To advocate for underappreciated baseball stars whose numbers, accomplishments, and reputations should earn them a place in the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Thursday, February 23, 2023
The 30 Second Test
Sunday, February 19, 2023
Chart For Second Basemen
Statistics for active players include totals through 2021.
Pre-1900
Games Slash Line H R RBI HR SB F%
Bid McPhee 2,138 .272/.355/.373 2,258 1,684 1,072 53 568 .944
Hardy Richardson 1,334 .299/.344/.437 1,694 1,127 828 73 207 .915
Cupid Childs 1,457 .306/.416/.389 1,721 1,214 743 20 269 .930
Fred Dunlap 965 .292/.340/.406 1,159 759 366 41 85 .924
1900-1920
Games Slash Line H R RBI HR SB F%
Nap Lajoie 2,480 .338/.380/.466 3,243 1,504 1,599 82 380 .963
Eddie Collins 2,826 .333/.424/.429 3,315 1,821 1,299 47 741 .970
Johnny Evers 1,784 .270/.356/.334 1,659 919 536 12 324 .955
Larry Doyle 1,766 .290/.357/.408 1,887 960 794 74 298 .949
Del Pratt 1,836 .292/.345/.403 1,996 857 979 43 247 .960
1920-1940
Games Slash Line H R RBI HR SB F%
Rogers Hornsby 2,259 .358/.434/.577 2,930 1,579 1,584 301 135 .965
Frankie Frisch 2,311 .316/.369/.432 2,880 1,532 1,244 105 419 .974
Charlie Genringer 2,323 .320/.404/.480 2,839 1,775 1,427 184 181 .976
Billy Herman 1,922 .304/.367/.407 2,345 1,163 839 47 67 .967
Tony Lazzeri 1,740 .292/.380/.467 1,840 986 1,194 178 148 .967
Buddy Myer 1,920 .303/.389/.406 2,131 1,174 848 38 157 .974
1940-1960
Games Slash Line H R RBI HR SB F%
Jackie Robinson* 1,416 .313/.410/.477 1,563 972 761 141 200 .983
Joe Gordon 1,566 .268/.357/.466 1,530 914 975 253 89 .970
Bobby Doerr 1,865 .288/.362/.461 2,042 1,094 1,247 223 54 .980
Red Schoendienst 2,216 .289/.337/.387 2,449 1,223 773 84 89 .983
Nellie Fox 2,367 .288/.348/.363 2,663 1,279 790 35 76 .984
Jim Gilliam* 2,094 .266/.360/.355 2,021 1,255 625 65 219 .977
*Includes incomplete Negro League statistics
1960-1980
Games Slash Line H R RBI HR SB F%
Joe Morgan 2,649 .271/.392/.427 2,517 1,650 1,133 268 689 .981
Rod Carew** 2,469 .328/.393/.429 3,053 1,424 1,015 92 353 .973
Bill Mazeroski 2,163 .260/.299/.367 2,016 769 853 138 27 .983
Bobby Grich 2,008 .266/.371/.424 1,833 1,033 864 224 104 .984
**Carew played 1,184 games at first base and 1,130 at second base, but was inducted as a second baseman and is thus included here.
1980-2000
Games Slash Line H R RBI HR SB F%
Ryne Sandberg 2,164 .285/.344/.452 2,386 1,318 1,061 282 344 .989
Roberto Alomar 2,379 .300/.371/.443 2,724 1,508 1,134 210 474 .984
Craig Biggio 2,850 .281/.363/.433 3,060 1,844 1,175 291 414 .984
Willie Randolph 2,202 .276/.373/.351 2,210 1,238 687 54 271 .980
Lou Whitaker 2,390 .276/.363/.426 2,369 1,386 1,084 244 143 .984
2000-Present
Games Slash Line H R RBI HR SB F%
Jeff Kent 2,298 .290/.356/.500 2,461 1,320 1,518 377 94 .980
Chase Utley 1,937 .275/.358/.465 1,885 1,103 1,025 259 154 .982
Ian Kinsler 1,888 .269/.337/.440 1,999 1,243 909 257 243 .981
DJ LeMahieu 1,300 .301/.356/.422 1,454 735 535 95 87 .991Thursday, February 16, 2023
Requiescat In Pace, Tim McCarver
In Memoriam
MLB catcher and first baseman from 1959-1980. 2x All-Star and 1967 NL MVP runner-up. 2x World Series champion (1964 and 1967 Cardinals). Began legendary broadcasting career in 1980, which included 23 World Series. 2012 Ford C. Frick Award recipient.
Tim McCarver passed away today at the age of 81.
https://thecooperstownadvocate.blogspot.com/2021/12/why-i-think-tim-mccarver-should-be-in.html
https://thecooperstownadvocate.blogspot.com/2022/12/requiem-for-heavyweight.html
Monday, February 13, 2023
Three Quotes About MLB Managers
Tuesday, February 7, 2023
WHY I THINK JEFF KENT SHOULD BE IN COOPERSTOWN
WHY I THINK JEFF KENT SHOULD BE IN COOPERSTOWN
By- Damien
Second base is not considered a power position. Second basemen tend to be smaller, nimbler guys, not hulking power hitters. At bat they are usually slap hitters. Jeff Kent went against the narrative and became an elite power hitter in his prime, the 2000 NL MVP, and the all time leader in home runs and RBI’s by a second baseman. Because of players like Kent, more and more second basemen are trying to hit for power and finding success.
Jeffrey Franklin Kent was born on March 7, 1968, in Bellflower, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. At first he wasn’t into baseball (he preferred motocross), but he eventually started playing and became a stud. He was a star shortstop in high school, but ran into some problems in his senior year. Although he had established himself as a power hitter, he was kicked off the team for an “attitude problem.” He didn’t earn any baseball scholarships, and was accepted by the University of California at Berkeley for academics. As a freshman at UCB, he was offered a spot on the baseball team as a walk-on, and he ended up setting the school record with 25 doubles, setting the stage for a successful college career. He was drafted by the Blue Jays in the 20th round of the 1989 amateur draft and was assigned to St. Catharines in the New York-Pennsylvania League. In his first season as a pro, Kent led the league in home runs. Kent powered through the farms for the next two seasons and made the Jays in 1992. He played only 65 games for Toronto before he was traded to the Mets. He finished the 1992 season with 11 home runs in 305 at bats. He continued to improve his power, averaging about 20 homers a season for the next few years, and was picked up by the Cleveland Indians in midseason 1996 for the pennant drive. Kent found stability with the Giants in 1997, and from there his career started to take off.
Kent batted .250 with 29 homers and 121 RBI’s in 1997. He followed up with an even better season in 1998, hitting .297 - 31 - 128. He made his first all-star team in 1999 and won the NL MVP Award in 2000 when he batted .334 with 33 home runs and 125 RBI’s, beating out the runner up, teammate Barry Bonds, by a stunning 113 points. Despite his success, however, Kent was not popular. He built up a reputation for being arrogant. “It’s not arrogant,” Kent once said, “it’s confident.” Confident or not, the press didn’t like him, although he was establishing himself as a perennial MVP candidate. In 2002, 34 year old Kent batted .313 and hit a career high 37 home runs, but all was not well. On June 25, Kent and Barry Bonds had a brawl in the dugout. The two never got along, and this incident only added fuel to the fire. Although Kent won a Silver Slugger and helped the Giants win the pennant, he was traded to the Astros after the season. Kent missed out on 100 RBI’s for the first time in seven years in 2003 (he had 93), but his acquisition forced four time Gold Glover Craig Biggio to the outfield.
Now those who reject Kent’s Hall of Fame case generally say that Kent was a bad fielder (because they admittedly don’t have anything against his hitting). Really? Biggio had been the Astros’ regular second baseman since 1992, and was coming off a fine defensive season in 2002, posting a fielding percentage of .988 (seven points above the league average). When Kent came along, Biggio was the one to move. Kent was coming off a season in which he’d led NL second basemen in double plays, and he sure wasn’t gonna move. He remained Houston’s second baseman until he was granted free agency a year later. After that, Biggio became the second baseman again for the rest of his career. If Kent was really such a bad fielder, then how was he able to beat out Biggio for the Astros’ second base job?
After he left the Astros, Kent went over to the Dodgers, winning another Silver Slugger in 2005 with 29 homers and 105 RBI’s. He enjoyed three more quality seasons after that, and retired after hitting .280 in 2008 at the age of 40.
Kent fares well compared with the second basemen in Cooperstown. Out of his 377 career home runs, he hit 351 when he was playing second base, the most in MLB history and 74 more than Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg, who ranks second. His other counting stats are also quite impressive: 1,320 runs scored, 2,461 hits, 560 doubles, 1,518 RBI's. His slash line was .290/.356/.500, making him one of only two second basemen (min. 7,000 PA) with a slugging percentage of at least .500. The other? Rogers Hornsby. Kent had eight seasons with over 100 RBI’s, the most of any second baseman (Hornsby had five). However, due to his unpopularity, he was passed up ten times by the BBWAA. After he was aged off the 2023 ballot, Kent said that the voting was “a head scratching embarrassment.” I can’t help but agree. The BBWAA voting has been very inconsistent over the years, and made a big mistake in omitting Kent. His next opportunity will come when the Contemporary Game Era Committee votes in 2026. One can only hope that the Committee will vote him in.
LIFETIME STATISTICS
Games career: 2,298 season high: 159 in 2000 and 2001
At Bats career: 8,498 season high: 623 in 2002
Hits career: 2,461 season high: 196 in 2000
Doubles career: 560 season high: 49 in 2001
Triples career: 47 season high: 8 in 2004
Home Runs career: 377 season high: 37 in 2002
Runs career: 1,320 season high: 114 in 2000
Runs Batted In career: 1,518 season high: 128 in 1998
Stolen Bases career: 94 season high: 13 in 1999
Walks career: 801 season high: 90 in 2000
Strikeouts career: 1,522 season high: 133 in 1997
Batting Average career: .290 season high: .334 in 2000
On Base Percentage career: .356 season high: .424 in 2000
Slugging Percentage career: .500 season high: .596 in 2000
Total Bases career: 4,246 season high: 352 in 2002
Sacrifice Hits career: 10 season high: 6 in 1993
Fielding Percentage career: .978 season high: .989 in 2004
Double Plays career: 1,362 season high: 120 in 2002 led NL 2B: 113 in 2002*
Putouts career: 4,816 season high: 462 in 2001**
Assists career: 5,918 season high: 430 in 2005 led NL 2B: 390 in 2001
*Kent turned seven double plays at first base in 2002, but led NL second basemen with 113
**Kent made 193 putouts at first base in 2001; his single season high as a second baseman is 325 in 1997
DID YOU KNOW?
-finished sixth in the NL MVP Award voting in 2002, eighth in 1997, ninth in 1998, 13th in 2004, 19th in 2005, and 26th in 1999
-won three NL Player of the Month awards and three NL Player of the Week awards
-hit 2-for-8 with two runs scored in five all-star games (four starts)
-led the NL in sacrifice flies in 1998 (10) and 2001 (13) and ranks 26th on the all time list with 103
-led the NL in extra-base hits in 2002 (81) and ranks 43rd on the all time list with 984
-his 49 doubles in 2001 set a Giants franchise record which still stands
-slashed .276/.340/.500 with nine home runs and 23 RBI’s in 49 career postseason games
-batted .276 with three home runs and seven RBI’s in his only World Series, 2002
-hit 8-for-13 (.615) with a homer in the 2006 NLDS
-went 5-for-5 and hit for the cycle on May 3, 1999
-went 5-for-5 with two doubles and a home run on June 12, 1999, barely missing his second cycle of the season
-went 1-for-2 with a double on his MLB debut
-went 1-for-2 in his final MLB game
-homered in his first at bat as a Houston Astro
-turned a triple play on August 19, 2004
-ranks 48th in career assists at any position
-among MLB second basemen, ranks 13th in career games, 14th in double plays, 20th in putouts, and 17th in assists
-also played 116 games at first base, 158 at third base, three at shortstop, seven as a DH, 42 as a pinch hitter, and four as a pinch runner
Saturday, February 4, 2023
Amazing Baseball Quote #8
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"Darryl Strawberry is not a dog. A dog is loyal and chases after balls." - Tommy Lasorda If there existed a Hall of Fame for bas...
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"If I had played my career hitting singles like Pete Rose, I'd wear a dress." - Mickey Mantle
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" I try not to break the rules, but merely to test their elasticity. " - Bill Veeck Jr. Amen! Although I'm not sure that'...
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Before the era of heavy weight training ushered in and everyone tried to become a muscle bound slugger, there was the speedier, more strateg...
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WHY I THINK BOB ELLIOTT SHOULD BE IN COOPERSTOWN By - Damien Bob Elliott was the best all around third baseman of the 1940’s, and one ...
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WHY I THINK BILL MADLOCK SHOULD BE IN COOPERSTOWN By - Damien Bill Madlock was a very good overall hitter, but he was primarily valuabl...
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WHY I THINK DOM DIMAGGIO SHOULD BE IN COOPERSTOWN By -Damien Dom DiMaggio was one of the best all around players in all of baseball du...
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Red Ruffing pitched from 1924 through 1947 for Red Sox, Yankees, and White Sox. He went 273-225 (.548) lifetime with a 3.80 ERA. Despite...
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WHY I THINK BOBBY GRICH SHOULD BE IN COOPERSTOWN By - Damien Bobby Grich was an unusual talent at second base. He didn’t have much cons...
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Negro League Players Who Should Have Hall Of Fame Plaques As we all know, Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s infamous color barrier in Apri...