Tag: Mickey Mantle

Derek Jeter: This Yankee Icon Is Not Finished, but Needs To Learn To Adjust

A recent article by John Harper of the New York Daily News quoted two former players saying that Derek Jeter will play hardball with the Yankees over his next contract.

I am asking why would Derek Jeter need to play hardball?

Is he going anywhere else?  No.

Will he ever wear another uniform?  Of course not.

Jeter has said he eventually wants to be a part owner of the Yankees.

Do you think that will ever happen if he ever plays for another organization? I have said countless times that he is today’s Joe DiMaggiogreat on the field, a multiple World Series winner, and quiet icon off the field.

So what is all the worry for? Is it that Jeter has been in a five for 47 slump over the last dozen games? 

The idea is to win games, not have the best batting average or highest slugging or best WAR. And the Yankees are winning games. In fact, they have won more games than any other team in baseballeven with a slumping Jeter and little consistency in the rotation after CC Sabathia.

Jeter is now hitting .264 on the season, a full 70 points lower than he did last season, and his OBP is 76 points lower. People are now claiming Jeter is on the downside, because he is older and most other non-steroid hitters have all suffered the same fate.

It is one seasonin fact, it is really only a couple months.

Besides not having his share of home runs and opposite field singles this season, everything else is pretty much the same offensively. Jeter is on pace for the same amount of runs scored, doubles, RBI, and almost as many walks.

It is mainly his lack of his trademark singles, that liner into right field or the hard ground ball which gets through the infield. Those extra hits have wreaked havoc with Jeter’s OBP and SLG. Yes, singles hurt slugging percentages. 

Jeter is second among active players with 2,139 singles and has been first of second in the AL in singles eight times in his 15 full seasons.

I have seen the articles and heard the talking heads discussing Jeter’s demise, how he is on the downside, and how the Yankees can not give him a long-term deal and big money after a “terrible” season like this*.

*No matter what Jeter’s season ends up as, and he could still have a great September and postseason, I give Jeter what ever he wants money wise. As I wrote earlier this year, I give Jeter a 10 year deal for $180-$200 million.

As I have said many times, Jeter is a prideful guy and would want Jeter-type money, even if he continues to hit like he has so far this season. But, Jeter is also like DiMaggio in that he will leave this game on top and not with his skills clearly eroding for everyone to see, even if millions of dollars are still on the table. 

Guys like Mickey Mantle and Willie Mays suffered at the end of their careers. Mantle stuck around for a year too long, trying to help the Yankees fill seats at the Stadium. Mantle stayed on a year plus after he hit his 500th HR and eventually saw his career average fall below .300. Letting that average fall below that magic .300 number was always one of Mantle’s big regrets after his career ended.

Mays was a shell of himself when he played in New York for the Mets. Yes, he did play in one more World Series but the last thoughts of many baseball fans was Mays floundering around in that 1973 Series, showing his true age. For all intents and purposes, Willie’s last season should have been 1971. Luckily for him, his career average stayed above .300 after his final season.

Jeter will leave the game well before he is toast. It could be two years or could be five years, but either way he will not stay around just for the money. And playing baseball for a living is not like other occupationspeople in most other occupations do not have their skills erode to the detriment of millions of fans.

If YOU were guaranteed a 10-year deal with your company, you would definitely stay on the job because you DO need the money and have no pride to stay around if you couldn’t do the work anymore. You would be George Costanza staying on at the playground ball company Play Now

Jeter is not like that. He does not need the money and will not stay around just to collect a check.

And when Jeter does leave the game, the Yankees will not be liable for the balance of his contract, although I believe the Yankees will have Jeter on a personal services deal immediately after he retires. It is the only time a MLB player’s contract is NOT guaranteed. Salomon Torres retired two years ago from the Milwaukee Brewers and left $3.75 million on the table.

What I haven’t seen or heard (especially from sabermetric guys) is how Jeter might be UNLUCKY this season. You know that thing saber guys use when they can’t explain why things happen on the field of play?

Why isn’t Jeter just plain unlucky? I showed above how all his other stats (besides HRs) are the same.

