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#16 (permalink) | |||||||||
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Pie Traynor's highs were 125, 124. Brooks Robinson's highs were 145, 126, 124, 123, 123. I think only Mathews, Schmidt, Brett, Boggs and Baker match up with Santo's output. If he's better than all of the Veterans Committee selections at that position, shouldn't he be in? (Jimmy Collins, Frank Baker, Freddie Lindstrom, George Kell) Quote:
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Frank Thomas, Mike Piazza, Ken Griffey Jr., Alex Rodriguez, Jim Thome and Manny Ramirez all could've been helped by performance enhancers, moreso than any of those mentioned earlier. And it's not merely about bulk either. You're going to allow those players into the Hall, but not McGwire, Bonds and Sosa? It all becomes very arbitrary. The Hall of Fame should not be set on an arbitrary standard. Quote:
It seems a little disingenuous to try to discount the accomplishments of McGwire, Sosa, Bonds, in light of the suspected high number of performance enhancement users throughout the league. If there was any advantage seen, did 40-50% of the league have an advantage over the rest of the league? Who exactly were all those players? Do you know that Chipper Jones, Gary Sheffield, Vladimir Guerrero, Ivan Rodriguez, Jeff Kent, Albert Pujols, Randy Johnson and Pedro Martinez weren't among those on the "advantage" side? Ultimately, doesn't it become a rather silly exercise to try to divine who had an advantage and who didn't? Heck, if you follow the timelines of Hank Aaron and Willie Stargell, it looks like they had a boost at the end of their careers as well. And they both got bigger too. Suspicious? Last edited by Triad; August 14th, 2008 at 12:13 PM. |
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#17 (permalink) | |||
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triad:
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Amazon.com: Burying the Black Sox: How Baseball's Cover-Up of the 1919 World Series Fix Almost Succeeded: Gene Carney: Books Burying the Black Sox: How Baseball's Cover-Up of the 1919 World Series Fix Almost Succeeded by Gene Carney. It was published last year, I own and have read it. It is the most wide ranging investigation into the known facts of the fix, academic in nature, not especially well written, but very exhaustive in detail and extremely carefull in distinguishing what is known to be true and what is conjecture. Far from "inconclusive", there is not the slightest doubt that Joe Jackson A) Knew that the fix was in before the start of the Series and knew the identities of those involved in the scheme. B) Accepted a $5000 payment delivered to him at his hotel room by those who recruited him and fully understood that this money was in exchange for his participation in the conspiracy. C) Played in games where he knew that the outcome was not being truly contested by his own club. D) Kept confidence with the conspirators throughout the length of the Series and revealed the fix to no one until forced to do so before a grand jury. What are known to be facts are taken from the orginal confessions of Cicotte, Williams and Jackson, the grand jury testimony from each of those three, the numerous witnesses who were treated to Hap Felder shooting off his mouth and bragging about the fix in local bars, the trial testimony of Sleepy Bill Burns and Billy Maharg who conspired with Chick Gandel and Swede Risburg to set the fix in motion, and the extensive testimony delivered in the 1923 civil trial against Charles Commiskey when several Black Sox, including Jackson, tried to recover the salaries they would have received in 1921 and 1922 had they not been banished from the game. Read it all and there is no way you will be able to deny any of the points listed above. Even if you wish to argue that Jackson refused to play poorly in exchange for money as evidenced by his Series stats, then you are still left trying to excuse his silence and his accepting the money. If not paid for his bad play, he was paid for his silence. And I do not buy your argument about dividing a man's character from his play, not when we are talking about an application of character to play on the field. Joe Jackson flunked the character test in a huge manner. If he had participated in fixing horse races I would not be arguing against his HoF credentials. He participated in fixing ballgames, he defrauded the fans who had paid their way into the park, he defrauded all those White Sox fans who had bought into the fantasy of sports and the joy of your club winning. He did it for 5 grand. He sold out. Putting Jackson in the MLB HoF would be like awarding Clifford Irving a Pulitizer for his Howard Hughes biography. I do not take Kirby Puckett's marital behavior into account when deciding on HoF credentials, that had nothing to do with the game. Quote:
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#18 (permalink) | |||||||||
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At any rate, from what I've read, Landis didn't give the Black Sox players a fair chance to defend themselves. Even being acquitted in court, that wasn't good enough for him. It smacks as a political move by Landis, who thought he was still a judge, and must've been jealous that he couldn't have ruled in the Black Sox court case. I have a very low opinion of Landis. To me, it's ridiculous that he's in the Hall of Fame, but Jackson and Rose aren't. Landis even stalled integration. Let's celebrate that? He died and was replaced as commissioner in 1944. If he had lived a few years longer, Jackie Robinson never would have got his shot. In fact, we have Landis to thank that we never got to see Josh Gibson in a major league game, or Satchel Paige in his prime. To me, Landis' indiscretions are far more reaching than Jackson helping to fix a World Series. How much did Landis defraud the fans by failing to allow blacks to play throughout the '20s and '30s? Quote:
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From what I've read, Comiskey himself knew about the fix. I guess if you're not a player, you get off easy. Quote:
The other factor we haven't talked about is threats to the well-being of the players' families. You might have thought twice as well about upsetting those criminals if it involved your family. Quote:
So the result is that your contempt is misdirected or at least incomplete. You're only fooling yourself when you think that Bonds and McGwire were the bad guys. For every one that's caught, there are likely a handful more that go under the radar. What this means is that you are probably unknowingly cheering for more cheaters than you are decrying. Isn't that rather ironic? And a little disingenuous, if you ask me. Quote:
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#19 (permalink) | |
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A highlight of the book is the prominence Mr. Carney gives to the often overlooked 1924 civil trial brought by Joe Jackson against Charles Comiskey for breach of his 1920 contract. At this trial, Mr. Carney states, "For the first time, there would be new light shed on what Cominskey knew and when he knew it and on exactly what he did or did not do about it. Here for the first time, Jackson's play in the World Series would be scrutinized and whether or not he had willingly lent his name to the conspiracy."The book sounds like it's saying Jackson was less culpable than his punishment suggests, and that Comiskey is even more culpable. |
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#20 (permalink) |
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Hall of Famer
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Mathematically, it is amazing how little a player would have to do to throw a series. Given 500 ABs, the difference between a .315 hitter (Roberto Clemente) and a .275 hitter (Richie Hebner) is 24 hits, or one hit every 6.4 games. So a batter who doesn't hustle to beat out a grouinder, or who gets thrown out making a poor slide trying to stretch a hit, once in the course of a 7-game series, had reduced his contributory BA by 40 points. If several players in unison were to reduce their hit total to just one below merit, or fail to make a compensatory sparkling play in the field just once, it would very likely alter the result of a moderately close series, by turning several Clementes into Hebners. Any good gambler would know this.
For this reason, I am unswayed by the observation that a player's actual stats through the series is evidence that he was or was not in on the fix.
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------------------ When people ask what I hope to see before I die, I answer that I've already seen too much. Last edited by jtur88; August 15th, 2008 at 12:06 PM. |
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#21 (permalink) | |
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That popular sentiment swayed a jury toward a star ballplayer isn't the sort of evidence I was referencing. |
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#22 (permalink) |
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I read a book co-written by Jim Bouton and a former umpire. It was about an umpire who had been hired to fix a divsion decidng game and the pitcher for the team that was supposed to lose. Bouton and the ump took turns writing chapters, 18 total, a top and bottom of nine "innings". Bouton wrote the top half from the pitcher's point of view, with the bottom half being told by the umpire.
