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With us deep into October playoff baseball, this week's poll/thread will be the Mr. October tribute thread celebrating Reggie Jackson's 1977 three-homer bravura performance. So, the first half will be listing the ten greatest right fielders ever who played most of their careers after WWII.
The second half will be listing our favorite songs from the awesome anything-goes 70's. Some of us were in high school/college in the 70's; some, like myself, were in grade school, and some only know it from Dazed and Confused. However, we all have favorites from this decade of Rock, Prog Rock, Country Rock, Reggae, Punk, and Heavy Metal.
Greatest Right Fielders
1. Hank Aaron. The true home run king. Tremendous power overshadowed excellent all-around game.
2. Frank Robinson. The stealth Aaron. Quiet, awesome right fielder too often overlooked in talks of the greats.
3. Roberto Clemente. Defensive force, offensive whiz, and wondrous character unparalleled since his death.
4. Vladimir Guerrero. Loved every pitch thrown to him, hit most of them, and had a bazooka arm.
5. Dave Winfield. Best athlete to play the position, maybe the best athlete to ever play the game.
6. Ichiro Suzuki. Batting machine and a dancer in Right with a rifle arm. Pretty speedy, too.
7. Reggie Jackson. October dramatics in 77 overshadowed his solid D and long career of prodigious power.
8. Andre Dawson. Hawk was the epitome of the big, bad rf. Awesome arm, power, and a deathly stare.
9. Larry Walker. Career in Coors caused skeptics, but he was the prototypical athletic, powerful Rf.
10. Tony Gwynn. Best pure hitter at the position and speedy in his early career.
Favorite Songs of the 70's
1. Melissa by The Allman Brothers. Soulful Southern croon by Gregg, beautiful accompaniment by Duane.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pwbowi-8Yoo
2. Ain't Talkin Bout Love by Van Halen. Killer opening Eddie riff and deep, growling vocals by David Lee.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SuyvT8nFMLY
3. Surrender by Cheap Trick. Post-punk classic influenced Nirvana, The Foo Fighters and other later greats.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1sAm5UCJ9vA
4. Into the Mystic by Van Morrison. Soulfully spiritual with Van slipping mystically into his slipstream.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RHTb-WE4zo
5. Over the Hill and Far Away by Led Zeppelin. Robert Plant's best vocal performance with Page's lyrical mastery.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bD9t44JUD4
6. Go All The Way by The Raspberries. Power pop gem influenced Springsteen among others.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Swicdtaddy0
7. Backstreets by Bruce Springsteen. This resonant urban aria is the best song on The Boss' best album.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oID_fZDtcs0
8. Alison by Elvis Costello. Elvis' biting classic of loss and acceptance announced his genius in '77.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9GlC9GyF4Y
9. Message in a Bottle by The Police. The Police's first great blend of rock and reggae with Sting's delicate growl.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MbXWrmQW-OE
10. September Gurls by Big Star. Another power pop classic unfairly forgotten like Big Star themselves.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNKSs1J38EA
The second half will be listing our favorite songs from the awesome anything-goes 70's. Some of us were in high school/college in the 70's; some, like myself, were in grade school, and some only know it from Dazed and Confused. However, we all have favorites from this decade of Rock, Prog Rock, Country Rock, Reggae, Punk, and Heavy Metal.
Greatest Right Fielders
1. Hank Aaron. The true home run king. Tremendous power overshadowed excellent all-around game.
2. Frank Robinson. The stealth Aaron. Quiet, awesome right fielder too often overlooked in talks of the greats.
3. Roberto Clemente. Defensive force, offensive whiz, and wondrous character unparalleled since his death.
4. Vladimir Guerrero. Loved every pitch thrown to him, hit most of them, and had a bazooka arm.
5. Dave Winfield. Best athlete to play the position, maybe the best athlete to ever play the game.
6. Ichiro Suzuki. Batting machine and a dancer in Right with a rifle arm. Pretty speedy, too.
7. Reggie Jackson. October dramatics in 77 overshadowed his solid D and long career of prodigious power.
8. Andre Dawson. Hawk was the epitome of the big, bad rf. Awesome arm, power, and a deathly stare.
9. Larry Walker. Career in Coors caused skeptics, but he was the prototypical athletic, powerful Rf.
10. Tony Gwynn. Best pure hitter at the position and speedy in his early career.
Favorite Songs of the 70's
1. Melissa by The Allman Brothers. Soulful Southern croon by Gregg, beautiful accompaniment by Duane.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pwbowi-8Yoo
2. Ain't Talkin Bout Love by Van Halen. Killer opening Eddie riff and deep, growling vocals by David Lee.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SuyvT8nFMLY
3. Surrender by Cheap Trick. Post-punk classic influenced Nirvana, The Foo Fighters and other later greats.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1sAm5UCJ9vA
4. Into the Mystic by Van Morrison. Soulfully spiritual with Van slipping mystically into his slipstream.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RHTb-WE4zo
5. Over the Hill and Far Away by Led Zeppelin. Robert Plant's best vocal performance with Page's lyrical mastery.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bD9t44JUD4
6. Go All The Way by The Raspberries. Power pop gem influenced Springsteen among others.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Swicdtaddy0
7. Backstreets by Bruce Springsteen. This resonant urban aria is the best song on The Boss' best album.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oID_fZDtcs0
8. Alison by Elvis Costello. Elvis' biting classic of loss and acceptance announced his genius in '77.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9GlC9GyF4Y
9. Message in a Bottle by The Police. The Police's first great blend of rock and reggae with Sting's delicate growl.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MbXWrmQW-OE
10. September Gurls by Big Star. Another power pop classic unfairly forgotten like Big Star themselves.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNKSs1J38EA