You see, Jeter’s BABIP has always been over .300 and last year it was an incredible .368, but this season it is only .298, below the norm of .300 and well below last season. His career BABIP is .356!

That means he is unlucky compared to last year and pretty much his entire career. So this year it will “even out” to what Jeter’s norm is, right?

So why haven’t I read or heard about how Jeter is unlucky? Is it because since Jeter’s BABIP this season is around the norm, this is what Jeter really is, a .265ish type hitter with little power? In fact, the Jeter detractors would probably argue that Jeter might be considered extremely lucky for his career!

Yeah, most guys who have 15 plus year Hall of Fame careers are always lucky when their BABIP’s are higher than .300, the major league average on balls in play. But it is only an average and many guys do have higher BABIP’s and some have lower ones.

But what I have seen that for the most part, guys who are really good hitters usually have higher BABIP’s. They have better approaches and hit the ball harder more often.

Sure, hard hit balls are sometimes right at fielders and little bloop hits fall in and “find grass.”

But good hitters do not get themselves out on the hard inside pitch by getting jammed all the time, they don’t swing at too many pitches outside the zone on the inner half and don’t flail-swing at many bad pitches on the outside part of the zone trying to compensate for a slower bat.

Three things Jeter is doing this season, more often than he has before.

Good hitters, however, adjust their swings according to how they are performing and how they are being pitched, but Jeter does NOT do that and it is causing him problems.

I have seen him all season. He still hits the same way he has his entire career and has not changed a thing**. He leans over the plate too much with his upper body. He is out on his front foot much more this season and when your bat slows down (and Jeter’s has), leaning over the plate and being out on your front foot is not a good combination.

**Unbelievably, Jeter even uses the exact same model bat, same length and weight, that he did his first year in the majors.

The swing is two distinct parts, working in tandem. First you step and then you swing. When I mean step, it could be an actual step, a toe tap or just an inward rotation of the front foot. When this happens, the hands move back to gain some separation. Then the hips turn, the hands bring the bat forward and through. 

The back side and front side are working together, but the bottom and top also need to work together. Think of your stance as a building with the waist as the midpoint, with the legs being the foundation and the upper body the steeple. The steeple needs to stay directly on top of the foundation for control and power.

Jeter is too out of control when he swings, as he brings his upper body forward and too far over the plate—that is causing all the weakly hit ground balls.

What you do not want to do is lean forward when you begin the swing process as this brings the hands forward with the upper body. A hitter can jam himself on inside pitches by doing this. When hitters “can’t catch up with the fastball,” bringing the hands forward with the upper body is one of the faults which contribute to that.

When pitchers are pounding you inside early in your career, your quick hands can guide the bat through the zone and you will get those extra hits to right field and up the middle. But when your hands and bat slow down, those extra hits become dribbling ground balls and weak pop ups.

When I played in my late 30′s – early 40′s, my bat became slower and I had to compensate for my slowness by being more of a location hitter and starting my swing early. Since these college pitchers (and catchers) were throwing me inside, I had to “cheat” by looking inside and committing earlier than normal.

In college and up into my mid 30′s, I was a gap-to-gap guy, but ended up more of a pull hitter later in my career.

While it will not happen this year, Jeter needs to change his hitting approach after this season.

Jeter needs to begin to alter his swing and keep his upper body back more. That will help him become a better hitter by using his legs more to get around on that inside pitch. Early in the count, Jeter might want to begin to become a “location hitter.” When he is looking for an inside pitch, Jeter usually gets around on it and makes better contact.

And Jeter will not be dropped in the batting order, either. Joe Girardi is NOT like Joe Torre. If Girardi did not drop Mark Teixeira in the lineup earlier this season, there is no way he drops Jeter. You play with the guys who have gotten you here (best record in baseball).

There have been stories that Jeter still wants to hit his way and does not seek much guidance from Yankee hitting coach Kevin Long. Guys like Alex Rodriguez, Nick Swisher and Robinson Cano eat up all the info from Long, but Jeter goes about things on his own.

That will change.

