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Hall of Merit — A Look at Baseball's All-Time Best Sunday, February 17, 2008Ballot Thread: Players Not in the Hall of Fame: Group 3 (career started before 1943)Group 3 is currently under the jurisdiction of the Veterans Committee. These players’ careers started before 1943 In alphabetical order (year of election in parenthesis):
Charlie Bennett (1921)
The election ends next Sunday at 8 PM EST.
John (You Can Call Me Grandma) Murphy
Posted: February 17, 2008 at 04:25 PM | 101 comment(s)
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The first 17 were on my ballot when they were inducted into the HoM, so I support their selection:
1) Deacon White-C/3B: The greatest catcher of the 19th century.
2) Bill Dahlen-SS/3B: Obviously, he had to have been worse than Charles Manson. Otherwise, he would have been in the HOF years ago.
3) Ezra Sutton-3B/SS/1B: The greatest third baseman of the 19th century and up to Frank Baker. Best third baseman for 1875 (probably), 1883, 1884 and 1885. Almost the best first baseman behind McVey for 1876.
4) Paul Hines-CF: Great defensive player and an outstanding hitter, too.
5) Cupid Childs-2B: Best major league second baseman of the '90s. Too short of a career to knock out McPhee for tops for the 19th century, but not that far behind. Considering the average second basemen of his era, he was fairly durable. Best major league second baseman for 1890, (almost in 1891), 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896, and 1897.
6) Stan Hack-3B: Amazingly, Stan wasn't a hacker! :-)Best major league third baseman for 1935, 1937, 1941, 1942, 1945 and 1946. Best NL third baseman for 1936.
7) Charlie Keller-LF: WWII did a lot of damage to his career numbers (as well as his back problems), but King Kong's prime can stack up to anybody's.Best ML right fielder for 1940. Best ML left fielder for 1943.
8) Joe Gordon-2B: Best second baseman of the 1940's when you give him appropriate WWII credit. Best major league second baseman for 1940, 1942, 1943, and 1947. Best AL second baseman for 1939 and 1941.
9) Heinie Groh-3B: Best third baseman of his era not name Frank Baker. Near the top of his position for total WS and WS per Games. Terrific hitting (second best at his position in major league history to date) and fielding for his position. Like Childs, many years as the best at his position, yet still had a long career for someone at his position. He belongs. Best major league third baseman for 1915, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920 and 1924.
10) Jack Glasscock-SS: I have him basically tied with George Wright as the greatest shortstop of the 19th century, except he has more career value than Wright (and George has more peak). Best shortstop for 1882, 1886, and 1889.
11) Charley Jones-LF/CF: He was playing a more difficult position than the one that it evolved into. I gave him a little more credit for his (unfairly) blacklisted years. Best major league leftfielder for 1877, 1879 and 1884. Best AA centerfielder for 1883. Best AA leftfielder for 1885 (close to being the best in the majors).
12) Pete Browning-CF/LF: Gotta love the peak and prime! Best major league second baseman for 1882. Best major league leftfielder for 1883 (close in 1890). Best AA centerfielder for 1885. Best major league centerfielder for 1887.
13) Hardy Richardson-2B/CF/3B: Terrific second baseman. Not nearly as dominating as Ross Barnes, but played in a more competitive era and was more durable. Best left fielder for 1886. Best second baseman for 1887 and 1889.
14) George Gore-CF: Did a lot in a relatively short career. Fast, terrific with the glove and a great batting eye.
15) Harry Stovey-1B/OF: Not an inner-circle player, but his bat can not be denied.
16) Joe Start-1B: Considered the best first baseman for the 1860s. Considering how old he was when he joined the NA and how well he did, that evaluation seems to hold water. Best first baseman for 1878 and 1879.
17) Bob Caruthers: While I still think his peak wasn't as historically great as others think and he did have a short career, Parisian Bob gets a nod from me. Best AA pitcher for 1889 and close to being the best AA pitcher for 1885 and 1886.
I didn't support these four:
18) Wes Ferrell-P: Just misses having enough career for me to say yes for him.
19) Sherry Magee-LF: He was very good, but not really dominant as a left fielder for his era.
20) Sheckard-LF: Ditto.
21) Charlie Bennett-C: Even giving him a catcher bonus, I don't see him as a great player.
You have Glasscock and Jones tie for 10). Is that 10 and 11?
Thanks for sticking your neck out. You are putting the lie to Chris Cobb's prediction with 20th century players at 4-5-6 and 18-19-20. We disagree on a lot but the big surprises stand out, Stan Hack and Sherry Magee.
Now I need to check and see Childs and Hack weren't really the best that many times.
This was a fairly easy choice for me.
2. Deacon White
As was this one.
3. Paul Hines
4. Stan Hack
The rest of the 'inner' group on this ballot.
5. Bob Caruthers
I like a broad skill set.
6. Jimmy Sheckard
7. Joe Start
The HoM was a little slow on these guys, imo, but we came around.
8. Ezra Sutton
A stand out at the position.
9. Sherry Magee
The numbers stand up, albeit quietly.
10. George Gore
I am normally a career voter, hence his somewhat low ranking. Still deserving.
11. Jack Glasscock
Career vote.
12. Cupid Childs
Remember when we got to vote for some of these guys every time?
13. Heinie Groh
Solid career.
14. Harry Stovey
Borderline, but in.
15. Pete Browning
16. Charlie Bennett
Neither of these two is in my PHoM, but I could see them getting in eventually (Browning more than Bennett, though).
These final five are not in my PHoM and are no longer even on my consideration list.
17. Charley Jones
18. Joe Gordon
19. Charlie Keller
20. Hardy Richardson
21. Wes Ferrell
Yes, Paul. I'll change that in a moment. Thanks!
Hack is higher up the all-time third baseman list than Magee is among left fielders. Not to mention the fact that outfielders are endowed with greater durabilty than the hot corner guys. IOW, I have no second thoughts with placing Smiling Stan comfortably over Sherry.
Regarding the last 4 on my list, I didn't have them on my ballot, so it wouldn't make sense for me to rank them higher. I'm also not going to start shortchanging the 19th century guys at this time.
As for sticking my neck out, if you can't handle the heat, stay out of the kitchen. :-D
I favor Win Shares, so my "bests" are reflective of that preference. WARP fans will disagree with me, of course, on many of them.
1. Bob Caruthers (1930-1st) 218-99 is more and more impressive when you compare Rusie, Griffith and McGinnity, let alone Walsh (Caruthers won 25 more games than Walsh and lost 27 fewer, pitching about 100 fewer innings. As a batter TB/PA .483, TB/Outs .793, so better than Nap and close to Stovey. If he’d just concentrated on pitching, added 50% to his career length, and gone 327-149, he’d have been in on the first ballot. Magnificent peak: 1886-87 59-23 and an OPS+ of 180 on 681AB beats anyone (Ruth’s best 2-way years, 1917-18, he was 37-20 and OPS+ of 182 on 440AB.) Compare with Ward, whose TB+BB/PA was .374 and TB+BB/Outs .545 and W-L was 164-102 (ERA+118) Caruthers was a better hitter and much better pitcher - so why have we elected Ward and not Caruthers?
2. Deacon White (1898-N/A) Mostly a 3B or C. 3443 hits normalized to 130 game season. OPS+127, mostly 3B and C. TB+BB/PA .416, TB+BB/Outs .636
3. Joe Start (1912 – 1st) I’m convinced by the arguments of his greatness in the 1860s. If you normalize his 1871-85 to 130-game seasons, season by season as above, he gets 2,705 hits after the age of 28. Add say 7 “normal” seasons of 150 hits for 1864-70 and he’s around 3,800. TB+BB/PA .389, TB+BB/Outs .572, both low, but we presumably only have his latter years, in gentle decline – also those numbers are lower before 1890. OPS+ 121, not very impressive, but with early career would be higher and 1B was a more important position back then. Nobody else loses this much of their career, yet still puts up decent numbers. He’s Ezra Sutton in 1871-86, plus the 1860s. Alternatively, he’s Jake Beckley.
4. Paul Hines. Long career, 3194 hits, normalized to 130 game seasons. TB+BB/PA.437, TB+BB/Outs .660.
5. Harry Stovey (1916- 3rd) Best years were in AA, and only 2,084 normalized hits (adjusting 1880-92 to 130 games). TB+BB/PA .512, TB+BB/Outs .800, OPS+ 143 puts him well above McPhee. However, he’s distinguished from the 90s outfielders by having his prime years in the 80s.
6. Pete Browning (2005-3rd) Recalculating, to adjust ’82 as well as ’83-’92, he had 2,177 “normalized” hits, with no AA discount. However, TB+BB/PA .511, TB+BB/Outs .855. the same as Tiernan, not quite as good as Thompson, but he got no significant boost from the 1893-94 run explosion. Career OPS+162 vs. 146 Thompson and 138 Tiernan, but you have to discount a bit for AA. On further reflection, 162 is 162, 13th highest OPS+ in history, 10th highest of eligible players; restored to his original position close to Cicotte.
7. Charley Jones (2003-6th) Short career – only 1,780 normalized hits, even when adjusted to nominal 130-game-played season. But OPS+ 149, TB+BB/PA .473, TB+BB/Outs .722, so above Pike and non-CF 90s OF.
