by rburgh » Sun Oct 23, 2011 9:19 am
Pujols grew up in Missouri. The falsified Dominican birth certificates are usually created when the players have grown enough to be noticed by scouts. This doesn't apply to Albert, who was signed out of high school. Could he be a year or two older? Maybe. But I think it's extremely unlikely.
He's 150 hits ahead of Rose's total at the same baseball age. Rose was born in April, so the comparison is pretty close. Even if he's off by a year or two, he'll get to 4000 if he decides to try for it. With his power, someone will pay him to hit .265-25-85 and put fannies in the seats when he's 44.
He'll also hit 800 HR's unless something odd happens. 4000-800 will be quite a feat. It will put him into the argument.
Curious - you discount the great batting averages from the dead ball era, without giving the players offsetting credit for the extreme difficulty of hitting HR's, and of fielding acceptably with crappy fields, primitive or nonexistent equipment, etc.
I think there are at least a dozen players (excluding pitchers) that one can make an argument for being the GOAT.
In no particular order, my list of these dozen would be Ruth, Cobb, Mays, Mantle, Oscar Charleston, Josh Gibson, Wagner, Williams, Gehrig, Barry Bonds, Pop Lloyd, and Aaron. A-Rod, and Pujols will surely join the list when their careers are ended.
The argument will never, and can never, be settled. There are many others, including ranking presidents, quarterbacks, basketball players, and movie stars.