Seeing the effect that Long has had on all the above guys and with the recent quick results with Curtis Granderson, I bet Jeter works with Long over the offseason and comes back strong again next year.

Just like he got better two seasons ago with his defense by getting in better playing shape, Jeter’s pride to become better and not fall off will be too much not to seek Long’s help. Jeter has his pride, but is too smart to continue to let that get in the way of improving.

He will improve his game over the winter, the same way he has done it over the years. He is the perfect player, not doing much of anything incorrectly.

He is so good at being a professional that the media took to having to rip him for not showing up at Bob Sheppard’s funeral. There was nothing else, until now with this late season hitting slump.

I believe that many people really want Jeter to fail, to have his skills erode so they can write him off. Jeter is the perfect player who has succeeded at most everything his entire life. He is a winner, a guy you can’t quantify via “advanced” statistical analysis.

Derek Jeter is a guy who has many big hits and great moments in his career, but according to his critics, might have been nothing more than a singles hitter with limited range on defense.

Overrated they say. But overrated players do not help their organization win five World Series titles, get to two others, and compile over 3,000 career hits over a 15 plus year HOF career.

As Yankee fans our BABIP has been high because we are “lucky” Jeter played in pinstripes all these years.

He will continue to do so in the future, for as many years as he wants.

Just let him play, finally adjust, and do his thing.

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Will Lou Pinella Join Mentor Billy Martin on Hall of Fame Waiting List?

With his retirement now as a player and manager complete, Lou Pinella will wait for a call from Cooperstown as one of this generation’s most successful managers having won 1,835 games with five major league clubs.

A World Series-winning manager with the Cincinnati Reds in 1990, Pinella won six divisional championships in 23 seasons including a record 116 games versus just 46 losses with a Seattle team that included future Hall of Famers Alex Rodriguez and Randy Johnson in 2001.

The former 1969 Rookie of the Year and the first Kansas City Royal to see a major league pitch, Pinella managed one All-Star game (1991) while being named Manager of the Year three times (1995, 2001, and 2008).

For the history of Lou Pinella and his impact on the game cannot be truly told without telling the story of former New York Yankee manager and mentor, Billy Martin.

For like Martin, Pinella was tough, excitable, and obsessed with winning.

Not only did Pinella play for Martin in the glory years of the mid-1970’s when the New York Yankees won three consecutive American League Championships,  like Martin he fought with the late George Steinbrenner who gave Sweet Lou his managerial debut in 1986 at the early age of just 42.

Pinella would succeed Martin as Yankee skipper with a 90-72 record and a second place finish in the American League East. Martin lead the Yankees the prior season with a 91-54 mark.

Like Martin, Pinella would win 90 games in his rookie season as a manager (Martin won 97 with the Minnesota Twins in 1969). Like Martin, Pinella would only win 100 games once (2001) while Martin had his 100-game season in 1977 when both contributed as manager and player to the first Yankee World Series Championship since defeating the San Francisco Giants in seven games in 1962!

Like Martin, Lou Pinella was for the most part a utility player who rarely gained regular status in the lineup.

Both made the American League All-Star Team once, with Martin as a member of the Yankees in 1956 and Pinella as a member of Royals in 1972. Martin played 11 major league seasons while Pinella played 18 with the Cleveland Indians, Baltimore Orioles, Royals and Yankees.

Pinella had the distinction of succeeding Martin in 1986 and again in 1988 when Martin went 40-28 while Pinella finished the season 45-48 for an overall record of 85-76.

It would be Billy Martin’s fifth and final tenure of his beloved New York Yankees.

Martin managed three All-Star Games in 1977, 1978, and 1982, and was named AP American League Manager of the Year three times in 1976, 1982, and 1983. Some observers believe his years in Oakland developing the likes of “Billy Ball” and future Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson were his greatest achievements as a major league manager.

For no baseball historian can tell the Lou Pinella story as a manager or player without the strong overtones of Billy Martin and his relationship as a manager and fellow Yankee.

