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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Mantle schmantle. Try living down Pynchon!
Roger Repoz (pronounced re-POZE, as in someone “lying in repose”) not only had a lyrical name, but also seemed destined to become a major league superstar. Some members of the Yankee organization regarded him as the next Roger Maris, but Repoz (seen here in his 1966 Topps card) would end up settling for a career that was more along the lines of Roger Cedeno or Roger Metzger. As if the Maris comparisons weren’t stressful enough, many New York writers and fans began referring to Repoz as the “next Mickey Mantle,” in part because he shared a blonde crew cut and a powerful uppercut swing with the legendary Mantle.
Playing for the Triple-A Toledo Mud Hens and employing a newfound batting stance in 1965, Repoz emerged as a top-flight Yankee prospect, prompting minor league manager Frank Verdi to call him the best everyday player in the International League. Shortly thereafter, Repoz earned a mid-season promotion to the Yankees, with mediocre old favorite Horace Clarke sent back to Triple-A to make room for the young outfielder. (That exchange, in and of itself, should have been something of a harbinger of doom.) Given his talent, Repoz seemed like a can’t-miss superstar in waiting. An excellent defensive outfielder with the speed to play center field, Repoz also owned the kind of left-handed pull hitter’s swing that made him a perfect fit for Yankee Stadium.
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1. Esoteric Posted: October 25, 2008 at 10:12 PM (#2994662)um, "mediocre old favorite Horace" was a rookie that year. He's also all of 2 months older than "the young outfielder."
I do have a Topps card of Repoz as an Angel lying around here somewhere though.
not fair. Cedeno had an 88 OPS+, Metzger a 67. Repoz had a perfectly acceptable 105, quite nice actually for a guy who played mostly CF. I really know squat about his career but his stats look like a guy whose value was completely missed in the ridiculous pitchers era of the late 60s. In his rookie year, he hit 220/298/454 which sounds real bad but was a 112 OPS+. The next year was 232/324/384, 106 OPS+. Bear in mind, league average (park-adjusted) that season was 244/311/377 ... so here's a 25 year-old CF who's just posted above average OBP and SLG. Sure, it's not Mantle but it's a lot better than Roger Cedeno.
Then there's 1971. That year he hit 199/333/374. That was an OPS+ of 107 against league averages of 318/366. He only got 3 more ML ABs.
He was above-average in SLG all but one season of his career; he was above-average in OBP about half the time. His BA stunk but so did everybody else's in those days. Granted, I assume most of those are ABs where he had the platoon advantage so I'm not pretending he was necessarily worthy of being a starter.
I understand, the writer was in a bind. Roger Maris, Roger Repoz ... he wants more Rogers but surprisingly, very few hitting Rogers with any success in MLB. And Jason Repko is no better. How about Wally Post? Possum Whitted?
I just couldn't resist and now I'm haunted again.
Yes, I know. Bobby got the rings and the ASG appearances and the MVP votes, while Clarke got exactly squat. But it's true.
Life's funny like that.
I like how Walt calls Bruce "the writer".
i wish i didnt know that, i always mentally pronounce it as re-pause
Boy, that really puts the mid-'60s in perspective. Wow those are bad-looking lines from the perspective of an early 21st-century MLB fan.
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