Friday, July 31, 2015

Marco's Baseball Bog-O-Roonie: DOLLARS, DELUSIONS and DESPERATION

MARCO'S BASEBALL BLOG-O-ROONIE:

DOLLARS, DELUSIONS AND

DESPERATION

...THE PENNANT CHASE

Today's topic is the wild trading session concluding this afternoon as the July 31st deadline for trades without clearing wavers has the baseball world all Topsy-turvey...catywampus...cracker-dog...and just plain chaotic and bewildering.

The trading season has gotten much more frantic since free agency has forced losing teams to trade their stars before losing them to free agency and other teams to make wild gambles to try to win before the same thing happens to them. Some of them do it right, some do it wrong and some just get unlucky or lucky as the baseball gods decree.

Take Kansas City for example. They are the smallest of the small market teams...toiling in the baseball wilderness and second division since 1985 when they won a World Series from the Cardinals thanks to the worst blown call by an umpire probably ever. Last year they snuck into the wild card, got hot and made it to the seventh game of the series before rolling over to Bumgarner and the Giants.

This year I predicted that they would win it all and they made me look smart by leading their division all season. But while their bullpen was supreme and their hitters hot and their fielders gold, they lacked an Ace starter and bench depth. Also, their core players Hosmer, Moustakis and several others are all on the verge of free agency...which in Kansas City means bye bye forever because KC doesn't have enough money to compete for free agents.

So KC needs to win now. Voila. They trade three of their best young lefty pitchers for Ace Johnny Cueto of the Reds. Then they pick up super sub Ben Zobrist from the Athletics who can fill in in left for injured Alex Gordon and when Gordon gets back, take over at second from offensively challenged Omar Infante.

They've emptied the farm and they know they only have Cueto for the rest of this season...he's a free agent and KC won't be able to resign him...not a chance in hades. But the Royals have this one year to win it all before they go back down to small market hell. God bless their little hearts, they are going for it.

KC's division rival Detroit has won the Central year after year, only to cough it up in the post season. For some strange reason they thought they could win without a bullpen and it has cost them year after year after year. They've failed to win two series against the Cardinals and the Giants and they let the Red Sox beat them in 2013 on David Ortiz's and friends heroics. They sunk a bundle into keeping Verlander, who had one more good season and then lost his fastball, his control and his ability to win. They tied up tons of money in Victor Martinez after his near MVP year and then watched him lose his effectiveness to injury. They let Scherzer walk away and traded all their other effective pitchers except for Verlander and Sanchez. They rented David Price for a year and now they've decided they can't win and traded him to the Jays for a prospect. They'll trade Cespedes next. He's a free agent to be as well.

I think Detroit lost their nerve. They are only 3 games away from the wild card behind the Twins. The Twins! They don't think they can come back and beat the Twins for God's sake? With Cabrera due back from a long stint on the DL, and J.D.Martinez almost leading the league in homers and Julio Iglesias playing gold glove shortstop and hitting
.318 and Kinsler and Cespedes playing great? I say keep Price and get a draft pick for him next year. Go out and get one of the good stoppers on the market and a number three type starter and go for it one more time. You can start to rebuild around your young players next year. But the Tigers spit the bit.

Over in the AL East it's a different situation. The race is tight even though the Yankees are 6 games up and looking good until they just lost Pineda to a forearm strain. Now they seem shaky in the rotation. Of course the Yanks will probably go out and get another starter. And maybe another reliever too (rumor mill says Chapman or Kinsler)so they can keep up with KC. But the Orioles and the Blue Jays are not that far behind and at least can compete for the wild card.

The Orioles aren't making many moves yet in the market. Well, they got Garcia Parra from the Brew Crew to play...outfield. I guess they want to keep their farm prospects. But next year they lose Crush Davis and some others and probably will be weaker. They are acting like a small market team that can't compete.

The Toronto Blue Jays, on the other hand, are all in for this year. Their offense is peaking with their off season addition Josh Donaldson an MVP candidate and Bautista and Encarnacion still dangerous. It's their pitching that has held them back. So what do they do? Trade for Troy Tulowitzki of the Rockies! They were worried about Jose Reyes' diminished range at shortstop (undoubtedly accelerated by playing on the astroturf of their home stadium) and his huge contract. So they traded Jose and three pitchers to the Rocks, including their number two prospect Hoffman who looked like an Ace-to-Be until he had Tommy John.