8. Hardy Richardson (1905- about 10th) long career, considerably better than league. OPS+130 and he was a 2B TB+BB/PA .469 TB+BB/Outs .716 Above Glasscock/Childs/Sutton, I think.
9. George Gore 2240 normalized hits at OPS+ of 135, so not quite Stovey. TB+BB/PA .477, TB+BB/Outs .779
10. Bill Dahlen (1915- 4th) Dahlen a good player, but NOT a clone of Davis -- less unique than Caruthers, less impressive counting stats than Welch. TB+BB/PA .434, TB+BB/Outs .670, only marginally better than McPhee, though SS is a more valuable position and he lasted a little longer. 2,457 hits pushes him up further, but it’s also significantly below Davis. OPS+109 not that impressive, even for a shortstop, pushes him down below Richardson (Davis was 121, heckuva difference.) Somewhat overrated by HOM electorate, I feel.
11. Jack Glasscock (1904- about 7th) Very long career with impressive batting numbers, given he was a SS. OPS+112, TB+BB/PA .407, TB+BB/Outs .614
12. Cupid Childs (1988-10th) OPS+119, almost the same as the 90s trio, and TB+BB/PA .470, TB+BB/Outs .797 highly competitive with them. Main negative is only 1720 hits, or about 1780 even if you normalize him to a 130 games played season. Nevertheless, he was a 2B.
13. Ezra Sutton (1908 – about 9th) a lot better than league at primarily defensive position. OPS+119, pretty good for a 3B TB+BB/PA.404 TB+BB/Outs .589
14. Charlie Bennett (1921 – 17th) Only 1,796 “normalized” hits over 1878-93, but he was a catcher. However McVey and Clements were catchers too, and both better hitters, while McGuire went on much longer. TB+BB/PA.454, TB/Outs .689, but much shorter career than Start/Sutton. OPS+118 impressive, pushes him up a bit
15. Heinie Groh (1938- 13th) Close to a clone of Childs, but not quite as good, so fits here. 1774 hits, OPS+118, TB+BB/PA .431, TB+BB/Outs .666 (all 3 below Childs). 3B in 10s probably about equivalent to 2B in 90s, but Groh not as good a hitter, given these numbers were after the deadball era.
16, Sherry Magee (1926- 19th) Better than Sheckard, but flattered by playing several more years in high scoring '10s and at Baker Bowl. TB+BB/PA .458, TB+BB/Outs .705, and with only 2,169 hits. OPS+136 fairly impressive though.
17. Wes Ferrell (1964-38th) Not enough career. 2623 IP @116 not all that impressive. Hitting adds something, though.
18. Stan Hack (1958-74th) Shortish career and rate stats inflated by the war. 2193 hits @ OPS+119, better than Gordon I think.
19. Joe Gordon (1976-34th) OPS+120, but only 1530 hits. Short and only moderately impressive career; missed 2 war years, but had one easy one. Played for Yankees, so others softened up the pitchers for him – would be more plausible if he hadn’t had a lousy 1946. Have moved him up a bit on comparison with Stephens, but Stephens was better.
20. Jimmy Sheckard (1930- 18th) Only 2,084 hits, but a walk machine. TB+BB/PA .440, TB+BB/Outs .691, but that's in the low scoring 00s. OPS+120 not very impressivre, pushes him down.
21. Charlie Keller (1996-Off ballot) Keller’s a hitting Dizzy Dean; all peak but very short career (missed 1 ½ years for war, but even with them would be under 1400 hits) He’s Hack Wilson minus a lot, because his 1943 should anyway be discounted. OPS+152 but so what?
Do you put all of pre-1893 on a 130-game norm?
In other words, does this mean adjusting 1880-85? Or that plus shortening 1886-92?
6. Pete Browning . . . 10th highest of eligible players; restored to his original position close to Cicotte.
. . .
12. Cupid Childs (1988-10th) OPS+119, almost the same as the 90s trio, and TB+BB/PA .470, TB+BB/Outs .797 highly competitive with them. [Ryan, Van Haltren, Duffy]
When the Cooperstown voters arrive, they will find heavy sledding through some of these comments.
;-)
15. Heinie Groh (1938- 13th) Close to a clone of Childs, but not quite as good, so fits here. 1774 hits, OPS+118, TB+BB/PA .431, TB+BB/Outs .666 (all 3 below Childs). 3B in 10s probably about equivalent to 2B in 90s, but Groh not as good a hitter, given these numbers were after the deadball era.
Barely the deadball era. His prime season were in Cincinnati 1913-21. about 8-1/2 seasons with missing games mainly in '13 and '21.
For early players and catchers, I normalize all seasons to 130 games (which is of course conservative for a modern player) simply by taking all "full" seasons played, knocking off the short ones at start or end, and grossing them up to 130 game seasons. For example, Hines played 19 full seasons, plus 11 games in his rookie year for a total of 1,659 games, or 1,648 in full seasons. 19x130=2,470 so I take the 2,122 hits in his 19 full seasons, multiply by 2470/1648 and add back the 12 hits in his rookie season. Allows me to set Hines in context of modern players, and normalize Joe Start, e.g., who played for much longer than Beckley and would probably have got to 4,000 hits on a rather Rose-ish pattern if playing a modern schedule. Did this with Stovey too.
Browning yes, the 10th highest should be removed -- 13th highest in history, I think 11th highest of retired players, assuming Bonds has retired.
Deadball era I had always taken as ending in 1910, since 1911 saw an explosion of hitting. YMMV.
Still waiting to hear whether you simply consider all players in history average fielders at their positions, or whether you believe there is some difference in defensive value between, say, Ozzie Smith and Derek Jeter or Brooks Robinson and Ryan Braun that is worth factoring into your analysis.
Bill Dahlen (1915) - great D plus good O at tough position, and long career.
Deacon White (1898) - start a petition drive for the first two.
Paul Hines (1898) - raked
Jack Glasscock (1904) - not too far behind Dahlen
Hardy Richardson (1905) - a 2B who could really hit
Joe Start (1912) - normalized career stats are estimated really good
Ezra Sutton (1908) - fine D when 3B was key, plus his bat
George Gore (1898) - raked
Harry Stovey (1916) - bonus credit for scoring so many durn times
Wes Ferrell (1964) - Dick Thompson, RIP
Charlie Bennett (1921) - fine C
Jimmy Sheckard (1930) - hit and played D
Heinie Groh (1938) - nice 3B
Stan Hack (1958) - OBP at 3B
Sherry Magee (1926) - raked
Bob Caruthers (1930) - combined Pitch and batter value, no bonus pts for uniqueness
Joe Gordon (1976) - still a clear HoMer at this point on the ballot
Cupid Childs (1988) - good stick at 2B
Charlie Keller (1996) - HoM borderline
Charley Jones (2003) - raked
Pete Browning (2005) - poor league qual, truly lousy D, not long career
After that year the spitter was banned.
Following the Chapman beaning, the rules mandated that only clean baseballs be kept in play.
Ruth was the only 20-homer hitter that year, with 54 he was the first to reach 30 in a season; after 1920 more and more players began to emulate him.
Having said this, the transition away from deadball strategies was gradual, occuring over the course of more than a decade.
This is all in saying that Groh was a deadball era thirdbaseman, with all the incumbent responsibilities on him, comparable to a modern 2B.
I won't belabor this point in the ballot thread, but...
Just because people who don't understand the limitations of those metrics use them inappropriately doesn't mean that the metrics themselves are bad. If you make an appropriate adjustment for the effect of playing in Fenway Park, Manny Ramirez comes out as below average by a moderate amount, and I think that's a fair conclusion to draw.
-- MWE
(It's one of the least congruous of the incongruous pairings around here.)
1. Bill Dahlen - great defensive shortstop, good hitter, long career; he and George Davis got overlooked by HOF
2. Deacon White - great early player; caught a lot and played 3B too
3. Paul Hines - very good hitter and center fielder
4. George Gore - similar to Hines
5. Jack Glasscock - best defensive shortstop of the 19th century, long career
6. Ezra Sutton - very good third baseman, uncovered by this project
7. Hardy Richardson - very good hitter, good defensive second baseman
8. Joe Start - much of his greatness is pre-NA; fine with me
9. Joe Gordon - acrobatic second baseman of "modern" times; would be higher if his poor seasons were not so poor
10. Sherry Magee - one of the most forgotten very good players of the 20th century
11. Harry Stovey - very good player of the 1880s
12. Stan Hack - all-around good 3B of the 1930s and 1940s Cubs (when they were good)
13. Cupid Childs - good defensive second baseman of the 1890s
14. Charlie Keller - with war credit, a decent HOM'er
15. Charley Jones - with blackball credit, ditto
16. Charlie Bennett - good 19th century catcher, on my borderline of PHOM
17. Heinie Groh - good third baseman of the 1910s and 1920s
18. Bob Caruthers - Parisan Bob was a very good combo pitcher and hitter
19. Jimmy Sheckard - I am not a big fan of his making the HOM, good all-around player on the fabled Cubs of the aughts
20. Pete Browning - too many discounts to be impressive to me (never voted for)
21. Wes Ferrell - I never voted for this good-hitting pitcher of the 1930s; got a lot of publicity within SABR circles due to the relentless advocating by Dick Thompson
I don't vote only by OPS+ by a long shot, but for fun I've thrown some of that in here.
