Circle of Greats: 1936 Balloting

This post is for voting and discussion in the 42nd round of balloting for the Circle of Greats.  This round adds to the ballot those players born in 1936.  Rules and lists are after the jump.

The new group joins the holdovers from previous rounds to comprise the full group eligible to receive your votes this round.  The new group of 1936-born players must, as always, have played at least 10 seasons in the major leagues or generated at least 20 Wins Above Replacement (“WAR”, as calculated by baseball-reference.com, and for this purpose meaning 20 total WAR for everyday players and 20 pitching WAR for pitchers).

Each submitted ballot, if it is to be counted, must include three and only three eligible players.  The one player who appears on the most ballots cast in the round is inducted into the Circle of Greats.  Players who fail to win induction but appear on half or more of the ballots that are cast win four added future rounds of ballot eligibility. Players who appear on 25% or more of the ballots cast, but less than 50%, earn two added future rounds of ballot eligibility.  Any other player in the top 9 (including ties) in ballot appearances, or who appears on at least 10% of the ballots, wins one additional round of ballot eligibility.

All voting for this round closes at 11:00 PM EST on Tuesday, January 14 while changes to previously cast ballots are allowed until 11:00 PM EST Sunday, January 12.

If you’d like to follow the vote tally, and/or check to make sure I’ve recorded your vote correctly, you can see my ballot-counting spreadsheet for this round here: COG 1936 Round Vote Tally.  I’ll be updating the spreadsheet periodically with the latest votes. Initially, there is a row in the spreadsheet for every voter who has cast a ballot in any of the past rounds, but new voters are entirely welcome — new voters will be added to the spreadsheet as their ballots are submitted.  Also initially, there is a column for each of the holdover players; additional player columns from the new born-in-1936 group will be added to the spreadsheet as votes are cast for them.

Choose your three players from the lists below of eligible players.  The 13 current holdovers are listed in order of the number of future rounds (including this one) through which they are assured eligibility, and alphabetically when the future eligibility number is the same.  The new group of 1936 birth-year guys are listed below in order of the number of seasons each played in the majors, and alphabetically among players with the same number of seasons played.

Holdovers:
Lou Whitaker (eligibility guaranteed for 10 rounds)
John Smoltz (eligibility guaranteed for 7 rounds)
Gaylord Perry  (eligibility guaranteed for 5 rounds)
Bobby Grich (eligibility guaranteed for 3 rounds)
Edgar Martinez (eligibility guaranteed for 3 rounds)
Craig Biggio (eligibility guaranteed for 2 rounds)
Juan Marichal (eligibility guaranteed for 2 rounds)
Willie McCovey (eligibility guaranteed for two rounds)
Dick Allen (eligibility guaranteed for this round only)
Kenny Lofton (eligibility guaranteed for this round only)
Eddie Murray (eligibility guaranteed for this round only)
Ryne Sandberg (eligibility guaranteed for this round only)
Ron Santo (eligibility guaranteed for this round only)

Everyday Players (born in 1936, ten or more seasons played in the major leagues or at least 20 WAR):
Harmon Killebrew
Bill Mazeroski
Vic Davalillo
Frank Howard
J.C. Martin
Jerry Adair
Julian Javier
Clay Dalrymple
Tony Gonzalez
Ruben Amaro
Wayne Causey
Bob Johnson

Pitchers (born in 1936, ten or more seasons played in the major leagues or at least 20 WAR):
Eddie Fisher
Don Drysdale
Joe Hoerner
Stan Williams
Fred Gladding
Ron Perranoski
Gary Bell
Ralph Terry
John Buzhardt
Barry Latman
Bill Monbouquette
John Tsitouris
Howie Reed
Lee Stange

133 thoughts on “Circle of Greats: 1936 Balloting

  1. jajacob

    Whitaker, Perry, Grich

    2 degrees of separation from Frank Howard. Growing up my back door neighbor was aunt to Tim Cullen teammate of FH. She saw him play several times and told me about it several years later.

    Reply
  2. David Horwich

    Perry, Sandberg, Santo

    The calm before the storm; probably the last chance any of the current holdovers have to be elected for a while.

    As most of you are probably aware, next year’s ballot will feature Frank Robinson, Bob Gibson, and Sandy Koufax, which will be immediately followed by 1934 Pt 1 with Aaron, Clemente, and Kaline. After that there are 3 elections with no top candidates (1934 Pt 2, 1933, and 1932), but still that’s 6 strong newcomers and only 5 elections. Then we get to 1931 – Pt 1 will have “only” Banks and Bunning, but oh that Pt 2: Mays, Mantle, and Mathews.

    Reply
    1. Voomo Zanzibar

      Dont forget Don Zimmer.
      He might get some votes for mistaking Pedro for an Octagon opponent at the age of 72.

      Reply
  3. Hartvig

    As always, seeing the names of players from this era brings back a lot of fond memories.

    With the possible exception of Hank Sauer, I think that Frank Howard may have been the player in all of baseball history to benefit the most if the designated hitter rule had been in effect in the era in which he played. If you combined that with any ballpark besides Griffith Stadium and I would say that he would have been a lock for 500 home runs. Put him in the right ballpark- say Fenway or Wrigley- from that era, and there’s a good chance that Maris’s record might not have held up for near as long as it did.

    I wasn’t a big fan of Harmon Killebrew when I was growing up and I don’t really know why. He’s always seemed like a decent guy. I’ve even got a rinsed out can of Killebrew Root Beer on one of the shelves of my sports stuff (it’s kind of cool looking with a screw top) and I was happy when he finally got into the Hall of Fame. I don’t see him as being any better than any of our hold over 1st baseman however and would really have to question his going in over any of them, particularly McCovey.