So now they have an even better offense (except they don't have a leadoff man anymore and their whole lineup is right handed except for one guy.) And still no pitching! Okay, when the Tigers panic they trade their number one pitching prospect for a few months rental of David Price. So that means the Jays are looking at a future with no good pitching coming up...they've traded all of them. They want to win now...and they could do it. However...

The Jays are the worst possible team for Tulowitzki. Why? Because Tulo plays hard and gets hurt diving for balls. He's a great shortstop but he averages about 115 games played a year because of rib, groin and hip injuries. So now he'll be diving on concrete. I doubt he'll last a month.

So the Jays better win their bet because they aren't going to be able to keep Price or any other free agent. Free agents don't come to Toronto because of the exchange rate with the Canadian dollar and the taxes up there. Plus it's a media black hole and stars don't dig that.

It's always the same teams collecting free agents: New York (both teams, Chicago Cubs, Dodgers, Red Sox, an occasional flurry from a Texas or Atlanta.

Speaking of Texas, the Rangers just gave up their number 3,4 and 5 prospects to the Phillies for Cole Hamels. This is mostly for next year because Cole has three years left
on his contract. Texas doesn't want to miss their window. Injuries knocked them out last season and they want to cash in while they still have a productive Beltre and Fielder and whatever Josh Hamilton has left. If Yu Darvish comes back ok next summer they could have a strong rotation. (I thought the Dodgers would wind up with Cole.)

And Houston. O Lordy! They are so excited in Houston! The 'Stros are finally winning once in awhile. But Springer got hurt, Carter stopped hitting and they got bounced out of first place for a few weeks. So they traded for Kazmir from Oakland and just got that head case Carlos Gomez from the Brewers to play center and hopefully hit. Good moves Astros! Get the city fired up and behind you and you can turn into a large market team. (What is Houston, the 4th largest city in the country now?) Even if they don't win the division, they are a favorite for a wild card.

The NATIONAL LEAGUE looks a bit less quixotic in their quest for glory. Most of the trades have been very utilitarian. Of course, this is the last day and things could change.

I predicted the playoff teams would be the Nationals, Cardinals and Dodgers winning with the Pirates and Giants wild cards. So far, that is exactly the order of things.

But the Mets with their great pitching are hanging around with the Nats. So the Nats upgraded their bullpen by adding Papelbon from the sinking ship that is the Phillies. The Nats also get Rendon and Werth back from injuries so they are looking stronger. Their starters got hurt though. Strasburg and Fister are out. Denard Span is still out. So the Nats are not sure things.

And the Mets could pounce ...if only they had a clue! They got a closer in Tyler Clippard but can't seem to land a hitter. Their loss Houston's gain with the Gomez fiasco. They didn't like his health issues. I guess they're paranoid after Wright's neck problem. Their offense is a joke and short and second are problems.

They should trade for Carlos Gonzalez of the Rockies. Lefty hitters do better at Citi Field. Citi is where right handed power hitters go to die. (Does anybody remember Jason Bay? He hit lots of homers and rbis for Pittsburg and Boston and then free agented to New York and dropped like a stone.)

The Central is in the capable hands of the St. Louis Cardinals, who pick up exactly who they need whenever they want to. They are so logical and orderly about their moves. Let's see, Holiday is hurt again...let's get...Moss from Cleveland!

Pittsburgh needs to win this year or next. Clock on the wall says free agent stars will be leaving for big bucks away from small market Pirates. It's sad...they are almost over the hump. If they could only win out of the wild card. A.J.Burnett was pitching way too good to last. Since the All Star break he's been a disaster.

The Cubs seem to be waiting till the off-season to go after some more help. This year is a little too early for them to go for it.

The Reds are major sellers. They will rebuild around Votto but they got a lot of good young talent by trading Cueto and now Leake (to the Giants) More to come with Chapman probably going. It's the Deguello playing in the background for the Reds. It's going to be awhile.


Out West, the Dodgers are playing cat and mouse with the resurgent Giants. I keep expecting them to go crazy and blow people out of the water with big moves, but the Dodgers surprised me by adding middle-level pitchers Wood and Latos to be 3-4 starters and actually got some prospects back to restock their farm in this complex 13 player three way deal with Miami and Atlanta. (The Marlins were just dumping contract money it looks like. I suspect the Braves got some good talent back...GM John Hart is a shrewd old bastard.)

