Originally posted by: RabidMongoose
Originally posted by: SP33Demon
Originally posted by: Muse
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
Originally posted by: Muse
Originally posted by: BigSmooth
Bonds comes as close as anyone but no one tops the Babe.
Ruth's numbers are ridiculous as it is, but then you look at the era he was playing in and it's even more amazing. In 1918 he led the league with 11 home runs, and in 1920 he hit 54 (the second-place guy had 19). Edit: part of this was due to the end of the dead-ball era but his numbers were still unheard of. He was the first and greatest slugger and he changed the game of baseball. Add to that his pitching accomplishments and the Babe is without doubt the greatest player of all time in my mind.
The completely sucked when Babe Ruth played. He couldn't even make the majors today.
Based on what? The stuff you are pulling out your azz?
The same could be said for John Kurk, David Wells, etc...... going by YOUR standards.
:roll:
Now to the meat of things. Why is Ruth the greatest you ask? Because raw numbers wise, he can't be touched, not even by today's era players. He led the league in adjusted OPS+ THIRTEEN times vs Bonds EIGHT.
He is number one in all time career adjusted OPS+ at 207, then Ted Williams at 190, and then Bonds and Gehrig at 179 apiece. Even if Barry averaged 250 for the next FIVE years (I don't think any player has ever done this) he still would only be at a career 195 OPS+, Babe at 207+ over 23 years. Even regular non adjusted OPS the Babe is first, murdering Bonds
by over .125 pts! The Babe led the league in HR's TWELVE TIMES to Bonds' TWO. Ruth led the league in total bases SIX times to Bonds' ONE. Ruth led the league EIGHT times to Bonds' ONE in Runs. Ruth led the league in SLG% THIRTEEN TIMES to Bonds' SIX. Ruth finished in the top ten in Batting Average TWELVE TIMES to Bonds' FIVE. Ruth is TENTH all time in Career Batting Average at .342, and Bonds isn't even listed at .297...
Interesting that you are now using OPS+, which you previously called a 'garbage statistic'. You're again showing very poor consistency in applying your arguments equally.
I personally would put the top 3 hitters as: Ruth, Williams, and Bonds - in that order. I don't think it's really grossly wrong for anyone to rearrange this in any order that they feel fit.
Um, OPS+ was only ONE stat I used out of seven comparisons. If Ruth led in OPS, he sure enough would have led in OPS+, there was no difference back then. Just b/c I listed it first, don't get all excited (since you usually do when any type of park adjustment stat is mentioned). I said it before and I'll say it again, park adjustment is inaccurate b/c it doesn't factor field type, weather, or dimensions into its equation. Its equation also only averages THREE years of total runs and then divides it (
Definition can be found here.)! The playing surface, wind patterns, and dimensions could all change in a 3 year span, skewing the three year total, do you not agree. I only listed OPS+ b/c while inaccurate, it's better than nothing and is the closest we have to any type of park adjustment at the moment (Bonds and Ruth also both played in hitter's parks so the final stats wouldn't be that different for %diff of OPS to park adjusted OPS). If you look above, I also did add "SLG%" as I did for Bench/Piazza, the only difference is I'm comparing overall hitting whereas Bench/Piazza was just for power. Is that too hard for you to understand, lol?
I still don't think u could ever put Bonds over Ruth, unless he can catch Ruth in OPS+, OPS, career batting average, HR/AB (Ruth hit 1 HR for every 11.75 AB vs 13.25 for Bonds, Big Mac had 10.X AB's to put how great he was into perspective as well), and total HR's (which he should due to the fact that Ruth pitched 4.5 years in the deadball era). Bonds has ALOT of catching up to do in a very short time, it's highly doubtful he will every overtake Ruth in any of these categories.
