Jump to content

MLB.com's Five Best 2nd-Basemen in O's History


LA2

Recommended Posts

12 minutes ago, Moose Milligan said:

Yeah, I'd posted that before clicking the link.  Me mentioning Craig Worthington was kind of a joke.  

3B might be the biggest gap between 1st place and 2nd place in terms of these positional rankings....It's really Brooks way far out in front and then...everyone else.

Machado was a most excellent player for the O's.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 4/13/2020 at 12:00 PM, DrungoHazewood said:

Gleason is listed at 5' 7", 158, and from 1890-1894 he threw 506, 418, 400, 380, and 230 innings.  They switched to allowing overhand pitching in '84.  It took a while for folks to catch on to the idea that 55 starts, 500 innings wasn't going to work so well throwing overhand, even if it wasn't max-effort like today.  The record for innings pitched is very dependent on when you draw the back line.  Bill Hutchison*, Amos Rusie, Sadie McMahon, and Gleason were the last of the 500 inning pitchers, none of them hit that mark after they moved the pitching distance to 60' 6".

The 1800s were an era of continuous transitions, and there were a lot of pitchers whose careers never made it to 30.  Some not to 25.

Gleason hurt his arm in '95 with the Orioles, and he transitioned straightaway to second base.  Thing was he wasn't really any good as a position player.  Career OPS+ of 78, and was at best an average fielder.  He hit .300 a couple times, but with no power and few walks.  From 120+ years away it's kind of hard to see why he was a regular for 12+ years after he quit pitching, he was a 0-to-2 win player almost every year. 

* I need to read up on Hutchison.  He apparently didn't throw a pro pitch until 24, didn't have a season of more than a couple starts until 27, then threw 300-625 innings a year for almost a decade.  Once had a minor league season where he allowed 271 runs in 305 innings.  In 1892 he faced 2639 batters, which is more than twice Jim Palmer's highest total.  By Tom Tango's basic pitch count estimator he threw almost 10,000 pitches.  Or roughly three times what a modern ace does.

I enjoy reading about players that played back on those days. Baseball history is very interesting to me. 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 4/13/2020 at 12:56 PM, Aristotelian said:

I would go with Alomar #2 over Roberts. His only strike against is that he only played three years, but during that time he was more productive than Roberts and he played a key role on two playoff teams. Had more GG's and All Star teams with the O's than Roberts had his whole career. If I had to choose, I would rather keep Alomar on the 96-97 O's than Roberts on the 2001-13 O's. 

I wouldn’t consider Alomar an Oriole.  He was only here three years plus the spitting incident equals not an Oriole to me.

Grinch. is better known as an Angel.

Billy Ripken not being mentioned at all is strange. Spent 7 years with the club.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Moose Milligan said:

Yeah, I'd posted that before clicking the link.  Me mentioning Craig Worthington was kind of a joke.  

3B might be the biggest gap between 1st place and 2nd place in terms of these positional rankings....It's really Brooks way far out in front and then...everyone else.

Garrett Atkins would like a word.

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, Can_of_corn said:

Machado was a most excellent player for the O's.

He's talking career value, I would assume.  But even considering a shorter peak, Brooks' best was better than Manny's. At least if you put trust in the retroactive defensive metrics.  Manny had a +27 and +20 season by more modern metrics and some people were skeptical.  Brooks was over +30 a couple times by DRS.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, LA2 said:

He's at the end of their "Honorable Mentions": "Craig Worthington placed fourth in AL Rookie of the Year Award voting in 1989." And Drungo doesn't think much of him. Craig had one good season and was gone from the major leagues faster than anyone had expected after his International League MVP season, for sure.

How long should a player last in the majors after a AAA season where he hit .244/.303/.419?  In a normal context if you showed someone that line the response would be "well, he might keep his job next year if he can really field." 

I've mentioned before that the weakest MLB MVP of all time might be Roger Peckinpaugh in '24, and he got a ton of extra credit for being the WS winner's captain.  Peckinpaugh out-hit Worthington's IL MVP year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Posts

    • You just can’t win with an offense this bad. It was an overreaction a month ago when they were getting called embarrassing or pathetic after a bad game. It legitimately might be an understatement at this point.  They have scored 4 runs or less in 19 out of their last 24 games (and 11 of their last 12 games) against teams that aren’t the Rockies or the White Sox. In those 19 games, they have scored 44 total runs (2.32 per game). In two of those games, they scored exactly 5 runs. In another, they scored 10 runs and lost. In another, they had 2 runs going into the 8th. Again, anyone complaining about this offense is underselling it at this point. In total, they have 80 runs in those 24 games (3.33 per game). In their last 8 games overall (including the White Sox), they have scored 15 runs. This offense is completely broken.
    • This team does not hit the fastball well, that's not good.
    • Plenty of teams limp into the playoffs and then make a deep run. This team has enough talent to do it, I just want to see Mayo and Kjerstad finally given a shot to play every day (put Kjerstad in RF, Santander at 1B, Mayo the full time DH), and move away from struggling/low ceiling vets like O'Hearn, Eloy, Rivera, and Slater.  Mayo and Kjerstad playing regularly and Westburg making it back for the playoffs could transform the lineup. I think Hyde is a terrible manager who can't write out a good lineup to save his life, but this offense has been so bad for so long that I think even he's capable of making those changes.  If Webb, Coloumbe, and Grayson can all make it back healthy, they'll also make a difference. 
    • Another Hyde thread 🙄
    • How am I scapegoating him? He hasn't played well for a very long time. I'm just saying give Mayo a legit shot.
    • Am looking forward to the season being over.  Yankees are taking full advantage of the O’s ineptitude - as they should.   Team is so inept offensively and does not seem fixable.  Bad combo of too many players still trying to figure things out. Have no idea what to expect over the next 2 weeks,  but currently they are unwatchable and an overall joyless bunch.   Need new dugout leadership that can help this team unlock its potential,  Hyde is no longer the answer and I think he knows it. 
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...