I like this group overall less than almost anybody; it may struggle come combined ballot time.
1 BILL DAHLEN - Very good player as a quality-fielding SS in 7 years with 100-120 OPS+. Phenomenal in the 156-38-36-27-23 peak years. Above average in the 4 years where he's in the 90s in OPS+. 'Most similar players' are George Davis and Bid McPhee. I'd put him right in between that pair. Reminds me even more of Alan Trammell, actually. That will be fun when we get to the "finals."
2 PAUL HINES - Best OPS+ ranks are 2-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-10 (weird coincidence of mostly avoiding repeats). 8 OPS+s above 140. Definitely a defensive bonus as well. Should be in the HOF, but admittedly wasn't either a dominator or a character that would have helped him be remembered decades later. But the resume is there.
3 DEACON WHITE - Best OPS+s 1-3-4-6-7-8. Funny that 'similar players' (yes, a toy and not a difference-maker) have him with George Wright or Hughie Jennings pretty much his entire career. But Deacon was playing C or 3B. Huge star on the 1877 Red Caps pennant winners.
4 GEORGE GORE - "Piano Legs" posted best OPS+s of 1-3-6-7-8-9-10 (what's up with the "no repeats," lol?). Nice long prime, but needed an extra year or 2 to rank even higher. Not as unusual as some others on the ballot.
5 JOE START - Someone once remarked that this stat line is like looking at the tail of a comet, I think. You see the 1871 at age 28, and the 1877-85, and it looks like something a great but inconsistent player puts up. And then you know the earlier reputation, so you know he played forever, he had a lot of very good years, and apparently quite a few others that are 'hidden.' I think that's enough for a '5' ranking here.
6 HARDY RICHARDSON - Good masher from 1979-90 who could place 2B well when needed, which was often. Kind of player who would be underrated by voters in modern times as well.
7 JOE GORDON - Trivia: top 10 in HRs in each of his first 9 full-time seasons. Nine-time All-Star. Six top 10s in Total Bases. And all of that is WITHOUT his due war credit. Yeah, it looks weird that his career has no head - and no tail. But the body of work is outstanding, and not many players of his era were better. Seven OPS+s of at least 117, and a great fielder too.
8 EZRA SUTTON - Highest OPS+s came in 1871 and in 1884 (both in the 160s). Tossed in big 1875 and 1885 as well. So another up-and-downer offensively, but a big asset on defense.
9 SHERRY MAGEE - Never below a 120 OPS+ in his 1st dozen years or 14 of his 15 seasons, ignoring an ill-fated 1919 swan song. 1-2-3-3-3-5-6-9 as his top 10s. Among the best hitters on the ballot, and didn't get smacked for his defense, durability, or longevity.
10 JACK GLASSCOCK - Pebbly may be a little overrated; not only wildly inconsistent, but some of the good years came in awfully convenient (cough weak league cough) years during a period of upheavals.
11 HARRY STOVEY - Racked up a 2-2-3-3-4-5-5-10-10. Scores with NY Giant rejected HOMers Ryan, Tiernan, Griffin in the similar players toy, oddly enough. He'd need monstrous numbers from 1883-89 AA to get a mid-ballot slot - and he's got them. Also scored well in 1890 PL and 1891 NL at ages 33-34, so he had the goods as a younger man.
12 CHARLIE BENNETT - Very good hitter from 1881-88. Throw in that he did it as a catcher, and it's a sweet peak. But even in that stretch he wasn't always durable (understandably). Tough guy to place.
13 CUPID CHILDS - This is a full-length career for this brutal and perhaps under-represented era. Even discounting 1890 AA as a very weak league, you'll find seven other 120 OPS+ seasons here. Matches up well against 2Bs in all eras.
14 HEINIE GROH - Excellent player from 1914-21. That's something, but I just can't get excited about him. Better fielder than Bob Elliott, but he couldn't hit like him. I guess he'd have made my PHOM if I had one, maybe.
15 BOB CARUTHERS - Tough to encapsulate what it means when a special hitter and special pitcher share the same body/same season. Ranked 1-2-3-7-9 in best ERA+ seasons. Led 1885 AA in ERA+, and 1886 AA in OPS+, in the latter season he also ranked 3rd in ERA+. And in 1887, he was 2nd in ERA+ and 3rd in OPS+.
16 WES FERRELL - 5th on my 1964 ballot when he got elected. The mighty bat (100 OPS+ !) and the high volume of innings in peak years just gets it done.
17 JIMMY SHECKARD - Left startlingly few fingerprints in terms of baseball's collective memory, but you have to like the all-around skills and imprint on pennant winners. To a point. Excellent fielder but overrated in many systems. 3-4-7-8-9 as best OPS+s for an OF is dicey for HOM nods.
18 PETE BROWNING - Look at the 1890 PL season. Browning, at age 29, leads the league in adj OPS+ by 13 pts over 32-yr-old HOMer Connor, followed by a 22-yr-old Beckley and HOMers Ewing, Brouthers, Gore, O'Rourke at 6-7-8-9. Am I supposed to assume that as a younger player he wouldn't have been able to post big numbers in the NL rather than the AA? Seven OPS+s above 163. 10 seasons as a regular, a good number for the era. This lousy fielder played some 16 pct of his career in the infield.
19 STAN HACK - Ranked 11th for me the year he was elected, 1958. Plenty of solid years outside WW II, seems like a decent fielder, slight position bonus. And not as good as Bob Elliott.
20 CHARLIE KELLER - Of his six actual big seasons, one was a weakened 1943 and another is a slight issue, 1942. Still, he has a dazzling peak that seems surely to have been longer if not for WW II. If only...
21 CHARLEY JONES - Another "if only," but he had more of a chance to avoid missing seasons than Keller did (I'm sympathetic, but he made his choice in a tough spot and paid the price). 2-3-3-3-5-5-5-6-7 in OPS+. I've come around a little, so I don't begrudge him supporters anymore. It just didn't quite work for me.
Tiernan alone was a Giant(R) if that's what you mean.
I was going in one direction, and then another, which is never a good idea.
:)
I meant popular early-era OFs who over time lost most or all of their supporters.
Was going to tie in Tiernan and Griffin with NYC, and then the phone rang and...
enough of detracting from the ballot thread....
I think your naked eye sees something different than my naked eye because I see someone (while maybe not the worst in history) who is WELL below average.
As I've often done in the past, I recommend internet archive (web.archive.org). Your 1915 ballot, for instance, is shown in the ballot thread at this site as one line. However, you can see it at post #9 right here.
Hunt around there and you will probably find most of your older ballots.
--
Win Shares MVPs, 1876-1900
4 Dan Brouthers (three outright, one tie)
3 Paul Hines (two outright, one tie)
Pete Browning has two outright (2) and six players have two including one tie (1-1/2): Stovey, O'Neil, Gore, Connor, Duffy, and Delahanty. Those players have 17 of the 36 awards to NL, AA, and PL players through 1900. Even of the one-time winners a majority are in the Hall of Merit: Barnes, White, Anson, Sutton, Thompson, Hamilton, Ward, Childs, Burkett, Jennings, Keeler, and Wagner, who won his first of several in 1900.
1. Bill Dahlen--#2 on my ballot when elected in 1915. An easy #1 here.
2. Deacon White--#1 in 1898. I probably over-rated him in 1898, but not by much.
My 1898 Ballot
1.-5. White, Hines, Spalding, Barnes, McVey
6.-10. Pike, Gore, G. Wright, H. Richardson, Radbourn
11.-15. Williamson, Jones, Sutton, Dunlap, Start
I would have G. Wright #1 if I had it to do over, and Big Ed would rate a bunch higher. Still White would probably be #2.
(gap)
3. Paul Hines--#2 in 1898.
4. Jack Glasscock--#2 in 1904.
5. Bob Caruthers--#2 in 1930. I'm still a peak voter and if we're going to elect anybody from the AA, Caruthers would be the first one.
6. Heinie Groh--#4 in 1938.
7. Joe Gordon--#9 in 1976 against tougher competition than any of the guys above him and most below.
8. Joe Start--#1 in 1912. Best player and best hitter in the world for a short time between Pearce and G. Wright.
9. Ezra Sutton--#3 in 1908.
10. Charley Keller--#2 in 1996. In hindsight, Gordon was more valuable.
11. George Gore--#7 in 1898. Pretty close to Hines, but then all of these guys are close.
12. Hardy Richardson--#7 in 1905. Wow, Pistol Pete only took 100 years even to follow Hardy into the HoM!
13. Charlie Bennett--#2 in 1921.
14. Pete Browning--#7 in 2005.
15. Sherry Magee--#13 in 1926.
16. Charley Jones--not rated in 2003 but peaked earlier at #5.
17. Cupid Childs--unrated in 1988 but peaked earlier at #7.
18. Jimmy Sheckard--unrated in 1930, peaked earlier at #8, not PHoM.
(gap)
19. Stan Hack--#14 in 1958. Over-rated (by me, when I made him PHoM).
20. Harry Stovey--#12 in 1916. If AA discount for Pete Browning, what about this guy? Over-rated (by me, when I made him PHoM).
