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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Monday, July 07, 2008
We asked our staff who the greatest living hitter is. We received five articles, with three votes going to Barry Bonds and one each to Stan Musial and George Brett.
George Brett? Ok, carry on.
Jeff Parker: GEORGE BRETT
My extreme Royal bias probably is affecting me, but I think George Brett is the greatest living hitter. While his career line of .305/.369/.487 is less impressive due to the offensive explosion of the last ten years, he was one of the best in his era. He won the 1980 MVP and could have won in 1976 and 1979 – and he should have won in 1985. He was selected for 13 all-star games and started nine.
Brett was at his best in the post season, batting .337/.397/.627 with 10 home runs and 23 RBI’s in 43 games. In his two World Series appearances he hit .373/.439/.539 - he hit .375 against the Phillies in 1980 and .370 against the Cardinals in 1985. He was always able to elevate his game when the situation required. Now I know clutch hitting is supposed to be a myth, but anybody who watched him play knew him to be a clutch hitter. His post-season heroics aside, during the regular season for his career George hit .314/.390/.496 with runners on base.
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Once again, it appears to be a case of crediting a player (Pujols) with something he hasn't done yet. Not that there's anything particularly wrong with that in a trivial exercise like this. But bear in mind that Mac, in his best years, was better that what Albert has done so far. Comparing Mac's peak OPS+ to Albert's career so far (full seasons only):
Mac - 216 196 177 176 170 164 143 Mac also has 2/3 of a season (422 PA) at 200 and 1/2 a season (321 PA) at 202
AP - 187 178 172 168 157 157 151 Albert also has 1/2 a season, this season, at 189.
While AP is a good bet to continue his excellence, Mac has a significant advantage so far, an average of 11 OPS+ points per season for 7 1/2 seasons plus the 422 PA at 200 season.
It's kind of a cool list, so I'll show everybody over .275 in the lively ball era.
+-----------+-------------+---------+------+| namefirst | namelast | hitting | hits |
+-----------+-------------+---------+------+
| Rogers | Hornsby | 0.3207 | 2310 |
| George | Sisler | 0.3181 | 2033 |
| Lefty | O'Doul | 0.3139 | 1136 |
| Harry | Heilmann | 0.3131 | 2085 |
| Zack | Wheat | 0.3115 | 1337 |
| Tony | Gwynn | 0.3103 | 3141 |
| Ty | Cobb | 0.3099 | 1476 |
| Bill | Terry | 0.3088 | 2193 |
| Al | Simmons | 0.3086 | 2927 |
| Ichiro | Suzuki | 0.3084 | 1354 |
| Joe | Medwick | 0.3045 | 2471 |
| Heinie | Manush | 0.3024 | 2524 |
| Bob | Fothergill | 0.2990 | 1064 |
| Tris | Speaker | 0.2987 | 1496 |
| Kirby | Puckett | 0.2986 | 2304 |
| Edd | Roush | 0.2977 | 1581 |
| Riggs | Stephenson | 0.2975 | 1515 |
| Roberto | Clemente | 0.2967 | 3000 |
| Nomar | Garciaparra | 0.2964 | 1537 |
| Lloyd | Waner | 0.2963 | 2459 |
| George | Burns | 0.2957 | 1234 |
| Vladimir | Guerrero | 0.2954 | 1786 |
| Sam | Rice | 0.2948 | 2561 |
| Paul | Waner | 0.2939 | 3152 |