    The Dodgers had a remarkable lot of talent on their pitching staff back in the very early 60’s when I was first getting interested in baseball. Along with Koufax and Drysdale you had Brooklyn stalwart Johnny Podres and hard-luck Roger Craig plus Perranoski and Larry Sherry in the pen. But for a little while Stan Williams looked as if he may have had as much promise of a great future in front of him as any pitcher on that staff.

    My vote;
    Perry, Sandberg, Santo

    Reply
    1. Voomo Zanzibar

      I cannot dispute your first-hand observations.

      Looking at Howard’s home/away splits for his three 40+ homer years (68-70), he whacked:

      69 at home
      67 on road

      And for his career:

      .279 .368 .514 .882 at RFK/Griffith
      .273 .352 .499 .851 career numbers
      ____________________

      The only stadiums with significant PA where he was truly beastly:

      Cleveland
      .332 .446 .648 1.093

      Minnesota
      .335 .405 .602 1.007

      Reply
    2. Lawrence Azrin

      Frank Howard’s home park with the Senators on DC was not Griffith Stadium, but DC (later RFK) stadium, from 1965-1971.

      Still, I do agree with you, thatif:
      -Howard had come along 15 years later or more to be able to DH
      and
      -played the majority of his career in a hitter’s park that favored righthanded pull hitters
      .. he would’ve had a good chance to hit over 500 HR.

      Both Howard and Jim Rice had 382 career HR; Howard had more Adjusted Batting Runs, 36.8 (85th) to 29.4 (123rds). Now, I know all about the 1978 MVP, ‘most feared batter’ and all that, but how does Rice get elected to the HOF (albeit in 14 tries…), while Howard gets 1.4% in 1979 and drops off the ballot???

      I am NOT arguing that Howard belongs in the HOF, merely that Frank Howard and Jim Rice are a lot closer in actual career value than many people think. Rice _did_ have more defensive value, and a better peak than Howard. But it’s hard to see what separates Rice from Howard, or Norm Cash, or George Foster.

      Reply
  4. Bryan O'Connor

    Most Wins Above Average, excluding negative seasons:

    Perry 50.9
    Grich 43.6
    Santo 43.3
    Whitaker 42.7
    Martinez 41.3
    Smoltz 40.1
    Lofton 39.3
    McCovey 38.9
    Sandberg 38.8
    Biggio 36.3
    Allen 35.9
    Murray 34.9
    Killebrew 33.0
    Marichal 32.7
    Drysdale 29.4
    Mazeroski, 10.4 WAA and maybe the happiest moment in baseball history

    One more time: Perry, Martinez, Smoltz

    Reply
  5. Dr. Doom

    Gaylord Perry
    Ron Santo
    Bobby Grich

    Welcome back to my ballot, Bobby Grich! I’ve missed voting for you!

    Also, I have to share my Harmon Killebrew story. I met Harmon shortly before he died. He was in St. Peter, MN in April 2010 speaking. There was, of course, about an hour for him to tell stories. Then an hour of question-and-answer. That COULD HAVE gone all night, because he was having so much fun telling stories, and we were all having so much fun listening. Then, he signed autographs – and that took longer than the speaking engagement. Because, as I’m sure you all know, when Harmon Killebrew signed autographs, he didn’t just “sign autographs.” He HAD TO talk to everyone. It’s just the kind of guy he was. Anyway, he was talking and signing and it was great, even though everyone had to wait for a million years. So, there was a one-item-per-person limit. Well, my wife and I only really one item for the two of us. So we brought something for her dad (who’s a big Twins fan, and grew up watching Harmon. But that, of course, left nothing for my dad, who is, like me, from Milwaukee, so not a Twins fan. He did come of age in the time of Harmon Killebrew, though, and remembered him fondly. So I called him on the phone to surprise him, and told him he had to hold on a minute. Then, when I got to the front of the line, I asked Harmon if he’d be willing to say “hi” to my dad. He said, “Of course!” and snatched my cell phone out of my hand. He asked my dad’s name, and I told him. My dad said, “Hello?” And Harmon said, “Hi, Bob! This is Harmon Killebrew!” He talked to him for a full minute. And you know what? No one in line was annoyed, because it’s not like it was special treatment. EVERYONE got there two-three minutes with Harmon. He was a very, very special person. I feel blessed to have met him. RIP, Harmon; you’re missed.

    Reply
    1. birtelcom Post author

      Most Regular Seasons MLB Homers During the 1960s:
      1. Harmon Killebrew 393
      2. Hank Aaron 375
      3. Willie Mays 350
      4. Frank Robinson 316
      5. Willie McCovey 300

      Reply
  6. Dr. Doom

    On a note unrelated to my previous post, how is Ron Santo on the bubble?!?

    I guess this Hall of Famer is, somehow, STILL underrated.

    I’m aware that he’s a relatively latecomer to the ballot, but so were Juan Marichal, Willie McCovey, and Dick Allen, and they’ve all racked up a couple of rounds to spare. Come on, Santo!

    Reply
    1. birtelcom Post author

      In the 1940/Round 2 vote Ron Santo lost to Pete Rose in the induction race by a single vote, which was actually discovered in a re-count. Santo’s support was enough to get him a back-up round of eligibility, but in the 1969 vote he appeared on only six ballots and lost his backup eligibility, by just one vote. The last two rounds he has, with 15 votes each time, come up just barely short of re-gaining his extra round. He just always seems to be missing out on something by the smallest of margins.