21. Wes Ferrell--unrated in 1964, not PHoM.
1. – Bill Dahlen, 16.8 bws/700PA, 2 MVP, 15 AS - #2 1915 A shame he is not part of the HOF yet.
2. – Deacon White, 18.4 bws/700PA (after 1875), 2 MVP, 13 AS, before my voting time. Who did he upset from 1936-1939?
3. – Joe Start, 21.7 bws/700PA (after 1875), 0 MVP, 12 AS, #2 1912, #4 1911. When I joined, consideration of his pre-NA play was one of the biggest debates around the HOM. I’ve accepted it.
4. – Paul Hines, 21.8 bws/700PA (after 1875), 6 MVP, 14 AS, before my voting time. Just edges Gore because of the longer career.
5 – George Gore, 22.9 bws/700PA, 4 MVP, 10 AS, before my voting time. A tremendous overlooked player.
6. – Jack Glasscock, 15.8 bws/700PA, 3 MVP, 12 AS, before my voting time. A solid all-around SS.
7. – Ezra Sutton, 18.4 bws/700PA (after 1875), 2 MVP, 10 AS, before my voting time. I think that bringing in his NA play, while not spectacular, bumps him above Hack and Groh.
8. – Stan Hack, 20.6 bws/700PA, 3 MVP, 11 AS #7 1954-1955; #8 1953; #9 1958; #11 1956-1957. Could easily be flipped with Groh.
9. – Heinie Groh, 20.0 bws/700PA, 3 MVP, 8 AS, #7 1933; #10 1938; #11 1935-1936; #12 1934, 1937. Could easily be flipped with Hack.
10. – Pete Browning, 26.1 bws/700PA, 5 MVP, 8 AS - #1 1960-1961, 1964-1965, 1968-1969, #2 1958, 1966, 1975-1976, 1984-1985, 1987, 1996-1997; #3 1959, 1963, 1970-1971, 1973, 1977, 1979, 1986, 1988, 1991, 1995, 2001-2002, 2005; #4 1956-1957, 1962, 1969, 1972, 1974, 1978, 1983, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003-2004; #5 1981, 1990, 1992; #6 1954-1955, 1980, 1982, 1989, 1993, 1999. Yes, I was happy he finally made it.
11. - Charlie Bennett, 15.9 bws/700PA, 1 MVP, 6 AS, #1 1916, 1918-1921, #2 1914, #3 1915, 1917, #4 1913, #5 1912, #6 1911. At the time of his election, we had elected only Buck Ewing. Cal McVey and Deacon White also were considered part-time catchers.
12. – Jimmy Sheckard, 20.9 bws/700PA, 3 MVP, 11 AS, #4 1929-1930; #5 1928; #6 1919, 1925-1927; #7 1924; #8 1920-1923. I will stick with my ranking of Sheckard (due to fielding) ahead of Magee.
13. – Sherry Magee, 25.0 bws/700PA, 3 MVP, 11 AS, #7 1925-1926. I’m not sure Magee shouldn’t rank ahead of Sheckard. They are awfully close.
14. – Harry Stovey, 23.8 bws/700PA, 4 MVP, 11 AS, #3 1913, 1916, #4 1914-1915, #7 1911-1912. The AA play drops him this far.
15. – Hardy Richardson, 21.0 bws/700PA, 1 MVP, 11 AS, before my voting time. Consistently good, but not a high peak.
16. – Bob Caruthers, 21.8 bws/700PA, 25.5 pws/300IP, 4 MVP/CY, 7 AS, #11 1918, 1919, #12 1916, #13 1915, 1917, 1930, #14 1929. I don’t share karl’s love for Parisian Bob, but he is still a HOMer in my book.
17. – Charlie Keller, 29.5 bws/700PA, 4 MVP, 6 AS, #12 1987, #13 1986, 1988, 1991, 1996; #14 1992, 1994-1995; #15 1984-1985, 1990. I jumped on his bandwagon late.
18. – Joe Gordon, 18.5 bws/700PA, 2 MVP, 9 AS, never on my ballot.
19. – Cupid Childs, 18.6 bws/700PA, 2 MVP, 9 AS, #3 1958, #4 1960, #5 1956-1957, 1959, 1961, #6 1964, 1967-1968; #7 1963, 1966; #8 1962, 1965; #9 1954-1955; #12 1976-1977, 1979; #13 1975, 1978; #14 1970, 1973; #15 1969, 1971-1972, 1974. At the time, he was better qualified than Doerr/Gordon. Perhaps I am not discounting AA enough.
20. – Wes Ferrell, 23.8 pws/300IP, 4 CY, 7 AS, #8 1945; #10 1944, 1946; #11 1947, 1949, 1951, 1954-1955, 1958, 1961; #12 1948, 1950, 1952, 1959-1960, 1964; #13 1956-1957, 1963; #14 1962; #15 1953. RIP, jonesy.
21. – Charley Jones, 24.9 bws/700PA, 3 MVP, 9 AS; #13 1919. Never gave him boycott credit.
1. Deacon White -- White and Dahlen seem to be the consensus 1-2, but I think White’s got a clear edge, even without any bonus for catching.
2. Bill Dahlen -- A solid #2. I can see why people like him most, but his peak doesn’t look as good as some of the 19th century guys to me.
3. Paul Hines -- I’ve got him with the best any 5 year peak (non-consecutive) in WARP1 (schedule adjusted). Great career value as well. I can see an argument for him as #1.
4. Jack Glasscock -- Surprised to see Pebbly Jack so high, but WARP absolutely loves him: he’s got the best 7 consecutive yeear peak of anyone on the ballot.
5. Hardy Richardson -- WARP sees his and Gore’s peaks as effectively identical, but Richardson’s got a real career advantage.
6. George Gore -- Great peak, career too short to rank any higher.
7. Joe Start -- Have to guess to put him on the same scale as everyone else. As it is, he’s got outstanding career value (in the ballpark with Hines, White and Dahlen) but his peak’s closer to Bennett and Childs, still good, but not relative to the folks above him.
8. Ezra Sutton -- Always a favorite of mine. He’s slightly less than Hardy Richardson.
9. Charlie Bennett -- Catcher bonus helps a bit, but he doesn’t really need it. I’ve never understood the lack of appreciation for him by some voters. C’est le HOM.
10. Heinie Groh -- I freely admit I may be overrating the 19th century guys, but I see Groh as clearly the best of the non-Dahlen 20th C-ers on this ballot.
11. Charley Jones -- Giving him blacklist credit helps him a lot. With the slightly different method I used for this than for my actual ballots, Jones moves from being interchangable with Browning to clearly ahead. Either WARP changed or my AA discount is harsher.
12. Cupid Childs -- A bit of a second base bonus here.
13. Bob Caruthers -- Great peak, not enough career. Nickname bonus not enough.
14. Jimmy Sheckard -- great career, not enough peak. No nickname that I’m aware of.
15. Harry Stovey -- WARP sees him and Sheckard as very comparable, after adjusting for schedule length and the AA.
16. Wes Farrell -- Great peak for a pitcher, only decent career value.
17. Pete Browning -- Ditto, except he’s a hitter.
18. Sherry Magee -- Slightly worse peak than Browning, a bit more career.
19. Joe Gordon -- These last three all got a war discount, as well as some war credit. The credit I know is warranted, I’m less sure about the discount.
20. Stan Hack -- The discount makes his peak easily the worst on the ballot.
21. Charlie Keller -- Likewise with his career value.
All these guys are in my PHOM.
Any advice on how to integate the NA WS numbers that Chris generated 5 years ago. I missed the discussion about scaling/regressing to the mean. I have his numbers and the BP WARP numbers, but I haven't had to use them since I didn't start voting until the mid-20s. Otherwise the NA numbers can just be gigantic. Thanks.
A dartboard would be good.
The first two are very close in my system. Both rate in the upper half of my PHOM and are significant omissions from the HoF.
1) D. WHITE #1 in 1898. When the HOF was starting, his memory was possibly hurt by two things - a) his peak was overshadowed by being one of many all-stars on that Boston team of the 1870's, he wasn't flashy, and he lacked the big repuation before arriving there, b) his many years at third do little for his overall image as a GREAT player as opposed to just a very good player.
Prime 1873-79. First team MLB All-Star in 1877 (1B) and 1879 (Ca); WARP adds 1873, 1875, 1876 (all Ca) (No WS for NA). Also a star in 1874 and 1878 (Ca). Honorable mention in 1884 and 1888 at 3B.
2) B. DAHLEN #1 in 1915. Long durable career without a high peak. That probably caused him to be perceived as a lesser player than contemporary Hughie Jennings (inducted 1945) who flamed fiercely but relatively briefly.
Prime 1891-05. First team MLB All-Star in 1892 (SS for WS; 3B for WARP); WARP adds 1894 (SS). Also a star in 1895, 1896, 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902, 103, 1904, 1905, 1908 (all SS). Honorable mention in 1891 (3B), 1893 and 1897 (SS).
