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Started by Mr. Ypsi, February 08, 2008, 06:32:15 PM

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Bishopleftiesdad

Quote from: Ricky Nelson on January 09, 2013, 09:43:43 PM
Quote from: Bishopleftiesdad on January 09, 2013, 04:27:23 PM
Maybe they all feel as John Faye, the Reds Beat writer:

http://cincinnati.com/blogs/reds/2012/12/31/exercising-my-right-not-to-vote/

Quote
Cincinnati Reds

I simply can't do it. I put off mailing in my 2013 Hall of Fame ballot until today's deadline.

It will not be sent.

I'd rather abstain than play judge and jury this year. The two most deserving players statistically of the 37 on the ballot are Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens. Bonds was the best hitter I've seen. Clemens was the most dominant pitcher.
Abstaining doesn't affect the outcome as much as mailing a blank ballot like some were reported to have done.

In case anyone missed it, Aaron Sele received one vote for Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame. Take a minute and let that sink in.
I see your point since it is on a percentage scale.


OshDude

Quote from: Ralph Turner on January 09, 2013, 11:20:35 PM
Quote from: Ricky Nelson on January 09, 2013, 09:43:43 PM
Quote from: Bishopleftiesdad on January 09, 2013, 04:27:23 PM
Maybe they all feel as John Faye, the Reds Beat writer:

http://cincinnati.com/blogs/reds/2012/12/31/exercising-my-right-not-to-vote/

Quote
Cincinnati Reds

I simply can't do it. I put off mailing in my 2013 Hall of Fame ballot until today's deadline.

It will not be sent.

I'd rather abstain than play judge and jury this year. The two most deserving players statistically of the 37 on the ballot are Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens. Bonds was the best hitter I've seen. Clemens was the most dominant pitcher.
Abstaining doesn't affect the outcome as much as mailing a blank ballot like some were reported to have done.

In case anyone missed it, Aaron Sele received one vote for Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame. Take a minute and let that sink in.
A debt repaid?
Possibly. The end of the voting results catches my attention every year. It's nothing new for someone to get a token vote – Benito Santiago and Danny Tartabull are two out-there ones off the top of my head – but Aaron Sele is a player I had not thought about in years. Seems like more than five years anyway.

Ralph Turner

Quote from: Ricky Nelson on January 10, 2013, 06:16:28 PM
Quote from: Ralph Turner on January 09, 2013, 11:20:35 PM
Quote from: Ricky Nelson on January 09, 2013, 09:43:43 PM
Quote from: Bishopleftiesdad on January 09, 2013, 04:27:23 PM
Maybe they all feel as John Faye, the Reds Beat writer:

http://cincinnati.com/blogs/reds/2012/12/31/exercising-my-right-not-to-vote/

Quote
Cincinnati Reds

I simply can't do it. I put off mailing in my 2013 Hall of Fame ballot until today's deadline.

It will not be sent.

I'd rather abstain than play judge and jury this year. The two most deserving players statistically of the 37 on the ballot are Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens. Bonds was the best hitter I've seen. Clemens was the most dominant pitcher.
Abstaining doesn't affect the outcome as much as mailing a blank ballot like some were reported to have done.

In case anyone missed it, Aaron Sele received one vote for Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame. Take a minute and let that sink in.
A debt repaid?
Possibly. The end of the voting results catches my attention every year. It's nothing new for someone to get a token vote – Benito Santiago and Danny Tartabull are two out-there ones off the top of my head – but Aaron Sele is a player I had not thought about in years. Seems like more than five years anyway.
I can imagine a favor that Aaron had done for a sportswriter many years ago, e.g., an autographed baseball for a sportswriter's loved one, some kid in a children's hospital.  The HoF vote cast would serve as the tip-of-the-cap from the grateful sportswriter.

Mr. Ypsi

HoF manager Earl Weaver has died at 82.  Hope he doesn't argue so strenuously with God that he gets ejected! :P

BBFan62

Quote from: Mr. Ypsi on January 19, 2013, 11:22:25 AM
HoF manager Earl Weaver has died at 82.  Hope he doesn't argue so strenuously with God that he gets ejected! :P

Sad day in baseball as Stan 'The Man" Musial (age 92) joins Earl Weaver vying for a spot on the after life team. Even though you killed the Cubs, I admired your skills Mr. Musial. You were among the classiest players ever.

Ralph Turner


Ralph Turner

Not sure where to put this article about the newest attraction at the Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs stadium this season...

Coming to a ball park near you soon

Mr. Ypsi

Could we be witnesses to the greatest hitting season ever?

