Tag: Baseball Hall of Fame

Jim Wynn: A Deserving Hall of Famer

A .250 batting average, 291 home runs, and 964 runs batted in. Not exactly numbers you would associate with a Hall of Fame outfielder.

The reality is, analysis that only covers the superficial level, such as this, is lazy and has cost many players their rightful spot in baseball history.

I wrote a piece covering this point with Scott Rolen in March due to this fear. Not many baseball players better personify this fear coming to fruition, however, than former Houston Astro great Jim Wynn.

Wynn was a great player, who happened to be slammed by details that have forever caused baseball historians to underrate his impact:

– While walks have never been “not valued,” as shown by the careers of players like Max Bishop, they have almost always lost their place in history, mostly due to the remaining prevalence of batting average. Wynn only hit .250 in his career, but walked in 15.28 percent of his plate appearances.

– The sixties were a horrific run-producing environment. To boot, the Astrodome was a horrible hitter’s park. Given all that, if the average hitter would hit .260/.335/.400 in an average run-producing environment, an average hitter playing for Houston in 1963-1969 would have hit .253/.314/.373. Wynn, in that time, hit .259/.361/.459.

This fact was not even lost on the players: Hank Aaron, after edging Wynn for the Home Run title, declared his belief that Wynn was the “real” Home Run champion due to playing half his games in the Astrodome, while Aaron played in the hitter-friendly Fulton County Stadium.

– Wynn was mired on average to bad teams for his entire Houston career, where the Astros never topped 85 wins. His first experience in playing for a contender was in 1974 for Los Angeles. Wynn responded with a .271/.387/.497 (in still a bad hitter’s park, where the average hitter would have produced .258/.329/.372), and led all Dodgers by a landslide in WAR per baseball-reference , with 8.6.

– Wynn was an okay fielder, but nothing special. Unlike other marginal outfielders, like Andre Dawson, it is likely a stretch to say he was ever a spectacular fielder, where Dawson likely had five seasons of sensational glove work.

So here we are, a career .250 hitter with average defense who only played in the postseason for one season. See why is can be easy to dwell on the bad and not focus on the good?

I would continue to dwell on the bad, such as his batting average, but the BBWAA already did that for everyone in 1983. Let’s, however, look at Wynn’s numbers and relate them to what is important: winning.

According to Jim Wynn’s page on baseball-reference.com, his offensive production “created” 1,149 runs for his teams (as shown here , Expected Runs and Runs Created formulas are credible ways to estimate a player’s production), while using 5,312 outs, good for a 5.84 RC/27 outs.

Over his career, league average scoring was approximately 4.31 runs per game. This rough estimation says that Wynn was 35.5 percent better than the average hitter (which makes sense, given his career wRC+, a runs created measure meant to adjust for year and ballpark is 137, or 37 percent above average).

It is still hard for a person to think of players in different contexts than what they played in, however, so instead, let’s bring Wynn forward into a more modern, 750-team run-context.

How would his numbers look? Fortunately, baseball-reference and Bill James also provide a handy tool to analyze this issue, and neutralize players to take away advantages gained in hitter eras.

Wynn’s real production has already been listed, .250, 291 HR, 964 RBI. Modest, but not that of a legend.

What does his “neutralized” statistics look like? How about .280 (with an OBP of .402), 341 HR, 1,158 RBI. 

So let’s think of Wynn in this regard. According to fangraphs , only 115 players can be classified as “outfielders” that accumulated 8,000 or more PA. This can be further broken down by performing three filters:

1) Exclude hitters who batted under .270.
2) Exclude hitters with under 300 HR.
3) Exclude hitters with under 1,100 RBI.

This leaves us with a list of 26 players. We can go on to eliminate a few more players (Ken Griffey Jr, Barry Bonds, Manny Ramirez, Gary Sheffield, Vlad Guerrero, Larry Walker, Luis Gonzalez) due to not having achieved Hall of Fame eligibility yet.