I consider the next two to be solid HOMers that easily should be in the HOF based on their past standards.
3) P. HINES #2 in 1898. Top player in baseball in the late 1870's.
Prime 1875-84. Best player in 1879, candidate in 1880, both by WARP. First team MLB All-Star (CF) in 1878, 1879, 1884. WARP adds 1876. WS adds 1881 and 1882. Also a star in 1875, 1880, 1883.
4) J. GLASSCOCK #2 in 1904. The SS of the 1880's. Made enemies by jumping to the wrong league (UA in 1884 but not PL in 1890); this might have cost him in the early HOF VC.
Prime 1881-92. Best player candidate in 1886 by WARP. First team MLB All-Star (SS) in 1882 and 1889; WARP adds 1881, 1883, 1885, 1886. Also a star in 1887, 1890, 1892. Honorable mention in 1884 and 1993.
Now we get down to the marginal candidates whose ranking is very dependent on what is emphasized by the contents of the ranking system. I don't consider them marginal but I know many others do.
5) B. CARUTHERS #1 in 1930. One of the more unique players in MLB history, an All-Star pitcher that could hit like a corner OF. He was Ruth before the Babe's conversion to OF.
Prime 1885-90. Best player in 1886 (WARP) or 1887 (WS), candidate in 1887 (WARP) and 1886, 1888, 1889 (WS). First team MLB All-Star (SP) in 1886, 1887, 1889; WS adds 1888. Also a star in 1885 and 1890.
6) W. FERRELL #2 in 1964. For many here, he either doesn't get enough credit for his hitting or gets too much demerit for the comeback attempts.
Prime 1929-34. Best player candidate in 1932 by WS. First team All-Star (SP) in 1929, 1930, 1931, 1933, 1934; WS adds 1932.
7) J. GORDON #2 in 1976. Moves up here with WWII Credit.
Prime 1939-48. First team MLB All-Star (2B) in 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943; WS adds 1947. Also a star in 1948. Honorable mention in 1938.
8) H. GROH #7 in 1938. My revised system (circa 1960) with its increased emphasis on prime and positional bonuses likes Groh and Hack more than my older system did.
Prime 1915-20. First team MLB All-Star (3B) in 1915, 1917, 1918, 1920, 1924; WARP adds 1916; WS adds 1919. Honorable mention in 1913 (2B).
9) S. HACK #13 in 1958. Groh-Lite, though Win SHares likes him better than Groh.
Prime 1935-42. Best player candidate by WS in 1938 and 1945. First team MLB All-Star (3B) in 1942 and 1945; WARP adds 1940; WS adds 1935, 1937, 1941. Also a star in 1938 and 1939. Honorable mention in 1943.
10) J. SHECKARD #2 in 1930. Long prime with a low peak and lots of fielding value. Not the standard recipe for a corner OF.
Prime 1899-11. First team MLB All-Star (LF) in 1903 and 1911 by WARP. Also a star in 1901, 1902, 1906, 1907, 1909, 1910, plus 1899 (RF). Honorable mention in 1905 and 1912.
11) J. START #4 in 1912. Could go anywhere on this ballot all dependent on what one believes about his 1860's career and peak.
Prime 186?-71,1877-82. Best player candidate in some years of the 1860's. First team MLB All-Star (1B) in 1878; WARP adds 1871 and 1879. Also a star in 1874, 1877, 1881, 1882.
12) G. GORE #6 in 1898. Short but high prime for a dynastic team.
Prime 1880-86. Best player candidate in 1880 by WARP. First team MLB All-Star (CF) in 1880 and 1885; WARP adds 1882, 1883; WS adds 1886. Also a star in 1881, 1884. Honorable mention in 1889.
13) C. BENNETT #1 in 1921. Short but outstanding prime and peak at Catcher. Long career for the position and era.
Prime 1881-85. First team MLB All-Star (Ca) in 1881, 1882, 1883, 1885.
The following guys are near the margins of my PHOM
14) C. CHILDS #6 in 1988. The 2B-man of the 1890's.
Prime 1890-97. Best player candidate in 1892 by WARP. First team MLB All-Star (2B) in 1890, 1892, 1896; WARP adds 1897; WS adds 1893, 1894, 1895. Also a star in 1891. Honorable mention in 1898.
15) H. RICHARDSON #4 in 1905. Close call between him and Childs.
Prime 1881-89. Best player candidate by WARP in 1881 and 1886. First team MLB All-Star (LF) in 1886; WARP adds 1881 (CF). Also a star in 1882, 1883, 1884, 1885, 1889 at 2B, and 1887 in LF. Honorable mention in 1879 (3B) and 1891 (LF).
16) E. SUTTON #3 in 1908. Strange career arc with a gaping hole where the peak should be, like Dwight Evans but even more so. Fill it in with play like before and after and he's a major star.
Prime 1871-77, 1883-85. First team MLB All-Star (3B) in 1883; WS adds 1882; WARP adds 1875 (no WS) and 1883. Also a star in 1871, 1873, 1877. Honorable mention in 1874 and 1881.
17) S. MAGEE #12 in 1926. Long career but not enough star power for my taste.
Prime 1905-10,1914-15. First team MLB All-Star (LF) in 1910 by WARP. Also a star in 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1914, plus 1915 (CF) and 1918 (1B).
Below here are the guys that are not in my PHOM.
18) C. JONES off-ballot in 2003. I give some (but not full) credit for the suspension and blacklisting.
Prime 1877-79. First team MLB All-Star (LF) in 1879; WARP adds 1877 and 1885. Also a star in 1878. Honorable mention in 1884 (LF) and 1883 (CF).
19) H. STOVEY #14 in 1916. The only thing that distinguishes him from many other non-HOMer "bats" is playing in the AA.
Prime 1883-91. First team MLB All-Star (LF) in 1888; WARP adds 1889 and 1891 (RF). Also a star in 1883 and 1885 (1B). Honorable mention in 1882 (1B), 1886 (CF), 1890 (RF).
20) C. KELLER off-ballot in 1996. Not enough there even with WWII credit.
Prime 1940-46. First team MLB All-Star (RF) in 1940, (LF) in 1943. Also a star in LF in 1940, 1941, 1946. Honorable mention in 1939 (RF).
21) P. BROWNING off-ballot in 2005. Not enough there. Extremely erratic career for a position player; reminds me of a pitcher such as Saberhagen, but the standards are different for OF/1B. I don't hold that against him but he needs more good seasons.
Prime 1882-87. First team MLB All-Star (CF) in 1887; WS adds 1882 (2B) and 1883 (LF); WARP adds 1890 (LF). Also a star in 1885 (CF).
Much of the new material for the pre-1893 players I have already posted, but here’s a breakdown of the numbers I am listing with the players.
For the pre-1893 players, I have ranked them primarily on a composite score based ultimately on RCAP and FRAA. I have listed their adj. RAA total, RAR, peak rates, and composite scores.
For the post-1893 players, I have ranked them primarily based on composite scores derived from Dan R’s WAR (50%), WARP1 (25%), and Win Shares (25%). These are adjusted to be consistent across periods. The HoM in-out line is at about 240. Pitchers’ numbers are derived somewhat differently, but scaled to be approximately equivalent.
I have integrated the two groups by considering players’ rank versus their contemporaries.
Rankings
Category I. Astonishing Oversights
1) Bill Dahlen Post-1893 Composite = 366. Easy #1 here. Best player elected to the HoM not in the Hall of Fame, including Pete Rose, though Rose is a close second.
2) Deacon White. RAA = 742. RAR = 1122. Peak rate, 89.41 raa/162 g. Composite = 2311. One of the very best players of the 1870s, combining excellent offense with outstanding defense at the most important defensive position of the era. He was much less valuable in the 1880s, but he was still a good player. He is an easy #2 here, topping all pre-1893 players under consideration in RAA, RAR, and peak rate.
Category II. Very Obviously Deserving
3) Paul Hines. RAA = 567. RAR = 950. Peak rate = 78.46/162. Composite = 1911. Long career and great peak. Hines is closer to those behind him than to those ahead of him in the rankings. Still, he had an excellent peak and a long, valuable career.
4) Jack Glasscock RAA = 696. RAR = 998. Peak rate = 75.71/162 games. Composite = 2072. Better than I realized. Above average offensively for his position, and a top-notch defender (352 adj. FRAA, according to WARP1). I rank him behind Hines because I doubt that his fielding was quite as good as WARP makes it out to be. Win shares is less enthusiastic, though it still sees him as an A defender. He’s in the top half of the HoM from the 1880s. The rest of the players on this ballot, with the exception of Joe Start for the 1860s, all rank in the bottom third of the HoM for their decade.
Category III. Solidly Qualified. Not top half of their HoM-decade cohort, but not near the in-out line, either.
5) George Gore RAA = 605. RAR = 851. Peak rate = 86.09/162 games. Composite = 1886. Going from Glasscock to Gore, we drop from the bottom of the top third of HoMers from the 1880s to the top of what should be the bottom third. Gore is about like Paul Hines without the career length, though his peak is even a bit better.
