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Who's your favorite mediocre baseball player?

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  • #46
    Originally posted by Dude Paskert View Post
    Wow...as I read this, I could hear my dad's voice calling that name out, followed by him laughing. He loved to hear the PA announcer call that name.
    He's been gone a dozen years now, it was nice to hear him again.
    I am so glad that I could bring back a happy memory of your times with your dad. Isn't that what baseball is all about - passing on memories from generation to generation? And the announcer who made Bocabella "famous" was Claude Mouton.
    Dave Kent

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    • #47
      Welcome back, Dave!!! Great to see you back after all these years.

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      • #48
        John Lowenstein

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        • #49
          Kevin Youkilis

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          • #50
            Terry Harmon the Phillies utiltyman from the 70's. Somehow I have every baseball card made of him.
            "(Shoeless Joe Jackson's fall from grace is one of the real tragedies of baseball. I always thought he was more sinned against than sinning." -- Connie Mack

            "I have the ultimate respect for Whitesox fans. They were as miserable as the Cubs and Redsox fans ever were but always had the good decency to keep it to themselves. And when they finally won the World Series, they celebrated without annoying every other fan in the country."--Jim Caple, ESPN (Jan. 12, 2011)

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            • #51
              Historically - Herman Franks and Sal Yvars, because of The Polo Grounds in 1951.

              Players I watched as a kid? Rex Hudler, Ken Reitz,

              Players who I watched come through AAA when I had a good friend working for the team, met them, and got lots of tickets from them after they made it to the bigs? Brian Barber, Tim Costo
              "Herman Franks to Sal Yvars to Bobby Thomson. Ralph Branca to Bobby Thomson to Helen Rita... cue Russ Hodges."

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              • #52
                Among the Dodgers of my youth, Lee Lacy was considered average by many but has some skills that did not always show up in the box score. He and Joe Ferguson bounced back and forth off the roster and I always thought the team was better off with these guys than without.

                On the pitching side, the Dodgers always made it a point to get rid of anyone who management thought was just average. Often times they would blossom somewhere else. See Rick Rhoden, Dave Stewart and Rick Sutcliffe for more information on this. As far as pitchers who really were average but managed to stick around for a little while Alejandro Pena comes to mind only for unrealized potential.
                Your Second Base Coach
                Garvey, Lopes, Russell, and Cey started 833 times and the Dodgers went 498-335, for a .598 winning percentage. That’s equal to a team going 97-65 over a season. On those occasions when at least one of them missed his start, the Dodgers were 306-267-1, which is a .534 clip. That works out to a team going 87-75. So having all four of them added 10 wins to the Dodgers per year.
                http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5hCIvMule0

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                • #53
                  Originally posted by SavoyBG View Post
                  Here's mine:

                  [ATTACH=CONFIG]106868[/ATTACH]
                  I wouldn't call Oscar Gamble 'mediocre'. he actually had a career 127 OPS+..about the same as Jim Rice. He never played a full season, but the time he did play, he was a really good hitter. In 1979 he only played 100 games, but produced a 187 OPS+. In 1977 he played 137 games and had a 162 OPS+.

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                  • #54
                    Snakes on the bathroom floor

                    Originally posted by Second Base Coach View Post
                    Among the Dodgers of my youth, Lee Lacy was considered average by many but has some skills that did not always show up in the box score. He and Joe Ferguson bounced back and forth off the roster and I always thought the team was better off with these guys than without.

                    On the pitching side, the Dodgers always made it a point to get rid of anyone who management thought was just average. Often times they would blossom somewhere else. See Rick Rhoden, Dave Stewart and Rick Sutcliffe for more information on this. As far as pitchers who really were average but managed to stick around for a little while Alejandro Pena comes to mind only for unrealized potential.
                    Exactly so. After years of therapy, I had finally freed myself from memories of the Stewart-Honeycut trade, and now they come flooding back. You're saying that the above guys were not actually mediocre, and I heartily agree.
                    Indeed the first step toward finding out is to acknowledge you do not satisfactorily know already; so that no blight can so surely arrest all intellectual growth as the blight of cocksureness.--CS Peirce

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                    • #55
                      It would have to be Dusty Rhodes for me. In all the years he had with the Giants, 1954 stood out like a beacon- it seemed he always did something to help the team win a game that year, whether as a pinch hitter or playing in the outfield to give Monte Irvin a rest. And what a World Series! He never had a year like that in the majors before 1954, or after 1954 as well.

                      I was lucky enough to meet him about ten years ago and for some reason the two of us hit it off- I guess it might have been because we both spent time in Staten Island or because we both sold cars for a living. I was a lifer in that business until a few years ago, but he only did it for a short time after he retired. He told me once, "They just had me there for my name. Hell, I couldn't have sold an ashtray to Edward R. Murrow." (LOL)

                      He was always a million laughs regardless of whatever we talked about, and we exchanged Christmas cards for several years. Those are prized possesions, and yes, you'd have to shoot me to get them. (lol) He always holds a place in my heart, and, of course, if it hadn't been for him, my beloved Giants wouldn't have won the Series in '54.
                      Last edited by chinese home run; 04-16-2012, 02:45 PM. Reason: spelling

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                      • #56
                        That's an hilarious ancedote chinese HR

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