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Left Fielders are the Labrador Retrievers of the baseball world: solid, steady, and unspectacular. However, they are extremely capable at getting their job done, and they can do great damage to their opponent when the need arises. They aren't as glamorous as their CF neighbors, but they can be deceptively and even strikingly graceful. While they don't have the Gary Cooper mystique or rifle arms of RFers, they can gun down runners with lethal aplomb.
So, to celebrate these Left Fielders/"Golden Retrievers," the first half of this poll/thread will address the Greatest Left Fielders since WWII. The second half of the poll/thread will address our Favorite Songs of the Oughts/00s. The Oughts saved us from the loathsome Frat-rock and Neo-Grunge of the late 90's. Marked by experimentation, a return to 80's Alt-rock, and a Folk renaissance, it was definitely a remarkable music decade. So, without having to look back too far, pick up to ten of your favorites. Quality is preferred, but not required...
Note: This is the final Greatest Players Thread: I had planned to do greatest closers and managers. However, after a fun, engaging run, I decided against it. A few have interjected their negativity (particularly last week), but we've still had 9 excellent threads with mostly courteous, interesting discussions about many topics. So, I would like to thank all who contributed....particularly fredpaii, Steve F, Ninersphan, and alk58.
Greatest Left Fielders (Bonds would have been #1, and Manny would have been #4...but they got greedy)
1. Ted Williams. The Greatest hitter ever. Also a mediocre defender, but who cares.
2. Stan Musial. Maybe the 2nd best hitter ever, and The Man played defense as well.
3. Rickey Henderson. There will never be a better leadoff hitter...EVER. Played a mean left field, too.
4. Carl Yastrzemski. Awesome D, excellent O, sublime class...and watch out for his grandson Mike in Baltimore.
5. Willie Stargell. Pops was a slugging LF before his storied move to 1b and astounding 1979 Playoff performance.
6. Billy Williams. Smooth left-handed hitter. Maybe the most forgotten HOFer of recent years.
7. Jim Rice. Dominant offensive player of his era. Others' roids stats of the late 90's almost kept him out of HOF
8. Ralph Kiner. Short career, but devastating power for his time. Also unfairly forgotten.
9. Tim Raines. Second best leadoff hitter of modern era. Will HOF voters ever come around?
10. Lou Brock. First great devastating base stealer. Solid hitter, too....Poor Ernie Broglio.
Favorite Songs of the 00's (
1. Read My Mind by The Killers. Las Vegas rockers brilliantly blend Springsteen Americana with 70's Glam sheen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKghBQbNxWA
2. All My Life by The Foo Fighters. The Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers of the Info age return to Grohl's Punk roots.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ04WbgI9rg
3. The Cave by Mumford and Sons. The Millennium's U2 rule the New-Folk movement. This is their best.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KkUeRPjc-Y
4. Vicarious by Tool. Danny Carey is the greatest Rock drummer since Neal Peart. He truly shows it on this one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOKV9Stri_M
5. Wake Me Up When September Ends by Green Day. Billie Joe's gorgeous and poetic dirge of pain and loss.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdpBZ5_b48g
6. Hysteria by Muse: Muse is Radiohead if they continued in The Bends direction, as seen on this hook-filled rocker.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYWklAV_cwQ
7. Everybody's Changing by Keane. Bacharach-esque gem with Keane's signature pianos and Chaplin's angelic voice.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zx4Hjq6KwO0
8. Sex on Fire by Kings of Leon. Tennessee rockers mix G. Allman growls with Glam exaltation of libidinal rapture.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RF0HhrwIwp0
9. Soul Meets Body by Death Cab for Cutie. REM-ish ditty is a Wordsworthian meditation on mind, nature, and love.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uizQVriWp8M
10. (tie)The Scientist by Coldplay. Their best song: a lovely acknowledgment of failure and recognition of love's end.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s70OsXlDD94
10. (tie) Evil by Interpol. New York Alt-rockers evoke Joy Division with this cynical pitch to an uncertain lover.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqfiHfDmOnw
10. (tie) Wake Up by Arcade Fire. Springsteen-inspired Canadians turn Young's "Old Man" on its head with this one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zdNdjF-htY
10 (tie) Last Night by The Strokes. NY Dolls meet T-Rex on this engagingly cocky song of romantic frustration.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TOypSnKFHrE
So, to celebrate these Left Fielders/"Golden Retrievers," the first half of this poll/thread will address the Greatest Left Fielders since WWII. The second half of the poll/thread will address our Favorite Songs of the Oughts/00s. The Oughts saved us from the loathsome Frat-rock and Neo-Grunge of the late 90's. Marked by experimentation, a return to 80's Alt-rock, and a Folk renaissance, it was definitely a remarkable music decade. So, without having to look back too far, pick up to ten of your favorites. Quality is preferred, but not required...