6) Joe Gordon Post-1893 Composite = 267. The top post-1900 player in this group. During his peak he was excellent on both offense and defense. During his decline his fielding slipped first, though I think WARP1 exaggerates his decline. Needs and deserves war credit.
7) Heinie Groh Post-1893 Composite = 266. Slightly behind Gordon by composite score. Excellent hitter for a few years; strong defender throughout a fairly short career.
8) Joe Start. RAA = 520. RAR = 1150. Peak rate = 40.67/162. Composite = 1778. Start is hard to place when we have so little ability to measure value in the 1860s. But surely his peak is hidden there, and he had a great career. My numerical measures set his 1862-70 equal to his 1871-79, but I’m confident his peak was better than that, so I rank him a bit above the numbers.
Category IV. Lower-Tier but In. Within 3 of their HoM-decade cohort’s in-out line.
9) Charlie Keller Post-1893 Composite = 261. Short career, but great peak. Never had a bad season while he was a full-time player.
10) Sherry Magee Post-1893 Composite = 260. Overlooked great hitter. A longer career than Keller, but indifferent defense keeps his peak from being as impressive.
11) Cupid Childs. Post-1893 Composite = 258. Faced much tougher competition than Richardson. Not as strong on defense, but a better hitter for his position.
12) Hardy Richardson. RAA = 567. RAR = 819. Peak rate = 79.02/162. Composite = 1781. Well-rounded and versatile player. Not far behind George Gore, really, but the players are bunched together pretty closely in the HoM’s lower tier.
13) Charlie Bennett. RAA = 583. RAR = 798. Peak rate = 79.20/162. Composite = 1777. A hair behind Richardson. A great peak in the early 1880s and a great defensive career is enough to earn Bennett’s HoM spot.
14) Jimmy Sheckard Post-1893 Composite = 282. By the numbers, he should rank higher, but this is one case where WAR’s inclusion of WS fielding numbers throws off its results. Sheckard is a deserving HoMer, but he is near the bottom of the 19-aughts cohort. Not much distance between him and Magee, really, but, as I noted in the Richardson comment, the lower tier players are closely bunched together.
15) Ezra Sutton. RAA = 415. RAR = 807. Peak rate =
44.62/162. Composite = 1445. Underrated by these numbers because WARP1 thinks his fielding was poor. I think it’s undervaluing his error rates. If he was a moderately above average fielder rather than a moderately below average one at third base, which was a fielding first position in his day, he’d rank about here.
16) Wes Ferrell. Post-1893 Composite = 261. A lot of voters seem to be underestimating the value of an above-average pitcher carrying a 100 OPS+ during the 1930s. Ferrell was over 100 RCAP for his position: that’s a huge boost to his value. Ranks ahead of Caruthers because his prime was longer and his durability as a pitcher was greater during that prime.
17) Stan Hack. Post-1893 Composite = 246. Just a little above the borderline. RCAP loves him, making him appear a better hitter for his position than Cupid Childs was for his, but that’s without war-time discounts. He’s a bit behind the players above, but just across the in-out line.
18) Bob Caruthers. RAA = 436. RAR = 682. Peak rate = 77.69/475 ip. Composite = 1506. Like Hack, a little bit behind his contemporaries Bennett and Richardson, but just across the in-out line. His overall value above average is similar to Jones and Browning below, but his five-year peak was stronger than theirs, which puts him at the top of the borderline group. His multipositionality gave him value that is not readily captured by measures designed with fixed seasonal positions in mind. I am now comfortable with him as a HoMer, which I have never been before, but he is very near the bottom of what I think would be my pHoM.
Category V. Questionable HoM selections. Below the in-out line for their decade as I have established it.
19) Charley Jones. RAA = 453. RAR = 697. Peak rate = 55.06/162. Composite = 1397. Jones’ best seasons put him in the company of Richardson and Gore, but he didn’t sustain that level of play over several consecutive seasons, as they and Bob Caruthers did, which sets him behind them. Although I give blacklist credit, it’s possible that the blacklist has pushed him out of my pHoM: if he had a couple of true peak seasons here, that might have pushed him over the top.
20) Pete Browning. RAA = 441. RAR = 639. Peak rate = 58.19/162. Composite = 1371. As with Jones, he falls just short. His bat would have been good enough to elect him, if he had either been even average defensively or durable. But his poor defense and short career leave him a little short.
21) Harry Stovey. RAA = 258. RAR = 518. Peak rate = 45.64/162. Composite = 1004. Looking at Stovey in measures derived from RCAP puts him in a really bad light. By Sinins’ unadjusted RCAA, he is about 100 runs behind Browning, which he would make up in superior fielding value, durability, and longevity, and base-running bonuses. But Browning is 300 runs ahead by season-adjusted RCAP, and that’s just too much for Stovey to make up. I think that if all of the little things that knock Stovey down somewhat unfairly were adjusted for, he would be pretty close to Jones and Browning in value, but I can’t see putting him ahead of either of them at the moment, and all three look to me like players who were elected because the HoM electorate is a little too enamored of batting value without taking account of position or defensive value. I am very fond of Harry Stovey: I supported his candidacy as I never supported the candidacies of Browning or Caruthers or Jones. But unless there are truly huge amounts of hidden baserunning value here, his election, along with those of Jones and Browning, looks to me now like a mistake.
[1906] This is very difficult, because so much depends on things unseen. We don't see what might well be the peaks of Start, Pike, and Meyerle. We can't see very well just what early pitchers did, becuase it's so alien from the game we watch. And defense - defense lies at the heart of many of our arguments, about McPhee, Bennett, Sutton, Williamson. Earlier this year on Primer there was the "Derek Jeter" series of articles about the difficulties of measuring defense with all of the observational tools we now have - and it's still not easy. We can make corrections for distortions present in our present stats because we watch the games ourselves and have strong mental images of the players. But none of us watched McPhee play, or Bennett. There are distortions out there that we don't even suspect.
1. Bill Dahlen [1915 - 1st on ballot] I had known for some time that various uebermetrics have an uncanny knack for throwing Davis and Dahlen into a near-tie. I thought that Davis was "really" better and if I were only to look at it properly, I would be obvious why. Well, I've looked, and it isn't obvious. Davis's 23 points of batting average, blunted by the offensive peripherals leaning the other way, a likely defensive advantage for Dahlen, Dahlen a little better before 1900, Davis a little better after, Dahlen with a little more hitters park advantage, Davis moving to the AL - it all seems to come out as a wash. Dahlen was a little more durable - he tended to play a few more games per season. I'll let that be the tie-breaker. I'll add that I clearly wasn't giving Davis "blacklist credit" for a year he missed - Davis is a much better case (and Rusie is a better case) for such credit than Jones.
2. Deacon White Elected before I started voting. To a certain extent, this is a nod to authority. Those who were in the electorate back then who are solidly behind him, for what seems to be good reason.
3. Jack Glasscock [1904 - 1st on ballot] Jack Glasscock. As worthy as Larkin or Trammell - which is an indication that there's no one at the level above that.
4. Paul Hines Another nod to those who started the project.
5. Stan Hack [1953 - 5th on ballot behind Greenberg, Dickey, Wells, and Beckwith] Depending on what you consider Beckwith to be, the second or third best-hitting 3B of the last 60+ years. OBP matters. Offense-only, he's below Sisler for peak but ahead career in my system. In my offensive system, more peak and less career when compared to Evans, more career and less peak when compared to Santo. Worthy of being compared to those two.
6. Ezra Sutton [1905 - 2nd on ballot behind Stovey] I trust the evidence of the late peak more than the early peak. He was a late bloomer, at his best in his 30's. Add in my newfound belief that he wasn't that bad in 1878.
7. George Gore The third "before my time" candidate.
8. Joe Start [1906 - 7th on ballot] The thing unseen about him: did he have a peak?
9. Sherry Magee [1925 - 2nd on ballot behind Grant Johnson, with Sheckard 3rd] The voters have him all over their ballots, including off. He does have 350 WS - that's hard to ignore. As a hitter, I have his value very close to Clarke. Clarke has a little bit more career above average, but Magee made far more of his biggest years, especially 1907 and 1910, than Clarke (1897, 1902). The comparison to Flick goes the other way - I like Flick's big years a little more than Magee's, but Magee had more career above average. I got into an exchange with TomH comparing Magee to Thompson. I'm standing pat for now - I see Magee as a substantially bigger hitter, in context. (The exchange in question with TomH seems to have been butchered in the site conversion - it may be in the 1925 discussion thread, but if so, it's unintelligible.)
10. Charlie Bennett [1906 - 8th on ballot behind Stovey, Sutton, Galvin, McPhee, Browning, Spalding, and Start]The most durable of catchers, whatever that means. And again: [1916 - 2nd on ballot behind Stovey] And Bennett makes my personal HoM this year. On both Stovey and Bennett, I'm in a "Why should I change my mind now?" mood.