This leaves us with 19 players: Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, Willie Mays, Frank Robinson, Mickey Mantle, Ted Williams, Mel Ott, Willie Stargell, Stan Musial, Dave Winfield, Carl Yastrzemski, Billy Williams, Duke Snider, Al Kaline, Harold Baines, Dave Parker, Jim Rice, Ellis Burks, and Al Simmons. Of these 19, 16 are already in the Hall of Fame, with only Ellis Burks having dropped off the Hall of Fame ballot.

So if Burks is simply not good enough, one can assume that Baines and Parker are the “minimum” standard to gain real consideration. 

Parker was a sought-after star in the 1970s and ’80s, and finished his career with a .290 average, with 339 HR and 1,493 RBI. Of course, Parker was a hacker, rarely walking, and despite his offensive skills, was only able to obtain a 121 wRC+. While Total Zone states that Parker was a great right fielder to start his career, his skills in the outfield eroded, and finished his career with 45.7 Wins Above Replacement.

Harold Baines was a good player for a long time. Started off similar to Parker as a hitter, constantly pushing the .300 barrier with good power, but not much in terms of walks and plate discipline. He developed this skill, however, and became a plus-walker in the second half of his career. Of course, Baines also spent well over half his career as a designated hitter, which has to be factored into his offensive production. Despite an excellent 123 wRC+ over an 11,092 PA career, Baines achieved 45.3 WAR.

Wynn’s career WAR? 60.7, which is very close to the 62.3 mark that Andre Dawson is credited with. In fact, looking at a “by-age” career WAR chart of the two men shows a noticeable trend:

WAR chart

Dawson and Wynn are very different, but also very similar. When one was retiring, the other was just entering the league. While both had value as power hitters, one complimented this part of his game with a keen batting eye, while the other with more visually appealing tools.

The end of the day, however, signals that both men equally helped their baseball teams. One man, Andre Dawson, is about to enter the Hall of Fame in a little over one week’s time, and I think he is a deserving candidate. But once again, to the Hall of Fame voters, if Andre Dawson, why not Jimmy Wynn?

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A Yankees Fan’s View: Ken Griffey Jr. Will Be in Cooperstown in Five Years

On Wednesday afternoon, Ken Griffey Jr. took the next step in his baseball career, and that was to end it.

The Mariners outfielder and designated hitter was not having his best season and decided it was time to call it quits. Next stop for Griffey…Cooperstown.

How can a player not make it when he is listed as No. 6 overall on the all-time home run list and made the All-Star team 13 times in 22 years? Griffey is beyond qualified for a spot in baseball eternity.

Sure, Tom Seaver earned his spot with the highest percentage ever to be inducted, but that may soon be in jeopardy with Griffey. Ken Griffey is a sure bet and unanimous pick for a spot in Cooperstown.

He has 630 home runs in his career. Many, including myself, believe that Griffey would be atop the all-time home run list had he not been injured several times throughout his career.

Barry Bonds had—and has—nothing on Ken Griffey Jr.

One important thing to note about Griffey is that there is not one steroid accusation against him. He was one of the cleanest players in the game. The belief that he may have taken something while he was injured to get back on the field more quickly is quite absurd.

The baseball world would come crashing down if either of its two ambassadors, Derek Jeter or Ken Griffey Jr., were caught on performance-enhancing drugs.

Some people love to watch Michael Jordan highlights in their spare time, but I wouldn’t mind spending a day watching Griffey’s finest. Whether it was crashing through a wall or diving for a catch, this guy put his body on the line at all times.

10 Gold Gloves cannot compare to the memories he created for fans in the stands when he went all out on the field or fans watching some of the greatest plays ever and seeing the Mariners or Reds star.

Griffey will always be that baby-faced kid with the backwards hat and the white tape on the bat. He has swagger and will always have swagger.

The only difficult thing is how will that be translated onto a gold plaque at Cooperstown with Ken Griffey Jr.’s face and a Mariners hat.