Comparing Ruth to Williams, Ruth still beat Williams by 17 points in OPS+ , and edges him out on 0.05 pts in OPS. Pure hitting wise, you can't even say that Williams is better than Ruth to his peers, Ruth led the league in BA 12 times to Williams six. OPS Ruth led 13 to Williams' 9. Williams did edge Ruth in career BA, .344 to .342 (numbers Bonds will NEVER EVER come close to). Yet Ruth murdered him in SLG (Ruth 13 to Ted 8) and HR's (Ruth led league 12 to Ted's 4). Yes, you could argue that Ted Williams could have eventually equalled/edged out the Babe in seasons that he missed due to wars (5). But in order to catch the Babe he would have had to lead the league in SLG% all five years just to equal Ruth, OPS 4 more times, BB 3 more times, RBI twice, and Runs scored twice. Even if Williams accomplished this, he still would have never caught him in years batting average leading the league or HR (or HR/AB). This is assuming that Williams has career years during the 5 he missed in his prime. And this is aside from the fact that Williams could not have ever made the Hall of Fame as a pitcher (let alone go 3-0 in the World Series with a 0.87 ERA), nor Bonds.
Let's go through some of Ruth's achievements:
1914: Finished 22-9 with a 3.23 ERA
1915: Finished 18-8 in 217.2 IP with a 2.44 ERA
1916: Finished 23-12, 1.75 ERA
1917: Finished 24-13, 2.01 ERA (last season as purely a pitcher)
1918: Finally put at 1st base mid season and led league in HR's, and still finished 13-7 with 2.22 ERA. Dubbed the "best lefthander in the league" by his manager which was why it took so long to convince him to let Ruth hit instead of pitch.
1919: Hit 29 HR's, shattering all baseball HR records and 1st player to hit a HR in every park in his league for a season. Still pitched 133 innings, finishing 9-5 with a 2.97 ERA.
1920: In 142 games, he hit 54 HR's which was more than
every AL and NL team except the Phillies. Set SLG% single season record that stood until Bonds' 73HR season (81 years!!).
1921: Led NYY to their first pennant ever. Picks up personal bests in Total Bases, Runs, RBI, and HRs. Pitches and won 2 games as well.
1922: Hits 35 HR's in only 406AB's due to a month suspension.
1923: Led NYY to pennant, Batted .368 with 3 HR's in WS. Led AL in HR's, won MVP, and came in 2nd in BA at .393
1924: Let AL in HR's and average, missed Triple Crown by finishing 2nd in RBI.
1925: Had stomach surgery, only played 98 games and hit 25 HR's.
1926: Let NYY to pennant after finishing 69-85 the previous season. Hit 4 HR's in the WS, 3 in one game. Led league in HR's, Runs, Total Bases, RBI, and BB.
1927: Teamed up iwth Gehrig, Lazzeri, and Meusel to form "Murderer's Row" and cruised to win WS. Ruth set new single season HR record of 60, he hit more HR's than any team combined in the AL.
1928: Won the WS again and batted .625 in the WS, a record not broken until 1990 (Billy Hatcher). He led league in HR's, Runs, and BB.
1929: Led AL in HR's.
1930: Led AL in HR's.
1931: Tied with Gehrig to lead league in HR's, team scored a record 1,067 runs.
1932: Ruth led NYY to pennant hits 2HR's in WS, his famous HR prediction to right happened.
1933: Led league in BB, hit 1st HR ever in the "All Star game".
1934: Last full season at age 39, bats .288 with 22 HR's and 84 RBI.
1935: Ruth retires after hitting 3 HR's in a game. Still holds Yankee single season records for Runs (177), Total Bases (457), Batting Average(.393), and SLG% (.847). Holds Yankee career records in Runs (1,959), HR's(659), Total Bases (5,131) and Batting Average (.349).
No question in my mind that the Sultan of Swat was by far the greatest player in their respective era!
And think about a)if he had chosen a pitching career instead of hitting he could have been one of the greatest pitchers ever b)if he had been a hitter for the 4 years he missed pitching his numbers would have been ever greater! My personal top 4 greatest players ever: 1)Ruth 2)Williams 3)Mays 4)Bonds