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We've covered hitters for a bit, so it's time to give the pitchers some time. We'll start with greatest Right Handed Starters since WW II. For the second half of the poll/thread, we'll go back to the culture world. In our recent Greatest Rock Bands poll, many posters either chose The Beatles as one of their favorites or named them their favorite band, period. Every generation loves the Beatles. So, for the second half, everybody should pick their greatest and/or favorite Beatles songs. Since they have so many great ones, don't worry about only listing your favorites. Odds are they will be great anyway.
Greatest Right Handed Starters
1. Tom Seaver. Choirboy face belied a fierce competitor with a dominating repertoire and wicked command.
2. Bob Gibson. The Demon. Big, fast, smart, and mean. Only pitcher to intimidate MLB rule makers.
3. Greg Maddux. The Surgeon. Scalpel-like control and location and sublime pitcher's mind.
4. Pedro Martinez. Closest thing to a right-handed Koufax. Electric stuff dominated the roided era.
5. Jim Palmer. Smooth and unflappable. Aggravated batters as much as he did Earl Weaver
6. Nolan Ryan. Ungodly fast and fierce. The epitome of the Big Texan Righty...just ask Ventura.
7. Juan Marichal. Koufax's right-handed contemporary. Roseboro incident cost him deserved recognition.
8. Don Drysdale. Ornery cuss. Played the bruising Clydesdale to Koufax' electric thoroughbred.
9. Fergie Jenkins. Unfairly overlooked in most talks of the great ones.
10. Robin Roberts. 6 straight 20 win seasons. Terribly forgotten by most baseball media and fans.
Favorite Greatest Beatles Songs
1. A Day in the Life. Has everything that makes the Beatles music great, including John's best performance.
2. Something. George's masterpiece. Sinatra called it the greatest love song of all time.
3. For No One. Paul's best and darkest song. Sounds more like a Johnny Cash dirge than a McCartney tune.
4. In My Life. John's elegy is his best solo writing effort.
5. While My Guitar Gently Weeps. The Beatles, George's elegant writing, and Clapton in a meeting of the gods.
6. Across the Universe. Beautiful psychedelia that inspired much un-beautiful psychedelia
7. Happiness is a Warm Gun. John at his most beautifully snarky. Alt-rock masterpiece before Alt-rock
8. She Said, She Said. Signaled the start of their experimental era. Easily Ringo's best work.
9. If I Fell. Their best early song with tough guy John at his most vulnerable.
10. Strawberry Fields Forever. Another beautiful John elegy. George Martin's best production work.
Greatest Right Handed Starters
1. Tom Seaver. Choirboy face belied a fierce competitor with a dominating repertoire and wicked command.
2. Bob Gibson. The Demon. Big, fast, smart, and mean. Only pitcher to intimidate MLB rule makers.
3. Greg Maddux. The Surgeon. Scalpel-like control and location and sublime pitcher's mind.
4. Pedro Martinez. Closest thing to a right-handed Koufax. Electric stuff dominated the roided era.
5. Jim Palmer. Smooth and unflappable. Aggravated batters as much as he did Earl Weaver
6. Nolan Ryan. Ungodly fast and fierce. The epitome of the Big Texan Righty...just ask Ventura.
7. Juan Marichal. Koufax's right-handed contemporary. Roseboro incident cost him deserved recognition.
8. Don Drysdale. Ornery cuss. Played the bruising Clydesdale to Koufax' electric thoroughbred.
9. Fergie Jenkins. Unfairly overlooked in most talks of the great ones.
10. Robin Roberts. 6 straight 20 win seasons. Terribly forgotten by most baseball media and fans.
Favorite Greatest Beatles Songs
1. A Day in the Life. Has everything that makes the Beatles music great, including John's best performance.
2. Something. George's masterpiece. Sinatra called it the greatest love song of all time.
3. For No One. Paul's best and darkest song. Sounds more like a Johnny Cash dirge than a McCartney tune.
4. In My Life. John's elegy is his best solo writing effort.
5. While My Guitar Gently Weeps. The Beatles, George's elegant writing, and Clapton in a meeting of the gods.
6. Across the Universe. Beautiful psychedelia that inspired much un-beautiful psychedelia
7. Happiness is a Warm Gun. John at his most beautifully snarky. Alt-rock masterpiece before Alt-rock
8. She Said, She Said. Signaled the start of their experimental era. Easily Ringo's best work.
9. If I Fell. Their best early song with tough guy John at his most vulnerable.
10. Strawberry Fields Forever. Another beautiful John elegy. George Martin's best production work.