Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

why is 3rd base the weakest position historically?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • why is 3rd base the weakest position historically?

    Mike Schmidt
    Pie Traynor
    Brooks Robinson
    George Brett
    Chipper Jones

    these are the top 5 full time 3rd basemen ....what makes this position so weak?


    every other position seems to be stronger by a mile

  • #2
    It's really not as weak as you make it out to be. Replace Traynor and Robinson with Matthews and Boggs, and suddenly it looks much better at the top. I think it certainly a 'stronger' position historically than shortstops and catchers. I will admit, though, that until Matthews came along, it was just a pitiful position historically.

    Comment


    • #3
      you think it's better than SHORTSTOPS?

      Honus Wagner, A-rod, Jeter, Ripken, Trammell etc. is a much better group to me

      Comment


      • #4
        Shortstops through history in my opinion were usually regarded as weak position players. Yet thirdbasemen were somewhat considered a power type position so I agree and he makes a very good point about lack of top notch thirdbasemen. Really from 1900 until when maybe Eddie Mathews retired Pie Traynor was the best ever.
        "(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)

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Blackout View Post
          Mike Schmidt
          Pie Traynor
          Brooks Robinson
          George Brett
          Chipper Jones

          these are the top 5 full time 3rd basemen ....what makes this position so weak?


          every other position seems to be stronger by a mile
          BTW, Eddie Mathews beats Brooks Robinson 143/104 in OPS+, 91 to 72 in WAR. Mathews drove in 100 more runs than Robinson in six fewer years! I don't see how Mathews isn't a top five third baseman.
          They call me Mr. Baseball. Not because of my love for the game; because of all the stitches in my head.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Blackout View Post
            Mike Schmidt
            Pie Traynor
            Brooks Robinson
            George Brett
            Chipper Jones

            these are the top 5 full time 3rd basemen ....what makes this position so weak?


            every other position seems to be stronger by a mile
            I would easily place Mathews and Boggs above Traynor and Robinson.
            Chop! Chop! Chop!

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Blackout View Post
              Mike Schmidt
              Pie Traynor
              Brooks Robinson
              George Brett
              Chipper Jones
              In a few years, we probably will add Alex Rodriguez to this list.

              And 3B is not the weakest at the top anyway. It's about as strong/weak as SS. And Catcher is actually the weakest position.
              Last edited by dgarza; 07-11-2012, 06:00 AM.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Blackout View Post
                you think it's better than SHORTSTOPS?

                Honus Wagner, A-rod, Jeter, Ripken, Trammell etc. is a much better group to me
                You're selling SS short here by including Trammell at the top. Replace him with Arky Vaughan. Or even Ernie Banks, although he played more 1B.

                Comment


                • #9
                  One big problem with third baseman on all time lists is that they burn out young. Third base may not be as important a fielding position but it is a physically and mentally stressful position, almost like catcher but not at that level. Third baseman get bad knees charging grounders, have hard line drives hit at them, and have to do a little dangerous stuff in foul territory on pop-ups. I just bet that if you take the top 20 third baseman in games played compared to the top 20 SSs you will see that shortstops last longer. Also perhaps third baseman are often big shortstops who couldn't quite handle playing SS at the major league level. Another problem is that third base was almost certainly a more important defensive position than second base up into the 30s and was more important than it is today up until the late 50s.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Scott Rolen, Ron Santo > Alan Trammell.
                    My top 10 players:

                    1. Babe Ruth
                    2. Barry Bonds
                    3. Ty Cobb
                    4. Ted Williams
                    5. Willie Mays
                    6. Alex Rodriguez
                    7. Hank Aaron
                    8. Honus Wagner
                    9. Lou Gehrig
                    10. Mickey Mantle

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      --Until probably the 1930s many, even most teams, were playing their 2nd best SS at 3B. Good hitting infielders who couldn't handle SS were more often playing 2B - see Lajoie, Collins and Hornsby as examples of guys who outhit any 3B during the first 60 years of MLB (well even longer really as Mathews is the first 3B who approaches their level over any length of time). Below the all time great level you'll find many more 2B who were outhitting most 3B.
                      --Even today there are still teams who go defense first at the hot corner. Also many really good hitting 3B get moved (Killebrew, Allen, Perez and Thome are examples of moves at the MLB level, but many more get shifted before arriving). In many cases teams would probaly be better served living with less than optimal defense to keep another big bat in the lineup, but you don't see many bat first 3B's sticking at the spot for full careers.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by leecemark View Post
                        --Until probably the 1930s many, even most teams, were playing their 2nd best SS at 3B. Good hitting infielders who couldn't handle SS were more often playing 2B - see Lajoie, Collins and Hornsby as examples of guys who outhit any 3B during the first 60 years of MLB (well even longer really as Mathews is the first 3B who approaches their level over any length of time). Below the all time great level you'll find many more 2B who were outhitting most 3B.
                        --Even today there are still teams who go defense first at the hot corner. Also many really good hitting 3B get moved (Killebrew, Allen, Perez and Thome are examples of moves at the MLB level, but many more get shifted before arriving). In many cases teams would probaly be better served living with less than optimal defense to keep another big bat in the lineup, but you don't see many bat first 3B's sticking at the spot for full careers.
                        Yep, Braun and Cabrera are two names that come to mind immediately. (Though Cabrera has since moved back to 3B to make room for Prince Fielder).
                        My top 10 players:

                        1. Babe Ruth
                        2. Barry Bonds
                        3. Ty Cobb
                        4. Ted Williams
                        5. Willie Mays
                        6. Alex Rodriguez
                        7. Hank Aaron
                        8. Honus Wagner
                        9. Lou Gehrig
                        10. Mickey Mantle

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Third base is very deep in MLB history, starting with being the most challenged position [except maybe, catching] through the dead-ball era. Names like, Leach, Lowe, Bradley, Steinfeldt, Collins, Devlin, Moriarty, Austin, and Frank [Homerun] Baker were prominently noted by fans. As MLB moved from deadball and into the livelier ball, guys like Groh, Vitt, Zimmerman, Frisch, War, Pinelli and Dykes came to the fore.

                          It's also interesting to scan the above names to see how many 3B moved on to management, from among the pre-War crop of Kamm, Pinelli, Bluege, Dressen, Whitney, Myer J. Sewell, Stripp, Higgins.

                          Much underrated Harlond Clift was the catalyst that shifted 3B into a power/on-base position, along with defense in an era that included names like Traynor, Hack, Keltner and Majeski.

                          That's just up into 1942. Given the above names to chose from and then adding everyone who came after, I'd seriously question the "elites" selected at the introduction of the thread.

                          Third base may not have a very limited cluster of Mount Olympus names; but it certainly has a tremendous depth of history and star performance, including HoF membership.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            The Top 5 Third basemen of all time, minimum of 1000 games at third base in the major leagues, consideration is for games played at third base only.

                            1- Mike Schmidt
                            2-Eddie Mathews
                            3-Wade Boggs
                            4-George Brett
                            5- Chipper Jones

                            Pie Traynor is nowhere near number 2 of all time, he isn't even anywhere near the Top 10, to list him in the Top 20 is being generous.

                            Brooks Robinson is in the bottom rungs of the Top 10, nowhere near #3.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by NJRob65 View Post

                              Pie Traynor is nowhere near number 2 of all time, he isn't even anywhere near the Top 10, to list him in the Top 20 is being generous.
                              so are you saying we have no top 20 third basemen before the 1950s?

                              Comment

                              Ad Widget

                              Collapse
                              Working...
                              X