11. Jimmy Sheckard [1919 - 4th on ballot behind Kelley, Keeler, and Bennett] Put a lot of runs on the board in a low-offense era, which is plenty valuable. Behind Kelley and Keeler, ahead of Duffy/Ryan/Van H - that seems about right. And again: [1930 - 1st on ballot] My latest methods show his offense as nearly identical to Val Haltren (and also Sisler, but that's a different story.) Why stay with Sheckard over the 90's outfielders? One issue is the sense that the "everyone sacrifices himself for the good of the team" ideology of his times may have done him more than his share of damage to his personal stats.
12. Harry Stovey [1906 - 1st on ballot] The "thing unseen" here is baserunning - but not that unseen. The man scored runs - he was as good at that as anyone. And again: [1905 - 2nd on ballot behind Radbourn] He scored runs, and although his best years were AA, it wasn't all AA. 1882 is a gem of a season. And again: [1910] The best power-speed combination of his time. Walks were scarce, errors were common, baserunning was largely undocumented - and Harry Stovey scored runs. I am backing off on him a little from my original ballots - I'm moving Sutton, Start, and Bennett ahead of him. But I'm still convinced that baserunning made a much, much larger impact in his day than in later baseball, and that he was uniquely good at it.
13. Hardy Richardson [1905 - 6th on ballot] Medium-long career, offense and defense both.
14. Heinie Groh [1938 - 4th on ballot, behind Doyle, Coveleski, and Van Haltren] I've never been particularly enthusiastic about him, but he was an MVP candidate more than once. I have no objection to his election.
15. Cupid Childs [1939 - 7th on ballot, his personal high point with me, behinde Rixey and Beckley, ahead of Carey and Duffy] Like a lot of people, his career is too short. Not the offensive peak of Doyle, but it is a real peak.
16. Wes Ferrell [1944 - 11th on ballot, just behind Beckley and just ahead of Childs] Nice peak, but flamed out early. Stopped hitting, so he didn't have a Joe Wood career path. Improved and amended to [1945 - 7th on ballot, ahead of Beckley] Nice early peak, flamed out young as pitcher, stopped hitting as well. The fact that he pitched in the highest average run environment of any ballot-worthy 20th century pitcher puts his 2600 IP in perspective, since high-scoring innings are more stressful. On the basis of his pitching statistics alone he wouldn't even be a candidate. By raw RA+ I have him as 167-124, which is about equal Hershiser or to the starter-only version of Eckersley. Include the hitting, and I get 177-115, which is Saberhagen/Cone territory, and with a bigger peak.
17. Joe Gordon [1956 - listed 19th, just behind Childs] Not much to choose from between him and Herman.
18. Pete Browning [1905 - 7th on ballot, just behind Richardson and ahead of Spalding and Start] I decided it doesn't make much sense to push Stovey and pretend Browning doesn't exist. I don't put much stock in his '82-'83 seasons, but he was a terrific (high-average) hitter. And later: [1916 - 14th on ballot] Another batting average first guy. And later: [1919 - listed 20th] Hurt by my rehabilitation of Chance, Grant, Jennings, and Griffith. In 1930 I listed him 25th, with Mike Tiernan 24th. By then, he was behind Caruthers. Did not score runs like Stovey did.
19. Bob Caruthers [1916 - listed as "waiting room"] I have trouble seeing the enthusiasm for him. That is an awfully short career. In fact, it's a very good match for the (documented) career of Al Spalding. We did elect Spalding, although I had some trouble seeing him, too. Among 1880's pitchers, I always had him behind Jim McCormick. And while he's the best-hitting pitcher of his times he's hardly the only one who could hit - look at Mullane and Whitney, for instance.
20. Charlie Keller Career too short for a "bat"; never appeared on my ballot.
21. Charley Jones I never bought the "blacklist credit" idea. Never on my ballot.
69. Devin McCullen in Flame Broiled...TO HELL! Posted: June 22, 2003 at 09:33 PM (#514315)
I'm feeling a little overlooked here - I'm late every week too!
1. Cap Anson (NA) He'd either be 1st or off the ballot. I may bring some rotten fruit to the induction ceremony, though.
70. John (You Can Call Me Grandma) Murphy Posted: June 22, 2003 at 10:03 PM (#514316)
I'm feeling a little overlooked here - I'm late every week too!
I didn't mean to "offend" you, Devin. I could have sworn that you had posted your ballot already. Besides, my boy Pearce needs your help!
So this has been going on 5 years of a)me being late, and b)John not particularly realizing I'm being late.
I think my favorite old comment was in 1899 when I had Charlie Bennett 15th, said I didn't really get the love and that he probably wouldn't be on my ballot much longer. He hit #1 by 1913.
Rank, player, numerical rating, all-time positional rank among MLers, most similar player(s) in value: Most similar players in value calculated with a similarity-score method comparing career length, performance rates, peak-ness versus career-ness, partition of value into seasons, and closeness of position on the defensive spectrum. Similarity score does not take into account, for example, balance of value between offense and defense, so players may be listed as similar who are not subjectively similar.
1. Deacon White +5.26 C (16) Carew(?!), N. Fox, W. Randolph.
2. Joe Gordon +5.26 2B (14) F. Baker.
3. Paul Hines +5.25 CF (12) Clemente
4. Charlie Keller +5.24 LF (14) Greenberg
5. Stan Hack +5.23 3B (7) Doerr, Santo, Ventura, Kent, Traynor, Harrah, J. Sewell.
6. Bill Dahlen +5.23 SS (16) Frisch, Randolph.
7. Joe Start +5.20 1B (24) (Keeler).
8. George Gore +5.18 CF (20) J. Kelley.
9. Ezra Sutton +5.18 3B (15) (Nettles).
10. Sherry Magee +5.16 LF (27) P. O'Neill, B. Powell, Olerud, K. Lofton.
11. Heinie Groh +5.15 3B (22) J. Collins, Bando.
12. Jack Glasscock +5.15 SS (29) Buddy Myer.
13. Cupid Childs +5.15 2B (24) (J. Collins).
14. Hardy Richardson +5.14 2B (29) Lazerri, J. Collins.
15. Charlie Bennett +5.13 C (35) (Steinbach).
16. Jimmy Sheckard +5.13 LF (33) Mo. Alou, Van Haltren.
17. Wes Ferrell +5.12 P (88) D. Vance, J. Antonelli.
18. Harry Stovey +5.12 1B (37) Tom York, Gene Woodling.
19. Bob Caruthers +5.11 P (98) (none).
20. Charlie Jones +5.11 LF (40) Jeff Heath.
21. Pete Browning +5.08 CF (47) (none; some similarities to Jack Fournier, many parallels to Danny Tartabull.)
As to my ranking of Gordon, this is what my system produces, and I don't think there are any errors in my addition and multiplication. Really, with Gordon, Groh, Keller, Magee, Ferrell, and Childs, there's very little to choose between them: a 3% difference separates the top of this group from the bottom. Gordon is a few points ahead of the others, he is farthest from the in-out line in his decade than any of the others (being 5 places above it), and with no obvious reason to view his score as an overrating, I followed the results of the system. A slightly different weighting of factors could readily invert this order.
Since Richardson and Bennett and Start and Sutton and Sheckard are in about this same place also, as far as I can tell, it's a situation with 11 players within 3-5% of one another. Ordinal ranking exaggerates the differences between them, and many orderings within this group are plausible.
One might ask why I have put Joe Start or Jimmy Sheckard or Ezra Sutton as low as I have: Gordon places high simply because that's where his numbers put him, and in his case, unlike a few others, I see no reason not to accept the numbers. I would say he probably has the strongest prime out of this whole group, and that is what my system probably prefers about him.
(1) Dahlen--Not sure, but I think he beats out Blyleven, Raines, Grich, Santon, and Home Run Johnson for the title "Best Player Not in the HoF (Non-Gambler Division)"
(2) White--Great career value plus a greta peak that is wildly obscured by short seasons, lack of attention to 1870s, and failure to understand how much he caught.
(3) Hines--In 1898, I had him a smidge ahead of White. On further review, he is probably a smidge behind.
Signficant Oversights--All-Time 110-160
(4) Glasscock--The perspective of the entire project suggests that we didn't relize quite how good he was.
(5) Sutton--I've always been really confused about him. He clearly had a great peak and a long, productive career. His bulk seasons weren't special and that should be held against him, but his combination of peak and career rank him awfully high on the All-Time 3B lists.
(6) Groh--Very good hitter, great fielder, awesome peak, history just lost him.
(7) Caruthers--Obviously not as good as Babe Ruth; prbably not as good as Joe Rogan; but still one of only three players who could hit and pitch at an All-Star level.
(8) Keller--With appropriate credit for war and MiL, his 7-year prime is in the top 100 of All-Time.
Comfortably HoM--All-Time 160-210
(9) Gordon--Key to evaluating him is whether his defense really deteriorated after his trade as WARP suggests. If it did, this ranking is too high given the shortness of his career. If it didn't deteriorate at all, he belongs in the group above.
(10) Richardson--The next three 19th century guys are awfully close (Sutton would be in this group excpet he ranks 10 spots higher at his position than they do at theirs).
(11) Gore
(12) Bennett
(13) Magee--dops 7 spots from the prelim; on further review, you guys were right and I was wrong; his bat was outstanding but not league-leading and his fielding was poor; somewhere around 200 all-time
(14) Sheckard--Another big peak, long career, many so-so seasons guy. My system may overrate them.