Anyway, at one point late in the book, the ump said (to the reader) that he had only made six calls wrong on purpose. While the book was fiction, I'd imagine (or at least hope) the umpire put a lot of thought into how he could fix a game. Changing the call on one pitch can change how later pitches to the batter happen. |
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#23 (permalink) | |||
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AB: 32 H: 12 2B: 3 HR: 1 RBI: 6 SO: 2 BAvg: .375 It would seem he was more on the side of helping his team win than not helping them win. In fact, of all the batters on both teams, he statistically helped his team more than any of the others. If the charge is that Jackson somehow held back, then that sure sets a high standard for how well he was expected to perform. You do better than anyone else in the Series, and that's still not good enough? Quote:
Eleven of twelve jurors believed Jackson had played every game to win. And that he had not received the $5000 from Williams until the Series was over. And that he had not been in on the conspiracy. Your points about Jackson: A) Knew that the fix was in before the start of the Series and knew the identities of those involved in the scheme. >> No different from Weaver. B) Accepted a $5000 payment delivered to him at his hotel room by those who recruited him and fully understood that this money was in exchange for his participation in the conspiracy. >> Disputed in the quote I gave. C) Played in games where he knew that the outcome was not being truly contested by his own club. >> No different from Weaver. D) Kept confidence with the conspirators throughout the length of the Series and revealed the fix to no one until forced to do so before a grand jury. >> No different from Weaver. So then what you're left with is that Jackson was as culpable as Weaver, whom you regarded as only deserving a suspension. Quote:
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#24 (permalink) |
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Looking at the overall question another way, we've basically had 130 years of baseball history, with the number of players heavily tipped to the last 40 years. Essentially, the first 90 years amounts to about 50 player-seasons when gauged by the last 40 years. So we have about 90 years worth of history when compressing to the current trend of teams and players. In those "90" years, we've got the following players who are possibly being kept out of the Hall of Fame who are deserving by most accounts:
Pete Rose Joe Jackson Mark McGwire Barry Bonds Sammy Sosa Rafael Palmeiro Roger Clemens That's nearly one player per decade, on average. So on that trend, 100 years from now we could expect the list to be about 15 players on the outside looking in who would otherwise be first-tier Hall of Famers. That's almost enough to start another Hall of Fame, or at least its own wing. How do we reasonably expect to leave such a substantial amount of the game's best players out? It's antithetical, and I believe it will become more obviously so as time goes on. The Hall of Fame will be incomplete without them. |
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#25 (permalink) | ||
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triad:
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Period. Jackson lost the case. Further, the book contains passages describing Jackson's rather idiotic attempt to "return" the money to Charles Commiskey, hoping that this would make everything go away. Exactly how do you return money that you have never received? There is not the slightest doubt that Jackson received and retained the $5000 given to him in his hotel room by his co conspirators. None at all. Jackson admitted this in his confession. Jackson admitted this when he attempted to "return" the money. Jackson is on record as having stated that he turned the money over to his wife. Jackson accepted and kept the money, that is why his case is different from Weaver's. Consider the two examples of behavior. Weaver was approached and informed of the scheme and offered money to particpate. His instant reaction was....leave me out of this, I will not participate, I will not take your money, I will not play at anything less than my best. Jackson was approached with the same deal....he took the money and kept his mouth shut. Rather than defending this blurb writer of whom you know nothing, why not read the book and find out for yourself? My patience for this sort of thing is limited. Quote:
Further, your faith in the integrity of Illinois juries in the early 1920's strikes me as ridiculous. The first trial, the one where the eight were charged with defrauding the public and throwing the series, was a farce from start to finish. The players were cheered by the spectators coming and going each day, Charles Commiskey, the one supposedly defrauded, was paying the fees for the player's defense attorneys, the written, signed confessions of Cicotte, Williams and Jackson were stolen from the DA's office and even though copies were still available, they were deemed inadmissable by the judge. After exonerating the players, the jury members helped carry them out of the courtroom on their shoulders and spent the night partying with them in celebration. All that sound like it was on the up and up to you? Jury of their peers....indeed. I am reporting facts....I have read the book and I am reporting facts. All of the representations I made are backed by evidence presented in the