Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 ..is getting another chance to hit singles in the majors, getting called up to the Indians over the weekend.
Guest Rockin' Doc Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Nothing wrong with hitting singles if you hit enough of them. You have to hit an awful lot of them, if that's all you bring to the plate.
Theoldmole Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Who are the Hall of Famers with least differential between BA and SP?
metirish Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Jeff Keppinger is doing awfully good out of essentially being a singles hitter.
Gwreck Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Eddie Collins, maybe (difference of less than 100 points).
Guest Rockin' Doc Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 OldMole - "Who are the Hall of Famers with least differential between BA and SP?"My guess would be Wade Boggs or Pee Wee Reese.
Guest sharpie Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Phil Rizzuto has all of the aforementioned beat. .273 average, .351 slugging.
Frayed Knot Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Tyner's other problem (aside from the total lack of power) is that he never really was (or became) the ball-hawking CFer you'd want that kind of hitter to be. Brett Butler could get away with singles & walks because he could play the position so well - but it's tough to endure that kind of production from a corner spot or even from just a so-so CFer.Maury Wills, btw, is the guy with the largest pct of his hits as singles in ML history (~88% or a .050 BA/Slg diff) - but of course he falls short of being a HoF-er.
Fman99 Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 While he wont ever make the HoF, our own gimpy 2B has a career BA of .298 and SLG of .356.1637 career hits, 1385 singles.
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 I'm just surprised that he keep getting chances. Guess he's in that Jose Offerman, Ice Williams world of AAAA players who bubble up now and then for a spell.
Gwreck Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 sharpie wrote:Phil Rizzuto has all of the aforementioned beat. .273 average, .351 slugging.Ah, see, I didn't think of Phil Rizzuto as a hall-of-famer.
Frayed Knot Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Doesn't mean Tyner can't be a useful fill-in here and there, just that his type of "narrow" skills have a very small margin for error in order to justify them as a full time player much less a 1st round draft pick.What Tyner essentially needed was a good OBP to make it as a full-time player since he had little else to fall back on - and when a one-trick pony has his one trick fall short (see also the caution about drafting slugging 1st basemen in the 'Draft' thread) he goes from somewhat valuable to easily replacable in short order.The Mets ran into the same problem - only at the opposite end of the spectrum from Tyner - with 1st rounder Robert Stratton.
Guest Rockin' Doc Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Knot - "Maury Wills, btw, is the guy with the largest pct of his hits as singles in ML history (~88% or a .050 BA/Slg diff) - but of course he falls short of being a HoF-er."So does Rizzuto (in a just world). Rizzuto was lucky to have some HOF former teammates looking out for him.
Guest AG/DC Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Tyner is still useful as a Darren Bragg type, getting callups here and there as a fifth outfielder, pinch-runner, defensive replacement who plays hard not necessarily because of some moral superiority, but because he's got to live like he's dying, because every big-league day could be his last. They may even hit two or three times a week if given a chance.Such guys are useful to have around, at least for managers to remind vets to take a less fom Bush League Billy over there at Locker 12 and not be complacent, but fans can fall way too deeply in love with them.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Not a HOF'er but try and top The Crazy Horse:LifetimeAVG. .251OBP. .283SLG. .309
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 TheOldMole wrote:Who are the Hall of Famers with least differential between BA and SP?I don't know if this is the smallest differential, but Lloyd Waner was .316 AVG. & .393 SLG.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 I don't know if this is the smallest differential, but Nellie Fox: .288 AVG. / .363 SLG.
Vic Sage Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 By position: (BA /SLG)C - Ray Schalk 253 / 3161B - Hughie Jennings 311 / 4062b - Jonny Evers 270 / 334SS - Ozzie Smith 262 / 3283b - Bobby Wallace 268 / 358OF1 - Richie Ashburn 308 / 382OF2 - Tommy McCarthy 292 / 376OF3 - Max Carey 285 / 386
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 Vic Sage wrote:By position: (BA /SLG)C - Ray Schalk 253 / 3161B - Hughie Jennings 311 / 4062b - Jonny Evers 270 / 334SS - Ozzie Smith 262 / 3283b - Bobby Wallace 268 / 358OF1 - Richie Ashburn 308 / 382OF2 - Tommy McCarthy 292 / 376OF3 - Max Carey 285 / 386Sandy Alomar's career was spread out over too many positions to make your list but still, here's what Sandy did or didn't do with his 5000+ plate appearances:AVG: .245OBP. .290SLG. .288Sandy's most similar batter, according to Baseball Reference is Bud Harrelson. He was 0-22 as a Met, without any bases on ball. His lifetime Met line is .000 AVG, .000 OBP., .000 SLG. He did score one run as a Met. How? I don't know.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 batmagadanleadoff wrote: He did score one run as a Met. How? I don't know.So I had to look this up. On 4/20/67, Alomar pinch ran for Jerry Buchek, who was injured after being hit by a Cal Koonce pitch and had to leave the game. Alomar was eventually singled in by his eventual most similar player, Bud Harrelson.The Mets beat the Cubs 6-1. It was Tom Seaver's very first major league win.
Guest AG/DC Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 It's not that Sandy's defense was spread over too many positions to make the list, it's that his entire caree was spread outside of the Hall of Fame.
Elster88 Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 sharpie wrote:Phil Rizzuto has all of the aforementioned beat. .273 average, .351 slugging.Is he in the HoF?
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 AG/DC wrote:It's not that Sandy's defense was spread over too many positions to make the list, it's that his entire caree was spread outside of the Hall of Fame.Gotcha.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 AG/DC wrote:It's not that Sandy's defense was spread over too many positions to make the list, it's that his entire caree was spread outside of the Hall of Fame.I said: "Gotcha."
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted May 12, 2008 Posted May 12, 2008 ="batmagadanleadoff"]Not a HOF'er but try and top The Crazy Horse:LifetimeAVG. .251OBP. .283SLG. .309Those 1972 Topps cards are a thing of beauty!
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