You did say Tulo was one of the best ever
I said Tulo was arguably the best ever, and I made clear I meant he was arguably the best to play the position,
not the one with the best career.
However, I have to disagree concerning his home-away splits as they are pretty drastic. He's basically a HOF'er offensively in Coors and a good player on the road. You said he's very good on the road as well in defending your position somewhere in an earlier post, but the evidence shows there to be a pretty drastic home-road split and his offensive stats definitely appear inflated at home. Then you say he earned those stats. Of course he earned them, but they are inflated relative to many other hitters because of where he accomplished them.
They are not "drastic." He has very good stats on the road. Also, you misunderstand what I meant by "earning" stats, since you say his stats are drastically inflated but still say he "earned" them. By "earned" them, I didn't just mean he accomplished them. I meant most of those produced stats would have been produced in more "regular" parks as well. Therefore his statistics there are not predominantly inflated.
I'm not saying he's not a very good player when healthy, but it's obvious he has benefited quite a bit by hitting in Coors. Get him over to Fenway where he will be able to post great numbers and no one will say they are inflated by the ballpark.
Firstly, many hitters have benefited from Fenway and other parks. So, Red Sox players aren't sterling examples of players with no ballpark benefits. Secondly, your final statement about Tulo is disingenuous, if not necessarily intentionally. You say he's a very good player when healthy, then you imply much of his being very good comes from playing in Coors. That's faint praise. You clearly don't think much of Tulo's accomplishments, and that's your prerogative. As I've noted, he's accomplished much, despite his fragility and over-exaggerated Coors assistance, and is arguably the most talented shortstop to have played the position.