      Reply
  7. John Z

    Hartvig @#9 i am with you here, love some of these names and most of them bring back fond memories. But, there is one cringe worthy name on this ballot. None other then JC Martin who was much a part of those darn 69′ Miracle Mets, Being from Baltimore my Mom, Dad, Siblings and I were much wrapped up in the pennant race and the heavily favored Orioles. Only to have those dreams dashed by what seemed like multiple miracles. JC Martin was one of those miracles in game 4, 10th inning, score tied, bunt and then reached base on a Boog Powell error and Powell was almost automatic at 1B in the late 60’s with his glove. I felt we really hung in there and Cuellar matched Seaver pitch for pitch, even Eddie Watt was a stud and automatic in 69′. I just knew if the O’s had won that game 4, they would go on to win the pennant, but no, thanks to this journey man catcher that no one had heard of outside of New York, would pinch hit a bunt/error to drive in the winning run. Oh the memories eh…..
    Anyways to steal a line from “Kung Fu Panda” Yesterday is history, tomorrow a mystery, so who will win this round of the COG? My solemn ballot this round;
    McCovey
    Perry
    Killebrew

    Honarble Mention:
    Capital Punisher AKA Frank Howard
    Big D’ from Van Nuys California Don Drysdale

    Reply
    1. Hartvig

      I know what you mean. For reasons far too complicated to go into Bill Buckner’s name touched a sore spot for me when it came up on the ballot.

      I’m also surprised that you’re the first to even mention Drysdale (well, I guess I did briefly but…). Not that I’m advocating for him- I think at best he’s a marginal COG candidate- but JAWS ranks him 49th vs. 43rd for Marichal (and JAWS doesn’t adjust for pre-1900 pitchers so their top 50 is heavily laden with pitchers from that era) and their scores are close at 57.5 and 56.0. Adam Darowski’s Hall of Stats ranks Marichal and Drysdale 49th & 53rd but has then both scoring 115 in his ranking. Bill James doesn’t see them as being that close (he has Marichal ranked 21st and Drysdale ranked 33rd) and of course he wrote at length about whether or not Drysdale was a worthy Hall of Famer and since as I understood it his conclusion was maybe I can see why people don’t think he meets the COG standard either.

      Reply
  8. --bill

    Perry, Grich, Drysdale.

    WAR sees Frank Howard and Bill Mazeroski as having about the same value. And Howard and Killebrew get hammered by dWAR.

    Reply
  9. RJ

    Harmon Killebrew did not do doubles (290 doubles in 9833 PAs). No one has as many PAs with fewer two-baggers. Only two others have at least 9000 PAs and fewer than 300 doubles: Larry Bowa and Brett Butler (combined HRs: 69).

    Reply
    1. Doug

      Players with most 20 HR seasons with twice as many home runs as doubles.

      Rk Yrs From To Age
      1 Mark McGwire 8 1990 2001 26-37 Ind. Seasons
      2 Harmon Killebrew 8 1959 1972 23-36 Ind. Seasons
      3 Dave Kingman 5 1973 1982 24-33 Ind. Seasons
      4 Willie McCovey 5 1962 1973 24-35 Ind. Seasons
      5 Mickey Mantle 5 1956 1962 24-30 Ind. Seasons
      6 Ralph Kiner 5 1947 1952 24-29 Ind. Seasons
      7 Sammy Sosa 4 1995 2002 26-33 Ind. Seasons
      8 Barry Bonds 4 1994 2007 29-42 Ind. Seasons
      9 Hank Aaron 4 1960 1973 26-39 Ind. Seasons
      10 Adam Dunn 3 2003 2013 23-33 Ind. Seasons
      11 Reggie Jackson 3 1968 1982 22-36 Ind. Seasons
      12 Roger Maris 3 1960 1964 25-29 Ind. Seasons
      13 Willie Mays 3 1955 1965 24-34 Ind. Seasons
      14 Babe Ruth 3 1925 1932 30-37 Ind. Seasons
      Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
      Generated 1/7/2014.
      Reply
    2. birtelcom Post author

      Lowest Career Doubles-to-Homers Ratio, min. 1,000 PAs:
      Mark McGwire .432
      Harmon Killebrew .506
      Ken Phelps .520
      Dave Nicholson .525
      Johnny Blanchard .537
      Dave Kingman .543

      Reply
    3. Doug

      Killebrew is also in this small group of players with a career ratio of more than 3 RBI for every 4 hits. Greenberg is notable as the only player to do this with more doubles than home runs.

      Rk Player RBI H PA From To Age G AB R 2B 3B HR BB SO BA OBP SLG Tm
      1 Babe Ruth 2220 2873 10622 1914 1935 19-40 2503 8399 2174 506 136 714 2062 1330 .342 .474 .690 BOS-NYY-BSN
      2 Harmon Killebrew 1584 2086 9833 1954 1975 18-39 2435 8147 1283 290 24 573 1559 1699 .256 .376 .509 WSH-MIN-KCR
      3 Mark McGwire 1414 1626 7660 1986 2001 22-37 1874 6187 1167 252 6 583 1317 1596 .263 .394 .588 OAK-TOT-STL
      4 Hank Greenberg 1276 1628 6097 1930 1947 19-36 1394 5193 1051 379 71 331 852 844 .313 .412 .605 DET-PIT
      5 Dave Kingman 1210 1575 7429 1971 1986 22-37 1941 6677 901 240 25 442 608 1816 .236 .302 .478 SFG-TOT-CHC-NYM-OAK
      6 Cecil Fielder 1008 1313 5939 1985 1998 21-34 1470 5157 744 200 7 319 693 1316 .255 .345 .482 TOR-DET-NYY-TOT
      7 Jay Buhner 965 1273 5927 1987 2001 22-36 1472 5013 798 233 19 310 792 1406 .254 .359 .494 NYY-TOT-SEA
      8 Ryan Howard 963 1176 5018 2004 2013 24-33 1178 4340 695 220 19 311 588 1401 .271 .361 .545 PHI
      Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
      Generated 1/7/2014.
      Reply
      1. Richard Chester

        He’s also in a small group of players with 25%+ of his hits being HRs (1000H min.).

