mookie1995
there's a good buck in that racket.
Dunno. He should be.
No doubt
Dunno. He should be.
Lets guess!If I heard Buster Olney correctly yesterday, he would have voted for 17 guys to get in if it were possible. Don't know which specific 17 but seems like an asinine amount.
Lets guess!
Raines, Thomas, Maddux, Glavine, Morris, Kent, Benitez, Biggio, Bagwell, Bonds, Sosa, Clemens, McGwire, Piazza, E. Martinez, Palmero.
That's 16.
Jones.![]()
Not say'in this is right but "only" 219 wins and he has the reputation of an *******. Plus he's going to be directly compared to Johnson and Smoltz where I think he will come up short in a lot of people's minds. Those three things will hurt him.
Right. I mean, if we're going to downplay the offensive numbers put up by some of the contenders because of PEDs/juiced ball/Coors Field effect/whatever*, then don't we also have to look at "a sub 3 ERA" as even better than its "default" (for lack of a better word) value in our mind because of the era in which it was accomplished? This is why, even if you don't want to get into WAR or other advanced stats, it's really helpful to at least look at OPS+ and ERA+, which take easily-understood numbers (OPS and ERA, respectively) and normalize them to league average. It's just a way to measure our intuitive understanding that offensive numbers from 2013 (league average OPS .714) are "better" than identical raw offensive numbers from 1997 (league average OPS .756). It puts the performance in the context of the playing environment.That being said, for Pedro to put up a sub 3 ERA in the "steroid era" is ridiculously good. He should be a first ballot hall of famer.
*Larry Walker was a fantastic hitter for a long time, not just at Coors but also in Montreal at the beginning of his career and in St. Louis into his late 30s, and I was kinda stunned by how little support he got this year. You like average? He won three batting titles. You like on-base? Career .400. You like power? He hit plenty of homers. He's got home/road splits, sure, but like I said he was a great hitter when playing his home games in Montreal and St. Louis too, and no slouch on the road. He stole some bases (33 of them during his MVP year in 1997!) at a decent rate of success. He was a decent enough fielder, if no Mays. And he's Canadian! Played goalie as a kid! And had a fantastic mullet! Ultimately, maybe he's more of a "Hall of Very Good" type, but I think he deserves more love than he's gotten so far.
I wonder whether this is the case maybe because 3,000 strikeouts wasn't "a thing" back in the day when the BBWAA was forming its institutional memory like 3,000 hits was. For the longest time, Walter Johnson was the only guy with 3,000 strikeouts. All the rest are pitchers from recent years (Randy Johnson, Clemens, Maddux, Pedro, Schilling, Smoltz), or were players who had their primes from the late '60s to early '80s after all the Boomers formed their collective impression of what a Hall of Fame pitcher should be (Gibson, Jenkins, Niekro, Perry, Seaver, Ryan, Blyleven). Many of them also had absurdly long careers, for whatever that's worth. On the other hand, Ty Cobb had 4,000 hits before 1930, and there were enough 3,000 hit guys from the early days (Speaker, Anson, Wagner, Collins, Lajoie, Waner), then later Musial bridging the gap to Mays and Aaron and the rest, that "the 3,000 hit club" was a phrase that could be plausibly used and therefore have meaning to voters.People seem to gush about guys with 3,000 hits. But not about 3,000 strikeouts. There are fewer pitchers with 3,000 strikeouts than hitters with 3,000 hits (16 vs 28). And if you look on that list, that's some pretty gosh darn good company to be in.
I wonder whether this is the case maybe because 3,000 strikeouts wasn't "a thing" back in the day when the BBWAA was forming its institutional memory like 3,000 hits was. For the longest time, Walter Johnson was the only guy with 3,000 strikeouts. All the rest are pitchers from recent years (Randy Johnson, Clemens, Maddux, Pedro, Schilling, Smoltz), or were players who had their primes from the late '60s to early '80s after all the Boomers formed their collective impression of what a Hall of Fame pitcher should be (Gibson, Jenkins, Niekro, Perry, Seaver, Ryan, Blyleven). Many of them also had absurdly long careers, for whatever that's worth. On the other hand, Ty Cobb had 4,000 hits before 1930, and there were enough 3,000 hit guys from the early days (Speaker, Anson, Wagner, Collins, Lajoie, Waner), then later Musial bridging the gap to Mays and Aaron and the rest, that "the 3,000 hit club" was a phrase that could be plausibly used and therefore have meaning to voters.
tl; dr: They just don't look for 3,000 strikeouts because for the longest time nobody had 3,000 strikeouts for them to look for. Walter Johnson had been retired for over 30 years before the next guy who would eventually get there (Bob Gibson) made his MLB debut.
In any case, I think all the 3,000 K guys will eventually get in if the voters get their heads out of their *** about Clemens.
Yep, I agree with you, and I think all the 3,000 K guys should be in, I was just sort of speculating as to why it's not discussed as a standard in the same way as 3,000 hits or 500 HR (which had Jimmie Foxx and Mel Ott in the early days in addition to Babe Ruth, before Williams and Mantle and Eddie Matthews and the rest came along).In my mind, 3,000 K's isn't about just hanging around long enough to get to that number. That's the equivalent to 200 K's for 15 years. You've got to be a helluva pitcher to put that number up. Yes, even Phil Niekro. 3,000 K's is even more automatic to me than 3,000 hits, if there is such a thing, the two 3,000 hit guys not being in notwithstanding (and I do not wish to discuss that last part at this time).
Out of curiousity, being from the PNW (kind of but we're in the Mariners market), what about Edgar Martinez?From 22.9 to 21.6 to 10.2 the last three years, with Johnson-Pedro-Smoltz on next year's ballot (with Biggio a virtual lock as well), he might not be on the ballot after next year. Griffey goes on in two years, and he looks like the only one getting in from that class. If Walker makes it that far, he might pick up steam then, depending on what they do with Piazza.
THE RULING IS IN: ALEX RODRIGUEZ - SUSPENDED WITHOUT PAY FOR 162 GAMES.
A-Rod's lawsuit starts in 3...2...1...
162*THE RULING IS IN: ALEX RODRIGUEZ - SUSPENDED WITHOUT PAY FOR 162 GAMES.
A-Rod's lawsuit starts in 3...2...1...