Martin would finish his time as Yankee manager with a record of 556-385 in eight seasons for a .591 winning percentage. Pinella would would finish 224-193 over three years in Yankee pinstripes for a .537 winning percentage.

Lifetime, Pinella would finish with a .517 winning percentage after 23 seasons and 3,548 games managed. Martin would finish 1,253-1,013 for an impressive .553 winning percentage in 16 major league seasons with the Twins, Tigers, Rangers, A’s, and Yankees.

Martin would only miss the playoffs with Texas while Pinella would only miss the post season with Tampa Bay.

Given the obvious similarities in managerial style and approach to the game to say nothing of their personal relationship as former Yankee manager and player, it would be fitting that when Cooperstown calls Lou Pinella, that the name of Alfred Manuel Martin finally be given his due with the Hall of Fame status he most certainly has earned.

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Mickey Mantle: Money, the New York Yankees, and Teammates

“If I was playing with the Yankees now, or even then, if somebody said, ‘Hey, I’ll give you a million dollars a year to go to Cleveland,’ my ass would have been in Cleveland. But they didn’t have that.

“When I came to the Yankees, I was 19-years old. I was like a little brother.”

Right fielder Hank Bauer, who made sure that anyone who could help the Yankees win helped the Yankees win, took Mickey under his wing.

The only clothing Mickey had was a pair of Levis and penny loafers.

Bauer took Mickey shopping, bought him a few suits, and slowly taught him the ropes.

Mickey was loyal to the Yankees. He credited their great run in the late 1940s and 1950s to a feeling of family.

“Heck, if we’d won in ’54 and ’59, it would have been like 16, 17 straight years (it would have been 1949-1964). I don’t think it will ever happen again. They don’t have the family feeling on a club anymore. I blame free agency.”

To the Yankees, Mickey Mantle was a leader, but he was also one of the guys.

“It wasn’t like I was their idol. I was their friend, their drinking friend.”

How revealing, how wonderful, and how sad.

When Mickey and the great Roger Maris were challenging Babe Ruth’s single season home run record, which Roger broke and still, to this day, holds, some baseball writers, looking for a juicy story, wrote that Mickey and Roger didn’t get along.

It was a lie.

Mickey loved to tell how, after reading the garbage that was written, he and Roger would go shopping at a Queens supermarket, each pushing his own shopping cart.

They were sometimes recognized, but often they were taken for what they were – two young men loading up on food for their apartment.

“I was as close to Roger Maris as I was to Whitey and Billy. That (61 homers) was the greatest single thing I’ve ever seen.”

Mickey Mantle retired after the 1968 season. He returned to his home in Dallas, where he was virtually forgotten, despite his name.

“It was like Mickey Mantle died for about two or three years. I had Mickey Mantle Country Cookin’ and a bowling alley. None of it worked. Then, somebody bought a bubble gum card or something, Next thing I know I’m getting letters, getting invited to banquets and stuff. It was like being reborn to me.”

Mickey Mantle made more money in one year from baseball cards than he did during his career with the New York Yankees, which has been estimated at “only” $1 million.

“It’s the greatest thing that ever happened to me.”

Of course, that statement must be taken with a grain of salt, but it is a fact that the memorabilia business changed Mantle’s and other retired players’ lives.

Mantle related how he had been retired for 25 years and that he was awed that a father would arrive at 8:30 AM for a signing that was scheduled for 7:30 PM.

He shouldn’t have been.

Mickey was in St. Louis for a card show. When one says “St. Louis,” one might as well be saying “Stan Musial.”

Just as fans were thrilled to meet one of their heroes, Mickey was just as excited to meet one of his.

“Stan Musial came up and had breakfast with me. I couldn’t believe it. I got goose bumps.”

Mickey’s hero was a real hero. So was Mickey.

References:

Shaughnessy, Dan. “Young Mickey Mantle: He Was the Ultimate in Speed, Power.” Baseball Digest. Feb. 1995.

Mickey Mantle at Baseball Reference

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Mickey Mantle’s Turning Point

It was a comment that received little attention during spring training, but it might have been a turning point for Mickey Mantle.