 

This article was featured on Bomber’s Banter and on the newly launched sports website, Sports Leak, the site to express your love of sports. 

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The Best Players at Each Position Not in the Baseball Hall of Fame

Last summer, Rickey Henderson and Jim Rice were inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Henderson is one of the greatest players of all time, and an easy choice for voters.

Rice was a more difficult choice, making it after more than a decade on the ballot. But plenty of worthy candidates remain on the outside looking in.

In Bill James’ book about the Hall of Fame, he suggests that fans often try to make cases for players they grew up watching, and liked.

We should focus more on the best players we can put in, rather than simply making a case for a player because we can.

Sure, we can make a case for Keith Hernandez. But there are plenty of players much better than Keith Hernandez not in the Hall of Fame.

So that’s what I did here. I decided to take a look and determine the best player, at each position, that is eligible (sorry Pete, Joe, and Eddie) but not in the Hall of Fame.

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MLB 2010: Five Reasons Why Ken Griffey Jr. Must Go

Ken Griffey, Jr. is a first ballot Hall Of Famer. That is obvious. Those Hall Of Fame skills are long gone, though. He was bad enough last year. Here are Griffey’s 2009 stats: .214/.324/.411. That isn’t good. Today, though, he flat out stinks. Check out his 2010 line: .191/.252/.213. Ouch! This isn’t new, either. Ken Griffey has been a below average player for years.

With all of that said, he is still very popular in Seattle. Griffey gets a big cheer when the lineup is called out over the PA system before the game. When he comes to the plate, people get off their butts to cheer for him.

It is not Griffey’s responsibility to bow out gracefully. The Mariners must take the bold step of cutting him. Here is why.

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Quotes from and about Ernie Harwell

“Baseball is the President tossing out the first ball of the season and a scrubby schoolboy playing catch with his dad on a Mississippi farm. A tall, thin old man waving a scorecard from the corner of his dugout. That’s baseball.”—Ernie Harwell in his Induction Day Speech (August 2, 1981)

 

Quotes from Ernie Harwell

“Baseball is a lot like life. It’s a day-to-day existence, full of ups and downs. You make the most of your opportunities in baseball as you do in life.”

“God blessed me by putting me here for thirty-one years at Michigan and Trumbull. I had (after being “released”) the greatest job in the world—a job I loved to do. But most of all, I appreciate you fans. I appreciate your loyalty, your support and your love that you’ve shown me, especially the love.” (September 30, 1991)

“I had a job to do, and I did it all these years to the best of my ability. That’s what I’d like to leave behind as I finish my final game in Toronto.”

“I’d like to be remembered as someone who showed up for the job. I consider myself a worker. I love what I do. If I had my time over again, I’d probably do it for nothing.”

“If I walked back into the booth in the year 2025, I don’t think it would have changed much. I think baseball would be played and managed pretty much the same as it is today. It’s a great survivor.”

“I love the game because it’s so simple, yet it can be so complex. There’s a lot of layers to it, but they aren’t hard to peel back.”

“I think I owe thanks to the people who have listened to me over the years, who tuned in on the radio. They have given me a warmth and loyalty that I’ve never been able to repay. The way they have reached out to me has certainly been the highlight of my life.”

“I think once you start as an announcer, you have to decide what kind of approach you’re going to have. I decided very early that I was going to be a reporter, that I would not cheer for the team. I don’t denigrate people who do it. It’s fine. I think you just have to fit whatever kind of personality you have, and I think my nature was to be more down the middle and that’s the way I conducted the broadcasts.”

“So much happened (in 1968) it was hard to keep up with everything. We had Denny McLain’s thirty-one victories, Gates Brown’s great pinch-hitting in the clutch, Tom Matchick’s home run to beat Baltimore in the ninth inning, then Daryl Patterson striking out the side to beat them in the ninth. Excitement every day in the ballpark.”

