Category 2 - Greatest Baseball Player
Guys - wait a second, is there not a solitary woman in this draft? anyway - I’m not much of a baseball fan anymore. I haven’t cared for the way owners ruined the game after A. Bartlett Giamatti died, and they completely lost me after shutting down the season in 1994. When I left Detroit 20+ years ago Tiger Stadium was still standing and Cal Ripken, Jr. had (just) ended his playing streak.
I watched a lot of the postseason last year for the first time in 5 years. This exercise was really fun but I frankly had some big holes to fill when it came to understanding advanced stats developed in the last two decades. Before I even started thinking about rankings I spent hours immersed in B-R, Fan Graphs, and SABR.
Baseball was my first love. I destroyed various external parts of our home throwing baseballs and tennis balls against objects. The fireplace foundation, brick planter next to the entryway, an entire wall of our 6-car garage - 15’ to the rafters, I would put all the cars in the driveway to hit balls off a tee for months during brutal Michigan winters - and more windows than you can imagine. I got whupped with a weeping willow switch often. The worst part was going out in the yard to break one off the tree branch because you’ve just been told you’re getting a beating.
While it was not the only thing I relied upon, five advanced statistics (+ two for pitchers) emerged as the foundation of my newfound understanding of the game of my youth.
Wins Above Replacement (WAR)**
Jaffe Wins Above Replacement Score (JAWS)
weighted on-base average (wOBA)
weighted runs created plus (wRC+)
adjusted OPS (OPS+)
adjusted ERA (ERA+)
fielding independent pitching (FIP)
**used both bWAR & fWAR, equal weighting.
As with 4 of the 5 other categories I have judged, the system was just a rough cut. Further refinement relied on a multitude of rankings and my own personal conclusions which are more qualitative in nature. In the end these rankings are nothing more than one person’s subjective opinion.
Tier 5
Franchise favorite, best player locally
16. (1 point) LF Pete Rose
RotY, MVP, WS MVP, 2 GG, 3 batting titles, 24 seasons, 17 ASG, 2B(4)-LF(4)-RF(4)-3B(4)-1B(8), ranks 1st in G, AB, H, singles, 2nd 2B, 6th RS. Batted .300 15x, 44-game hitting streak (NL record), 6 pennants 3 WSC (.321/.388/.440 in 8 postseasons, all higher than regular season.) Led the league in hits 7x, 2B 5x, RS 4x, OBP 2x.
79.7 / 80.5 WAR
62.3 JAWS
.354 wOBA
121 wRC+
118 OPS+
Baseball's all-time hits leader with 4,256 over the course of his 24-year big league career, Pete Rose won three batting titles and led the league in hits seven different times while earning the nickname "Charlie Hustle" for his all-out style of play.
Stayed healthy and stuck around for a long time. Serviceable defensively, excellent lead off hitter, intense leader. He was an inspiration for literally millions of mediocre kids who saw themselves in him. “I may not be the most talented, but I can always hustle, I can always outwork the other kids with more talent” was the mantra of many youth in the 60s & 70s.
Compiled his way into the standard stat record books but last in this cohort group in every advanced stat except for WAR. Great team player, willing switched positions several times to help his team field the best lineup.
Signature play: 1970 All Star Game, scores game winning run by barreling through Ray Fosse in the 12th inning
interview with Chris Russo
Good clip, he talks about what the ASG meant to National Leaguers (they ALWAYS won when I was a kid.)
FINAL THOUGHTS - Was this a homer pick by a Ohioan? I mean he was definitely getting drafted but he is a polarizing figure. Was kind of shocked he came off relatively early. In the end my placement was based on advanced stats plus nobody ever thought he was the best player in baseball (or his team) at any time in his career. The lifetime ban wasn’t a factor, I simply don’t think he is better than anyone else drafted for this category.