Some New York Yankees’ rookies were showing off their skills at St. Petersburg in 1956. Mickey watched the hopefuls a few minutes and then the Yankees’ 24-year-old veteran turned to a reporter.

“A lot of these young kids of ours are going to be good ballplayers.”

This was a new Mickey Mantle.

The late Shirley Povich of the Washington Post predicted that 1956 would be the year when the real, mature Mickey Mantle arrived. He wouldn’t be the Yankees’ leader, but he would lead by example. He wasn’t a kid anymore.

Povich noted that Mickey was striking out less. Yankees’ coach Bill Dickey, a Hall of Fame catcher, remarked that Mickey was getting a piece of the ball because he was not going for “the sucker pitch,” which is another way of saying Mantle was becoming more selective at the plate.

Many of the “experts” predicted that 1956 would be the year that Mickey challenged Babe Ruth’s single-season home run record.

Yogi Berra, who was considered an even more dangerous hitter, followed Mantle in the batting order.

In 1955, Yogi won his third MVP award, hit 27 home runs, and batted in 108 runs. Pitchers would be careful with Mantle, but they would not be eager to walk him with Yogi lurking in the on-deck circle.

Switch-hitting gave Mickey an advantage because curve balls always broke into him, but Yankee Stadium favored left-handed hitters, which meant that about one-fourth of the time, Mantle would have to face the cavernous left-center outfield, referred to as “Death Valley.”

Thanks to Phil Rizzuto, Mickey was one of the best bunters in baseball, but Yankees’ management realized that fans wanted to see gargantuan home runs, not beautiful drag bunts. The threat of injury was another factor.

Two weeks before the end of the 1955 season, Mickey pulled a muscle behind his knee while beating out a bunt in the pennant-clinching game at Boston.

Ben Epstein of the New York Daily Mirror wrote, “That’s when he won the pennant and lost the World Series. That knee kept Mickey out of most of the Series, remember?”

Mickey Mantle had a breakout season in 1956. On July 4, which is the unofficial mid-point of the season, Mickey had 29 home runs. He led the league in batting (.371), in runs batted in (71), and in runs scored (69).

The “experts” were right. They popular opinion was that Mickey was a very special player.

“Nobody of his era has been able to hit the ball farther, run as fast, or bunt as well as Mantle.”

Dickey, who was Ruth’s teammate, said that Ruth could hit a ball awfully high and far. So could Mantle.

He compared the awe other players had when they saw one of Mantle’s long home runs with the amazement of players who watched Ruth.

In 1956, Mickey didn’t break Ruth’s home run record. He didn’t come close, but Mickey won the Triple Crown.

He led the majors, not just the American League in batting (.353), home runs (52), and RBI (130).

It was rare. It was unusual. For once, the “experts” were experts.

Reference:

Povich, Shirley. “As High and Far as Ruth.” Baseball Digest . July 1956.

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Power Ranking the 10 Most Valuable MVPs in MLB History

There have been plenty of significant Most Valuable Players through the history of Major League Baseball, but which 10 are the best of the bests?

From studs in the American League like Mickey Mantle in 1956, 1957, and 1962, to duds like the AL’s Dustin Pedoria in 2008, let’s power rank the 10 most valuable MVPs to ever play America’s Pastime.

As a side note, I want to go ahead and inform readers that this is—by far—the toughest top 10 list I’ve ever had to put together, and just because some of the current talent may be towards the back end of (or not even on) this list doesn’t mean they are not worthy MVP players.

My point is that it would be extremely difficult to even assemble a top 25 list of the best MVPs in the history of baseball, let alone narrowing it down to 10.

However, without further ado, here we go…

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2010 Home Run Derby: The Ultimate Field of Players Past and Present

With six of the contestants in this year’s Home Run Derby recently announced, this seemed like a good time to reflect back on some of the best sluggers to ever play the game.

What would your dream Home Run Derby field look like if you could include any player, past or present?

I will admit, I cheated a bit, making a list of 10 when the field is generally set at eight participants. However, my two extra additions are a bit outside the box, and I think the field could be expanded to accommodate them.