| Jack | Tobin | 0.2931 | 1255 |
| Babe | Herman | 0.2925 | 1818 |
| Baby Doll | Jacobson | 0.2925 | 1398 |
| Pie | Traynor | 0.2924 | 2416 |
| Rod | Carew | 0.2918 | 3053 |
| Albert | Pujols | 0.2910 | 1159 |
| Irish | Meusel | 0.2906 | 1230 |
| Lew | Fonseca | 0.2905 | 1075 |
| Joe | DiMaggio | 0.2904 | 2214 |
| Chuck | Klein | 0.2901 | 2076 |
| Freddy | Leach | 0.2890 | 1147 |
| Matty | Alou | 0.2887 | 1777 |
| Chick | Hafey | 0.2886 | 1466 |
| Ralph | Garr | 0.2884 | 1562 |
| Eddie | Collins | 0.2883 | 1334 |
| Stan | Musial | 0.2880 | 3630 |
| Earle | Combs | 0.2875 | 1866 |
| Frankie | Frisch | 0.2874 | 2837 |
| Kiki | Cuyler | 0.2869 | 2299 |
| Ivan | Rodriguez | 0.2869 | 2354 |
| Freddie | Lindstrom | 0.2868 | 1747 |
| Cecil | Travis | 0.2868 | 1544 |
| Rip | Radcliff | 0.2865 | 1267 |
| Dale | Mitchell | 0.2859 | 1244 |
| Al | Oliver | 0.2857 | 2743 |
| Todd | Helton | 0.2846 | 1700 |
| Derek | Jeter | 0.2844 | 2150 |
| Ernie | Lombardi | 0.2843 | 1792 |
| Bing | Miller | 0.2842 | 1934 |
| Jack | Fournier | 0.2835 | 1213 |
| Tony | Oliva | 0.2835 | 1917 |
| Wade | Boggs | 0.2834 | 3010 |
| Ross | Youngs | 0.2834 | 1187 |
| Don | Mueller | 0.2833 | 1292 |
| Don | Mattingly | 0.2831 | 2153 |
| Lou | Gehrig | 0.2830 | 2721 |
| Dante | Bichette | 0.2827 | 1906 |
| Ken | Williams | 0.2827 | 1428 |
| Garret | Anderson | 0.2824 | 2081 |
| Manny | Sanguillen | 0.2823 | 1500 |
| Taffy | Wright | 0.2820 | 1115 |
| Bob | Meusel | 0.2818 | 1693 |
| Earl | Averill | 0.2811 | 2019 |
| Magglio | Ordonez | 0.2807 | 1436 |
| Carl | Reynolds | 0.2805 | 1357 |
| Bill | Dickey | 0.2801 | 1969 |
| Goose | Goslin | 0.2800 | 2735 |
| Juan | Pierre | 0.2799 | 1244 |
| Spud | Davis | 0.2797 | 1312 |
| Bake | McBride | 0.2797 | 1153 |
| Cecil | Cooper | 0.2795 | 2192 |
| Placido | Polanco | 0.2795 | 1117 |
| Michael | Young | 0.2792 | 1104 |
| Ethan | Allen | 0.2789 | 1325 |
| Charlie | Gehringer | 0.2787 | 2839 |
| Bibb | Falk | 0.2786 | 1463 |
| John | Stone | 0.2785 | 1391 |
| Jim | Bottomley | 0.2783 | 2313 |
| Steve | Garvey | 0.2781 | 2599 |
| Mike | Piazza | 0.2781 | 2042 |
| Mickey | Rivers | 0.2781 | 1660 |
| Jimmy | Johnston | 0.2780 | 1024 |
| Jo-Jo | Moore | 0.2779 | 1615 |
| Gee | Walker | 0.2778 | 1991 |
| Tommy | Davis | 0.2777 | 2121 |
| Charlie | Jamieson | 0.2775 | 1747 |
| Bill | Madlock | 0.2775 | 2008 |
| Hal | Morris | 0.2775 | 1216 |
| Joe | Vosmik | 0.2774 | 1682 |
| Willie | McGee | 0.2773 | 2254 |
| Harvey | Kuenn | 0.2770 | 2092 |
| Frank | McCormick | 0.2769 | 1711 |
| Paul | Molitor | 0.2765 | 3319 |
| Orlando | Cepeda | 0.2760 | 2351 |
| Juan | Gonzalez | 0.2760 | 1936 |
| Manny | Mota | 0.2760 | 1149 |
| Larry | Walker | 0.2760 | 2160 |
| Sean | Casey | 0.2757 | 1333 |
| Wally | Berger | 0.2756 | 1550 |
| George | Kelly | 0.2756 | 1727 |
| Jim | Rice | 0.2755 | 2452 |
| Mike | Greenwell | 0.2753 | 1400 |
| Carlos | Baerga | 0.2750 | 1583 |
+-----------+-------------+---------+------+
That's a really neat list, if I do say so myself. A nice mix of great and semi-great hitters. Lots of players with great reputations who don't make leaderboards in more value-oriented stats.
