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#1 |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Home of the T-Bones
Posts: 11,116
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You might want to check out the Rob Neyer column that is guest written by Rob Wood today on the Top 100 players. Pete Rose enthusiasts should ignore this recommendation.
http://espn.go.com/mlb/columns/neyer_rob/1424690.html
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KCBOOMER Buck O'Neil: The Monarch of Baseball |
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#2 | |
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NetShrine Vagabond
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Louisville
Posts: 7,866
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Quote:
I'm a Rose fan (not an enthusiast) and don't see anything wrong w.r.t. Rose in this column. What did I miss? |
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#3 |
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NetShrine Creator & Curator
Join Date: May 2002
Location: NetShrine WHQ
Posts: 5,548
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Check their voting on their site Skip..............
So, Wade Boggs is the #39 best player of all-time? ![]()
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Steve, Forum Administrator "They come and they go, Hobbs. They come and they go." That's why there's NetShrine.com |
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#4 |
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NetShrine Vagabond
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Louisville
Posts: 7,866
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Got it. Rose = 102. No wonder I passed on joining SABR. Thbbbbb.
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#5 |
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Netshrine Cleanup Hitter
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I have some issues with it, but it's just a few people's opinions, worth no more than ours. Let's swap Rose and Boggs on the list, and go from there.
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#6 |
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Renounced Membership 7/9/03
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Boggs may have been the human embodiment of a metronome but he certainly wasn't the 39th best player to ever play. That said, Boggs wasn't nearly as bad as some of his critics suggest.
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#7 | |
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NetShrine's Evangelist
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Living by faith, and not by sight!
Posts: 2,194
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Quote:
I could agree to that assessment if I were convinced that Wade Boggs emerged as an average or better fielder at 3B. I remember an old volume of THE SCOUTING REPORT (I think it was 1984 or so) which said "Wade Boggs cannot field." in describing his defense. One or two years later I began to read accounts of how good a fielder Boggs was at 3B, and how hard he worked to improve. (Boggs actually won two (2) Gold Gloves, but I'm not convinced he deserved them, unless it was in the context of a weak field where somebody had to win the award.) Boggs was a very unique player. He brought leadoff man skills to a power position, and he wasn't a speed burner, but he was on base a lot, he wasn't slow (he just wasn't fast) and he appears to be a defensive plus. On top of this, Boggs was undoubtedly ready for the majors 2 1/2 years before he was called up; had he been called up in 1980 his stats would be more impressive than they are right now. Boggs is 25th in career OBP and 33rd in BA; excellent for the era he played in. Subjectively, I can defend Boggs as the 39th best player more easily than I could defend Bill James' pick of Craig Biggio as 35th best. |
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#8 | |
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Netshrine Vacuum Cleaner
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I agree here. Boggs is better than Biggio, but neither is top 50 all time. |
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#9 |
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Netshrine Cleanup Hitter
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Yes, I scanned for Biggio on this Top 100, and didn't see him.
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#10 |
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NetShrine Vagabond
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Louisville
Posts: 7,866
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So any other comments on the SABR Top 100? Beyond the obvious snub of Rose, of course.
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#11 | |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Winter Springs, FL
Posts: 2,503
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Quote:
I couldn't agree more - reverse the luck Boggs and Schmidt had in the way of opportunity and Boggs is the #1 3B by acclaimation , and Schmidt tucks in at #4 behind Boggs, Mathews and Brett (I know Smed will disagree with this, but Smed is wrong - Mike Schmidt was extraordinarily lucky to land with a bad Phillies team that had incredible patience with him)
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"I would submit that if the world survives for a million years, perhaps its finest hour may be that in the last half of the 20th century, when the power to blow up the world rested in the hands of a few men in two very unsophisticated and suspicious countries, we didn't do it, and one American, Richard Nixon, moved the cold war away from permanent confrontation toward victory. How could any wrong that he did compare with that?" - John Sears |
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#12 | |
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NetShrine Vagabond
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Louisville
Posts: 7,866
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Quote:
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#13 | |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Winter Springs, FL
Posts: 2,503
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Quote:
You miss the point, which is that if Schmidt got a later start to his career he would not have piled up the counting stats that he did. The counting stats are all that give MJS the edge over Eddie Matthews or George Brett. Moreover, there are few examples of a team giving 350+ AB while hitting .196 and striking out over one-third of the time. Under even slightly different circumstances Schmidt could have been 25 or 26 before establishing himself as a regular
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"I would submit that if the world survives for a million years, perhaps its finest hour may be that in the last half of the 20th century, when the power to blow up the world rested in the hands of a few men in two very unsophisticated and suspicious countries, we didn't do it, and one American, Richard Nixon, moved the cold war away from permanent confrontation toward victory. How could any wrong that he did compare with that?" - John Sears |
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#14 | |
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Membership Suspended 11/19/02
Join Date: May 2002
Location: VNV Nation
Posts: 2,952
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Really? How about MVPs: Schmidt 3 Brett+Mathews 1 Years in top 10 in MVP vote: Schmidt 9 Brett+Mathews 9 HR titles Schmidt 8 Brett+Mathews 2 Leading league OPS Schmidt 5 Brett+Mathews 3 Gold Gloves Schmidt 10 Brett+Mathews 1 Last edited by VNV Nation : 08-31-2002 at 09:50 PM. |
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#15 |
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Guest
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: washington dc
Posts: 2,625
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PW - great post. schmidt would still be #1 in my book, but good point nonetheless.
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