Maybe Flaherty has some dirt on him. Isn't Schoop supposed to be the 2B of the future?I love Buck, but his borderline obsession with making Ryan Flarehty an All-Star 2B is getting worrisome.
I think Safeco really affected him more than it would have for other hitters. Once he got out, he showed the kind of game he had back when he was with the Dodgers. If you add in his defense, I think he would have a good shot at the hall. He was one of the better defensive 3B in his prime.Adrian Beltre having that many hits kind of snuck up on me. I don't think I've ever thought of him as a HOF'er, but he's got a very good shot at finishing with 3000 hits and 400 HRs (he's at 384 now, so maybe 450 or 500 as a longshot). That would put him on a very exclusive list with the likes of Mays, Musial, Yaz, Ripken Jr, Winfield, Murray, and Palmeiro. If he makes it to those levels, I think you have to give him quite a bit of consideration for the Hall.
wow you're right, those numbers are pretty good.Adrian Beltre having that many hits kind of snuck up on me. I don't think I've ever thought of him as a HOF'er, but he's got a very good shot at finishing with 3000 hits and 400 HRs (he's at 384 now, so maybe 450 or 500 as a longshot). That would put him on a very exclusive list with the likes of Mays, Musial, Yaz, Ripken Jr, Winfield, Murray, and Palmeiro. If he makes it to those levels, I think you have to give him quite a bit of consideration for the Hall.
Good comparison between Beltre and Palmerio. Until he got caught for cheating, I never understood all the hate towards Palmeiro. I thought he was a very good power hitter and a slick fielding first basement. Sure he was never dominant, heck most of the time he wasn't even the best player on his team, but he was consistent and over his career he compiled some impressive stats. Both of them compare pretty favorably to Eddie Murray.I've never liked the "automatic numbers." Just about everyone who gets to those heights ultimately does deserve to be in the Hall of Fame, but they shouldn't get there JUST because of those numbers. You have to examine the career and decide if the guy was ever one of the most dominant players in the game for an extend period of time. This is why I don't think Biggio belongs, either.
Beltre has only 3 Top 10 finishes in the MVP race and 3 All-Star game appearances. And fair or not, his greatest season (2004) will always have a cloud over it, due to the steroid era.
I think Beltre is very similar to Rafael Palmeiro. Even before he was caught cheating, there was serious debate on whether or not Palmeiro belonged in the Hall, and he was well on his way to both 3000 hits and 500 homeruns.
Agreed comparing players from different eras is pretty trivial, though fun to do. However, Frank Thomas, a contemporary of Palmeiro, put up "similar" numbers to him and IMO The Big Hurt was leagues better than Palmeiro. I think this comparison reinforces the idea that stats do not tell the whole story. Then again, we are "technically" comparing two HOF (worthy in Palmeiro's case) players. Maybe we should be comparing them to other AS caliber players in the league who did not make it to the HOF. I think that will better illustrate their greatness. One also has to remember that there have only been 28 players in the history of baseball who have over 3,000 hits and only 26 players who have over 500HRs. So we are talking about a very selective group of excellent players. Thus, maybe for the time being these "automatic numbers" still work because so few players have reached these milestones but baseball has to worry about compilers.A lot has to do with the era the player belongs to. You look at Jim Rice's career numbers, and they are good, but they don't blow you away. But anyone who watched baseball in that era will tell you that Rice was, without a shadow of a doubt, one of the most feared sluggers of the time.
You are right about McGriff. He was never dominant. Donny Baseball and Murray were better players than him in the 80s, Thomas and Bagwell were better than him in the 90s. Personally, I would like to see him make to the HOF if only to show up all the steroid users but IMO he was not one of the great ones.I think Fred McGriff is a great example of why the automatic numbers are silly. Was McGriff a really good player? Yep. Was he a dominate player? No. Is he a Hall of Famer? Well, the closest he has gotten so far was 2012, when he received 23.9% of the vote. And this is a guy who was very likeable (everyone remembers the Tom Emanski commercials) and was never really wrapped up in steroid speculation. Would 7 more homeruns magically make him a Hall of Famer?
You sure you don't mean bulging dick?Evan Gattis to the DL with a bulging disc. It sucks since he'll miss the ASG. I would've loved to have seen him in the HR Derby.
Only because he got caught. Imagine what would happen if they let the Barry Bonds accusations get out of hand.You sure you don't mean bulging dick?
http://www.si.com/mlb/2014/07/01/bloodsport-excerpt-alex-rodriguez-new-york-yankees-steroids
I love how baseball let A-Rod cheat and then turned around and vilified him.
hammel is going to do poorly in the American league like the last time with the orioles. not sure how samardjiza will translate into the American league.So, apparently the A's just got both Samardjiza AND Hammel.
For some reason, that pisses me off.
O.co is a great park for pitching, and the A's OF defense is solid. They'll both be fine. Hammel was excellent in Baltimore in 2012, for what it's worth.hammel is going to do poorly in the American league like the last time with the orioles. not sure how samardjiza will translate into the American league.
Yeah, Samardzija is solid, occasionally awesome, and Hammel is okay, and occasionally really good. Russell looks pretty good, but he's at least a year away, more likely two or even three years away. The A's have a shot at winning the world series this year, and Samardzija and Hammel increase those chances.As an A's fan, should I be happy about this? I liked watching Russell in the minors, and I actually thought our pitching was already pretty solid. I wonder if someone's getting flipped for some 2B help.
If Joey Votto ever gets traded for anything I would be pretty happy actually. He is a great OBP guy, but he doesn't have nearly enough power at 1B to justify his contract. I understand sometimes giving a franchise player a contract that is an albatross in their twilight years, but I don't think that Votto is that guy.I LOL'ed at the the story about all the reporters going nuts because Joey Votto cleaned his locker. It started with them reporting that he might've been traded, and it snowballed into several reporting that the Reds traded him for David Price.
But did you think he was that guy when he received it? I was unsure about Ryan Howard's contract at the time, but now it's one of, if not the biggestIf Joey Votto ever gets traded for anything I would be pretty happy actually. He is a great OBP guy, but he doesn't have nearly enough power at 1B to justify his contract. I understand sometimes giving a franchise player a contract that is an albatross in their twilight years, but I don't think that Votto is that guy.
I don't think anyone minds the Yankees struggling.ESPN just had an article yesterday saying the Yankees can't afford to have Tanaka struggling, and now he's on the DL.
At the time I thought he was. He was coming off a monster year and was entering his prime, but it seems as if his power never really returned after the knee injury he suffered the year he received that. Still though, unless a team has Yankees or Red Sox type of money they should never really tie up that much to a player anyways. I'd prefer 3-4 above average players than 1 superstar.But did you think he was that guy when he received it? I was unsure about Ryan Howard's contract at the time, but now it's one of, if not the biggestup in Phillies history.
Anyone who goes to Boston should know that this is going to happen to them. Doesn't matter what you do, they always make sure to kick the shit out of you when you leave town.Red Sox throw A.J. Pierzynski under the bus, get into the bus, and then proceed to run over their former catcher multiple times.