Miguel Cabrera, a notoriously slow starter who usually heats up later in the season, is WAY ahead of his Triple Crown season stats:  exactly 1/3 of the way thru the season, he is hitting .369, and is on pace for 51 HRs and an all-time record 195 RBIs.  IF he follows past seasons and heats up, watch out: he could obliterate the RBI record, beat the (non-steroid) HR record, and hit who knows what?!

Stay tuned. ;D

Bombers798891

Quote from: Mr. Ypsi on June 01, 2013, 11:06:07 PM
Could we be witnesses to the greatest hitting season ever?

Miguel Cabrera, a notoriously slow starter who usually heats up later in the season

Stay tuned. ;D

This is not true. Cabrera's career splits:

1st half: .320/.396/.564 1 HR every 20.2 PA
2nd half: .320/.398/.565 1 HR every 19.5 PA

For his career, he has hit between 53 and 59 HR's every month of the season.

And how's this for eerie?

Cabrera at home: 200 2B, 7 3B, 170 HR
Cabrera on road: 201 2B, 7 3B, 169 HR

He's pretty much just awesome at hitting all the time.

As for the greatest ever? No. Gehrig ('34 and '36) and Ruth (Every year from 1920 to 1932 except '22 and '25) would be higher on my list, as would Ted Williams' 1941 and Musial's 1948. But in the last 50 years? You might be onto something—provided we take out A-Rod's/Bonds' peak seasons

Mr. Ypsi

Thanks for looking that up - I stand corrected.  I was probably overreacting to last year, when as of June I don't think he was even leading the Tigers in any of the Triple Crown categories.  By his standards, he's mired in a 2-week slump: while still leading the majors in both categories, his BA has fallen 30 points and his RBI pace has fallen from a record 195 to a 'mere' 178! ;)

Bombers798891

Quote from: Mr. Ypsi on June 12, 2013, 11:40:35 AM
Thanks for looking that up - I stand corrected.  I was probably overreacting to last year, when as of June I don't think he was even leading the Tigers in any of the Triple Crown categories.  By his standards, he's mired in a 2-week slump: while still leading the majors in both categories, his BA has fallen 30 points and his RBI pace has fallen from a record 195 to a 'mere' 178! ;)

RBIs are fickle, since they depend more on other players than they do the hitter himself. And it's just really hard to maintain a super high batting average unless you walk a ton or have great speed.

Mr. Ypsi

Miguel does have one new all-time record: no one in history ever had more than two games in a season going 4 for 4 with at least two of the hits being home runs.  Miggy did it three times in the first 78 games!

Saw something I'd never noticed before: in SI.com's previews they always list the team leaders in the three triple crown categories - for Dodgers at Rockies, all six were named Gonzalez. ;) 

(For Tigers at Blue Jays, 4 of the 6 were Cabrera - for the Tigers that was, of course, Miguel; for the Blue Jays it was the naughtiest Cabrera, Melky (served a 50-game suspension for PED's last year while a Giant).  Melky, they don't approve of THAT way to become a Giant. :P)

Mr. Ypsi

#102
Miggy had his SEVENTH 4-hit game today (but 'only' one HR :P) in the team's 87th game (so barely over halfway thru).  Anyone know what the record for 4-hit games in a season is?  (Since prior to 1941, .400 seasons were not that uncommon, I'd assume it is more than 7, but no idea if it is 8 or 13?)

Bombers798891

Quote from: Mr. Ypsi on July 07, 2013, 06:16:11 PM
Miggy had his SEVENTH 4-hit game today (but 'only' one HR :P) in the team's 87th game (so barely over halfway thru).  Anyone know what the record for 4-hit games in a season is?  (Since prior to 1941, .400 seasons were not that uncommon, I'd assume it is more than 7, but no idea if it is 8 or 13?)

This may or may not be the record, but George Sisler had 12 four-hit games in 1920.

Mr. Ypsi

Quote from: Bombers798891 on July 15, 2013, 04:55:34 PM
Quote from: Mr. Ypsi on July 07, 2013, 06:16:11 PM
Miggy had his SEVENTH 4-hit game today (but 'only' one HR :P) in the team's 87th game (so barely over halfway thru).  Anyone know what the record for 4-hit games in a season is?  (Since prior to 1941, .400 seasons were not that uncommon, I'd assume it is more than 7, but no idea if it is 8 or 13?)

This may or may not be the record, but George Sisler had 12 four-hit games in 1920.

Thanks for the info.  Miggy may reach or break the team record of 8 - done 3 times by Harry Heilmann, twice by Ty Cobb, and, most recently, by Charlie Gehringer in 1935.