Towards the Bottom of HoM--All-Time 210-230
(15) Ferrell--very short career but did just enough in that time
(16) Hack--WS sees him as slightly better than Groh, but I just don't see it; I think his peak is substantially less impressive, the fielding gap is immense, the position was harder when Groh played, and Groh was even slightly better with the bat in their meaningful seasons
(17) Childs--Looks like Gordon or Doerr until you adjust for shift in defensive spectrum.
(18) Stovey--very similar to Browning or Jones only where they had gaps, injuries, temper tanturms, etc., he just kept chugging along; his consistency and skills at the small things place him just over the in/out line
Right on the Bubble--PHoM, but not All-Time Top 230
(19) Start--His performances in the NA and NL don't match up with the performances of elite 1B at those ages. Makes my PHoM enitrley as a career candidate.
(20) Jones--Even if you give him blacklist credit, once you discount for the early AA and his declining defense, his career largely turns on some extraordinary numbers in some very short late 1870s seasons; I think there is enough here to agree with his induction (and we deserve credit for identifying him0, but--like Start--I think we have gone overboard in praising and ranking him
Not PHOM
(21) Browning--A great hitter, but can't survive the triple wammy of (1) poor durability; (2) fielding ineptitude; and (3) AA deduction--every time I come up with a comprehensive system, he comes out about 300th.
For what it's worth, of the 13 ballots cast so far, EricC's is not close to the lowest consensus score. There two clearly lower and two others about the same. If you want to comment on placements, how about karlmagnus with Dahlen #10, Caruthers #1, and Jones and Browning in the upper third?
karlmagnus is fascinating in a different way. Questioning him isn't potentially fruitful to the same degree --at least not at this stage, partly because he has been outspoken for a century.
EricC fascinates with a mathematical system. If I understand correctly every player's score is the maximum of some underlying measure over every possible time period. (Consecutive? That is not in my understanding at all.) If so, EricC, one thing you might do is include in each comment the player's most valuable timespan --over which he ends up measured directly.
One other note in Gordon's favor, however, is that DRA sees him as a *superlative* defensive 2B, top 10 all-time, which the other uberstats definitely do not agree with.
As for karlmagnus, he is *always* low consensus, and he refuses to differentiate good fielders from bad ones as long as they play the same position. Since so much of Dahlen's value rests in the fact that he not only played shortstop but played it spectacularly well--a contribution which karlmagnus does not acknowledge--I'm half-surprised Dahlen made his ballot at all. (Yes, I know it's obligatory).
I would think Dahlen is getting hosed by EricC's timeline, except that he has White #1. Maybe White is getting some special old-time catcher bonus to compensate? EriC, please clear up the mystery!
I'm afraid I myself am going to have to sit this ballot out, as I simply don't have enough confidence in my ability to evaluate pre-1893 players to arrive at a satisfactory ranking. I wish we had divided this group into pre- and post- pitchers' mound eras.
Groh: 141.45
Magee: 133.95
Gordon: 132.05
Keller: 131
As I use your system, it does not meaningfully distinguish Magee or Keller from Gordon. Groh does do substantially better, using your system only. I do not have a theory as to why we derive such different results. Perhaps it is a difference between the first and second version results? Or perhaps a different valuation of peak?
The ranking of Childs (and of Dahlen as well), although scaled to the post-1893 scores, is not actually based on WAR, since it doesn't cover all of Dahlen's and Child's careers. It is based on WS and WARP, scaled down, and cross-checked by the RCAP + FRAA method that I developed to look at pre-1893 players. That method, which compares Childs only to his contemporaries, places him a little farther above my in-out line than my old WARP/WS assessment did. Since the RCAP+FRAA method uses a higher replacement level, I am inclined to trust it more, so I bumped Childs up over my prelim.
But to me the next group after the big four, then, is the MVP candidates: Caruthers, Groh, Gordon and Start.
After that it's more of a mish-mash. A prime/career guy (Sutton) is next, then an obvious peaker (Keller) and so on. But to me, Caruthers, Groh, Gordon and Start stood out in their day to a degree that Magee (for sure) and Childs and even Keller did not.
Do you mean MVP candidate for a few years running? Perhaps that distinguishes Caruthers, Groh and Start, at least, from Childs and Magee. (--and Richardson, Jones, Sheckard, Hack. It leaves me puzzled about Browning, Stovey [candidates in lesser league?] and about the two Newark Yankees.)
Most of these players did win a win shares MVP (meaning "position player" or non-pitcher). Magee lead in 1910 with 36 win shares (margin five over Solly Hofman's career year). He is second in 1907 with 38 win shares (margin six behind Honus Wagner's day at the office). But only one player in one season by one win share beat Honus Wagner for the win shares MVP in the 19-aughts.
Wagner NL rank by win shares 1900-1912: 1 2 1 1 1; 1 1 1 1 1; 3 2 1
Here is a list, if I clerk correctly
Best of the rest: NL 1900-1912 without Honus Wagner (season win shares leaders, non-pitchers)
1900 32 Flick
1901 38 Burkett (league leader; Wagner 37)
1902 31 Beaumont
1903 33 Sheckard
---- 10% increase to 154-game schedule
1904 29 Chance
1905 42 Seymour
1906 36 Devlin
1907 38 Magee
1908 32 Lobert and Tinker
1909 31 Clarke
1910 36 Magee (league leader; Hofman 31, Wagner 30)
1911 31 Schulte (league leader; Wagner 30)
1912 34 Zimmerman
Beaumont and Clarke were teammates on dominant champions.
Otherwise only Tinker, in a 1908 tie, played for the pennant winner.
1. Deacon White
2. Paul Hines
3. Bill Dahlen
4. Cupid Childs
Second Tier:
5. Joe Gordon
6. Joe Glasscock
7. Stan Hack
8. Charley Jones
Best of the Rest:
9. Pete Browning
10. Harry Stovey
11. Ezra Sutton
12. Charlie Keller
2. Deacon White
Both top 10 at their positions.
3. Paul Hines - Great hitter with a long career.
4. Jack Glasscock - Great defensive shortstop.
5. George Gore - A CF who could hit.
6. Jimmy Sheckard - Pretty long career, good hitter
7. Bob Caruthers - Packed a lot into a short career.
8. Stan Hack
9. Sherry MaGee - Long career, excellent hitter
10. Heinie Groh - He and Hack are both top 15 3B.
11. Hardy Richardson - Excellent hitter for a 2B.
12. Harry Stovey - Great peak.
13. Wes Ferrell - Nice hitting pitcher.
14. Charlie Bennett - Second best 19th century catcher.
15. Joe Start - Never really looked at him before this week. Decent career after age 28. If he really was the best player before that, this seems like a fair place to put him.
16. Ezra Sutton - Long career, good defender.
Here's the short career/high peak part of the ballot:
17. Pete Browning
18. Joe Gordon
19. Cupid Childs
20. Charlie Keller
21. Charley Jones
13. Bob Caruthers
14. Sherry Magee
15. George Gore
16. Wes Ferrell
17. Jimmy Sheckard
18. Heinie Groh
19. Joe Start
20. Hardy Richardson
21. Charlie Bennett
I don't think time will permit me to do any thoughful comments. Gordon is probably the most non-consensus ranking. I think he is well ahead of nearly all 2B of his era. At least all twenty players got ranked. For the most part, the high peak short career guys were in the mid-range for me.
:-)
Childs is way behind, on that I agree.
1) Deacon White - Seasons at catcher and gloveless 1B put hima ahead of Dahlen for me.
2) Bill Dahlen - Defensive wizard.
3) Paul Hines - Fantastic centerfielder. All around player.
4) George Gore - A lesser version of Hines. Still, that makes him fourth.
5) Jack Glasscock - My old comment revived once more: The total package at shortstop.
6) Joe Start - With pre-71 credit.
7) Joe Gordon - With war credit.
8) Hardy Richardson - Loses out to Gordon because of the defensive spectrum shift.
9) Charlie Bennett - I have always been more bullish on Bennett than most. Fantastic defense and offense in very harsh conditions for his position.
10) Bob Caruthers - The ultimate combo man.
11) Ezra Sutton - When the project started, I wasn't too crazy about him but a better understanding of career length during his era and the defewnsuive spectrum quickly made me see what others touted.
12) Cupid Childs
13) Stan Hack
14) Heinie Groh
These guys I couldn't really separate. Childs edges Hack for doing during the one league era. I find Hack to be more dominant than Groh.
At this point, it's basically the lf's.
15) Harry Stovey - Yes, I read Chris Cobb's wonderful study. No, it didn't affect my placement of Stovey. I think there are some factors that work against Stovey that mnake him worse. Still he's only 15th.
16) Pete Browning - Always been one of Browning big booster sin later years. However, when ranked against his closer contemporaries, he was always on the lower parts of my ballot. Thata analysis of him still holds true.
17) Charley Jones - Blacklist and early play credit included.
18) Charlie Keller - Some war credit included. Injuries do him in.
The last three represent the ones I really never had much entusiasm for.
19) Sherry Magee
20) Wes Ferrell
21) Jimmy Sheckard