And personally if you "disqualify" Bonds from any ranking due to steroids, then you are sying that the steroids were "cheating".
OPS+ overrates McGwire because it doesn't account for hte games he constantly missed for injuries. (Does health count in the "greater hitter" discussion? Depends on definitions, I guess, but it's worth bringing up.)
Here are their top BRAR numbers:
105, 90, 88, 86, 76, 75, 69 - Pujols
119, 82, 77, 73, 70, 60, 59 - McGwire
McGwire's 60 is in strike-shortened '95, so one could give him a 12% boost up to 68 or so, but still the numbers looks pretty good for Pujols.
(And of course there's steroids and whatnot.)
First, there's really no preference involved in my part. Given the question, I'd say Bonds.
But the examples I was giving were not specifically related to the value an offensive player creates and instead looking at hitting as a technical skill (Gwynn's ability to consistently hit the ball hard) or even artistic (Ichiro's ability to do myriad things with a pitched ball) one.
Maybe not to you. You're entitled to your personal opinion. I don't so much as disqualify Bonds as view what he accomplished post 1999 as something beyond his normal ability.
On a level playing field, without chemical enhancements, I think we've seen the best Barry could do and the best Frank could do, and I rank the big hurt just slightly ahead of Bonds. If there were reason to change my opinion on whether Frank used steroids, then I'd give the edge to Bonds.
I'm not interested in punishment for Bonds. While I have no doubt he cheated, I believe in due process and he hasn't been caught in a way that the rules of baseball would allow a punishment. I don't like seeing him blackballed or denied entrance to the HOF. But I don't like the use of steroids in the sport, and Bonds most certainly benefitted from his use of them.
So when I consider the question of who was the greatest, I try and look at how great they were without cheating.
Even more to the point here is what Bonds accomplished before 1999. And though I see his juicing as a HOF disqualifier due to the character clause, that thought shouldn't apply to a discussion like this. And I don't see any way to get around the conclusion that even if you put a huge steroid discount on all of his post-1998 numbers, Bonds is still the best living hitter. I'd probably like to say otherwise, but facts are facts.
And he didn't cheat. He did something some don't like, but the playing field was completely level. Well, excepting the crown for drainage.
Barry all day long.
Throw in Thomas's post 33 numbers and compare to some steroid-adjust Bonds numbers, and the conclusion depends on what kind of adjustment factor you use.
Right. You have to apply a 25% discount to Barry's post 1999 numbers to get them down to the "merely as good as Frank Thomas at his very best" level. And even then you're left with Barry at 6 seasons of 200+ and 2 more over 180, to Frank's one over 200 (compiled in a short season), and 7 between 174 and 181. As much as I love Frank, it's no contest.
Damn Chris. No wonder Bonds was so good. All those pitchers facing him were throwing off flat ground, while the guys facing Frank, Mac and others got to throw off mounds.
We can go on for days like this (and have). It's personal opinion. I say steroid use was cheating, it was against MLB rules even if there was no enforcement or testing provision. But I'll respect your opinion on this if you respect mine. I think it's cheating, you don't. Fine, leave it that way. I'm not going to try and convert you from voting for Bonds as GLH, but my vote goes to the big hurt.
