- Posts: 1906
- Joined: Wed Aug 29, 2012 9:13 pm
Let's take the argument advanced for not having players prior to 1893 added to the pool to its' logical conclusion. As I read it, the crux of Rosie's argument is that prior to the rules changes of 1893- presumably the moving back of the pitcher's mound about 10 feet being the key change - there is a qualitative difference between baseball played before the rule changes and baseball after the changes were implemented, such that baseball functionally became a different game after the rule changes and that this fundamental difference warrants the exclusion of the pre 1893 cards from consideration for at least the near future.
Okay, so baseball also became a functionally different game after the spitball and other "freak deliveries" were outlawed in 1917 and again when Babe Ruth singlehandedly ended the deadball era and ushered in a wholly different type of baseball. Can one realistically compare the type of baseball played during the deadball era to anything that came after it? The rise to prominence of the home run obviated the prevailing strategic approach to baseball, forever rendering it obsolete.
Then of course we have the dh introduced in 1973. So extending Rosie's logic to its logical conclusion, the NL and AL post dh are playing very different games of baseball. Therefore, to ensure that we have a homogenous set where all the included players essentially played the same game, we should restrict any future additions to ATG, to cards from 1920-1972 as before and after those dates, the game was very different, not to mention how steroids changed the game even more radically starting in the 90's.
I'm not one to bang my head against a brick wall interminably. Thus, going forward, I will no longer participate in any way with what I view as an arbitrary and capricious selection process to add cards to ATG.
Okay, so baseball also became a functionally different game after the spitball and other "freak deliveries" were outlawed in 1917 and again when Babe Ruth singlehandedly ended the deadball era and ushered in a wholly different type of baseball. Can one realistically compare the type of baseball played during the deadball era to anything that came after it? The rise to prominence of the home run obviated the prevailing strategic approach to baseball, forever rendering it obsolete.
Then of course we have the dh introduced in 1973. So extending Rosie's logic to its logical conclusion, the NL and AL post dh are playing very different games of baseball. Therefore, to ensure that we have a homogenous set where all the included players essentially played the same game, we should restrict any future additions to ATG, to cards from 1920-1972 as before and after those dates, the game was very different, not to mention how steroids changed the game even more radically starting in the 90's.
I'm not one to bang my head against a brick wall interminably. Thus, going forward, I will no longer participate in any way with what I view as an arbitrary and capricious selection process to add cards to ATG.