book and the evidence is overwhelming. Your man Jackson was dishonest. You want to make a hero out of someone who took money to help defraud the fans, that is your choice. It isn't mine. I would rather see an honest player who was lousy at the game get enshrined, than the greatest player who wasn't honest. I suspect that you are the victim of the romanticizing of Jackson which has taken place ever since "Sholess Joe" was written and then turned into "Field of Dreams." That stuff only works on a dramatic level if you begin with the false premise that Jackson was some innocent who didn't understand what was going on and and never would have participated if he had. That just isn't true. Jackson was good friends with the crooked players. The White Sox in 1919 were a faction torn club. One set was centered on Eddie Collins, "College Boy" and was a collective of the more educated, more serious, less rowdy players. The rival faction was led by Chick Gandel and was composed of the less educated, hard drinking, hard partying blue collar/agricultural background players, naturally the illiterate Southerner Jackson was drawn to the latter group. All eight of the dishonest players were from the Gandel group, they were friends. So even if Jackson did not wish to participate in throwing games, he still faced the conflict of having to rat out his friends on the club, as did Weaver. Weaver refused to play dishonestly and refused to take any money. Jackson, regardless of his intentions or his play, took the money and kept silent. Now, where we might see Weaver as misguided but noble, placing loyalty to friends ahead of the integrity of the game, Jackson also had 5 grand as his motivation for "protecting" his friends. Read the book.....don't argue facts with me when you are just guessing. I get the feeling that on this issue, you are going to be immune to facts no matter what. Your impulse seems to be to want to excuse all offending players of all lowball conduct. I don't feel that way. My feeling is that any conduct by a player which brings into question whether or not the games are being played honestly and fairly, is conduct which justifies removing them from MLB on a permanent basis and denying them any post career honors. |
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#26 (permalink) | |||||
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I think the only possible unhypocritical stance to take is that what happens on the field as sanctioned by MLB at the time (unless there is a specific review of certain specific individual occurrences) is to be respected. This retroactive cleansing doesn't wash. It's an unrealistic idealism to assume that it accomplishes anything substantive. All it does is create a false sense of jurisprudence on the integrity of the game. It finds a scapegoat and attacks him, then everyone is happy for a time. It's not all that different in principle from the sacrificial nature of treating the manager when a team is going bad (he's outta there). The move is made to appease, and the manager becomes a political pawn. So goes the player who raised suspicions from his actions that many in the league were engaged in nefarious deeds. In the eyes of the league, he must be made an example of, and at the same time it supposedly makes them look angelic and interested in things being on the up and up — all the while their deeds are on the same level of those they are demonizing. No, the whole solution in terms of legend is to let it all ride and leave out the political nature of the sport. We're fooling ourselves if we think the self-policing of the ownership and league officials is bringing about justice for all. Last edited by Triad; August 18th, 2008 at 03:04 PM. |
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#27 (permalink) | |
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This got me to thinking. Umpires who make it to the post season are salaried at around 200K to 300K, so are much cheaper to get to than a player. But with the cameras now in use, it would be very hard for an ump to make 2 or 3 bad calls in one game, all favoring the same team. I guess one could counterbalance those with bad calls favoring the other team, at junctures much less likely to be critical. That would give an appearence of balance, but certainly not of competence, and hell would be raised. An umpire that makes just one bad call at a seemingly relevant point, would have an effect only if the game would have been close in any case, which many games are not, and he could turn a 9-1 game into a 9-4 game, which would be of no value. Only a plate ump would be able to influence the game. Calls made by the others are too infrequent and obvious. Your plate ump in on the fix only gets to do one game. So who is cheap, that could influence a game? A batboy, by giving a superstar a cracked bat with crucial runners on base, which might still be a bloop double? A clubhouse attendant, by spiking the Gatorade tank with some mild depressant? Players salaries are too high for the gamblers to afford them. Any player with a regular slot in a post-season game would have th expectatin of makkng at least ten million in his career. You could get to a bench plyer with diminishing prospects, but he might never get into a game, or handle a ball if he does.
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------------------ When people ask what I hope to see before I die, I answer that I've already seen too much. |
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