15. (2 points) 1B Rod Carew
MVP, RotY, 7x batting champ, 19 seasons, 18 ASG, 2B(9)-1B(10, led league in OBP 4x, H 3x, 3B 2x, RS & OPS x1. Lifetime .328, 3K hits. 4 postseason (.220 in 50 AB), 0 pennants & WSC.
81.3 / 72.3 WAR
81.0 JAWS
.369 wOBA
132 wRC+
OPS+ 131
With a .328/.393/.429 career line and an impressive seven batting titles to his credit, Rod Carew was arguably the best contact hitter of the 1970s. He made the All-Star team each of the first 18 seasons of his career.
Phenomenal contact hitter. Not much power and below average defensively but man was he a tough out. 1971-78 peak .344/.407/.457 while averaging 198 hits. Something of a liability in the field, always made a lot of errors. In his MVP season of 1977, he was batting .403 on July 10 when he landed on the cover of Time and Sports Illustrated.
Batted .300 15 straight years, 1975-78 he was a top 3 AL player. Small market player in his peak years though hardly underrated - All Star his first 18 years. Never seemed to rip the ball hard, just knew how to place it. Lot of looping, curving hits. Very unique stance & swing.
Signature moment: 1977 ABC news profile
FINAL THOUGHTS - Saw him often in his Twins years, great at hitting singles. Almost obscure during his best years. IDK, he hit for average and the Tigers pitched around him, but he never really struck fear like say Killer Killebrew or Tony Olivia. With the Angels he was one of a handful of aging stars you had to worry about. Did he ever do anything memorable in an important big game? Weak postseason stats. Great hitter but couldn’t push him any higher.
14. (3 points) 2B Eddie Collins
1914 MVP (Chalmers Award), 25 seasons (preASG), 2B (21)-SS (2)-PH (2), .333 career BA, 7-year peak 1909-15 averaged 111 R, 58 SB, .343/.436/.446 led AL R 3x, SB 4x, 2nd BA 3x (to Cobb), 6 pennants, 4 WSC (.328/.381/.414), by Win Shares Bill James ranks him the greatest 2B of all time. HoF Class of 1939, was one of 11 living players honored at the first induction when Cooperstown opened June 12, 1939.. All time ranks: 18th R, 11th H, 12th 3B, 19th BB, 8th SB, 3rd Singles, 1st SH.
123.9 / 120.5 WAR
94.1 JAWS
.409 wOBA
144 wRC+
141 OPS+
Eddie Collins played 25 season and ranks 11th on the all-time list with 3,315 career hits. He never once led the league in hits or won a batting title, but he finished his career with an impressive .333/.424/.429 line and his 124.0 career rWAR is good for 10th-best among position players. He also tallied 1,300 RBI and 1,821 runs scored and won AL MVP honors in 1914.
This one surprised me; forgot how good he was. I used to think Collins or Gehringer was an interesting debate, but upon further study it’s Eddie all the way.
Excellent place hitter, slick fielder and smart baserunner. First player to steal 80 bases. No Gold Gloves in his era but led 2B in FPct 9 times (+ 2nd 6x) with very good range factor numbers.
Was the only MVP traded/sold before the next season until Alex Rodriguez 87 years later. Nickname was “Cocky.” Part of the “$100,000 Infield” which won 4 pennants & 3 WSC 1910-1914. By 1915 he was the 3rd highest paid player behind Cobb and Speaker.
When he retired he was 2nd in MLB history in G (2,826), BB (1,499) and SB (744), 3rd in R (1,821), 4th in H (3,315) and AB (9,949), 6th in OBP (.424), 8th in TB (4,268), and 4th in AL history in 3B (187). Naturally he’s moved down the lists in all those standard stats but clearly one of the great prewar players. Only player to play 12+ seasons with two teams.
47 home runs is the fewest of any Hall of Fame position player. Straddled the Dead Ball and Ruth eras, but he played the same game throughout. Not a superior athlete by any means but sort of a more refined, upper crust precursor of Rose - he willed his way to success. No doubt he was one of the most intelligent players in MLB for his time.