AS I mentioned, the Giants got Leake from the Reds. He pitched great on the road and okay in the band box at Great American. He should do real well in the big park in San Francisco.

FIRST HALF MVPS:

AMERICAN: Trout
NATIONAL: Goldschmidt (Harper real close)

Oh yeah...for some reason I left out St. Louis from the Mt. Rushmore of each team last time:

St. Louis Cardinals: ROGERS HORNSBY, DIZZY DEAN, STAN MUSIAL, BOB GIBSON
foothills: Jessie Burkett (hit over .400 twice in the nineteenth century), Lou Brock, Ozzie Smith, Albert Pujols.

Fans chose Brock over Dizzy Dean. I can see it. Brock led them to three pennants. But Dean had 5 great years in the hitting-happy early thirties and was the star of the famous Gashouse Gang series winners of 1934 when Diz won 30 games.
Also, Dizzy was the most popular and colorful player in baseball after Babe Ruth.
Pujols I think is nixed because of the way he left the team. Ozzie should get more consideration. What a great star!

See you next time...

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Marco's Baseball blog-o-roonie at the break

MARCO'S BASEBALL BLOG-O-ROONIE

THE “MOUNT RUSHMORE” DEBATE:

MLB has asked fans to choose the “Mt. Rushmore” of each team...the 4 players who represent each team best throughout their history.
I now reprint my picks for the original eight teams of the American League in conjunction with scathing repudiations of the imbecilic picks of mere fans.
Then I'll do the National League.


YANKEES: easy...Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio, Mantle.
...but in the foothills are Berra, Ford, Jeter and Rivera.

*no arguments here! The fans agreed!

RED SOX: harder...Cy Young, The Thumper, Yaz, Ortiz
foothills: Pedro Martinez,(Big Asterisk* Clemens)

*the fans picked Pedro Martinez over Cy Young. Pedro's 5 years (starting with Montreal in 97 when he had an ERA of 1.90) are indeed as dominant as any pitcher has ever had. Considering the hitter's era he pitched in, Pedro was the most dominant pitcher of all time in the 99 and 2000 seasons.

But how do you keep Cy Young off Mt. Rushmore? Pedro pitched 7 seasons for the Sox, Cy pitched 8. Cy actually pitched more for the National League Cleveland and St. Louis franchises. So I guess I'll let it pass. I love Pedro, but you will see a trend of ignoring the great players of earlier eras. Today's fans have no sense of history.

ST.LOUIS BROWNS/BALTIMORE ORIOLES: George Sisler (hit .400 twice), Brooks Robinson, Cal Ripken, Eddie Murray
foothills: Jim Palmer

*fans put Palmer in and completely ignored the fact that the franchise started in ST. Louis with the Browns. So no Sisler.

WASHINGTON SENATORS/MINNESOTA TWINS: Walter Johnson, Harmon Killebrew, Rod Carew, Kirby Puckett
foothills: Bert Blyleven (under-appreciated), Jim Kaat

*ring the alarm bells! Fans did NOT put Walter Johnson in. They put Tony Oliva in but not Walter Johnson, the consensus best pitcher of all time...especially if you go by longevity. Now I know I'm dealing with New Age ignoramuses!

DETROIT TIGERS: Ty Cobb, Hank Greenberg, Charlie Gehringer,
Al Kaline
foothills: Alan Trammel, Miguel Cabrera

*fans jumped the gun by putting Miguel Cabrera in instead of Gehringer. Maybe by the time he's done, but it's too early. Somebody look up Gehringer's record. 14 stellar seasons. Lifetime .320/.404/.480 and played the best defense of his time. Won a couple of World Series too.

CLEVELAND INDIANS: Nap Lajoie, Tris Speaker (The Grey Eagle...always liked his nickname), Bob Feller, Satchel Paige (I know he only played a couple of years for them when he was about 50 but hey, some team should have room for the greatest pitcher of all time on Mt. Rushmore. Who would you rather have, Rocky Colavito?)
foothills: Lou Boudreau, Rocky Colavito

*fans put in Vizquel and Jim Thome instead of Nap Lajoie and Paige. Okay, I was having fun with Paige (see story at end of today's blog) but they actually called the Indians the “Cleveland Naps” when Lajoie played. Top 5 of second basemen all time.

