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best Yankee offense?

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  • best Yankee offense?

    1927 Murderers Row .307/.381/.489, 158 Hr 975 runs 90 SB 137 OPS+

    1939 Bronx Bombers .287/.370/.451, 166 Hr 967 runs 72 SB 117 OPS+

    1961 M&M Boys (and co) .263/.328/.442 240 Hr 827 runs 28 SB 118 OPS+

    1998 yankees .288/.362/.460 207 Hr 965 runs scored 153 SB 117 OPS+

    2007 yankees .290/.366/.463 201 Hr 968 runs scored 123 SB 118 OPS+


    which of these historical offenses was the best???
    22
    1927
    72.73%
    16
    1939
    13.64%
    3
    1961
    4.55%
    1
    1998
    9.09%
    2
    2007
    0.00%
    0

  • #2
    I dunno. I'm kind of partial to 137 team OPS+s, even if it was 81 years ago.
    "Any pitcher who throws at a batter and deliberately tries to hit him is a communist."

    - Alvin Dark

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    • #3
      im tempted to say 2007 based on there being 30 teams now not 16

      but they didnt win it all

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      • #4
        Wow, I never realized how great a season Posada had with the bat last year. A 154 OPS+ from catcher? A-freakin-mazing.
        "Any pitcher who throws at a batter and deliberately tries to hit him is a communist."

        - Alvin Dark

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        • #5
          I know everyone loves the 1939 Yankees (with good reason), but the 1936 Yankees put up some seriously good numbers too...

          .300/.378/.483, 182 HR, 1065 R, 77 SB, 123 OPS+

          Of course, they only won 102 games, compared to the 106 of '39
          sigpic
          5.

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          • #6
            The 1931 Yankees deserve to be on any list of greatest offensive teams. Greatest run scoring team, even context adjusted, of all-time. They didn't win the pennant because of their pitching.
            "Any pitcher who throws at a batter and deliberately tries to hit him is a communist."

            - Alvin Dark

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            • #7
              The Yankns have had some amazing offenses, but I dont think they can beat Murders Row the 1927 Yankees!
              39 AL Pennants • 26 World Series titles
              2003 • 2001 • 2000 • 1999•1998 • 1996 •1981 • 1978 •1977 • 1976 • 1964 • 1963 •1962 • 1961 • 1960 •1958•1957 • 1956 • 1955 • 1953 • 1952 • 1951 • 1950 • 1949•1947 • 1943 • 1942 • 1941•1939 • 1938 • 1937 • 1936•1932 • 1928 • 1927 • 1926 •1923 • 1922 • 1921

              :bowdown:1•3•4•5•7•8•8•9•10•15•16•23•32•37•42•44•49 & soon 2•6•20•21•51•42

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              • #8
                Originally posted by AstrosFan View Post
                Wow, I never realized how great a season Posada had with the bat last year. A 154 OPS+ from catcher? A-freakin-mazing.
                The highest he ever hit was .287, and suddenly at 36 he hits .338. Amazing is right, and he did it clean.
                Lou Gehrig is the Truest Yankee of them all!

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                • #9
                  2007?? Are you serious? I can think of many Yankees teams better than that. Ihave to say 1927 Murderers Row team, without doubt the best Yankees team ever, and maybe even the best team in baseball, but that is debate-able
                  MySpace Codes

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by stejay View Post
                    2007?? Are you serious? I can think of many Yankees teams better than that. Ihave to say 1927 Murderers Row team, without doubt the best Yankees team ever, and maybe even the best team in baseball, but that is debate-able
                    offensively the 2007 team was one of the top ever.

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                    • #11
                      On offense the 1927 team is hard to beat from any yankee, or other team from any era. During the 30's they repeatedly had brilliant offense, but neevr quite matched the '27 performance. 61 was only great for its incredible home run total. 98 was a very well rounded season, nothing to really critise the offense, but not as many historically big stats.

                      2007 was very good, but it wasnt that incredible, and the fact they spent most of the season battling to maintain .500 will hurt them, even if thats mostly the fault of pitching (or lack of).
                      Last edited by bob; 02-12-2008, 08:16 AM.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by fartingbob View Post
                        On offense the 1927 team is hard to beat from any yankee, or other team from any era. During the 30's they repeatedly had brilliant offense, but neevr quite matched the '27 performance. 61 was only great for its incredible home run total. 98 was a very well rounded season, nothing to really critise the offense, but not as many historically big stats.

                        2007 was very good, but it wasnt that incredible, and the fact they spent most of the season battling to maintain .500 will hurt them, even if thats mostly the fault of pitching (or lack of).
                        Does anybody have the stats for just the second half of 2007? They were a game under .500 at the All-Star break. Their bats weren't even producing the first few months.
                        Lou Gehrig is the Truest Yankee of them all!

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by fartingbob View Post
                          On offense the 1927 team is hard to beat from any yankee, or other team from any era. During the 30's they repeatedly had brilliant offense, but neevr quite matched the '27 performance. 61 was only great for its incredible home run total. 98 was a very well rounded season, nothing to really critise the offense, but not as many historically big stats.

                          2007 was very good, but it wasnt that incredible, and the fact they spent most of the season battling to maintain .500 will hurt them, even if thats mostly the fault of pitching (or lack of).
                          1 they made the playoffs so how they began doesn't matter

                          2 they lead the league in batting, on-base AND slugging, home runs and runs scored

                          3 what hurts them is losing in the playoffs

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by White Knight View Post
                            Does anybody have the stats for just the second half of 2007? They were a game under .500 at the All-Star break. Their bats weren't even producing the first few months.
                            first half: .280/.356/.436, 2,999 atbats 89 home runs 112 OPS+

                            sec half: .300/.376/.493 2,718 atbats 112 home runs 125 OPS+

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                            • #15
                              Let's not forget the 1976 Reds. Sure they don't have the eye-popping raw stats as some of the Yankee teams but they led the NL in runs, hits, doubles, triples, HRs, SBs, SB%, BA, OBP, SLG, OPS, and OPS+ (129) and they led in these categories by large margins. This kind of across the board domination is very uncommon.
                              Last edited by Honus Wagner Rules; 02-12-2008, 12:16 PM.
                              Strikeouts are boring! Besides that, they're fascist. Throw some ground balls - it's more democratic.-Crash Davis

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