Note: This is the final Greatest Players Thread: I had planned to do greatest closers and managers. However, after a fun, engaging run, I decided against it. A few have interjected their negativity (particularly last week), but we've still had 9 excellent threads with mostly courteous, interesting discussions about many topics. So, I would like to thank all who contributed....particularly fredpaii, Steve F, Ninersphan, and alk58.
Greatest Left Fielders (Bonds would have been #1, and Manny would have been #4...but they got greedy)
1. Ted Williams. The Greatest hitter ever. Also a mediocre defender, but who cares.
2. Stan Musial. Maybe the 2nd best hitter ever, and The Man played defense as well.
3. Rickey Henderson. There will never be a better leadoff hitter...EVER. Played a mean left field, too.
4. Carl Yastrzemski. Awesome D, excellent O, sublime class...and watch out for his grandson Mike in Baltimore.
5. Willie Stargell. Pops was a slugging LF before his storied move to 1b and astounding 1979 Playoff performance.
6. Billy Williams. Smooth left-handed hitter. Maybe the most forgotten HOFer of recent years.
7. Jim Rice. Dominant offensive player of his era. Others' roids stats of the late 90's almost kept him out of HOF
8. Ralph Kiner. Short career, but devastating power for his time. Also unfairly forgotten.
9. Tim Raines. Second best leadoff hitter of modern era. Will HOF voters ever come around?
10. Lou Brock. First great devastating base stealer. Solid hitter, too....Poor Ernie Broglio.
Favorite Songs of the 00's (
1. Read My Mind by The Killers. Las Vegas rockers brilliantly blend Springsteen Americana with 70's Glam sheen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKghBQbNxWA
2. All My Life by The Foo Fighters. The Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers of the Info age return to Grohl's Punk roots.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ04WbgI9rg
3. The Cave by Mumford and Sons. The Millennium's U2 rule the New-Folk movement. This is their best.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KkUeRPjc-Y
4. Vicarious by Tool. Danny Carey is the greatest Rock drummer since Neal Peart. He truly shows it on this one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOKV9Stri_M
5. Wake Me Up When September Ends by Green Day. Billie Joe's gorgeous and poetic dirge of pain and loss.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdpBZ5_b48g
6. Hysteria by Muse: Muse is Radiohead if they continued in The Bends direction, as seen on this hook-filled rocker.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYWklAV_cwQ
7. Everybody's Changing by Keane. Bacharach-esque gem with Keane's signature pianos and Chaplin's angelic voice.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zx4Hjq6KwO0
8. Sex on Fire by Kings of Leon. Tennessee rockers mix G. Allman growls with Glam exaltation of libidinal rapture.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RF0HhrwIwp0
9. Soul Meets Body by Death Cab for Cutie. REM-ish ditty is a Wordsworthian meditation on mind, nature, and love.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uizQVriWp8M
10. (tie)The Scientist by Coldplay. Their best song: a lovely acknowledgment of failure and recognition of love's end.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s70OsXlDD94
10. (tie) Evil by Interpol. New York Alt-rockers evoke Joy Division with this cynical pitch to an uncertain lover.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqfiHfDmOnw
10. (tie) Wake Up by Arcade Fire. Springsteen-inspired Canadians turn Young's "Old Man" on its head with this one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zdNdjF-htY
10 (tie) Last Night by The Strokes. NY Dolls meet T-Rex on this engagingly cocky song of romantic frustration.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TOypSnKFHrE