With only ten, there is sure to be someone I left off that you feel belongs, so let the debate begin.

Let me know who I left out that you would include in your fantasy Home Run Derby.

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MIckey Mantle Anecdotes

A Difference Between Mickey and Joe DiMaggio

In one way, Mickey Mantle was the antithesis of Joe DiMaggio. The Jolter was such an aloof individual that rookies dared not to approach him, much less attempt to speak to him. Mickey Mantle used to rush over to greet new players with an outstretched hand.

“I’m Mickey Mantle,” he would say, as if the young player didn’t know. It was one of Mickey’s nicest gestures.

When questioned about his rookie season, Mickey related that his first thrill as a Yankee was shaking hands with Joe DiMaggio.

Mickey and the Baseball “Expert”

One day during spring training at St. Petersburg, a baseball writer walked over to Mickey, who was near the batting cage. Mickey was watching New York Yankees’ crafty left-hander Steady Eddie Lopat working on his “junk.”

The writer tapped Mickey on the shoulder.

“Mick, there’s the first pitcher I’ve seen all spring who gives me itchy fingers. I’d love to pick up a bat at hit against him.”

Mickey explained why the writer never became a baseball player in such a way that points out the sad fact that “experts” who never played the game receive much too much credit.

“It won’t do you no good. As soon as you step up to the plate Lopat makes you start to think and he’s got you because he can think better than you can.”

Bat Only Right-Handed?

Another time, at another spring training, the same writer, knowing that the switch-hitting Mickey was more effective from the right side of the plate, questioned him about it. For about a second, Mickey had the writer going.

“Wanna know something? I’m gonna bat only right-handed this year.”

Mickey couldn’t help but start laughing.

“I really would, if those right-handed pitchers would promise me that they wouldn’t throw me any curves.”

Everyday, before a game, Mickey would wrap his legs in yards of bandages. Whenever manager Casey Stengel felt he should ask him if he could play, Mickey almost always said he could.

 

Mickey, Joe, and Willie

There have been many discussions, probably millions over the years, comparing Mickey to DiMaggio and Willie Mays.

Statistically, the three are extremely close, but one incident during the 1961 World Series, most of which Mickey sat out due to an infected hip, provides great insight into the weakness of statistics.

Mickey was stretched out on the trainer’s table face down. His hip had a hole in it the size of a golf ball due to an open abscess. Catcher Elston Howard, walking by, was taken aghast.

Ellie turned to Mickey as he shuddered. “Mick, you are a great man.”

Anyone who had ever been Mickey’s teammate agreed with Ellie.

Reference:

By ARTHUR DALEY. (1969, March 7). Sports of The Times :Musings About Mantle. New York Times (1923-Current file),40. Retrieved June 26, 2010, from ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 – 2006). (Document ID: 79948757).

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It’s Not Mickey Mantle or Willie Mays, It’s Albert Pujols

I don’t know how this is going to turn out, but it is going to be interesting to find out.

When Mickey Mantle and Willie Mays were active, the majority of fans rated Mays ahead of Mantle, often with the disclaimer that if Mickey had Mays’ health, it might have been different.

Now that we have “experts” such as Bill James and his ilk, a bevy of measurements exist that have led to the conclusion that Mickey was better than we thought.  The primary reason is that his peak years were better than Willie’s.

Mickey Mantle’s best season was 1956, when he won the Triple Crown, leading the majors with a .353 batting average, 52 home runs, and 130 RBIs.

His next best season was 1957, when he batted .365, hit 34 home runs, and had 94 RBIs. 

Following the 1957 season, New York Yankees’ general manager “Lonesome” George Weiss wanted to cut Mickey’s salary, claiming that with the exception of batting average, Mickey had fallen well short of his 1956 numbers.

Bill James and his sabermetricians have changed all that.

It is difficult to conclude that any one of a number of seasons was Willie’s best.  His highest batting average of .347 was achieved in 1958, but he hit “only” 29 home runs in Candlestick Park.

In 1955 Willie hit 51 home runs, and in 1965 he hit 52.  His best RBI season was 1962, when he drove home 141 San Francisco Giants.

