the bat, and his production was fairly consistent for the next decade.
― clemenza, Monday, 23 April 2012 14:34 (thirteen years ago)
i wonder if the pandemic year will make a difference in anyone's chances like maybe how the strike year cost McGriff a likely induction via the writers. i think for example Jose Ramirez will get in on way or another, but if you calculate his .292/.386/.607 2020 performance out to a full season, he looks like a guy who had the necessary transcendent stat line to catch writers' eyes in 2037 or so -- 47 HR, 44 2B, 125 runs, 128 RBI, 87 BB, 28 SB.
― omar little, Thursday, 20 February 2025 20:07 (four months ago)
I know there were a few guys who had a career-worst year--some recovered, some didn't--that may make a difference in a close call. One who comes to mind is Altuve. He's probably in the clear now, but if the cheating scandal keeps it close, his lost 2020 could come into play.
― clemenza, Friday, 21 February 2025 02:57 (four months ago)
clem are you going to the canadian hof inductions this weekend?
― mookieproof, Friday, 6 June 2025 01:17 (one month ago)
I might try to get to the induction ceremony, which--if I'm reading their website correctly--is free. There's an opening night thing that costs $100, and other things (autograph session, golf tournament) that are expensive. But I might wander over Saturday afternoon and see how close I can get.
― clemenza, Friday, 6 June 2025 02:42 (one month ago)
jos. a bats
― mookieproof, Friday, 6 June 2025 02:50 (one month ago)
I saw he was at leftfield today and sort of regretted not going
― FRAUDULENT STEAKS (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Friday, 6 June 2025 03:58 (one month ago)
They always do something in Toronto on the Thursday, right? I think my collector friend always goes to that.
― clemenza, Friday, 6 June 2025 05:01 (one month ago)
i met up with a friend before she headed to the Justice show nearby and was right outside Leftfield - place was packed solid.
― FRAUDULENT STEAKS (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Friday, 6 June 2025 13:43 (one month ago)
I'll post later, but finally made it to Induction Day (a 10-minute walk from my house--thanks for the nudge, mookieproof). Some photos and video:
https://photos.app.goo.gl/kPhQb6PUbHG2dxSn7
― clemenza, Saturday, 7 June 2025 20:52 (one month ago)
nice!
― mookieproof, Saturday, 7 June 2025 23:09 (one month ago)
Some of the people in attendance today: Fergie Jenkins, Larry Walker, Lloyd Moseby, Ernie Whitt, Pat Gillick, Paul Beeston, Gord Ash.
― clemenza, Sunday, 8 June 2025 01:20 (one month ago)
Sounds really cool, clem!
― NoTimeBeforeTime, Sunday, 8 June 2025 19:21 (one month ago)