I've played around with this in a couple discussions. I would say that the low BA player is better, but then be presented with an example by linear weights which refutes it. It took me a while to figure out what was going on, but here it is:
For players close to the league average OBP/SLG or below, the low BA player is usually better by linear weights. For elite players, well above the league OBP/SLG, the high BA player is usually better. The best living player discussion obviously would be looking at the second group of players, and thus the high BA players are to be preferred.
For players close to the league average OBP/SLG or below, the low BA player is usually better by linear weights. For elite players, well above the league OBP/SLG, the high BA player is usually better. The best living player discussion obviously would be looking at the second group of players, and thus the high BA players are to be preferred.
Why?
The high BA and low BA do get closer together as OBA/SLG increase, but its only a difference of a few runs over the course of a season anyway, even at the extremes, so we're kind of nitpicking anyway. Normal LW have enough error in them as a measurement tool that 2-3 runs is basically meaningless.
Why?
Because that's what the data say. Pick a linear weights estimator, and make up high and low BA players with below-average, average, above-average, and elite OBP/SLG. Try it for yourself.
could you email me (or post) how you made that table and how you psoted it?
Thanks.
Treating the relationship between offensive components and runs scored as linear (which is what linear weights do) is effective over the range of normal team performance, but breaks down at the extremes. There is no team which hits as well as elite hitters do, and when you start looking at elite hitters, you start getting into the range where the effects become non-linear.
-- MWE
Holding all other things constant, that might actually work, but as you may notice, the difference is miniscule and not everything else is held constant. A 2 run difference over the course of a full season is probably more than made up in the difference in productive outs, which the higher average hitter SHOULD have more of.
Also, one more measure which I'm shocked nobody has mentioned is consistency. A great hitter should be able to hit great year in and year out. It's probably the main reason why Pujols pops into my head long before McGwire, who was obscenely inconsistent.
Mario Mendoza
Luis Pujols
Tony Pena Jr.
Rey Ordonez
Neifi Perez
Billy Ripken
Ozzie Guillen
Joey Gathright
Joe Giraldi
(wait, I might have the wrong list here)
Did you even READ my comment about Randy Tate?
Least Living Hitter with a career is probably one of the following: Ed Brinkmann, Ozzzie Guillen, Alfredo Griffin, or Sandy Alomar Sr..
But again, this is another way that the comparison is biased toward a guy like Pujols who's still in his prime. McGwire was never consistent, of course, but to go back to the other guy who's been compared to Pujols in this thread - look at Frank Thomas. Over his first 7 full seasons (Pujols has played 7 full seasons), Frank Thomas never missed more than 21 games in a season (2 of his first 7 seasons were the strike years of 1994-95, when he played in all of his team's games both seasons) and had career LOWS to that point of 102 runs scored, 101 RBI, .308 BA, .426 OBP, .536 SLG, and an OPS+ of 174.
So even for consistency, The Big Hurt is right there with Pujols. Except that Thomas then added 1,219 games where he hit .277/.391/.521/OPS+ of 135 on top of the 7 consistent years.
A lot of people use rate stats above all else, to the extent that every season someone like Frank Thomas plays with an OPS+ of 125 makes him LESS worthy of the Hall of Fame in their eyes. Perhaps if he had retired after the 2004 season he would be the Greatest Living Hitter.
There is only one caveat I would mention about splitting the question up the way you do. While Gwynn may be the best living "pure hitter" by your definition, and that is something kind of cool, it should not be used as a point in favor of arguing that he was "better" than anyone else. It is a neat curiosity, more analogous to Willy Taveras being the "best living bunter for hits" than being to Bonds being the best overall hitter. Gwynn is not a greater player for his very good hitting taking the particular shape that it did. I know you didn't make that argument, but all too many commentators on Gwynn seemed to make the slide from "best pure hitter" to "best hitter".