        Player………….HR…..H
        Barry Bonds……..762…2935
        Jim Thome……….612…2328
        Sammy Sosa………609…2408
        Mark McGwire…….583…1626
        H. Killebrew…….573…2086
        Dave Kingman…….442…1575
        Adam Dunn……….440…1537
        Ralph Kiner……..369…1451
        Ryan Howard……..311…1176
        Carlos Pena……..285…1138
        Gorman Thomas……268…1051

        Reply
          1. Doug

            Looks like Paul Konerko has the second-longest triple-less streak at 1220 games (4420 AB) from 5-17-00 to 6-6-08.

            The longest active streak belongs to Russell Martin, at 796 games and 2719 AB since tripling off Matt Cain on 9-9-07.

            Longest career (G/AB) for different triple totals.
            0 – Johnny Estrada 612/2079
            1 – Rod Barajas 1114/3460
            2 – Brian McCann 1105/3863 (and counting)
            3 – Victor Martinez 1308/4884 (and counting)
            4 – Charles Johnson 1188/3836
            5 – Mike Sweeney 1454/5188
            6 – Mark McGwire 1874/6187

  10. RJ

    Juan Marichal vs Don Drysdale.

    Marichal:

    Wins: 243
    Losses: 142
    Win-Loss%: .631
    ERA: 2.89
    Game Starts: 457
    Complete Games: 244
    Shutouts: 52
    Innings Pitched: 3507
    Strikeouts: 2303
    ERA+: 123
    All Star appearances: 9
    Cy Young Awards: 0
    World Series Titles: 0
    WAR: 61.9

    Drysdale:

    Wins: 209
    Losses: 166
    Win-Loss%: .557
    ERA: 2.95
    Game Starts: 465
    Complete Games: 167
    Shutouts: 49
    Innings Pitched: 3432
    Strikeouts: 2486
    ERA+: 121
    All Star appearances: 8
    Cy Young Awards: 1
    World Series Titles: 3
    WAR: 61.2

    The standout difference is their W-L%, but other than that it’s very similar. I’m not sure I can continue to vote for Marichal if I’m not going to vote for Drysdale either.

    As an aside, Drysdale’s 1959 WS appearance was interesting. 11 hits, 4 walks and only 1 earned run (on a double play when he was no longer in the game) in 7 innings has to be approaching some record for most baserunners/fewest runs in a WS game, no?

    http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/LAN/LAN195910040.shtml

    Reply
    1. Doug

      Sharp eye, RJ.

      Drysdale does indeed hold that record, together with Run Guidry. Spud Chandler has the most baserunners without allowing any runs. Johnny Antonelli is the only pitcher to allow a home run and no others runs with 13 or more baserunners. Jim Babgy is the only pitcher with that many base runners, but no walks, and allowing only one run.

      Rk Player Date Series Gm# Tm Opp Rslt App,Dec IP H R ER BB BR SO HR
      1 Ron Guidry 1978-10-13 WS 3 NYY LAD W 5-1 CG 9 ,W 9.0 8 1 1 7 15 4 0
      2 Don Drysdale 1959-10-04 WS 3 LAD CHW W 3-1 GS-7 ,W 7.0 11 1 1 4 15 5 0
      3 Johnny Antonelli 1954-09-30 WS 2 NYG CLE W 3-1 CG 9 ,W 9.0 8 1 1 6 14 9 1
      4 Jim Hearn 1951-10-06 WS 3 NYG NYY W 6-2 GS-8 ,W 7.2 4 1 1 8 14 1 0
      5 Paul Dean 1934-10-05 WS 3 STL DET W 4-1 CG 9 ,W 9.0 8 1 1 5 14 7 0
      6 Jim Bagby 1920-10-10 WS 5 CLE BRO W 8-1 CG 9 ,W 9.0 13 1 1 0 14 3 0
      7 Harry Brecheen 1944-10-07 WS 4 STL SLB W 5-1 CG 9 ,W 9.0 9 1 1 4 13 4 0
      8 Spud Chandler 1943-10-11 WS 5 NYY STL W 2-0 SHO9 ,W 9.0 10 0 0 2 13 7 0
      9 Carl Hubbell 1933-10-06 WS 4 NYG WSH W 2-1 CG 11 ,W 11.0 8 1 0 4 13 5 0
      10 Waite Hoyt 1921-10-10 WS 5 NYY NYG W 3-1 CG 9 ,W 9.0 10 1 0 2 13 6 0
      11 Eddie Plank 1914-10-10 WS 2 PHA BSN L 0-1 CG 9 ,L 9.0 7 1 1 4 13 6 0
      12 Jack Pfiester 1907-10-09 WS 2 CHC DET W 3-1 CG 9 ,W 9.0 10 1 1 1 13 3 0
      Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
      Generated 1/7/2014.
      Reply
      1. RJ

        Thanks for all the cool tables Doug!