“The greatest single moment I’ve ever known in Detroit was Jim Northrup’s triple in the seventh game of the World Series in St. Louis. It was a stunning moment because not only were the Tigers winning a world championship that meant so much to an entire city, they were beating the best pitcher I ever saw—Bob Gibson.”

“Wheaties was the big sponsor in those days (1940s). They sponsored almost all the baseball games in the majors and the minors. That was a lot of Wheaties. I think there were twenty-four boxes in a case and some of these guys were hitting twenty-five and thirty home runs a season. We had a dog in those days named Blue Grass and the players used to give us their Wheaties for him. Blue Grass loved Wheaties and so did I.”

 

Quotes about Ernie Harwell

“Ernie Harwell stands, as much as anybody as I can think of, as a positive representative of what the game of baseball should and does stand for. His memory will be long lasting and the quality of man he is will never diminish.”—Detroit Tigers Catcher Bill Freehan

“Ernie (Harwell) is probably the most beloved person who has ever been in Detroit with the Detroit Tigers. He is loved by everybody and rightfully so. He’s a great broadcaster but even a better person. That comes across on his broadcasts.”—Hall of Famer Al Kaline

“His prodigious resume had one noticeable blank. He never broadcast a perfect game. But he broadcast thousands of games perfectly.”—David Enders of the Detroit Free Press (September 30, 2002)

“If I have a few positives I’m going to take out of this year, meeting Ernie (Harwell) is definitely going to be at the top. It was pretty emotional. If he didn’t tug at your heart when he was out there talking about the people who meant to him, his lifetime commitment to his wife, his devotion to God, it was pretty touching. I got a little choked up.”—Tigers Infielder Damian Jackson

“I think you have to take Ernie’s career in context with the city. The city is a blue-collar city primarily. That being said, that means there are a lot of core values. I know that sounds like a cliche. Detroit is not a New York, it’s not a Chicago or a San Francisco. Normally, I think that means people look for consistency. Ernie has been consistent in that if anyone were to have studied his style, they’ll discover that he has been the same over the years. He didn’t try to go in one direction one year and a new direction the other year. And that consistency kind of created, whether intentional or not, the expectations of the fans. By not varying his style, he established a loyal following. Detroit was a staple for the game. They were very well-known for the quality of the organization. That’s kind of what Ernie was. He called the game by what he saw.”—Tigers Public Relations Director Dan Ewald

“Somehow he brings the proper pitch and phrasing to a whole season, with a rhythm and pacing that only a select few have ever commanded. In many ways a Harwell broadcast is profoundly musical, as befits a man who has published fifty-five songs with composers such as Johnny Mercer. Many an announcer has aspired to sounding as if talking to a friend in his living room, but Harwell effortlessly establishes the same rapport on the air as he does in person.”—Baseball Author Bruce Shlain

“You can never give the score too many times. He never put himself above the game. For a lot of guys now, it’s become a show business-type thing. Ernie always kept the focus on baseball.”—Detroit Tigers Television Broadcaster Mario Impemba

“When you think of the Detroit Tigers, you think of Ernie Harwell. Like the speakers said, there’s certain teams that have certain voices attached to them. The Cubs have Haray Caray. The Tigers have Ernie Harwell.”—Tigers pitcher Jason Beverlin

“We need to understand today and each day left in the 2002 season that we are truly privileged to see through his eyes and hear his calm and reassuring voice. His effortless brilliance masks countless hours of preparation. Let us understand, appreciate and be joyous for our time with him.”—Tigers President John McHale

“Whether talking about the pitching style of Mickey Lolich with picturesque adjectives or the majesty of an Al Kaline home run with his signature call of ‘loooong gone,’ Harwell’s vivid descriptions of games have earned him the respect of fans and his peers.”—Radio Hall of Fame

He has demonstrated a standard of accuracy and reliability, with a distinctive style of play-by-play and a love for the game that has earned him the respect of all. It is with great pride that the American Sportscasters Association inducts Ernie Harwell into the Sportscasters Hall of Fame.”

Source: Baseball-Almanac

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