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- Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2012 11:21 am
I have seen multiple videos of Ruth's swing. It's way too long for today's game. He'd be Adam Dunn at the plate if he continued to use it, totally helpless against any decent slider. One of the early pitchers to use a slider extensively was George Uhle, and Ruth's OPS against him was .829 in over 100 PA's.
But he WOULD be a superstar. On the mound. Or maybe, he would have been taught a shorter swing at an early age. And of course he'd be a whole lot fitter than the beer-bellied slugger we see in pictures. Two things are for sure, he had remarkable eye to hand coordination and he was strong as an ox. That translates pretty well into the category "hitting machine."
My issues with his cards in this game are simply due to the strategy of the days he began his career in. He basically demolished 50-60 years of the science of hitting, since he was the only hitter trying to hit the ball over the fence in the early 1920's. Hornsby and Gehrig quickly followed suit. And then there was the year when Cobb decided to hit home runs. I think it was1925, when he slugged .598 at age 38, second only to his otherworldly 1911 season at age 24. In 1925, which was coincidentally Ruth's worst season, Cobb led the AL in OPS and OPS+.
When pitchers are trying to keep you from hitting the ball on the ground the other way, and you are simply looking to pull everything in the air, magical things can happen. It was be like if some big LH slugger today decided to simply hit the ball the other way against a shift, and everybody continued to shift against him. He'd demolish the single season batting average record and the single season hit record.
But Ruth did continue to murder the ball for more than a decade, recording OPS's over 1.100 13 times in 14 years. So he was still a great hitter even when the pitchers adapted to the new style of hitting.