        Guidry’s 1978 game is the only one on the list since Drysdale’s. I’m guessing that’s because no pitcher would be allowed to give up that many baserunners in today’s game (with all the racking up of the pitch count that entails) without a reliever coming in, no matter how successfully he was escaping jams.

        Reply
    2. Hub Kid

      I know it is a fluky record, but I like the consecutive shutouts record, held by Drysdale, with 6 straight in 1968 (58 innings). The flukiness is compounded by the record being ‘broken’ by Hershiser’s 59 consecutive scoreless innings (but only 5 shutouts) in 1988. According to Wikipedia, the no. 3 on the list is Walter Johnson with 55 2/3 innings in 1913, and he has the more meaningful career shutouts record with 110. B-Ref doesn’t rate either consecutive innings or consecutive shutouts, not showing a leaderboard for either.

      After RJ’s stats above, Drysdale has fewer career shutouts (49) than his contemporary Marichal (52). Maybe this is a bit like the hitting streak vs. career hitting. Incidentally, Luis Tiant also had 49 career shutouts (and 9 in 1968 to Drysdale’s 8), and Hershiser had 25 career shutouts (more than Roy Halladay’s 20).

      Reply
      1. Richard Chester

        Baseball Almanac has a consecutive scoreless inning leaderboard. In 4th place is Jack Coombs with 53 IP in 1910. It was his record that Johnson broke in 1913.

        The BR PI shows Drysdale as the record holder with 6 consecutive shutouts.

        Reply
    3. bstar

      Drysdale’s career WAR (67.2) is actually better than Marichal’s (63.1) because Don was a better hitter, but that advantage is still pretty small.

      Like a lot of people on here, though, I always considered Marichal to be a cut above Drysdale. But they really do look like effective equals.

      Reply
      1. Lawrence Azrin

        @47/bstar,

        Speaking of equals – Drysdale’s career Pitcher’s WAR is 61.2, Marichal is 61.9. YET – Marichal is 101 games over .500, while Drysdale is only 35 games over .500. Lesson #137 why Pitcher’s Wins can be highly deceptive…

        Useless trivia: Marichal won 25 or more games three times (1963, 1966, 1968), but got _no_ CYA votes those three years (blame Koufax and Gibson), as there was only a first-place vote till 1970.

        Reply
        1. bstar

          Run support (average MLB RS for both pitchers’ careers was 4.1):

          Marichal – 4.7 RS/9
          Drysdale – 4.1 RS/9

          I don’t think that explains all of the difference in win % for these two. The biggest thing I see is that Drysdale had far more no-decisions than Marichal.

          Lawrence: If Drysdale had been the Giants ace and Marichal had played second fiddle to Sandy Koufax, would their narratives be at least partially switched?

          Reply
          1. Lawrence Azrin

            @70/bstar,

            The difference in run support between these two isn’t as great as you state; I think you have to factor in Dodger Stadium into Drysdale’s run support (he pitched there from 1962-1969), and how it killed offense, esp. in the 2nd ‘dead ball era’ of 1963-68.

            The Giants had a lineup of Mays, McCovey, Cepeda, Jim Ray Hart, Bobby Bonds (+ others) for a good part of Marichal’s career. But the Dodgers also had some solid lineups over Drysdale’s Dodger career, starting with Snider/ Hodges/ /Campanella/ Furillo/ Reese/ Gilliam in the mid/late 50s, then by the ealy 60s the Davises/ Frank Howard/ Ron Fairly/ Roseboro/ Wills.

            Granted, his last few years, the Dodgers offense was quite weak, but I think that Drysdale had some pretty good offenses supporting him most of his career.

    4. oneblankspace

      Marichal vs. Drysdale Head to head:

      5/19/61: LA 8, SF 7 ; Drysdale 5 IP, 2ER ; Marichal 7 1-3 IP, 4ER
      9/ 4/61: Drysdale CG-SHO, Marichal L, 4 1-3 IP, 4R, 3ER
      9/ 9/61: SF 9, LA 6 ; Marichal 3 1-3 IP, 1ER (injured) ; Drysdale 6 1-3 IP, 6ER
      6/11/63: Marichal CG-SHO, Drysdale L, 8 IP, 3ER
      6/19/63: Marichal W, 7 2-3 IP, 3R, 1ER ; Drysdale L, 4 1-3 IP, 6R, 4ER
      8/30/63: Drysdale CG-W, 1ER ; Marichal L, 6 IP, 2ER
      9/ 7/63: Marichal CG-W, 3R, 2ER ; Drysdale L, 6 IP, 4ER
      4/29/65: Drysdale CG-W, 1ER ; Marichal L, 6 IP, 2ER
      6/15/65: Marichal CG-W, 1ER ; Drysdale CG-L, 2ER
      6/28/65: Marichal CG-SHO, Drysdale CG-L, 5R, 1ER
      5/ 3/66: Marichal CG-W, 1ER ; Drysdale L, 6IP, 4ER
      5/17/66: LA 2, SF 1 (13) ; Marichal 10 IP, 1ER; Drysdale 9 IP, 1R, 0ER
      6/12/66: Marichal CG-W, 2ER ; Drysdale L, 5 1-3 IP, 2ER
      8/27/66: Marichal CG-W, 2ER ; Drysdale L, 6 IP, 3ER
      7/ 8/67: Marichal CG-W, 4ER ; Drysdale L, 4 2-3 IP, 6ER
      8/ 1/68: Marichal CG-SHO, Drysdale L, 8 IP, 2ER

      Marichal: 10-3 (9-0 CG, 3 SHO), Drysdale 3-10 (3-2 CG, 0 SHO)

      Reply
      1. Paul E

        O B S # 57:

        I vaguely recall that Bill James wrote up in one of abstracts or compendiums something to the effect that Drysdale pitched poorly in “big” games. In the games you’ve listed, his ERA appears to be approximately 3.25 – not so bad considering the SF Giants’ lineup of that period

        Reply
        1. David Horwich

          James devoted an entire chapter (31) of The Politics of Glory to Drysdale. Some excerpts:

          “Drysdale pitched 80 games (75 starts) in the heat of a pennant race…his performance is a mixed bag. Drysdale helped carry the Dodgers down the stretch in ’63, ’65, and ’66, helped them blow it in ’61 and ’62, and pitched badly down the stretch in ’59, although the Dodgers won anyway.”