PHILADELPHIA/KANSAS CITY/OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Jimmie Foxx, Lefty Grove, Reggie Jackson, Ricky Henderson
foothills: Home Run Baker, Al Simmons, Catfish Hunter, Dennis Eckersley

*of course! Who ever heard of Lefty Grove? Not the Athletics fans! They put Eckersley in there. Dumb! Grove was a Top 10 pitcher of all time.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Eddie Collins, Luke Appling, Nelson Fox, Frank Thomas
foothills: Big Ed Walsh (deadball era pitcher who won 40 games in 1908 while pitching 464 innings! Lifetime ERA? 1.84)

*idiot fans put Konerko, Baines and Minoso ahead of Appling, Fox and Eddie Collins. Collins is easily in the top three second baseman of all time. Top thirty of all players all time! Can you say that about Konerko or Baines? According to Bill James, Collins was among the best defensive second sackers of all time, was the best bunter of all time, invented the hit and run, caused the infield fly rule to be invented to keep him from doubling up base runners on dropped pop ups, stole 731 bases, batted .333 lifetime with a .424 lifetime On base. White Sox fans...go stand in the corner!

NATIONAL LEAGUE ORIGINAL EIGHT:

BOSTON/MILWAUKEE/ATLANTA BRAVES: Warren Spahn, Hank Aaron, Chipper Jones,Greg Maddux
foothills: Kid Nichols(averaged over 30 wins a year in the 1890s), Hugh Duffy (batted .440 in 1894...great center fielder), Ed Mathews (very close at third with Jones), Phil Niekro, Tom Glavine, John Smoltz

*Spahn and Aaron are slam dunks...fans agree with me

NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Christy Mathewson, Mel Ott, Willie Mays, Willie McCovey
foothills: Carl Hubbell, Juan Marichal, (DISQUALIFIED: BARRY BONDS...no steroid Frankensteins allowed on Mt. Rushmore!)

*stupid fans don't even mention Christy Mathewson...one of the original Hall of Famers and a great pitcher for the Giants for years and years. 6 ex post facto Cy Young awards. Shame! One of the first great American baseball heroes and a consensus top twelve pitcher. Same with Mel Ott...a great, great outfielder and 500+ home run hitter with a high average and on base percentage. Fans had Bonds and Posey. Too soon on Posey...see above for Bonds.

BROOKLYN/LOS ANGELES DODGERS: Dazzy Vance, Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Sandy Koufax
foothills: Zach Wheat, Pee Wee Reese, Roy Campanella

*I don't expect the fans to remember Dazzy Vance who was one of the best pitchers of the twenties. He dominated and had ERA's about two runs lower than the league for the decade of the twenties. Played for bad teams...still won 7 straight strike out titles, 3 ERA titles.

Fans liked Drysdale who was a great pitcher but overrated because he pitched in the pitcher's paradise of Dodger Stadium in the worst hitter's era of all time.

Pee Wee is a Hall of Famer who played from 1940 til 1958...the era of greatness for the Dodgers. He was the captain, the shortstop, the lead off man, the team leader in every way. He put his arm around Jackie Robinson's shoulders and let the world know that not every Southern Man was a racist. A very important Dodger.

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES: very tough choices here...Grover Alexander, Robin Roberts, Richie Ashburn, Mike Schmidt
foothills: Ed Delahanty, Sliding Billy Hamilton, Steve Carlton

*fans ignored the old timers of course...even Alexander who is probably one of the top five all time pitchers. Alex won 245 games just in the decade of the teens (nine years with 1918 off so he could go get gassed in the trenches of World War One.) total of 373 wins all time. Led in victories 6 times, innings pitched 7 times, complete games 6 times, shutouts 7 times pitching in one of the great hitter's parks of all time. He threw 16 shutouts in 1916! (Read that again!) Alex led in strike outs 6 times and ERA 5 times. He had WARs over 10 3 times! His Whips WERE unreal...etc. etc...he would have won 4 Cy Youngs ex post facto. (Cy himself would have only won 5!)
Adjust for era all you want...Grover was a pitching God.

Richie Ashburn was the heart and soul of the Phils in the fifties. (led in hits 3 times, walks 4 times, triples twice, batting twice and on base 4 times. Games played 7 times ...that's important) A great leadoff man and right up there with Willie as a great center fielder. As important to Philadelphia as Al Kaline was to Detroit.