DCA, you are right, I got it exactly wrong in my initial statement. For high values of OBP/SLG, a higher BA is better. In the comments to the article I linked to, Tango played around and found the "break even" point, where BA was completely irrelevant, was .360/.450, which of course is worse than anyone we are talking about here. So I was wrong, higher BA is better for these guys. Of course, the difference are so small that it there is really no reason to look at BA in thinking about the best overall hitter.
Are you sure you're looking at the right Frank Thomas? He lost a couple of seasons to injury, but his lowest OPS+ in a full season is 118. That's probably average for a DH, not "quite dreadful."
If you are using it exclusively to rate players, your analysis is faulty.
Games played has to figure in somewhere, or else John Paciorek is the greatest hitter of all time. But fielding's got nothing to do with "greatest living hitter".
Does baserunning?
I'd argue no, but I'll concede it's a debatable point. I intepret "Greatest Living Hitter" to be, who did the most damage while they were in the batter's box.
edit: or more accurately, "who did the most damage during their own plate appearances" if you want to give players credit for hitting doubles and triples instead of singles.
Pujols is mostly peak, since he's in mid-career. He's had a hell of a 7.5-year peak, but McGwire's level of performance at his best was higher.
It's just too speculative at this point. As a great hitter, he certainly has a better chance than most to sustain a high performance level as he ages; but he's already been dealing with significant injuries and has already had to slide over on the defensive spectrum.
Thomas's average dropped more than that, as you noted. So did Giambi's. Of course, there's no law that says it has to happen to Pujols; but the point is that it's difficult to maintain a batting average that high as a slugger ages. The nice thing is that a hitter at Pujols's level can still produce even if his batting average drops to .260, like Thomas's and Giambi's did.
"Risked his career" by kissing up to the owners? Anyway, I presume precisely nothing about whether Thomas used PEDs. I don't care that he's taken a vocal anti-PED position; we know nothing about what these people do when nobody's looking.
But don't let me stop you. ;
But that's the point: there _is_ a speed component to hitting. It's built in to singles, doubles, and triples, and therefore shows up in OPS in that respect. But obviously steals don't show up in OPS, so we need to at least make a mental adjustment for them. Otherwise, it would make no sense to talk about "hitting" in terms of OPS -- thereby conceding that there's a speed component to hitting -- and then ignore that speed component when it comes to steals.
"Hitting" = "Offense". People can talk about "pure" hitting, and ignore walks and steals and the like -- but then they're not talking about hitting. They're talking about something else.
And Mike Greenwell is right behind him. I felt old this weekend when I heard Greenwell on the radio and he was talking about his som in the Indians system.
Sure, of course. There's also a speed component to fielding, but that doesn't mean that therefore one has to include fielding when you're talking about hitters. I think one can draw a perfectly reasonable line between what one does as a <u>batter</u> and what one does as a <u>baserunner</u> and call the former "hitting" and the latter "baserunning".
But I'm not married to this argument, and it's not all that relevant to anything being discussed here. Barry Bonds is the greatest living hitter if you give him any credit at all for anything he did after 1999. And while Albert Pujols is a better baserunner than Frank Thomas ever was, it would be very hard to convince me that it's enough to offset Thomas's advantages in peak, prime, and career (add fielding, though, and you've got yourself a good debate).
I don't think you are in proper possession of the facts, so if you are interested, I'll elaborate. I suppose that my comment may have been a minor stretch, but Thomas and the other 15 on the Sox were as directly active against steroids as any player on Earth.
If you want a real chuckle, check out who their main critic was. :)
select namefirst,namelast,(sum(h))/(sum(ab)+sum(bb)+sum(sh)) as hitting,sum(h) as hits from master inner join batting on master.playerid=batting.playerid where batting.yearid>1919 group by batting.playerid having hits>1000 and hitting > .275 order by hitting desc;
I printed the output using the code tag. The pre tag never works very well for me, for some reason.
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