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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Monday, February 18, 2008
Welch-aid alert! Welch-aid alert!...Head exploded at deli located near Reason Magazine offices. Juices flowing!
I’ve previously established that Lou Whitaker is no Joe Morgan (who in turn is no Willie Mays). But how does Sweet Lou stack up against the rest of the best second basemen of the past fifty years? I ran the numbers on eight other players who are either already in the Hall of Fame, rate highly in career OPS+, or rate highly in career fielding runs. Those players are Rod Carew, Bill Mazeroski, Willie Randolph, Roberto Alomar, Ryne Sandberg, Jeff Kent, Bobby Grich, and Craig Biggio. (I’m shocked at how few modern second basemen are in the Hall.)
...The best player left to talk about is Bobby Grich, who, to be honest, I hadn’t heard of until three weeks ago. Grich played for the Orioles and Angels, and made up for his mediocre career batting average (.266) with some power (591 XBHs in only 6890 career at-bats) and a lot of walks (1087). His career 125 OPS+ ranks eighth all time for second basemen with at least 3000 career plate appearances, ahead of everyone on this list except Joe Morgan. He could play defense, too, with 79 career runs prevented. While Grich didn’t have the longest career and missed parts of many seasons, he was an excellent player when in the lineup.
Repoz
Posted: February 18, 2008 at 04:05 AM | 40 comment(s)
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Pedroia!
Cano!
Pedroia!
Any questions?
WTF?!??! Were you born in a cave? This is why I advocate that all schools be required to have a copy of RBI Baseball.
The writer is obviously not as old as I am.
I remember when Grich came over to the halos I got to see him play quite a few times. A good patient hitter with gap power at the time and a good glove. His career at the Angels seemed erratic though....injuries I suppose.
If you are looking at adding more 2nd baseman to the HOF, he definitely needs to be in the discussion.
1. Grich
2. Santo
3. Dick Allen
4. Ted Simmons
5. Darrell Evans
6. Joe Torre
7. Minnie Minoso
8. Bill Freehan
9. Billy Pierce
10. Jimmy Wynn
11. Graig Nettles
12. Ken Boyer
We dealt with Whitaker in "Group 1". He's also easily Hall-qualified.
Come on, guys; he may have just learned who Grich is, but his analysis is far better than what you'd get from the Bill Conlins of the world -- who actually have heard of Grich. Mind you I don't really agree with this guy's rankings, but at least he's making a serious attempt.
Very good point.
We thought we was better qualified for the Hall of Fame than Ron Santo.
You sure am qualified to vote for the Hall of Fame, but I don't know about being in it.
Doerr > Grich > Knoop
I agree. That might be the greatest game ever made, even if all the players are white.
Is there any broad class of players more underrated in historical discussions than hitters with high secondary averages whose careers took place between 1963-86?
And yeah, "he could play defense." It's weird; in the Orioles phase of his career he was widely (and rightly) seen as by far the best defensive 2Bman in the game. But that reputation didn't make the trip out west, and by '79 he was more known for his offense, even though his D was still terrific.
Don't know that I'd rate him higher than Santo, though.
Last year we had a thread to figure out "Who's the best player we've never heard of?"
For me it was Chris Snyder. But now that I've heard of him, though, the new title-holder is someone else. Who? If I find out, it won't be him anymore.
Any of the Texas relievers would work. I had no clue who they were until I looked them up during the Tex trade.
It's the decline of SOM and the rise of fantasy baseball :) Kids today are much more likely to be talking about today's players because of it, rather than the geezers.
Tossing out some names:
Chris Coghlan
Deibinson Romero
Charlie Culberson
Nick Noonan
-- MWE
Seventeen-year career as a starter and reliever, 123 wins, had a complete-game win the World Series, won 19 games at age 24, 18 games at age 34.
Never recalled hearing about him or reading about him until a couple years ago.
Christ, my first thought was "Russ" ...
next he'll be telling us he never heard of Verle Tiefenthaler
For the record, I'm 27 and had heard the name Grich before, but thought he was a crappy Met from the 1960s. Evidently that's incorrect.
no, that was Chris Canzoneri
Or even, god help us, Ethan Blackaby.
Then again, he drove in the winning run in the 11th inning in game four in 1986, which to this day is the greatest moment in any sporting event I've ever attended in person.
But for about two years he was the greatest leadoff hitter in the history of the Chicago White Sox and by a comfortable margin. Finished 2nd in MVP voting in 1926 (tried to kill himself before the start of 1927).
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