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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Wednesday, February 03, 2010
Relax Rivington Bisland Fan Club members…passed over again.
Anyway, I asked myself the question “who was the greatest Brown?” I know the knee-jerk response is to say “Gorgeous George Sisler, stupid”. He’s the only Brown to get elected by BBWAA, he hit over .400 twice, posted a lifetime .340 batting average and hit over .300 over six seasons in which he had such severe sinusitis that at times he suffered from double vision. While Sisler was a hit machine, he has just a career OPS+ is just 124, tied for 245th career all-time. He gets bashed a bit in the saber crowd for not drawing walks, hitting for power all at the wrong end of the defensive spectrum.
On the flip side, you have Bobby Wallace, one of the finest defensive shortstops of his era. Total Zone has him worth 9.5 runs above average per season (700 PA). While his offensive numbers are less than stellar (career OPS+ of 102), he did post some solid seasons in a less than hitter friendly era. We’ll take a closer look at both players at some point as I add more players in my revolutionary and sometimes controversial Hall of Excellentitude, but in the meantime I just wanted to throw some numbers out for your consideration before you say with certainty that Sisler was the King of the Browns.
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If one player combined Clift's 20s and Williams's 30s, he'd be a Hall of Famer. But Clift disappeared from view after turning 30, the age when Williams was just getting started in the majors.
them newfangled stats LOVE Williams
he has the highest OPS+ for any Brown with > 3000 PAs
His '22 season is crushing in my all time strat league
Was he in the PCL or other high minors? Those teams had no reason to necessarily sell their best players to MLB if they were helping sell tickets. That's what happened with Grove.
That was my first thought, but Williams was *in* the majors from 25 onward...he just didn't play much. Wondering if it's more an Edgar Martinez situation than a Grove situation.
Well, looking at it more closely--243 PAs with the Reds at 25, but only 29 at age 26, then didn't play in the majors at all at 27 and had only 2 PAs the following year before putting up a great half-season with the Browns at 29. Maybe some injuries?
I'm guessing that BB-Ref's minor-league data probably has some gaps back then, but based on what they do have, it looks like Williams was just a late bloomer. They don't show anything before he was 23 and it shows him playing D-level minor-league ball at ages 23-24. He did spend some time in the PCL, but it looks like just the end of 1916 and then all of 1917 (at ages 26-27) before he made it big with the Browns, which seems like a reasonable amount of time to spend in the minors, even today. He is from Oregon, though, so maybe it was a case of being stuck on the West Coast that kept him from being discovered earlier.
Looking at B-Ref (BTW I'm shocked that there have only been two Ken/Kenny Williams in MLB history) it seems like his teams had pretty good OF's.
The 1918 Browns had OPS+'s of 119, 110, 96 in the OF with a 131 on the bench. The '16 Reds had 132, 103, 86 and the '15 Reds had 137, 111, 85. His OPS+ was 86 in 1915. Depending on D, he might not have been good enough to start.
1941--cuppa coffee, age 20
1942--age 21, 14-92-.294-.341-.433, 116 OPS+, 4th in MVP voting
1943--22-91-.289-.357-.482, 142, 9th in MVP voting
1944--20-109-.293-.365-.462, 128, led league in RBI, only Browns pennant ever, 3rd in MVP voting (#1 position player)
1945--24-89-.289-.352-.473, 132, led league in HR, 6th in MVP voting
1946--still just 25, 14-64-.307-.357-.460, 121
1947--15-83-.279-.359-.406, 110
1948--moves to Boston
Yeah, he faced weaker competition during the war, but why don't people say that about Lou Boudreau.
OPS+ Boudreau/Stephens--all seasons of 100 games
1940--113
1941--108
1942--118/116
1943--135/142
1944--146/128
1945--133/132
1946--118/121
1947--129/110
1948--166/112
1949--100/136
1950-----/110
1951-----/120
1954-----/104
Total 121/118
Boudreau was of course an A+ SS, Stephens a B.
MVP Voting Boudreau/Stephens (Top 10s)
1940--3rd
1941----
1942--10th/4th
1943--10th/9th
1944--6th/3rd
1945--8th/6th
1946--10th/--
1947--3rd/--
1948--1st/4th
1949----/7th
also, he wasn't a bad as a pitcher, either.
1. I'm not sure how well OPS+ applies to the deadball era.
2. 1918 was a war shortened year.