          Drysdale had a 3.13 ERA in those 80 games (512 IP).

          Breaking it down further, James looked at games against the Dodgers’ chief rival in each of the 6 seasons mentioned above; he didn’t pitch notably well in those games, with a 3.74 ERA in 248 IP.

          Then he looked at games against key rivals in Aug-Sept only. “Twelve times Drysdale had a chance to beat the most critical opponent in the heat of a pennant race. He never won; never pitched particularly well without winning.” He went 0-6 with 6 no decisions, ERA of 5.33 in 83 IP.

          Reply
          1. Paul E

            David H @ 69:
            I’ve never been a believer in the myth of “clutch” (trumpets blaring, broadcaster felatio), however, if you have the pill in your hand in a ML baseball game, you have a distinct advantage over the guy holding the bat (66.5 % success rate on average?). For a guy like Drysdale to fail extraordinarily (barring injury)like that, is a total collapse.
            I’ve seen talented guys like Edmonds and Rolen go 1 for 30 (combined) in a post-season series and hit the cover off the ball at other times. That’s a small sample size and understandable. But, if you have the ball in your hands, you’re in control, for the most part, of the event’s outcome.
            Drysdale wouldn’t be the first to disappoint on a big stage; I’m sure he won’t be the last.

          2. David Horwich

            Paul E @80:

            Well, you’re in control to some extent, but you’re still at the mercy of your offensive support, your defensive support, and plain ol’ luck. Drysdale did pitch reasonably well in the WS, that should count, too, when discussing his performance in clutch games. Not that I’m advocating Drysdale for the CoG; I don’t think he’s particularly close.

      2. Lawrence Azrin

        @67/Paul E,

        For the years you listed, the NL ERA was about 3.50 (I didn’t weight innings/year), so a 3.25 ERA by Drysdale in these games is decent but not close to outstanding.

        Reply
  11. oneblankspace

    Biggio from the holdovers

    EMurray from the holdovers

    Drysdale from the newcomers — one of the few HOFers who was married to a HOFer (basketball player Ann Myers); he worked the White Sox TV booth with Hawk Harrelson before Harrelson was promoted and fired Tony La Russa

    Reply
  12. Lawrence Azrin

    All first basemen this time:

    – Harmon Killebrew
    – Eddie Murray
    – Willie McCovey

    They rank by the JAWS HOF-evaluator 19th, 14th, and 12th respectively. KIllebrew ranks ahead of 8 HOF 1bmen (two BBWAA choices, Perez and Terry).

    Reply
  13. jeff hill

    I find it odd that so many are voting for Killebrew despite his pedestrian WAR totals for such a long career(just over 60 overall). Only twice did he reach 6+ WAR and his low avg. plus SLG is an odd mix.

    Lofton, Santo, Smoltz

    Reply
    1. RJ

      For 26 years the career home run leaderboard read Aaron, Ruth, Mays, Robinson, Killebrew. That leaves an impression.

      Reply
    2. Hartvig

      Plus, at least as of 1999, Bill James had him ranked 63rd on his list of the top 100 players of all time. Plus his value took a fairly significant hit when Washington/Minnesota asked him to do some stuff that he probably shouldn’t have been doing, like playing in the outfield or third base, especially late in his career.

      Reply
  14. aweb

    Perry, who seems to be taking a long time for a guy with 90+ WAR – are people actively avoiding him due to the spitter? His career value seems to be well into automatic territory

    Grich, my choice for out of the 2B logjam (I’ve voted for most of them at one time or another). Unless he wins, I can see him getting lost in the coming ballot crunch.

    Santo, always destined to just barely lose these voting things, apparently.

    Reply
    1. Bryan O'Connor

      Is this a comment on your personal preference for Murray or on his likelihood to stay on the ballot? It seems that in every election, Murray gets no more than one or two of the first 40 or so votes, but the late voters creep in and save him in the last day or two. I could see him sticking around through the upcoming glut of superstars.

      Reply
      1. Artie Z.

        Both – with the guys that are coming up I’m going to find it hard to keep voting for Murray, and I’m guessing that I’m part of the deciding factor on whether or not he gets 10%. Even this round I had a tough time voting for Murray over Marichal. Perhaps he stays on with the “top 9” return rule.

        Reply
    2. Lawrence Azrin

      @79/Bryan,

      Yeah, I’ve noticed the same thing about Murray’s support – I hadn’t checked the COG 1937 ballot for a few days when the results were announced, so I figured he was gone, but lo and behold! – he got more than enough votes those last few days to exceed 10%.

      Drysdale illustrates very well the difference between the actual HOF and our COG – he’s a decent HOF selection, but an also-ran for COG consideration.

      Reply
  15. Michael Sullivan

    Perry, Grich, Whitaker

    Drysdale is the only newcomer I seriously considered, but I think he falls just short of COG.