Did really well in the advanced stats, longevity, great base stealer - mostly from studying pitchers & getting big leads rather than pure sped - outstanding glove man, first non-Yankee to win 4 WSC (but no appearances the last 2.) Columbia grad, one of the smartest players of any era. Was captain of the 1919 Black Sox but not involved in the scandal.
Racist ##### who refused to sign Jackie Robinson when he was the Red Sox GM. They were the last team to break their color line.
National Baseball Hall of Fame biography
FINAL THOUGHTS - I was all over the place with this one, as high as 8th and as low as 16th in different iterations of the rankings. Slap hitters are hard to love; chicks dig the long ball. But as with the other singles hitters, isn’t really a guy you can pick as the best in the league. Best at his position for the AL? I think so. But not great great, just great. hehe
13. (4 points) RF Joe Jackson
.356 career batting average (3rd), all time highest rookie batting average (.408), 13 seasons (pre-ASG), 10 full seasons, LF (5)-RF (5), led AL 3B 3x, H 2x, 2B OBP SLG OPS 1x. 2 Pennants, 1 WSC (.345/.368/.455).
62.1 / 60.5 WAR
57.3 JAWS
.443 wOBA
165 wRC+
OPS+ 170
Though he played just nine full seasons prior to his lifetime ban for being part of the 1919 Black Sox scandal, Shoeless Joe Jackson was one of the best hitters the game has ever seen. He was at his best playing for the Cleveland Naps, hitting .381/.449/.550 over a four-year span from 1911-14. He finished his career with 1,772 hits in 1,332 career games.
Couldn’t rank him higher because of his shortened career but he was nearly as good as Cobb or Speaker. Set a WS record with 12 hits in 1919.
Sharecroppers son from South Carolina, illiterate - signed his contracts with an X - married a 15 year old local girl the year he became a pro, disliked big cities. His teammates hazed the country bumpkin and he had difficulty adopting to baseball life. Hit .358 in the South Atlantic League in 1909 but Connie Mack traded him because he thought he lacked the maturity to be a big leaguer, as he had done poorly in two late season call ups. The next he won the Southern Association batting title and hit .387 in 20 G with the Indians.
In his rookie year of 1911, amassed 233 hits, 45 2B, 19 3B, batted .408 - 6th highest 1901-2019 - and led the league in OBP. In 1912-13 he led the league in hits and in SLG+OPS 1913. Three times he topped 20 triples to lead the AL in the Dead Ball era, setting two different franchise records that still stand including the AL record of 26. Finished Top Ten in HRs 6 times.
In August 1915 he was traded to the White Sox, hitting .307 in the WS they won that fall. He missed all but 17 G in the 1918 season because of WWI. He hit .351 the next year and .375 with no errors in the Black Sox WS loss. In his last season he hit .382 with a career high 121 RBIs.
Never won a batting title because Cobb was in his prime, winning 12/13 1907-1919. Jackson finished Top Ten 8/10 seasons: 2nd his first three years (.408-.395-.373), 3rd in 1916 (.341, Cobb .370, Speaker .386) and 1920 (.382, Speaker .388, Sisler .407), 4th 2x, 7th 1x.
Many players in the Dead Ball era choked up on the bat with their hands separated. Shoeless Joe kept his hands together on the end of the bat and strode into his swing, producing the hardest hit line drives in MLB. Babe Ruth though his technique was perfect and told a reporter in 1919 he copied his swing from Jackson.
News accounts of his alleged grand jury testimony do not match the stenographic record. A jury acquired the 8 White Sox players of any wrongdoing but Judge Kennesaw Landis imposes a lifetime ban. After his expulsion the local Chicago paper ran the infamous “Say It Ain’t So, Joe” headline. Their is considerable doubt Joe was in on the fix,& the other 7 players confirmed he never went to any of their meetings related to the scandal. Jackson maintained his innocence for 30 years to no avail. He remains on the ineligible list.
He played semipro ball under pseudonyms for 20 years in Georgia and South Carolina. “All the big sportswriters seemed to enjoy writing about me as an ignorant cotton-mill boy with nothing but lint where my brains ought to be,” Jackson said in 1949. “That was all right with me. I was able to fool a lot of pitchers and managers and club owners I wouldn’t have been able to fool if they’d thought I was smarter.”
His wife of 43 years - the 15 year old local sweetheart - read his contracts, managed his affairs, wrote letters on his behalf. She helped run a series of successful businesses: pool room, dry cleaning plant, BBQ restaurant, and most famously, “Joe Jackson’s Liquor Store”. I think Katie was the highlight of his life.
In the winter of 1933-34, Ty Cobb and sportswriter Granted Rice entered the liquor store, with Jackson showing no sign of recognition towards Cobb. After making his purchase, Cobb finally asked Jackson, "Don't you know me, Joe?" Jackson replied, "Sure, I know you, Ty, but I wasn't sure you wanted to know me. A lot of them don't."
Shoeless Joe Jackson: Hall of Fane worthy?
FINAL THOUGHTS - Debated this a lot. I had him as high as 8th or 9th on advanced stats. Personally I think he wasn’t a real smart feller, it’s doubtful he threw the 1919 Series. But at the end of the day, he only played 9 MLB seasons. I’m OK with him here though because especially in MLB folks do love their compilers.
12. (5 point) 1B Willie McCovey
RotY, MVP, 22 seasons, 6 ASG, 1B (19)-LF (3), led the league in HR 3x, RBI 2x, S.Pct & OPS 3 straight years (1968-70), 2 postseasons (.310/.412/.689), 1 pennant, 0 WSC.
64.5 / 67.4 WAR
54.5 JAWS
.388 wOBA
145 wRC+
147 OPS+
A prolific slugger during his time with the San Francisco Giants, Willie McCovey had 521 home runs and 1,555 RBI over his 22-year big league career. He won NL MVP honors in 1969 when he hit .320/.453/.656 and led the league with 45 home runs and 126 RBI.
Went 29-92-.372/.459/.760 in 1959 AAA ball before the Giants called him up at the end of July. Went 4-4 with two triples off a HoF pitcher in his debut, won RotY despite playing only 52 G (13-38-.354/.429/.656). Played his entire career in California; 19 years in two stints with the Giants, 3 with SD (+ a cup of coffee as DH with the A’s.) Retired with 521 HR (T8th), then a NL LH record and 2nd behind only Ruth amongst LHs (he’s now 20th all time.)
Bouton (Ball Four): “A group of terrorized pitchers stood around the batting cage watching Willie McCovey belt some tremendous line drives over the right-field fence. Every time a ball bounced into the seats we’d make little whimpering animal sounds. ‘Hey, Willie,’ I said. ‘Can you do that whenever you want to?’ He didn’t crack a smile. ‘Just about,’ he said, and he hit another one. More animal sounds.”
At his peak no one was more feared. Intentionally walked 45 times in 1969, breaking the old record by a dozen. 40 IBB in 1970. Sparky Anderson said if they pitched to him he’d hit 80 HR; there’s no comparison between McCovey and anyone else. Walter Alston said, "McCovey didn't hit any cheap ones. When he belts a home run, he does it with such authority it seems like an act of God. You can't cry about it."
6’4” with long arms that hung off a massive frame, Stretch was a line drive, dead pull slugger, below average fielder, probably the most popular Giants player ever (yes, even more than Mays.) Bothered by foot and hip injuries with arthritis in his knees, he was a part-timer much of the last decade he played. In 1986 he was the 16th first ballot Hall of Famer.
Signature play 1962 World Series
You gotta watch this! One of the best Game 7s ever, stunning conclusion.
Peanuts cartoon December 22, 1962
Peanuts cartoon January 28, 1963
backstory
FINAL THOUGHTS - Dude was legit scary. Nobody on the right side of play was safe when he was batting.