There was probably somebody who played a full season throwing left-handed back in the 19th century, but I don't know how to find such a thing. The last guy I remember doing it was Mike Squires, a glove-first first baseman for the White Sox in the late '70s / early '80s. According to BB-Ref, he played 14 games / 38 innings (including 2 starts) at 3B (mostly in 1984) and 2 games / 2 innings at C (in 1980).
I still have to ask--who's George Stone?
Explain please?
I've seen him on all-time Jewish all-star teams. The name Stone did not seem Jewish to me at the time, but I've since met a Rabbi Stone.
Steroids.
Steve Stone. And the name almost certainly is the Americanized version of Stein
Eddie Gaedel, duh. Assuming that by "greatest", you mean "most awesome".
Swinging back around to Sisler, he stole plenty of bases and was a very good first baseman at his peak.
I still have to ask--who's George Stone?
A guy who had one really, really good year in a short career. (Actually, he was pretty awesome in 1905 and '07 as well. For that matter, he hit .406 in the minors in 1904.) A modern analog would be... maybe Kevin Mitchell? Not really very similar in terms of skill set, but similar career shapes.
Hard to argue with a career OPS of 1.000.
And it's OBP-heavy!
Actually, his OPS is undefined.
Heh.
Actually, his OPS is undefined.
Wait--what? He's got a 1.000 OBP, .000 SLG. What am I missing?
i don't think anything about eddie gaedel is "heavy"
He's got an undefined slugging. 0 divided by 0 is undefined. It can be any number.
Thus endeth the math pedantry.
Physically, he was a little guy, like Billy Hamilton (well, a bit bigger than Billy, but the same basic model). Like Billy and many other players of this size (Joe Morgan is one) George ran like the wind. In 1909, he had a leg injury that took his speed, and then an arm injury which took the strength he needed to get away with his stance. The injuries robbed him of his ability to play at the major league level, and poof, he was gone with no decline phase.
In terms of Browns' players, his peak can stand up to George Sisler's, which no other Brown can do. He didn't even last long enough to have a real "prime," and probably could not have beaten out Harlond Clift on that sort of time span anyway. As for career, he's not in the race, which is between Sisler, Wallace, Urban Shocker, and Clift, depending on how much importance you put on playing just for the Browns.
One last note: Ken Williams is badly overrated by his stats, I am sorry to say to his fans. The ballpark that the Browns played in during Williams' heyday was the same Sportsman's Park that the Cardinals were in until 1966. The park was sort of a mirror image of Fenway, with a very small right field territory, so small that they had to put a big old screen in front of the right field seats to keep the homers down. But Williams played before the screen went up, so his homer numbers are badly inflated. A mere ballpark adjustment for the park as a whole doesn't do the thing justice. It was MUCH easier to get a ball out over the right field fence in Sportsman's than almost anywhere else. Williams played just as Ruth discovered the homer uppercut, and was one of the first to discover its power as a weapon, but because it took a while for the whole league to figure it out, it wasn't obvious until he was done just how many homers were going to get hit if something wasn't done about right field. That being said, 1922 is still a great season for Ken, no matter how much of an adjustment you make. - Brock Hanke
My calculations for offensive value that I used for HoM purposes - this is essentially a context-adjusted RCAA from a particular book, in units of about a tenth of a win. This is the top three seasons, sorted best to worst:
Stone: 92, 54, 50
Sisler: 70, 68, 46
Williams: 54, 52, 43
Players with single seasons any better than Stone's 1906 on this scale are very, very rare and tend to have names like Cobb or Gehrig. In fact (offense only - Stone was a corner OF, not a SS), Wagner was only above that number once.
The fact that I instantly knew the answer to the question, "Who was George Stone?" can be entirely attributed to my experiences with the HoM.
In 1932, the year he hit 58 HR, Jimmie Foxx hit 5 doubles off that screen, which wasn't there in 1927 when Ruth hit 60.
Thanks! If you want to see this issue in a little more detail, including how Musial ended up playing so much first base, or if you want LOTS and LOTS of educational stuff in general, you should try the Hall of Merit "by Position" discussions on this here site. The HoM, having voted a bunch of players in, held a separate series of votes, by position, to rank the elected players within their positions. Go to BTF, find "Hall of Merit", click on it to find "Hall of Merit Ballot, Discussion, and Results Threads", and click on that to find "Hall of Merit by Position Discussion Threads", and finally click on that to find "Left Fielders." I have a comment on Musial, #90, and there are responses in later comments. You could, and should, try other threads, like "Right Fielders" or "Catchers" and then try the Ballot and Results Threads because we don't shut up just because we finished voting.
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