    Reply
  16. donburgh

    Perry, Lofton, Biggio (next year, Craig, next year)

    A note about Mazeroski: I grew up in Pittsburgh while Maz was on the BBWAA ballot, and I took it as a matter of faith that he was being snubbed. Now that I’m older, even as I am happy for Maz that he is in the Hall, I’m pretty well convinced that he doesn’t belong there. An OPS+ of 84 just doesn’t cut it, no matter what other factors there are. That said I still might put him on the Pirates Mount Rushmore (cough, cough).

    Reply
    1. Hartvig

      I’m actually coming around just a little bit on the idea that maybe there is also room for a few players who maybe aren’t among the greatest ever but who were “very good and…” if part of their story is an integral part of the long term narrative- from Maz to Tinker to Evers to Chance to maybe even someone like Lefty O’Doul who was a terrific minor league pitcher before he turned in a few really good seasons in the majors in the outfield after a 309 hit season in the high minors and before a long and successful career as a minor league manager that was sandwiched around his playing a huge role in getting baseball started in Japan.

      There’s room for umpires and managers and executives and writers and owners. Maybe we can find a way to honor some players who were colorful or stood out in some way or just have a really interesting story without saying they were the greatest ever.

      Moe Berg for the Hall of Fame!

      Reply
      1. birtelcom Post author

        The Hall of the Very Interesting. The standard might be those about whom an interesting special exhibit at Cooperstown could be put together. Maz is unusual in having two separate important claims to great fame — one of the great defensive second basemen of all time (#2 to Joe Gordon in b-ref’s career Rfield since 1900) as well as the hitter of the only walk-off homer in a World Series Game 7.

        Reply
  17. Kirk

    Perry, Killebrew and Mazeroski not that Maz deserves it but I can never forget the joy he brought me as a youngster who was recovering from a broken leg and out of school so I got to see his world series winning homer live. What a thrill.

    Reply
  18. opal611

    For the 1936 election, I’m voting for:
    -Ryne Sandberg
    -Edgar Martinez
    -John Smoltz

    Other top candidates I considered highly (and/or will consider in future rounds):
    -Perry
    -Biggio
    -Whitaker
    -Grich
    -Lofton
    -Santo
    -McCovey
    -Murray

    Reply
  19. Insert Name Here

    Initial vote (same as last round) :

    1. Ron Santo (7.0 WAR/162 during 10-yr peak of 1963-72)
    2. Juan Marichal (7.1 WAR/162 during 7-yr peak of 1963-69)
    3. Gaylord Perry (5.9 WAR/162 during 13-yr peak of 1964-76)

    A rough, very flexible ranking of other candidates:

    4. Kenny Lofton (6.7 WAR/162 during 8-yr peak of 1992-99)
    5. Willie McCovey (6.7 WAR/162 during 8-yr peak of 1963-70)
    6. Bobby Grich (6.6 WAR/162 during 12-yr peak of 1972-83)
    7. Dick Allen (6.6 WAR/162 during 9-yr peak of 1964-72)
    8. Ryne Sandberg (6.2 WAR/162 during 9-yr peak of 1984-92)
    9. Craig Biggio (5.8 WAR/162 during 9-yr peak of 1991-99)
    10. Lou Whitaker (5.5 WAR/162 during 15-yr peak of 1979-93)
    11. Harmon Killebrew (5.3 WAR/162 during 12-yr peak of 1959-70)
    12. Eddie Murray (5.7 WAR/162 during 9-yr peak of 1978-86)
    13. Edgar Martínez (6.4 WAR/162 during 7-yr peak of 1995-2001)
    14. John Smoltz (5.8 WAR/162 during 5-yr peak of 1995-99)
    15. Don Drysdale (5.4 WAR/162 during 8-yr peak of 1957-64)

    Reply
  20. bells

    A bit late catching up on this round, I’ve been on holiday. So I only know Don Drysdale by name, I wasn’t born until 1980. But looking at his page, I find a few interesting things:

    1) His batting added 6 WAR to his career total. His 1965 is crazy for a pitcher – .300 BA in 138 PA and 7 homers. That’s the best pitcher batting season I can remember seeing, although I don’t pay attention to those really ever. Anyone got some other notables to talk about?

    2) His career was solid and sometimes spectacular, although I guess he played second fiddle to Koufax for a good few years. But that’s an interesting comparison – looking at Drysdale’s career, he was pretty much done at 31 although it took him a year to admit it. All a quick search found was that his ‘chronically sore shoulder’ caused him to quit. Player-value wise, though, Drysdale had as much as Koufax through age 30 season, although the dominant peak is of course what’s most closely associated with Sandy’s greatness. Anyway, my point is that if Drysdale took the precautious route and retired after age 30 without having a bad season, would we be giving him the same credit for ‘what could have been’ that Koufax is going to likely get starting next election?

    Reply
      1. bells

        Wow, if Walter was a borderline CoG choice for me before this, this puts him over the top 😉

        Also, I’m not a PI subscriber so I can’t see the top 10 results, but sorting for pitchers since 1901 I see that Drysdale’s 1965 is 13th for OPS+. His .300 BA is not even in the top 20. Curious if anyone is interested in fleshing out some of the greater pitching batting seasons. I know, I know, I can google search for articles on the topic, but this is a discussion blog so I want to encourage discussion.

        Reply
        1. Richard Chester

          I’ve gone through this many times before. Here’s how you can get the top 10 results. Go back to your PI run and enter OPS+ equal to or greater than 134 and make your run in ascending order. You will get the top 11 in reverse order. Just do it.

          Reply
          1. Voomo Zanzibar

            Greatest hitting season by a pitcher?
            For more than 25 PA, the highest OPS goes to:

            Hal McKain
            In 1930, of course.

