Posted: Tue Feb 21, 2006 5:14 pm
Ive got 10 bucks for it........
If your gay lover's boyfriend doesn't kill you in a fit of jealous rage, you'll probably be around to see Alex Rodriguez break it...unfortunately.Cicero wrote:I would like to be able to see that record beaten in my lifetime.
Cicero wrote:Who gives a fuck if the guy hates the media? Can you blame him? Dude is the best all-around player since Mays.
*facepalm*Cicero wrote:Dude is the best all-around player since Mays.
Mace wrote:He's only slightly better at playing left field than Sammy Sosa is at playing right.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Hammerin' Hank set that lofty mark without so much as one 50-bomb season to his credit? I was pretty young, but I don't remember Henry whining about all of his phantom injuries -- dude just went out and balled. Maybe he didn't have all of those injuries because he didn't try to carry 280 pounds on a body that was made to be 180.Henry didn't have to resort to the juice to break it.....and Bonds may not be able to do it even after padding his stats with 'roid assisted homers for a number of years.
Nice way of putting it, since "bitter" and "racist" are two characteristics many people associate with Bonds.Cicero wrote:I hope Bonds breaks Aaron's record. Aaron is just as bitter and still a racist after all these years.
Amazing Mace wrote:^^^ I like this guy. Couldn't have said it better myself.
I'm thinking that Ted Williams might have hit .500 if he'd worn body armor, and who knows how many homers the players of that era might have if they'd been juiced. I have to laugh at the thought of someone trying to convince Williams to slip on some body armor and imagine how it might have played out........
Coach: "C'mon, Ted, put it on. It'll let you crowd the plate and pull more balls to right field."
Ted W.: "Are you kidding? I'm Teddy fuckin' Baseball, not some pussy who has to wear plastic armor to hit. I pull EVERYTHING and ain't even pussy enough to hit to left field now....so why would I want to crowd the plate? Why don't you give that shit to Mantle or some other Yankee pussy 'cause I'm Teddy fuckin' Baseball, the greatest fuckin' hitter who ever played the game, and I don't need that shit. Only a pussy would wear that shit."
Coach: "Okay, okay...Jeez, forget it, Teddy. I guess there's no need to even ask you about takin' this new fangled steroid stuff that's supposed to make you stronger."
Ted W.: "That's right.....better go lookin' for a pussy to take that stuff too, and you ain't gonna find nobody around here. I'm thinkin' you might wanna wait a decade or two to break that stuff out 'cause there's gonna be a lotta guys playin' the game that'll be chasin' our records....and they're gonna need lots of help."
Toddowen wrote:I'm not so sure.GrizBearStare wrote:The ink won't even be dry on Bonds HR record before ARod renders the whole thing moot.
The 50+ HR hitter won't be as common in the years to come. The 50+ HR hitter is entirely a product of steroids. Being associated with using steroids in the bigs is becoming like being associated with gambling...as it should.
We'll be seeing fewer 50+ HR seasons.
Check out the SI article. According to the authors of the new tell all Barry book, Bonds made a direct connection between his steroid regimen and having a better eye at the plate. I don't know if it can ever be medicaly verified, because reproducing Bonds doping cycles is not something I see ever being done in a lab. But that's what Bonds is alledged to have said was one of the side effects.Dinsdale wrote:That said, Bonds still has the best "hitters eye" of any player in the game today. In his defense, dude doesn't swing at too many bad pitches. Steroids don't help him with that. They do help him jack it 500 feet when he gets his pitch, though.
To be perfectly fair, Ted Williams didn't have to face modern relief pitching. Or play anywhere near as many night games. Or face pitchers who were juiced.Mace wrote:^^^ I like this guy. Couldn't have said it better myself.
I'm thinking that Ted Williams might have hit .500 if he'd worn body armor, and who knows how many homers the players of that era might have if they'd been juiced. I have to laugh at the thought of someone trying to convince Williams to slip on some body armor and imagine how it might have played out........
Coach: "C'mon, Ted, put it on. It'll let you crowd the plate and pull more balls to right field."
Ted W.: "Are you kidding? I'm Teddy fuckin' Baseball, not some pussy who has to wear plastic armor to hit. I pull EVERYTHING and ain't even pussy enough to hit to left field now....so why would I want to crowd the plate? Why don't you give that shit to Mantle or some other Yankee pussy 'cause I'm Teddy fuckin' Baseball, the greatest fuckin' hitter who ever played the game, and I don't need that shit. Only a pussy would wear that shit."
Coach: "Okay, okay...Jeez, forget it, Teddy. I guess there's no need to even ask you about takin' this new fangled steroid stuff that's supposed to make you stronger."
Ted W.: "That's right.....better go lookin' for a pussy to take that stuff too, and you ain't gonna find nobody around here. I'm thinkin' you might wanna wait a decade or two to break that stuff out 'cause there's gonna be a lotta guys playin' the game that'll be chasin' our records....and they're gonna need lots of help."
Mace
What I mean by "modern relief pitching" is simple. The old guys got more opportunities to lock in on a starter. Nowadays, most managers not named Guillen will yank pitchers at the first sign of trouble. Personally, I'd prefer sending a guy up against Juan Marichal after 8 innings than to send him in against a fresh Mariano Riveria. And the statistics bear that out as Riveria has an ERA .5 lower than Marichal.Mace wrote:And to be even more perfectly fair......today's players don't have to play doubleheaders or ride trains from city to city, and, as previously mentioned, have the luxury of wearing body armor to protect themselves against the inside pitch....oh, and they also wear batting helmets. Williams may not have played "as many" night games, but he did have to play a large number of games under the lights.....lights that were far inferior to the lighting of today's fields. The pitchers of Williams' era also pitched from a much higher mound, giving a definite advantage to the pitcher. Not sure what you mean by "modern relief pitching" but Williams faced better starting pitching, top to bottom, IMO, than the watered down staffs of today's game. Personally, I think the importance of the specialized bullpen is highly overrated in its effectiveness. I'll take Bob Gibson/Sandy Koufax/Juan Marichal/et al in the seventh or eighth inning over some no-name reliever brought into the game to get the "by the book" righty-lefty matchup.....and I think Ozzie Guillen would agree with me.
All of that said, I don't know how Williams could not hit .500 if he were playing today's game. :)
Mace
On that I think we can both agree. Players like Williams, Ruth, Cobb and Foxx would still be great players in any era. But the question is whether or not they would have put up the kind of numbers that they did back in the day. Myself, I think they would have put up numbers comparable to today's star players. Maybe a little better, or maybe a little worse. But you would not see the kind of insane RBI totals and batting averages you saw in the 30s. There's a bunch of reasons why only a handful of players have even gotten within shouting distance of .400 since WWII.Mace wrote:Ted Williams was the greatest hitter I've ever seen and I've seen absolutely nothing from today's game that would lead me to believe he wouldn't be the dominant hitter in the game if he were playing today.