Fans also had Schmidt and Roberts along with Carlton (5 strike out titles, 1 ERA title)...who I love but who wasn't quite as dominant as Roberts and Alexander in their respective eras.

CINCINNATI REDS: Frank Robinson, Johnny Bench, Pete Rose, Joe Morgan
foothills: Ernie Lombardi, Barry Larkin

*fans chose Barry Larkin over Robinson. Obviously they forgot that Robinson won them a pennant and was dominant for ten years in a Reds uniform before they inexplicably traded him to Baltimore where he won the triple crown in 66. Barry Larkin was a great team leader and shortstop. But Robinson was very close to Willie and Hank as a hitter in that era and was way better than everybody else. Bill James lists him as the 24th best player OF ALL TIME.

PITTSBURGH PIRATES: Honus Wagner, Ralph Kiner, Roberto Clemente, Willie Stargell
foothills: Arky Vaughn (top five shortstops of all time), Paul Waner (300 hit club)

*fans voted for Mazeroski who will always be a God in Pittsburgh. Over Kiner. Kiner was super productive as a home run hitter who walked a lot and carried a bad team for years. He couldn't run, field or throw. Maz was a pathetic hitter with a terrible on base percentage but was the best fielding second baseman of all time. Turned the double play better than anyone before or since. Has the highest fielding rating OF ANY PLAYER ALL TIME AT ANY POSITION. So I guess it can be a good argument. But if Maz hadn't hit that one home run...

CHICAGO CUBS: Mordecai “Three Finger” Brown, Gabby Hartnett, Ernie Banks, Ryne Sandberg
foothills: Cap Anson*, Billy Williams, Ron Santo, Sammy Sosa*

*fans picked Santo and Williams but not Brown or Gabby. I expected that. Brown was one of the two best pitchers of his era along with Christy Mathewson. He beat Matty head to head in those early days of the great rivalry between the Giants and the Cubs...the only time that the Cubs ever won World Series. I just think that the best player on those early Cubs teams should be on Mt. Rushmore for them. And Brown, pitching with a mutilated hand...was one of the best pitchers ever.

Gabby helped the Cubs win a couple of pennants in the twenties and thirties. He was the leader at catcher. Williams and Santo are both worthy candidates and great players...among the best. Sammy Sosa*...I just can't go there.

Cap Anson is a special and sinister case. He played (mostly first base) from 1871 to 1897...led the league in rbis 8 times...batting 4 times. First man to ever get to 3000 hits. What made him special was that he was largely responsible for keeping the National League together in those early years...thus getting professional baseball going. Normally he'd be considered a titan of the game and a prime candidate for Mt. Rushmore. But...Anson, more than any other man, was most responsible for keeping black players out of major league baseball. There have been other racists in baseball for sure, but this was the man who actively worked to get a permanent ban on black players... a ban that lasted until 1947.
Get down off that mountain Cap.

ALL TIME NEGRO LEAGUE MT. RUSHMORE: John Henry “Pop” Lloyd,
Oscar Charleston, Josh Gibson, Satchel Paige
foothills: Buck Leonard, Cool Papa Bell, Martin Dihigo, Rube Foster, Smokey Joe Williams and about ten others.
(Remember this is the best players from the whole league...not just one team)

Lloyd was a shortstop and Ruth called him the best player he ever saw. Charleston was known as “the black Ty Cobb” and was an Alpha Star par excellence. You've heard of Josh Gibson...probably the greatest right handed power hitter ever. Once hit a ball out of Yankee Stadium...Hit some 700 homers in Negro League play. Outstanding catching skills.
And Satchel? Well, here's a story for you:

Vin Scully tells this story:

One of the things that Bill Veeck did as a promotion, he signed Satchel Paige, who was very close to being 50 years old and still pitched very well in Triple-A. On that ballclub, back in 1956, was Whitey Herzog — now a Hall of Fame manager.
But Whitey was an outfielder, and they were playing in Rochester, New York, and Herzog was out in the outfield and he noticed a promotional thing in the Rochester ballpark. There was a hole in the fence in center field, and above it was a sign — “If you hit the ball in the air through the hole, you get $10,000.”
So Herzog went back into the clubhouse, got a bunch of balls, went out to center field and tried to throw a ball through the hole. And he couldn’t do it. So then when he went back in before the game started, Whitey was talking to Satchel Paige. And he said, “Satch, you see that hole out there in center field?”
And Paige said, “Yes, wild child.”
He said, “I’ll bet you a bottle of bourbon that you can’t throw the ball through that hole.”
So the next day, before batting practice, Herzog got a bunch of balls and he took Satchel Paige out. Herzog marched off 60 feet, 6 inches from the hole. He gave Satchel Paige the ball.
And Satchel said, “Wild child, does the ball fit through the hole?”
And Whitey Herzog said, “Satch, it sure does.”
He said, “Then you have a bet.”
So he held the ball up and looked over the ball like he was aiming a rifle. Now, Paige winds up and throws. The ball goes into the hole, spins around, and pops out again. And Herzog thinks, “Holy mackerel! He’ll never come any closer than that.”
Paige picks up the next ball, aims: right through the hole. Clean as a whistle. He said, “Wild child, I will take that,” and walked off the field.”


Answer to the stumper question:
What brothers hold the major league record for most home runs by sibling players?
Answer: Hank Aaron and Tommie Aaron. Hank hit 755 and Tommie hit 13!
Next post before I leave for New Mexico at the end of July!





Thursday, July 9, 2015

ALPHA-STARS






ALPHA-STARS



Now why is there a photo of Pete Reiser at the top of this article? Well, Children, because he is an obscure and almost forgotten example of that rarest of baseball animals...the ALPHA-STAR.
Yes, it's just a cute name I made up for my own entertainment, but here is what I mean:


Over the history of baseball there have been many DOMINANT players who could control the game with one or more talents. Ace pitchers like Johnson, Grove and Koufax and their latter-day counterparts Scherzer and Bumgarner are easily identifiable.
An ALPHA-STAR is a player that controls the game not with one or two talents, but with all FIVE of the particular talents of baseball...the ultimate 5-TOOL PLAYER. The 5-tools are commonly defined as:


1.HITTING
2.HITTING WITH POWER
3.RUNNING
4.FIELDING
5.THROWING


*(I would argue that there are actually at least 8 identifiable talents that affect the game, with the addition of DURABILITY (like Gehrig and Ripken...players whose value increases by their ability to stay on the field), BASEBALL INTELLIGENCE (players like Joe Morgan and Greg Maddux who can out-think opponents) and LEADERSHIP (players who possess that intangible quality of inspiring and supporting their teammates. They can be quiet leaders by example like Stan Musial, inspirational guys like Willie Stargell and Dutch Daulton,or fiery guys like Rose, Johnny Evers and Frankie Frisch. They can even be “clowns” like Luis Tiant, Rabbit Maranville, Yogi Berra and, recently, Hunter Pence. Whatever the ephemeral qualities that define “leadership”, it's pretty obvious that it can have a positive effect on winning or losing a ballgame.


Anyway, this is probably the subject for a later discussion. Right now, let's just talk about the traditional 5 tools)


So, my definition of an ALPHA-STAR is a player who is, at any given time, the outstanding player on the field AT ALL FIVE TALENTS. This would be a player who is at least top ten and preferably top five year in and year out in most offensive hitting categories, in fielding his position, in the throwing game (pitchers have a special caveat which I go into below) and in the running game (mostly stolen bases but the other positive aspects of speed as well).


Let's give some examples that most people easily recognize. WILLIE MAYS, MICKEY MANTLE and DUKE SNIDER. All three of these superstars won batting titles ( Snider actually only contended) and home run titles. They were considered to be great center fielders. They all had great arms...Mays and Snider had all-time great arms. They could run. Mays led the league in steals a few times. Mantle and Snider didn't steal much because of team philosophy but they were two of the fastest men in baseball in their primes.
Willie, Mickey and the Duke were super athletes and ALPHA-STARS...Ted Williams and Stan Musial weren't. Williams and Musial were both better pure hitters than any of the WMDs. Williams probably had more power than Willie and Duke, but not more than Mick. Neither Ted or Stan could field with the center field boys and neither could throw that well. Stan ran pretty good but was not much of a stolen base threat. Ted ran like a drunken donkey.
Okay, you get my definition now?


Well, if you look at the history of baseball, there are very, very few players who dominated in every category.
The first was probably Ed Delahanty, who played most of his career in the 1890's for the Phillies. He hit over .400 3 times and led in slugging and doubles 5 times each and homers twice. He led in steals once with a high of 58 and could field several positions well with a cannon arm, but is not generally remembered for being a defensive genius like say, Tris Speaker, who came along later.