Let’s select 1954, when he won the batting title, as one of Willie’s best two seasons, and 1955 as the other.

Mickey Mantle                            
Year   2B    3B    HR    RBI    BA    OBA    SA
1956    22    5    52    130    .353    .464    .705
1957    28    6    34    94     .365     .512    .665
                           
Willie Mays                            
Year    2B    3B    HR    RBI    BA    OBA    SA
1954    33    13    41    110    .345    .411    .667
1955    18    13    51    127    .319    .400    .659

It is closer than one might think, but Mantle gets a slight edge.  While Mickey’s walks bolstered his on base average, Willie hit many more triples.

Another factor is that Willie’s role with the 1955 New York Giants was to drive in runs, because he was the primary, and with the possible exception of Henry Thompson, the only real RBI threat on the team.

Mickey had Yogi Berra, Moose Skowron, Hank Bauer, and a young Ellie Howard, which meant there was more of a chance that a Mickey Mantle walk would lead to a Yankees’ rally, than a Willie Mays walk would lead to a Giants’ rally.

Now let’s examine their third and fourth best two seasons.  

For Mickey, let’s take 1961, which some claim was his second best season, and 1958.

For Willie, let’s use 1965, when he hit 52 home runs, and 1957, when he had at least 20 doubles, 20 triples, and 20 home runs playing on a terrible New York Giants’ team.

Mickey Mantle                            
Year    2B    3B    HR    RBI    BA    OBA    SA
1961    16    6    54    128    .317    .448    .687
1958    21    1    42    97     .304    .443     .592
                           
Willie Mays                           
Year   2B    3B    HR    RBI    BA    OBA    SA

1965    31    3    52    112    .317    .398    .645
1957    26    50    35    97    .333    .407    .626

It is impossible to decide which player had the best four top offensive seasons, especially since Willie played on Giants’ teams that often were out of contention and Mickey didn’t, at least until 1965.

All that the above does is confirm the greatness of both players, but let’s conclude by examining the top four offensive seasons of the best player in the game today.

Albert Pujols                           
Year   2B    3B    HR    RBI    BA    OBA    SA

2006    33    1    49    137    .331    .431    .671
2004    51    2    46    123    .331    .415    .657
2009    45    1    47    135    .327    .443    .658
2003    51    1    43    124    .359    .439    .667

Any comments?

References:

Mickey Mantle at Baseball Reference

Willie Mays at Baseball Reference

Albert Pujols at Baseball Reference

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The Best of the Best: Yankees Mount Rushmore

In honor of the year Robinson Cano is having (.368 Batting Average, 13 Home Runs, 47 RBI), it got me thinking that if Cano keeps this pace up, where will it rank amongst the greatest Yankee seasons of all-time?

We still got a long ways to go, and there’s still a lot of baseball to be played, so I will re-address that question towards the end of the season.

But for now, the important question that I was pondering about was related to Mount Rushmore.

Don’t worry – I am not giving a history lesson about the four presidents who’s faces are on the mount, but rather, I found myself asking the question, if were carving a Yankees Mount Rushmore which four Yankee legends would get the nod?

Would it be the Babe or the Mick? Lou Gehrig or Joe DiMaggio? Mariano Rivera or Don Larsen? Jorge Posada or Yogi Berra? How about the Boss?

The list can go on and on, and narrowing it down to a final four was not an easy task.

However, after deciphering long and hard about whom to chose, my mission was accomplished.

You might agree with me, but in all likelihood, there will be a player you felt I left out, that deserved to be here.

Feel free to give your opinion.

Let the adventure of climbing “Yankees Mount Rushmore” begin.

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Where Does Derek Jeter Rank in the 10 Greatest Yankees of All-Time?

The Yankees have had some of the greatest players in Major League Baseball history. This list ranks the top 10 of those legends who wore the pinstripes very proudly during their stay in the Bronx.

To rank the players I used their individual stats while with the Yankees and their success in the postseason. I also took into consideration military service and career-threatening injuries.

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