by macnole » Mon Jan 09, 2012 2:11 pm
I guess I'm super old school then. I agree on Raines 100%. Bagwell no way, for instance though...
Cannot just look at stats against history across eras--need to look at where they were in their era, like the analysis on Raines. Bagwell had a 400 career OBA in an era where that is very good, but not auto-HOF.
To wit on Bagwell over his career...
Top 3 in BAvg: 1 time.
Top 3 in OBA: 3 times. Never #1.
Top 3 in OPS: 1 time.
Top 3 in HR: 3 times.
Top 3 in RBI: 3 times.
Looks like a couple/few statistically gorged years to me along with everyone else. And he didn't have a niche to make up for all around offensive dominance (lack of it).
For comparison, here is Stan Musial:
3x MVP
Top 3 in BAvg: 14 times (7 times #1!)
Top 3 in OBA: 13 times
Top 3 in OPS: 11 times
Top 3 in HR: 2 times
Top 3 in RBI: 5 times
Top 3 in Doubles: 12 times
Top 3 in triples: 7 times
So even in an era of small ballparks, well made/tighter wound baseballs, mounds lower height, it's clear one guy here in the comparison belongs, and it ain't Bagpipes (as much as he was a cool likable player). Give me a break--the HOF has to be guys that dominated their competition, or a portion of the game in some way. And he did not do well against higher competition in the postseason. He is not hall-worthy.
Note: Raines was top 3 in runs scored 4 times, OBA 3 times (and twice #4), BAvg 3 times...
Bags wasn't even in Raines' league when it came to performance against peers. Not even close. Raines should be in--he changed the game of his era. Bagwell did not. A four time all star who hit .250 in that venue, and a .226 hitter in 6 years of postseason play.
Many others like him in his era.