Tris played center field and set the standard for that position until Joe Dimaggio came up to challenge his primacy as the UR-CENTER FIELDER of all time. (Mays probably knocked Joe off the perch.) Speaker was team leader of both the Red Sox of the 1910's and the Cleveland Indians of the teens and 20's. He led the league in hitting (when Cobb took a year off from winning it) and was a power hitter for doubles and triples in that pre-homer era. Tris stole 30-50 bases every year.


Cobb, by the way, would not match my definition as an ALPHA-STAR, although he certainly dominated baseball with his incredible superiority as a hitter, base stealer and intimidator. The chink in Ty's armor was throwing. Contemporaries said that “he threw like a washer woman”.


Other Alphas of the early era were second baseman Nap Lajoie and star-crossed Shoeless Joe Jackson.


But the most identifiable Alpha of the day, and one of the most identifiable of all time, was Pittsburgh shortstop Honus Wagner.


Honus was the best hitter of his league...8 batting crowns. He was the best power hitter (even though in the dead ball, fields-with-no-fences era nobody hit many homers), leading in slugging 6 times, doubles in 7 and triples in 3. He was the stolen base champion 5 times with a high of 61.
Honus was the best fielding shortstop of the league and played many other positions occasionally. According to his contemporaries, he would have been the best at almost every other position as well.
Honus also had a famous, powerful arm. When his team was in a situation where a sacrifice fly could beat them, they often put Honus in the outfield because nobody could run on his arm. Honus Wagner was the best of his league IN EVERY 5 TOOL CATEGORY.


A little later on you can add Negro league stars Oscar Charleston and Martin Dihigo (power, speed, played every position including pitcher where he was a 200 game winner over his career)to the list. Josh Gibson is iffy in the running game but awfully strong in the other four tools with extra credit for being a catcher. Shortstop John Henry Lloyd (Ruth called him the greatest player he ever saw) and Turkey Stearns (lead off man-speed and cleanup hitter-power) are probables.
There are probably more of these stars, but stats are a little obscure.


Joe Dimaggio is a definite. Best of his era defensively and top two (with Williams) as a hitter and power hitter. Unlike Ted, Joe could run and run well. He didn't steal because that wasn't the Yankee game.


Jackie Robinson was an Alpha in every way except as a power hitter. (Jackie had a lot of those “extra” tools I spoke about earlier)


In our modern era you can make a case for Hank Aaron who could steal you 20 bases a season and play an exceptional right field.
Frank Robinson won a batting title, a couple of homer titles and stole at about the same rate as Aaron. Frank was also a strong, but not Mays-like, defensive player.


Except for his arm and his questionable ethics, Barry Bonds has to be on the list. He stole over 30 bases 9 times. Barry's arm was not Alpha caliber, however.
A-Rod likewise...undeniable as a hitter, fast, good defense but not an A-arm and certainly an ethical nightmare and distorted-by-drugs talent level.


Ken Griffey Jr. ran pretty well, was the best center fielder around and hit for power as well as almost anybody. He didn't hit that well for average, especially for his era.


Larry Walker led the league in hitting, homers, defense and throwing arm. He stole about 15 bases a season but he was famous for his base running skill. I'd say he sneaks in as an Alpha.


Reggie Jackson could never hit for average. He could steal during the first half of his career and played good D with a strong arm for the first half also, but then his skills deteriorated until he was more of a DH type.


Bo Jackson was a possible but he could never hit for average.


Jose Canseco made 40-40 (steals and homers in the same season) famous but his defense was a joke. Also never hit for average.


Who have we got playing in the Big Leagues now that could join the exclusive club?
You've got to keep an eye on Trout and Harper who are looking real good. It's probably too early to start bandying Carlos Correa's name about, but what a beginning!
I only count 2 dominant tools for Giancarlo Stanton....power and arm. (But those two are off the charts dominant). Cespedes could be one if he wanted to run more and could hit for higher averages. Miggy Cabrera doesn't have speed or defense.(But what a hitter!)
Paul Goldschmidt is in the top ten in steals 16 in the first half of 2015), and if he can do that and still be top five in hitting and homers while playing great D at first, he might be the next Alpha.