            .419 .486 .710 1.195

            4 triples in 31 PA !
            ____________________

            Step it up to 50 PA and we have the woefully underutilized Micah Owings in 2007

            .333 .349 .683 1.033

            12 XBH in 64 PA, as a rookie.
            ____________________

            Walter’s .433 season tops the list at 75 and 100 PA, but…
            ____________________

            at 125 PA, a few OPS ticks behind the Big Train is Don Newcombe in 1955:

            .359 .395 .632 1.028

            7 home runs in 125 PA
            That’s 2.5 WAR on offense.

            Only Wes Ferrell’s 2.6 in 1937 tops that WAR.
            He had 54 more PA.
            They both pinch hit at a similar ratio to their PA.

          2. bells

            Thanks Richard, that’s obvious in retrospect. I’ve probably overlooked it many times because I never use the PI. I feel like the new kid in class who put his hand up too soon, oops.

        2. no statistician but

          Bells:

          Wes Ferrell used to be regarded as the greatest hitting pitcher, for a guy who only pitched and pinch hit. A fellow named Ruth racked up 5.6 batting WAR in his first three seasons on the mound (397 PAs), so they decided he was more valuable playing day-to-day.

          Reply
          1. paledave

            Terry Forster doesn’t quite qualify, but he hit an insane .397/.413/.474 in 86 plate appearances for his mostly relief career. He was kind of a poor man’s Rich Gossage, but chunkier.

            I also remember Fernando V. and Fernandez Sid as very capable with the lumber.

          2. bells

            okay, when I posed that question I didn’t even think of Ruth, d’oh. I should just quit posting in this discussion, haha.

  21. bells

    Well anyway, here’s my vote, based on cumulative rankings of 3 measures – WAR, WAA+ and JAWS as a preliminary assessment. A ranking of ‘3’ means the player was #1 in each category, a ranking of ’45’ means he was ranked 15th of the players on the ballot in each category.

    Perry 3 (1 1 1)
    Grich 8 (3 2 3)
    Santo 9 (4 3 2)
    Whitaker 12 (2 4 6)
    Martinez 19 (6 5 8)
    Smoltz 22 (5 6 11)
    Sandberg 23 (9 9 5)
    Lofton 24 (8 7 9)
    McCovey 30 (12 8 10)
    Marichal 31 (13 14 4)
    Murray 31 (7 12 12)
    Drysdale 32 (10 15 7)
    Biggio 34 (11 10 13)
    Allen 40 (15 11 14)
    Killebrew 42 (14 13 15)

    A case could be made for Whitaker to be included in the top 3 – Grich, Whitaker and Santo are real tight by these measures, and all were pretty underappreciated during and since their careers. But they’re all safe on our ballot, and they’ll be blown off the charts the next several elections, so I won’t split hairs and just vote for the top 3:

    Perry
    Grich
    Santo

    Reply
  22. Lawrence Azrin

    Once again, all of the on-the bubble COG candidates have climbed off the edge of the cliff. It’s magic.

    BTW, I know that I’ve mixed my metaphors horribly.

    Reply
    1. birtelcom Post author

      Not necessarily a mixed metaphor — I think I once saw a magical cliff bubble in a Road Runner cartoon.

      Reply
    2. paget

      I’m gratified to see that, thanks to another late surge, Eddie Murray has survived yet again. I haven’t voted for him in a while, but he was one of my favorites back in the ’80s.

      Anyone have a sense of why Murray has maintained such a consistent level of support and Dave Winfield didn’t? In terms of counting stats you could scarcely find two all-time greats who are more identical. WAR has Winfield as much the stronger offensive player, while Murray hurt his team in the field a lot less.

      Reply
      1. David Horwich

        Murray hasn’t really had significantly more support than Winfield, he had just had better timing. Murray came onto the ballot in 1956, with Molitor the only other strong new candidate that year, and he drew more than 25% of the vote his first two years, which gave him a bit of a cushion.

        Winfield came on the ballot in 1951, along with Blyleven, Dwight Evans, and Buddy Bell; in addition to having more competition from birth year-mates than Murray, the holdover list was longer by the ’51 ballot. So Winfield never cracked 25% and was always on the bubble.

        Reply
        1. Lawrence Azrin

          @127/DH,

          Just as he did in real-life MLB, Steady Eddie just keeps chugging along here on our COG votes, never getting big vote totals, but getting enough to stay on the ballot. It’s uncanny.

          Reply
        2. David Horwich

          Correcting myself @127, the holdover list for the 1951 ballot was actually smaller (by 1 player) than the list for the 1956 ballot.

          Reply
      2. birtelcom Post author

        For what it’s worth, Adam D.’s Hall of Stats gives Murray a 123 Hall Rating. That’s right around the threshold of a COG-level player, if you use Adam’s formula strictly and nothing else to determine who was a COG player (though even Adam himself doesn’t use his formula in that strict a fashion). In comparison, Winfield gets a 113 Hall Rating, which is not as much of a COG-type number. I don’t think we’ve inducted anybody yet with a Hall Rating under 126 (Gwynn, Palmer).

        Reply
    3. Voomo Zanzibar

      Well, assuming Frank Robinson wins next year, Gibson and Koufax join the clump, with Aaron, Clemente, Kaline (Aparicio and Cash) on deck.

      Some of us are likely to cut the umbilicus on our guys.
      ________________

      Here’s something:

      The only season of Roger Maris’ career that he did NOT receive an intentional walk:

      yes, That season.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Voomo Zanzibar Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *