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World's Greatest Draft (1 Viewer)

I'm trying to figure out what all those quotes have to do with his international status, except the last one. And heaven forbid a broadcaster use hyperbole, wouldn't happen.Babe Ruth is a big American name in baseball so when you export the league you export the names involved. That doesn't make him an international athlete. He dominated a game that was purely and solely American at the time. He's one of the big names in sports but he wasn't a great international athlete. IMO, he makes a 50 times better celebrity than Mary.
so... your saying that he's a horrible choice as an athlete because no one worldwide knew who he was....But he's 50 times more known that Mary, one of the most prominent figures of the largest religion on earth??Really?You don't see how contradictory that is?
I didn't say no one knew who he was, in fact my point about him being a celebrity pretty much implies that a lot of people knew who he was. I said he was not an international athlete. As in, he dominated an American sport without much international support. There are far more athletes out there with international competition and prominence internationally than the Babe. Your reading comprehension is still low.I also didn't say he was more known than Mary. I said he was a better celebrity than Mary because he was known in his lifetime and was treated like a celebrity in his lifetime.Now go back, read what's there, process it properly and then respond to what was actually said and not to your misinterpreted Bible attacks.
So Babe Ruth DID bring baseball to the International masses and the fact that he was (and still is) the greatest player to ever play the game is internationally important?Nice....Thanks for making my arguments for me...
Where did I say that? And if you took it that way, it's even more power for him in the celebrity category. Babe didn't play against other good international players. How then can he be ranked against others who were the best at their international sport?
 
Good work, LB. Seriously. For once you didn't just repeat the same thing over and over.BTW, in the fall of 1946, the Babe was diagnosed with throat cancer, and spent 3 months in the hospital. It was published that he would likely not survive his illness. April 27, 1947, was declared Babe Ruth day. Not just MLB, but every league, professional or amateur, at every level...and in every country baseball was played.
No but over 80% of his quotes were not germaine to the argument. I don't think anyone would doubt what he meant to baseball or his greatness within the game, it's the international appeal that was the topic and only 1 quote touched on that and was a factless opinion.
actually, what you and Tim are saying is factless opinion since you've repeatedly stated that Babe Ruth is not a world-wide known athlete, yet have provided no evidence of any such thing....Whereas you have been given evidence that he is, in fact, a revered athletic figure worldwide and is STILL considered the greatest player to ever play his game (which is now one of the most popular on earth)
Being a famed player is different than being one of the best international players. A distinction I truly don't expect you to see based on previous arguments. I can't speak for Tim, but I never said he wasn't worldwide known, I said that baseball wasn't an international sport and Babe's athletic prowess was restricted to a mostly American level. Look at the other athletes chosen, they are all in international sports. Baseball wasn't then and while his legacy is prominent when the game was exported, his prowess was not tested internationally.
Babe Ruth is revered as the greatest baseball player of all-time worldwide and everywhere baseball is played. No one seriously questions that even if baseball wasn't international at that time.I mean did you know that Japan's greatest player (Japan = #2 baseball league in the world) is nicknamed, literally, "The Babe Ruth of Japan"? He doesn't even get his own nickname, he's just said to be Japan's version of Babe Ruth.That is how great Babe Ruth is...
 
I'm trying to figure out what all those quotes have to do with his international status, except the last one. And heaven forbid a broadcaster use hyperbole, wouldn't happen.Babe Ruth is a big American name in baseball so when you export the league you export the names involved. That doesn't make him an international athlete. He dominated a game that was purely and solely American at the time. He's one of the big names in sports but he wasn't a great international athlete. IMO, he makes a 50 times better celebrity than Mary.
so... your saying that he's a horrible choice as an athlete because no one worldwide knew who he was....But he's 50 times more known that Mary, one of the most prominent figures of the largest religion on earth??Really?You don't see how contradictory that is?
I didn't say no one knew who he was, in fact my point about him being a celebrity pretty much implies that a lot of people knew who he was. I said he was not an international athlete. As in, he dominated an American sport without much international support. There are far more athletes out there with international competition and prominence internationally than the Babe. Your reading comprehension is still low.I also didn't say he was more known than Mary. I said he was a better celebrity than Mary because he was known in his lifetime and was treated like a celebrity in his lifetime.Now go back, read what's there, process it properly and then respond to what was actually said and not to your misinterpreted Bible attacks.
So Babe Ruth DID bring baseball to the International masses and the fact that he was (and still is) the greatest player to ever play the game is internationally important?Nice....Thanks for making my arguments for me...
Where did I say that? And if you took it that way, it's even more power for him in the celebrity category. Babe didn't play against other good international players. How then can he be ranked against others who were the best at their international sport?
there are literally millions of people who know infinitely more about baseball than you do who disagree with you because they all recognize Ruth as the greatest player of all time in his sport.
 
you really think Usain Bolt is better than Babe Ruth Tim?

Really?
In terms of international recognition? Absolutely. But let's look at the total list. Excluding, as you wrote, Pele, Gretzky, Jordan, Ali, and Louis, that means you think Ruth should be ranked above:

Jim Thorpe

Eddie Merckx

Donald Bradman

Jesse Owens

Tiger Woods

Usain Bolt

I know next to nothing about Merckx and Bradman, except what I've read here. But since they both appear to have been internationally recognized athletes who were dominant in their sports, I would personally have to rank them above Ruth. All of the others are clearly above Ruth.

So right now, I've got Ruth at #19, and frankly I don't expect that to change unless the guy who's got Bruce Lee moves him to a WC, in which case Ruth drops to #20. It would be very difficult for me to see Ruth rising above these others.

But again, I'm not the judge of this category. Just giving my own take here.
you do realize you are the only person on earth who doesn't think Ruth is internationally recognized, right?And I only say that because I am ABSOLUTELY sure that you are not saying that Ruth doesn't (and wouldn't, and hasn't, and will forever) dominate baseball in a way in which no one else has ever dominated anything....
This is my last post on the subject so it doesn't drive people away, but once again you are confusing concepts. Being recognized internationally is not the same as being the best at an international level. The fact that he is so popular internationally without haveing competed internationally makes him a good celebrity, very good IMO. But his dominance came solely in America and for the purposes of this draft he falls below a lot of the internationally competing athletes.And BL, the Eastern half of Russia is Asia and they are very big hockey fans/players.

 
you really think Usain Bolt is better than Babe Ruth Tim?

Really?
In terms of international recognition? Absolutely. But let's look at the total list. Excluding, as you wrote, Pele, Gretzky, Jordan, Ali, and Louis, that means you think Ruth should be ranked above:

Jim Thorpe

Eddie Merckx

Donald Bradman

Jesse Owens

Tiger Woods

Usain Bolt

I know next to nothing about Merckx and Bradman, except what I've read here. But since they both appear to have been internationally recognized athletes who were dominant in their sports, I would personally have to rank them above Ruth. All of the others are clearly above Ruth.

So right now, I've got Ruth at #19, and frankly I don't expect that to change unless the guy who's got Bruce Lee moves him to a WC, in which case Ruth drops to #20. It would be very difficult for me to see Ruth rising above these others.

But again, I'm not the judge of this category. Just giving my own take here.
you do realize you are the only person on earth who doesn't think Ruth is internationally recognized, right?And I only say that because I am ABSOLUTELY sure that you are not saying that Ruth doesn't (and wouldn't, and hasn't, and will forever) dominate baseball in a way in which no one else has ever dominated anything....
This is my last post on the subject so it doesn't drive people away, but once again you are confusing concepts. Being recognized internationally is not the same as being the best at an international level. The fact that he is so popular internationally without haveing competed internationally makes him a good celebrity, very good IMO. But his dominance came solely in America and for the purposes of this draft he falls below a lot of the internationally competing athletes.And BL, the Eastern half of Russia is Asia and they are very big hockey fans/players.
you really are missing the point...Babe Ruth IS the greatest player in the history of baseball, period.

You can't say that about Jordan, Ali, Gretzky, Bolt, Woods, or anyone else... There is ALWAYS someone else there to make an argument for the #1 spot.

Except in baseball. The Bambino is THAT good, he was THAT great. There is NO argument. He is the greatest player to have ever played the game.

That is true in Japan, in Central/South America, in Asia, and in the US.

 
there are literally millions of people who know infinitely more about baseball than you do who disagree with you because they all recognize Ruth as the greatest player of all time in his sport.
One more post...Larry, I completely agree that Ruth is the greatest player in the history of baseball, you still don't get that even though I've said it before several times.Baseball was not an international sport then, he didn't compete in an international league. He was the best ever in his sport in which, at the time, only half a continent truly and deeply cared about. It's grown infinitely since, which makes him a celebrity, but doesn't make him a great international athlete.
 
10. Athlete Better defined than "Sports figure." Let's limit the discussion to who are the greatest athletes in history from a global perspective.
it doesn't say "the greatest athletes who competed in international competitions". It says "the greatest athletes in history from a global perspective" and since everyone who plays the game thinks he is the greatest ever, I'd say he more than qualifies....
 
Mad Sweeney makes excellent arguments that I can hardly improve on. Anyhow Larry, the person you need to convince is not me or Sweeney but Misfit Blondes, and from his few comments on this subject, it appears you're not doing such a great job so far. But I wish you luck!

 
you really think Usain Bolt is better than Babe Ruth Tim?

Really?
In terms of international recognition? Absolutely. But let's look at the total list. Excluding, as you wrote, Pele, Gretzky, Jordan, Ali, and Louis, that means you think Ruth should be ranked above:

Jim Thorpe

Eddie Merckx

Donald Bradman

Jesse Owens

Tiger Woods

Usain Bolt

I know next to nothing about Merckx and Bradman, except what I've read here. But since they both appear to have been internationally recognized athletes who were dominant in their sports, I would personally have to rank them above Ruth. All of the others are clearly above Ruth.

So right now, I've got Ruth at #19, and frankly I don't expect that to change unless the guy who's got Bruce Lee moves him to a WC, in which case Ruth drops to #20. It would be very difficult for me to see Ruth rising above these others.

But again, I'm not the judge of this category. Just giving my own take here.
you do realize you are the only person on earth who doesn't think Ruth is internationally recognized, right?And I only say that because I am ABSOLUTELY sure that you are not saying that Ruth doesn't (and wouldn't, and hasn't, and will forever) dominate baseball in a way in which no one else has ever dominated anything....
This is my last post on the subject so it doesn't drive people away, but once again you are confusing concepts. Being recognized internationally is not the same as being the best at an international level. The fact that he is so popular internationally without haveing competed internationally makes him a good celebrity, very good IMO. But his dominance came solely in America and for the purposes of this draft he falls below a lot of the internationally competing athletes.And BL, the Eastern half of Russia is Asia and they are very big hockey fans/players.
you really are missing the point...Babe Ruth IS the greatest player in the history of baseball, period.

You can't say that about Jordan, Ali, Gretzky, Bolt, Woods, or anyone else... There is ALWAYS someone else there to make an argument for the #1 spot.

Except in baseball. The Bambino is THAT good, he was THAT great. There is NO argument. He is the greatest player to have ever played the game.

That is true in Japan, in Central/South America, in Asia, and in the US.
:( :shock: :shock: :lmao: :lmao:
 
Mad Sweeney makes excellent arguments that I can hardly improve on. Anyhow Larry, the person you need to convince is not me or Sweeney but Misfit Blondes, and from his few comments on this subject, it appears you're not doing such a great job so far. But I wish you luck!
honestly, misfitblondes was always going to rank me 20th in his categories no matter who I picked, I knew that before the draft started, so I don't really care where he ranks me...and as far as sweeney's arguments go, tim, you realize they are completely in opposition to your own arguments, right?You argued Ruth doesn't matter and isn't known internationally... Sweeney is simply arguing that he didn't compete internationally...Neither is relevant since neither is required to be great, but that isn't the point here...
 
honestly, misfitblondes was always going to rank me 20th in his categories no matter who I picked, I knew that before the draft started, so I don't really care where he ranks me...
I think this is really unfair to Misfit Blondes, Larry. I have full confidence that he and all the judges will be completely impartial. If I were you and I believed otherwise, I never would have participated in this draft.Sweeney's arguments aren't contradictory to mine, they're simply different to mine, in addition to mine, and quite possibly better than mine. They serve to strengthen my overall evaluation of the selection.
 
honestly, misfitblondes was always going to rank me 20th in his categories no matter who I picked, I knew that before the draft started, so I don't really care where he ranks me...
I think this is really unfair to Misfit Blondes, Larry. I have full confidence that he and all the judges will be completely impartial. If I were you and I believed otherwise, I never would have participated in this draft.Sweeney's arguments aren't contradictory to mine, they're simply different to mine, in addition to mine, and quite possibly better than mine. They serve to strengthen my overall evaluation of the selection.
tim...your argument is that Ruth isn't known worldwide...Sweeneys is that, although Ruth was known worldwide and was and is considered the greatest of all time in his sport, he never actually played international competition...Thus, Sweeney has stated that your argument is false in making his claim. Thus, although he agrees with your evaluation, he has stated numerous times that your reasoning was false.Either way, I think you all are crazy if you don't think the athlete who is almost unanimously considered the greatest player to ever play a game that is going to soon be the second most popular sport on earth is not deserving of being in the top 20 athletes of all time...PLUS he isn't just the greatest at his sport, he's also the one who MADE the sport. Like the quote I quoted last page said "Babe Ruth IS baseball".
 
btw, I don't think its unfair to misfitblondes at all...

and if I cared about the judging I wouldn't participate in these things...

but I don't care about the judging, and I'm not going to pick to try and please a judge (especially not a judge that has made it clear it is impossible for me to please)...

 
Larry is much closer to being correct about Ruth than Tim. Babe Ruth was not an international figure during his prime playing days, but he did headline an influential barnstorming tour of East Asia in 1934 (I believe he also toured Latin America, but I need to double-check). Ruth's international profile built up slowly after his death, throughout the second half of the 20th century wherever American media and culture in general were "exported". He certainly looms iconic today in every baseball-playing nation.

Today, Babe Ruth -- the icon -- is very much known worlwide even in areas where baseball has made no inroads at alll. A German/Jordanian/Sri Lankan/South African man-on-the-street may never have heard of the New York Yankees, or may not even know what a home run is. But they will know -- if only hazily -- "Babe Ruth" as an all-encompassing symbol of that American game of baseball.

 
Larry is much closer to being correct about Ruth than Tim. Babe Ruth was not an international figure during his prime playing days, but he did headline an influential barnstorming tour of East Asia in 1934 (I believe he also toured Latin America, but I need to double-check). Ruth's international profile built up slowly after his death, throughout the second half of the 20th century wherever American media and culture in general were "exported". He certainly looms iconic today in every baseball-playing nation.

Today, Babe Ruth -- the icon -- is very much known worlwide even in areas where baseball has made no inroads at alll. A German/Jordanian/Sri Lankan/South African man-on-the-street may never have heard of the New York Yankees, or may not even know what a home run is. But they will know -- if only hazily -- "Babe Ruth" as an all-encompassing symbol of that American game of baseball.
This is a good, convincing argument. Taken in conjunction with Larry's arguments, perhaps I am wrong. We'll see what Misfit Blondes thinks and eventually, what the FFA thinks.
 
This inventor made something that every country has and even remote villages in Africa have one, which constitutes an effect on the world. For many years the radio was the only way news traveled, other than mail. It acted as a news source, entertainment, social gathering, scare tactic, propaganda machine, and many other uses. There are few inventions that have affected the globe such as the radio and more than likely everyone in the world has at least seen one. The inventor that is credited with the invention of the radio is Mario Kart's next selection and that is:

17.01 - Guglielmo Marconi - Inventor

During his early years, Marconi had an interest in science and electricity. One of the scientific developments during this era came from Heinrich Hertz, who, beginning in 1888, demonstrated that one could produce and detect electromagnetic radiation—now generally known as "radio waves", at the time more commonly called "Hertzian waves" or "aetheric waves". Hertz's death in 1894 brought published reviews of his earlier discoveries, and a renewed interest on the part of Marconi.
Where does the telegraph fit in here?
The telegraph was in most homes throughout the world? The telegraph was similar to that of fax machines vs. telephones. Nearly everyone had/has a telephone yet many fewer people had fax machines. Many, maybe the majority of households had radios... corporations, I assume, media outlets, had the telegraph capabilities.
 
Rules:

10. Athlete Better defined than "Sports figure." Let's limit the discussion to who are the greatest athletes in history from a global perspective.
Let's reconsider the original premise for the category.Worldwide Population by Continent

World - 6.707 billion

Asia 4.054 billion
Africa 973 million
Europe 732 million
Latin America and the Caribbean 577 million
Northern America 337 million
Oceania 34 millionOK...so now go back and look at the reaction to the Wayne Gretzy pick.

Think Gretzky is big in Asia? Africa? Latin America? Oceania?

They don't play hockey there.

The play baseball in far more places.
This is one big reason why I do not understand the love of the Gretzky pick. He was a good hockey player, but who knows him? I won't rank who has been picked but if Gretzky falls outside of the top 10, I would not be surprised.
 
I think that what changed the radio was when they went from one person having to listen on an earphone to a speaker that the whole family could hear. I don't know who came up with that, though.

 
you really think Usain Bolt is better than Babe Ruth Tim?

Really?
In terms of international recognition? Absolutely. But let's look at the total list. Excluding, as you wrote, Pele, Gretzky, Jordan, Ali, and Louis, that means you think Ruth should be ranked above:

Jim Thorpe

Eddie Merckx

Donald Bradman

Jesse Owens

Tiger Woods

Usain Bolt

I know next to nothing about Merckx and Bradman, except what I've read here. But since they both appear to have been internationally recognized athletes who were dominant in their sports, I would personally have to rank them above Ruth. All of the others are clearly above Ruth.

So right now, I've got Ruth at #19, and frankly I don't expect that to change unless the guy who's got Bruce Lee moves him to a WC, in which case Ruth drops to #20. It would be very difficult for me to see Ruth rising above these others.

But again, I'm not the judge of this category. Just giving my own take here.
you do realize you are the only person on earth who doesn't think Ruth is internationally recognized, right?And I only say that because I am ABSOLUTELY sure that you are not saying that Ruth doesn't (and wouldn't, and hasn't, and will forever) dominate baseball in a way in which no one else has ever dominated anything....
This is my last post on the subject so it doesn't drive people away, but once again you are confusing concepts. Being recognized internationally is not the same as being the best at an international level. The fact that he is so popular internationally without haveing competed internationally makes him a good celebrity, very good IMO. But his dominance came solely in America and for the purposes of this draft he falls below a lot of the internationally competing athletes.And BL, the Eastern half of Russia is Asia and they are very big hockey fans/players.
you really are missing the point...Babe Ruth IS the greatest player in the history of baseball, period.

You can't say that about Jordan, Ali, Gretzky, Bolt, Woods, or anyone else... There is ALWAYS someone else there to make an argument for the #1 spot.

Except in baseball. The Bambino is THAT good, he was THAT great. There is NO argument. He is the greatest player to have ever played the game.

That is true in Japan, in Central/South America, in Asia, and in the US.
Actually, there is and has been plenty of debate on the question. I happen to agree, as do many, but your pretentiousness detracts from the point. FWIW, I'd probably rank Ruth above Gretzky in the category, but I'm not the judge.

 
Larry is much closer to being correct about Ruth than Tim. Babe Ruth was not an international figure during his prime playing days, but he did headline an influential barnstorming tour of East Asia in 1934 (I believe he also toured Latin America, but I need to double-check). Ruth's international profile built up slowly after his death, throughout the second half of the 20th century wherever American media and culture in general were "exported". He certainly looms iconic today in every baseball-playing nation.

Today, Babe Ruth -- the icon -- is very much known worlwide even in areas where baseball has made no inroads at alll. A German/Jordanian/Sri Lankan/South African man-on-the-street may never have heard of the New York Yankees, or may not even know what a home run is. But they will know -- if only hazily -- "Babe Ruth" as an all-encompassing symbol of that American game of baseball.
Exactly why he makes a much, much better celebrity than athlete. He was dominant in a sport while competing only against one nation's players. Most everyone else was competing in an international sport and was the best vs much higher percentage of the world's players.
 
This inventor made something that every country has and even remote villages in Africa have one, which constitutes an effect on the world. For many years the radio was the only way news traveled, other than mail. It acted as a news source, entertainment, social gathering, scare tactic, propaganda machine, and many other uses. There are few inventions that have affected the globe such as the radio and more than likely everyone in the world has at least seen one. The inventor that is credited with the invention of the radio is Mario Kart's next selection and that is:

17.01 - Guglielmo Marconi - Inventor

During his early years, Marconi had an interest in science and electricity. One of the scientific developments during this era came from Heinrich Hertz, who, beginning in 1888, demonstrated that one could produce and detect electromagnetic radiation—now generally known as "radio waves", at the time more commonly called "Hertzian waves" or "aetheric waves". Hertz's death in 1894 brought published reviews of his earlier discoveries, and a renewed interest on the part of Marconi.
Where does the telegraph fit in here?
The telegraph was in most homes throughout the world? The telegraph was similar to that of fax machines vs. telephones. Nearly everyone had/has a telephone yet many fewer people had fax machines. Many, maybe the majority of households had radios... corporations, I assume, media outlets, had the telegraph capabilities.
Your post mentioned homes throughout the world? I don't see it in there. I'm pretty sure that the telegraph made radio and mail not the only ways news traveled. Maybe in Europe and USA most homes had radios but that was certainly not true throughout the world.

 
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Your post mentioned homes throughout the world? I don't see it in there. I'm pretty sure that the telegraph made radio and mail not the only ways news traveled. Maybe in Europe and USA most homes had radios but that was certainly not true throughout the world.
News travels quickly to the masses through mass communication efforts. While newspapers are good, they do not hit the masses right away. It takes time to report, type, print, distribute. The telegraph takes time to report, type up, deliver. The radio is report, talk which distributes the news. The radio cut out much of the time the other popular methods had to have... similar with the mail. I don't see how you are arguing the fact that radio, once in the hands of the masses, did not distribute the news, information, entertainment, much quicker than that of those other methods. If that is not what you are arguing, then what are you arguing?
 
This pick was largely overlooked because of multiple folks ranting about Marxism.

I'm going to toss a name in the ring for one of the top spots in the inventor class.

3.10 James Watt Inventor

The brilliant Scot who transformed the steam engine into an efficient device that was instrumental in ushering in the Industrial Revolution. He did not invent the steam engine, rather he took an inefficient design and made it drastically more practical. The steam engine as it was when he began his work on it used boiling water and a stream of cold water to produce steam. This process cooled the boiling water which then had to be re-heated, wasting as much as 80% of the heat used in the process. He developed two gigantic advancements that revolutionized the world. His most important patent was the external condenser which allowed the source water to stay at it's heated temperature in a separate chamber. He then continued to improve the engine by adding valves to create a two way stroke, doubling the already multiply expanding power of the engine. He later started manufacturing and selling them with a financial partner in a "manufactory" which became the "factory".

Numerous other patents followed, some of which like Edison were most likely from his employees, that eventually led to the steam locomotive. Regardless of their origin, those controversial (but undisputed) patents were based on the newly efficient design of the steam engine. He coined the term "horsepower" and the "watt" as a unit of power was named after him.

Over the next six years, he made a number of other improvements and modifications to the steam engine. A double acting engine, in which the steam acted alternately on the two sides of the piston was one. A throttle valve to control the power of the engine, and a centrifugal governor to keep it from "running away" were very important. He described methods for working the steam expansively. A compound engine, which connected two or more engines was described. Two more patents were granted for these in 1781 and 1782. Numerous other improvements that made for easier manufacture and installation were continually implemented. One of these included the use of the steam indicator which produced an informative plot of the pressure in the cylinder against its volume, which he kept as a trade secret. Another important invention, one of which Watt was most proud of, was the Parallel motion / three-bar linkage which was especially important in double-acting engines as it produced the straight line motion required for the cylinder rod and pump, from the connected rocking beam, whose end moves in a circular arc. This was patented in 1784. These improvements taken together produced an engine which was up to five times as efficient in its use of fuel as the Newcomen engine.

James Watt's improvements to the steam engine transformed the Newcomen engine, which had hardly changed for fifty years, and initiated a series of improvements in generating and applying power, which transformed the world of work, and was a key innovation of the Industrial Revolution. The importance of the invention can hardly be overstated--it gave us the modern world. A key feature of it was that it brought the engine out of the remote coal fields into factories where many mechanics, engineers, and even tinkerers were exposed to its virtues and limitations. It was a platform for generations of inventors to improve. It was clear to many that higher pressures produced in improved boilers would produce engines having even higher efficiency, and would lead to the revolution in transportation that was soon embodied in the locomotive and steamboat. It made possible the construction of new factories that, since they were not dependent on water power, could work the year round, and could be placed almost anywhere. Work was moved out of the cottages, resulting in economies of scale. Capital could work more efficiently, and manufacturing productivity greatly improved. It made possible the cascade of new sorts of machine tools that could be used to produce better machines, including that most remarkable of all of them, the Watt steam engine.

His inventions weren't limited to the steam engine either:

Watt continued to invent other things before and during his semi-retirement. He invented a new method of measuring distances by telescope, a device for copying letters, improvements in the oil lamp, a steam mangle and a machine for copying sculptures.
Mad Sweeney - on the previous page you were making a case Watt should be a top 3 inventor (actually, if I am reading it correctly, you think he goes ahead of Edison and Tesla to #1). My research gave me a very different view of Watt.Watt's improved machine operated at very low pressures, relying on the power of the atmosphere - acting on a vacuum created by condensing steam - to do the work. They were, in fact, atmospheric engines rather than true steam engines. While the condenser idea is his alone, and sealing the top of the cylinder allowed for a far more efficient and powerful engine than the Newcomen engine, the real leap forward came when his patents expired. The future of the steam engine was high pressure steam - which does not use a condenser - that made the locomotive possible.

It was within his legal right to hold a monopoly steam power through various patents, but in the larger scheme of things, he stymied any further development. He fought to protect his patents, which were very broad. Watt refused to allow his most talented engineer - a modest man whom history has forgotten - to work with "strong steam", even after the man had developed a working model of a steam carriage.

It could well be argued his proprietorial attitude toward the steam engine upheld the industrial revolution for 15 years.

Anyway, Watt was an extraordinary man, and he was a lifelong inventor. He should rank high, definate top ten, maybe even 5. But I have a hard time putting above the giants you mentioned (Edison, Gutenberg, and Lun).

I'm still undecided about where Tesla should rank.

 
Your post mentioned homes throughout the world? I don't see it in there. I'm pretty sure that the telegraph made radio and mail not the only ways news traveled. Maybe in Europe and USA most homes had radios but that was certainly not true throughout the world.
News travels quickly to the masses through mass communication efforts. While newspapers are good, they do not hit the masses right away. It takes time to report, type, print, distribute. The telegraph takes time to report, type up, deliver. The radio is report, talk which distributes the news. The radio cut out much of the time the other popular methods had to have... similar with the mail. I don't see how you are arguing the fact that radio, once in the hands of the masses, did not distribute the news, information, entertainment, much quicker than that of those other methods. If that is not what you are arguing, then what are you arguing?
I'm not arguing anything, I was asking where the telegraph fit into your model of news only being distributed by mail and radio for many years, newspapers hadn't even occured to me. Then you went on some offensive about radios in most homes as if I had challenged something that didn't even appear in your post. So yes, I will just agree with you that other than telegraph and newspapers (and the telephone), mail and radio (in the homes that actually had it) were, for a goodly amount of time, the only ways news got around. I don't know why you'd be so down on telegraph anyways since Marconi worked with telegraphs a lot.
 
Larry is much closer to being correct about Ruth than Tim. Babe Ruth was not an international figure during his prime playing days, but he did headline an influential barnstorming tour of East Asia in 1934 (I believe he also toured Latin America, but I need to double-check). Ruth's international profile built up slowly after his death, throughout the second half of the 20th century wherever American media and culture in general were "exported". He certainly looms iconic today in every baseball-playing nation.

Today, Babe Ruth -- the icon -- is very much known worlwide even in areas where baseball has made no inroads at alll. A German/Jordanian/Sri Lankan/South African man-on-the-street may never have heard of the New York Yankees, or may not even know what a home run is. But they will know -- if only hazily -- "Babe Ruth" as an all-encompassing symbol of that American game of baseball.
Exactly why he makes a much, much better celebrity than athlete. He was dominant in a sport while competing only against one nation's players. Most everyone else was competing in an international sport and was the best vs much higher percentage of the world's players.
Just to add a con argument to the Ruth debate - he was dominant while competing against one nation's white players.When you look at how many great African-American and Latino superstar players followed Jackie into MLB, it almost taints the baseball records set before the color line was broken. XX% of the best players weren't allowed to compete.

 
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No game has the worldwide participation that soccer has. Not even close.

Pele is the greatest player ever to play that game (in my opinion), but he is not a unanimous choice. There are 2 or 3 others who qualify for that title.

Babe Ruth played on a limited stage. A one nation sport at the time, in fact, a regional sport, concentrated in cities in the northeast and midwest. Soccer players played on an international stage.

There are other sports which have been truly international for decades.

 
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btw, I don't think its unfair to misfitblondes at all...

and if I cared about the judging I wouldn't participate in these things...

but I don't care about the judging, and I'm not going to pick to try and please a judge (especially not a judge that has made it clear it is impossible for me to please)...
Are you serious? It is completely unfair, and insulting even, to suggest Misfit will automatically rank your pick last. You're a real trip Larry.
 
No game has the worldwide participation that soccer has. Not even close.Pele is the greatest player ever to play that game (in my opinion), but he is not a unanimous choice. There are 2 or 3 others who qualify for that title.Babe Ruth played on a limited stage. A one nation sport at the time, in fact, a regional sport, concentrated in cities in the northeast and midwest. Soccer players played on an international stage.There are other sports which have been truly international for decades.
Excellent point, and one that's been totally ignored in this draft. In fact, you could draft the next 9 greatest players in soccer's long history and make a very good argument that they + Pele would qualify for the top ten on this list ahead of everyone else selected thus far.
 
btw, I don't think its unfair to misfitblondes at all...

and if I cared about the judging I wouldn't participate in these things...

but I don't care about the judging, and I'm not going to pick to try and please a judge (especially not a judge that has made it clear it is impossible for me to please)...
Are you serious? It is completely unfair, and insulting even, to suggest Misfit will automatically rank your pick last. You're a real trip Larry.
:goodposting:
 
Michael Jordan is not the greatest player to ever play basketball
:goodposting: :lmao:
Yeah, you Celtic fans will never respect whom I talking about, despite the fact that he was far and away better than your greatest player ever. If the person I'm speaking of had been a Celtic, he would have had all those rings.
This has nothing to do with the Russell/Chamberlain argument. Which by the way, I feel strongly that it favors Chamberlain over Russell. I don't look at championships as a be-all in greatness.This has to do with Jordan being better than Chamberlain, Russell, Bird, Magic, etc.To think that Jordan is not the greatest basketball player takes some very homerish glasses.
 
Michael Jordan is not the greatest player to ever play basketball
:goodposting: :lmao:
Yeah, you Celtic fans will never respect whom I talking about, despite the fact that he was far and away better than your greatest player ever. If the person I'm speaking of had been a Celtic, he would have had all those rings.
This has nothing to do with the Russell/Chamberlain argument. Which by the way, I feel strongly that it favors Chamberlain over Russell. I don't look at championships as a be-all in greatness.This has to do with Jordan being better than Chamberlain, Russell, Bird, Magic, etc.To think that Jordan is not the greatest basketball player takes some very homerish glasses.
I wouldn't say that. I'm not a huge Wilt fan, I didn't start watching basketball till he was long gone. I'm actually more of a Jordan fan. But I think Wilt's numbers are Ruth like and actually more dominant than Michael. I think a very good objective argument can be made that Wilt is the best player of all time, and I believe it to be true.
 
Michael Jordan is not the greatest player to ever play basketball
:goodposting: :lmao:
Yeah, you Celtic fans will never respect whom I talking about, despite the fact that he was far and away better than your greatest player ever. If the person I'm speaking of had been a Celtic, he would have had all those rings.
This has nothing to do with the Russell/Chamberlain argument. Which by the way, I feel strongly that it favors Chamberlain over Russell. I don't look at championships as a be-all in greatness.This has to do with Jordan being better than Chamberlain, Russell, Bird, Magic, etc.To think that Jordan is not the greatest basketball player takes some very homerish glasses.
I wouldn't say that. I'm not a huge Wilt fan, I didn't start watching basketball till he was long gone. I'm actually more of a Jordan fan. But I think Wilt's numbers are Ruth like and actually more dominant than Michael. I think a very good objective argument can be made that Wilt is the best player of all time, and I believe it to be true.
Okay, so I know you don't think he should be drafted, but if you believe him to be the greatest of all time, it's not inconceivable someone else feels the same way and is thus considering him. So, big time spotlighting here.
 
Okay, so I know you don't think he should be drafted, but if you believe him to be the greatest of all time, it's not inconceivable someone else feels the same way and is thus considering him. So, big time spotlighting here.
I know, I know, but it's a little late in the day. I hinted, then Moops threw his name out. Look, it's better for the entire draft that nobody chooses this guy, OK? I don't want anybody to have a poor score. I want everyone to do well. So please draft someone other than Wilt Chamberlain, OK? If you think I've destroyed the integrity of the draft now, so be it.
 
Okay, so I know you don't think he should be drafted, but if you believe him to be the greatest of all time, it's not inconceivable someone else feels the same way and is thus considering him. So, big time spotlighting here.
I know, I know, but it's a little late in the day. I hinted, then Moops threw his name out. Look, it's better for the entire draft that nobody chooses this guy, OK? I don't want anybody to have a poor score. I want everyone to do well. So please draft someone other than Wilt Chamberlain, OK? If you think I've destroyed the integrity of the draft now, so be it.
Do I think you've destroyed the integrity of the draft? #### no. I'm just calling you on something that you regularly call others on. I couldn't care less about spotlighting to be honest.
 
btw, I don't think its unfair to misfitblondes at all...

and if I cared about the judging I wouldn't participate in these things...

but I don't care about the judging, and I'm not going to pick to try and please a judge (especially not a judge that has made it clear it is impossible for me to please)...
Are you serious? It is completely unfair, and insulting even, to suggest Misfit will automatically rank your pick last. You're a real trip Larry.
ok, maybe last is a bit unfair, but that's only because misfits isn't dumb enough to actually do that...But misfits is definately going to rank my picks lower because I picked them than he would had someone else picked them...

:lmao:

I expected it coming in, no biggie... like I said, I don't care...

 
Skipped Pick

NONE

17.04 FUBAR - Next Selection

17.05 Acer FC - On Deck

17.06 Yankee23fan - In the Hole

17.07 Thorn

17.08 DC Thunder/MisfitBlondes

17.09 Doug B

17.10 Mad Sweeney

17.11 Big Rocks

17.12 higgins

17.13 John Madden's Lunchbox

17.14 Usual21

17.15 thatguy

17.16 Andy Dufresne

17.17 Herbert The Hippo

17.18 BobbyLayne

17.19 Mister CIA

17.20 Abrantes

18.01 Abrantes

18.02 Mister CIA

18.03 BobbyLayne

 
btw, I don't think its unfair to misfitblondes at all...

and if I cared about the judging I wouldn't participate in these things...

but I don't care about the judging, and I'm not going to pick to try and please a judge (especially not a judge that has made it clear it is impossible for me to please)...
Are you serious? It is completely unfair, and insulting even, to suggest Misfit will automatically rank your pick last. You're a real trip Larry.
ok, maybe last is a bit unfair, but that's only because misfits isn't dumb enough to actually do that...But misfits is definately going to rank my picks lower because I picked them than he would had someone else picked them...

:confused:

I expected it coming in, no biggie... like I said, I don't care...
A little bit of a psychological ploy here...1. Misfit is going to rank me low because he doesn't like me.

2. I will make it public that he is going to rank me low.

3. Others will come to his defense, and say he will be impartial.

4. That will put him in a box, and force him to be impartial.

5. Ain't I smart?

 
Babe Ruth is, IMO, a terrible choice for the World Draft. The fact that baseball is popular now worldwide has nothing whatsoever to do with Babe Ruth. Most people around the world have no idea who that is.
I suggest you read up on the history of baseball a little.
 
I know this is a late followup on the Joe Lewis pick, but I wanted to add that from most accounts Max Schmeling loathed how Hitler and the Nazis promoted him as a Teutonic golden boy and symbol of Nazism. He hated that he wasn't allowed to show his immense respect for Lewis as a fighter. Many have suspected this is why he lost so quickly in their second fight: not because he threw the fight, but because his heart wasn't 100% into it. He loved being a national hero, but hated all the racist superiority crap that people said about his victory. Some think he feared having to live through all that again.

It's a sad story, really.

 
Babe Ruth is, IMO, a terrible choice for the World Draft. The fact that baseball is popular now worldwide has nothing whatsoever to do with Babe Ruth. Most people around the world have no idea who that is.
I suggest you read up on the history of baseball a little.
Agreed. Ruth was a tremendous athlete in his time and era. Everyone knows about the homeruns and hitting, sure, but did you know he was a starting pitcher for a World Series championship team? Not only was he in the Red Sox rotation, he had under a 3.00 ERA for the playoffs. That's just astounding.That's like A-Rod, fed on hot dogs and beer instead of roids, both hitting 50+ homeruns for the year, and being the best Yankees pitcher throughout the playoffs. It's unheard of. Even for the circumstances of Ruth's era, it was still unheard of. The guy was a tremendous athlete.He's the Gretzky of baseball.
 
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I know this is a late followup on the Joe Lewis pick, but I wanted to add that from most accounts Max Schmeling loathed how Hitler and the Nazis promoted him as a Teutonic golden boy and symbol of Nazism. He hated that he wasn't allowed to show his immense respect for Lewis as a fighter. Many have suspected this is why he lost so quickly in their second fight: not because he threw the fight, but because his heart wasn't 100% into it. He loved being a national hero, but hated all the racist superiority crap that people said about his victory. Some think he feared having to live through all that again.

It's a sad story, really.
I don't care what you say about me, just so you spell my name right. :D
 
Babe Ruth is, IMO, a terrible choice for the World Draft. The fact that baseball is popular now worldwide has nothing whatsoever to do with Babe Ruth. Most people around the world have no idea who that is. We are not talking Ali or Jordan- there was NO worldwide recognition of the Babe. The only reason you made this choice, Larry, is because you are an American. I'm surprised that with so many great international athletes available to be drafted, several of them who are American, that you would be so limited in your choice. I'm pretty sure that except for Bruce Lee (who IMO is not really an athlete) this is the worst choice in this category. But now that you've made it, I don't necessarily advise you moving it to wildcard, because it's an equally bad selection there. Sorry.
you are massively underestimating how well known Babe Ruth is...
Do you have any evidence to support this? If you do, perhaps I'll change my mind. I'm always open to new facts. What evidence do you have that Babe Ruth was an athlete of international repute?
I grew up in Australia and if you asked me to name 1 baseball player it would have been Babe RuthThe only other names that would even be considered would be Joe Di Maggio, Micky Mantle and Cal Ripken Jr.Most Australians would probably have heard of Babe Ruth. Ask them to name 3 Baseballers and unless they currently follow Baseball, Babe Ruth would definitely be in the list. Internationally.Basketball = Jordan, Magic & BirdBaseball = Babe RuthHockey = GretzkyCricket = BradmanSoccer = Pele, Beckham or XXXX
 
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I know this is a late followup on the Joe Lewis pick, but I wanted to add that from most accounts Max Schmeling loathed how Hitler and the Nazis promoted him as a Teutonic golden boy and symbol of Nazism. He hated that he wasn't allowed to show his immense respect for Lewis as a fighter. Many have suspected this is why he lost so quickly in their second fight: not because he threw the fight, but because his heart wasn't 100% into it. He loved being a national hero, but hated all the racist superiority crap that people said about his victory. Some think he feared having to live through all that again.

It's a sad story, really.
Timschochet made a passing reference earlier in the thread about Kistallnacht, the night of broken glass. In a coordinated attack on Jewish people and their property, 91 Jews were murdered and 25,000 to 30,000 were arrested and deported to concentration camps. More than 200 synagogues were destroyed and thousands of homes and businesses were ransacked.Max Schmeling agreed to hide the two teenage sons of a Jewish friend of his, David Lewin, November 9-10, 1938 when Nazi pogroms against the Jews reached new heights. He kept the Lewin boys, Henry and Werner, in his apartment at the Excelsior Hotel in Berlin, leaving word at the desk that he was ill and no one was to visit him.

Later, when the rage of hate died down a little bit, did Schmeling help them flee the country to safety. They escaped and came to the United States where one of them, Henri Lewin, became a prominent hotel owner. This episode remained under shrouds until 1989, when Henry Lewin invited Schmeling to Las Vegas to thank him for saving his life.

Hitler never forgave Schmeling for refusing to join the Nazi party, so he had him drafted into the Paratroops and he was sent on dangerous missions. He survived the war and lived to be 99; IIRC he died 3-4 years ago.

 
Unlike the last pick, Joe Louis is an excellent choice. Not only did he enjoy worldwide recognition, he was actually representative of the idealism of the United States, especially in his battles against Max Schmeling. It is true that, during Louis' lifetime, boxing was a sport dominated by American athletes, but one that was still followed avidly all over the globe. Great, great pick.
The name Joe Louis might have been a name 30 years ago, but now ask someone to anme a boxer anda) It will depend what country they are fromand b it is almost certainly likely to be Ali or Tyson.A boxing fan knows who Joe Louis is, the man in the street not so much.
 
Rules:

10. Athlete Better defined than "Sports figure." Let's limit the discussion to who are the greatest athletes in history from a global perspective.
Let's reconsider the original premise for the category.Worldwide Population by Continent

World - 6.707 billion

Asia 4.054 billion
Africa 973 million
Europe 732 million
Latin America and the Caribbean 577 million
Northern America 337 million
Oceania 34 millionOK...so now go back and look at the reaction to the Wayne Gretzy pick.

Think Gretzky is big in Asia? Africa? Latin America? Oceania?

They don't play hockey there.

The play baseball in far more places.
And this is why Bradman SHOULD score VERY high.The dominant player by a country mile in a sport with a large population of the world to draw from.

 
you really think Usain Bolt is better than Babe Ruth Tim?

Really?
In terms of international recognition? Absolutely. But let's look at the total list. Excluding, as you wrote, Pele, Gretzky, Jordan, Ali, and Louis, that means you think Ruth should be ranked above:

Jim Thorpe

Eddie Merckx

Donald Bradman

Jesse Owens

Tiger Woods

Usain Bolt

I know next to nothing about Merckx and Bradman, except what I've read here. But since they both appear to have been internationally recognized athletes who were dominant in their sports, I would personally have to rank them above Ruth. All of the others are clearly above Ruth.

So right now, I've got Ruth at #19, and frankly I don't expect that to change unless the guy who's got Bruce Lee moves him to a WC, in which case Ruth drops to #20. It would be very difficult for me to see Ruth rising above these others.

But again, I'm not the judge of this category. Just giving my own take here.
you do realize you are the only person on earth who doesn't think Ruth is internationally recognized, right?And I only say that because I am ABSOLUTELY sure that you are not saying that Ruth doesn't (and wouldn't, and hasn't, and will forever) dominate baseball in a way in which no one else has ever dominated anything....
This is my last post on the subject so it doesn't drive people away, but once again you are confusing concepts. Being recognized internationally is not the same as being the best at an international level. The fact that he is so popular internationally without haveing competed internationally makes him a good celebrity, very good IMO. But his dominance came solely in America and for the purposes of this draft he falls below a lot of the internationally competing athletes.And BL, the Eastern half of Russia is Asia and they are very big hockey fans/players.
you really are missing the point...Babe Ruth IS the greatest player in the history of baseball, period.

You can't say that about Jordan, Ali, Gretzky, Bolt, Woods, or anyone else... There is ALWAYS someone else there to make an argument for the #1 spot.

Except in baseball. The Bambino is THAT good, he was THAT great. There is NO argument. He is the greatest player to have ever played the game.

That is true in Japan, in Central/South America, in Asia, and in the US.
There is no sane argument about Bradman not being #1 and he has a larger population base than Baseball to draw from.I think the pick of Ruth is fine, but he is not the greatest player in Baseball history, just the most well known.

 
Larry is much closer to being correct about Ruth than Tim. Babe Ruth was not an international figure during his prime playing days, but he did headline an influential barnstorming tour of East Asia in 1934 (I believe he also toured Latin America, but I need to double-check). Ruth's international profile built up slowly after his death, throughout the second half of the 20th century wherever American media and culture in general were "exported". He certainly looms iconic today in every baseball-playing nation.

Today, Babe Ruth -- the icon -- is very much known worlwide even in areas where baseball has made no inroads at alll. A German/Jordanian/Sri Lankan/South African man-on-the-street may never have heard of the New York Yankees, or may not even know what a home run is. But they will know -- if only hazily -- "Babe Ruth" as an all-encompassing symbol of that American game of baseball.
:D
 
No game has the worldwide participation that soccer has. Not even close.Pele is the greatest player ever to play that game (in my opinion), but he is not a unanimous choice. There are 2 or 3 others who qualify for that title.Babe Ruth played on a limited stage. A one nation sport at the time, in fact, a regional sport, concentrated in cities in the northeast and midwest. Soccer players played on an international stage.There are other sports which have been truly international for decades.
like Cricket
 
Unlike the last pick, Joe Louis is an excellent choice. Not only did he enjoy worldwide recognition, he was actually representative of the idealism of the United States, especially in his battles against Max Schmeling. It is true that, during Louis' lifetime, boxing was a sport dominated by American athletes, but one that was still followed avidly all over the globe. Great, great pick.
The name Joe Louis might have been a name 30 years ago, but now ask someone to anme a boxer anda) It will depend what country they are fromand b it is almost certainly likely to be Ali or Tyson.A boxing fan knows who Joe Louis is, the man in the street not so much.
You have to look at what their world reknown was in their time.Some 25-30 year old came in here last week (I forget who it was) and made the preposterous argument with Doug B that Jackie O wasn't a big celebrity.There was no more famous 'reluctant celebrity' before her, but his contention was someone of a certain age (30 and under or some silly number) wouldn't know her if they saw her picture. The logic is absurd. It's not about who is recognizable or famous for today only.
 
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Well, it appears I'm wrong about the international fame of Babe Ruth. That's fine; I don't mind being wrong from time to time. It's so rare it's exciting! :goodposting:

Anyhow, I'll be gone almost all day today. I'll update picks tonight.

 

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