I'm sure I'm forgetting a few. Why don't you guys enlighten me?


I mentioned that pitchers were a special category because one tool...namely throwing arm...could dominate the whole game without any of their other tools even being necessary. But most pitchers can't be Alphas by my definition because of this one-tool-only dominance.
Except for one.
Yep, you got it. It's The Babe.


According to Total Baseball, Babe Ruth was deserving of the ex post facto Cy Young Award for the American League in 1916, beating out Walter Johnson in his prime. That means that Babe Ruth had the dominant arm in his league AT PITCHER! And then went on to dominate as the all-time power hitter. He was also a top notch defensive outfielder and had surprising speed for such a big man. (He is in the top all time in steals of home). Ruth won one batting title and hit a high average of .393!


But nobody in MLB baseball history could lay claim to being the best pitcher and the best hitter in his league in one career. Only the Babe.
As usual, you have to invent a special category for the Bambino...THE ALL-TIME ALPHA-STAR.


And now to mysterious Pete Reiser: here's the sad story in a Wikipedia nutshell. (He also led the league in steals twice, which the article doesn't mention.) A Hall of Famer who might have been. An ALPHA-STAR who came crashing down before his time.


I hope at least Dodger fans will remember him. He could have been the greatest Dodger of them all.


PETE REISER

(*quoted from Wikipedia)
“In 1941, his first season as a regular starter, Reiser helped the Dodgers take home the pennant. He was a sensation that year, winning the National League batting title while leading the league in doubles, triples, runs scored, and slugging percentage. He was also named a starter to the All-Star team and placed second in MVP balloting.



On July 19 of the following year, Reiser crashed face-first into the outfield wall in St. Louis, trying to catch what turned out to be a game winning inside-the-park home run by Enos Slaughter of the rival Cardinals in the bottom of the 11th inning. The loss cut the Dodgers' lead over the Cardinals to six games.



Despite missing just four games with the resulting concussion, he batted only .244 over his final 48 games that season, dropping his batting average from .350 to .310 on the season overall. The Dodgers ended up losing the pennant by two games to the Cardinals, who won 20 of their last 23 games and eventually the World Series.



Reiser gave great effort on every play in the field, and was therefore very injury-prone. He fractured his skull running into an outfield wall on one occasion (but still made the throw back to the infield), was temporarily paralyzed on another, and was taken off the field on a stretcher a record 11 times.



Leo Durocher, who was Reiser's first major league manager, reflected many years later that in terms of talent, skill, and potential, there was only one other player comparable to Reiser. Willie Mays. Durocher also said that "Pete had more power than Willie—left-handed and right-handed both. He had everything but luck."



Reiser, a switch hitter who sometimes restricted himself to batting left-handed because of injury, served in the United States Army during World War II, playing baseball for Army teams. While serving, he was injured again and had to learn to throw with both arms. Durocher said, "And he could throw at least as good as Willie [Mays] right-handed and left-handed."



When Reiser returned to the majors in 1946, he was still suffering from a shoulder injury from playing Army baseball. He later said: "It wasn't as serious as the head injuries but it did more to end my career. The shoulder kept popping out of place, more bone chips developed, and there was constant pain in the arm and shoulder."



He was never the same hitter that he was early in his career. However, he still retained his speed and stole home plate a record seven times in 1946.”



My only comment on this article is that it's a shame that Leo Durocher didn't recognize the problem and move Reiser to an infield position so he wouldn't keep hurting himself. (Reiser did play some third.)



Look for my next post during the All-Star break. And enjoy the second half of the season.



Meanwhile here is a going away funny baseball story for you.



Marco



The Dodger bullpen of the mid-sixties had a tradition that the night before any of Sandy Koufax's starts was boys night out for the relief staff. That's because for about 5 years Sandy pitched a complete game pretty much every time out and the bullpen boys knew they'd get a day off. So they weren't afraid to tie one on the night before a Koufax start.
Well one game, Sandy is having one of those days. For some reason the opposition is hitting him and the bullpen boys are sitting there very quiet and very hungover.
Manager Walter Alston goes out to the mound with catcher John Roseboro to confer with his Ace.
What have you got left, Sandy?” says Alston.
Koufax replies “Not much, but whatever I got it's still more than you've got out in the bullpen today.”
Know what you mean.” says Walter and just walks back to the dugout.