User Comments, Suggestions, or Complaints | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertising
Vivid Seats is a sports ticket broker, concert ticket broker and theater ticket broker offering the best baseball tickets like Yankees tickets, Cubs tickets, and Red Sox tickets, as well as Police reunion tour tickets and Jersey Boys tickets. |
We have baseball tickets, the NFL schedule, college football tickets and Cowboys tickets. We have NBA tickets like Celtics tickets and Lakers tickets. Plus, buy Giants tickets, Patriots tickets and Colts tickets. Also check out our MLB baseball schedule |
Concerts Theatre NFL Angels Dodgers MLB Celtics Theater NBA Tickets Venues NHL Lakers Tickets NFL Yankees NHL Phillies NBA Wicked Marlins MLB Concerts Cubs Mets Red Sox Wicked WWE Red Sox Mets Yankees Dodgers |
Page rendered in 0.4224 seconds
81 querie(s) executed


Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
Rk Name Team Place Points | AB H HR BA OPS SB| W-L IP ERA WHIP SO
1 Dick Allen CHW 21 321 | 506 156 37 0.308 1.023 19|
2 Joe Rudi OAK 1 164 | 593 181 19 0.305 0.831 3|
3 Sparky Lyle NYY 1 158 | 21 4 0 0.19 0.465 0| 5-Sep 108 1.92 1.05 75
4 Carlton Fisk BOS 0 96 | 457 134 22 0.293 0.908 5|
5 Bobby Murcer NYY 0 89 | 585 171 33 0.292 0.898 11|
6 Gaylord Perry CLE 0 88 | 110 17 1 0.155 0.397 0| 24-16 343 1.92 0.98 234
7 Wilbur Wood CHW 0 78 | 125 17 0 0.136 0.312 0| 24-17 377 2.51 1.06 193
8 Luis Tiant BOS 0 70 | 56 6 0 0.107 0.263 0| 15-6 179 1.91 1.08 123
=>9 Ed Brinkman DET 0 62 | 516 105 6 0.203 0.538 0|
10 Mickey Lolich DET 1 60 | 89 6 0 0.067 0.312 0| 22-14 327 2.5 1.09 250
11 Catfish Hunter OAK 0 57 | 105 23 0 0.219 0.434 0| 21-7 295 2.04 0.91 191
12 John Mayberry KCR 0 27 | 503 150 25 0.298 0.901 0|
13 Jim Palmer BAL 0 21 | 98 22 0 0.224 0.516 0| 21-10 274 2.07 1.05 184
14 Rod Carew MIN 0 16 | 535 170 0 0.318 0.748 12|
14 Bobby Grich BAL 0 16 | 460 128 12 0.278 0.773 13|
EDIT:Sorry about the formatting and thanks to BBRef.
Sometimes that'll do it.
EDIT: I know his brother was a catcher with the White Sox, but I think maybe another one of them was an umpire...
here
I'll bet Brinkman had a higher OPS+ than Lolich, Hunter, or Palmer. I never realized that Rudi ever finished 2nd in voting. I thought that he was underrated.
While Brinkman was no Belanger crabbing around SS (who was?)...I don't recall him not being "smooth".
From Zanger's '67 Book
...Brinkman has been turning fans' heads with his dazzling SS play...
At short, nobody makes the play in the hole any better than he does...
'68 ML Book.
But Ed's wide-range fielding and superb arm...
He's such a good fielder that the Nats are going to try and live with his light bat.
Must dig out Detroit era material now...
GGC, Brinkman's OPS barely surpassed Palmer's -- .538 to .516
I worked with someone from Michigan who recalled that after Detroit won the AL East in '72 by half a game over Boston (strike year, thus an uneven schedule), the Tigers were interviewed in the locker room and a delirious Ed Brinkman uttered one of the George Carlin seven on live TV. Can anyone confirm this?
Brinkman's BAs:
228,224,185, 229,188,187
then, with Teddy Ballgame as manager:
266, 262
then with Williams NOT as manager:
228, 203
coincidence?--probably; people sure talked about it at the time though
Two things I'll remember about Brinkman: he was a part of that monstrous McLain deal (which gave the Tigers a new left side of the infield, him and the original A-Rod) and he had an incredibly long neck. If you've ever seen Brinkman's 1972 Topps card, you'll know what I mean. He was the antithesis of Walt "No Neck" Williams.
Brinkman was the kind of guy who would have found it tough being an everyday shortstop in today's game, but he was a good fit for the sixties and seventies, when teams willingly gave up offense for defense at shortstop. He was terrific defensively, with good hands and a really strong arm.
Also, his brother is Chuck Brinkman, who was a backup catcher briefly for the White Sox in the early 70s. There's no relation to the umpire, Joe Brinkman.
To say the trade of Brinkman, Rodriguez, and Joe Coleman for one Denver McClain was unpopular in Washington is a vast understatement.
Joe Coleman was the piece that hurt.
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.
<< Back to main