The Big Hurt
jrdolan
Posts: 2,549 ✭✭
No, this isn't about our fellow board member with the tongue-in-cheek comments about PSA. This is about the original Big Hurt. Today he hit his 445th career home run. He's 37 years old and has trouble staying off the DL. Can he get 55 more and join that very exclusive 500 HR Club?
Now a broader question: Is his career HOF-worthy? I remember when he was the most feared hitter in the league for a period of years, but he fell on injuries and hard times. If this were his last year, he would end with 450+ HR, 1500+ RBI, .300+ BA. In the days of less bulky ballplayers and fewer HRs, that would have been more than enough. Now? If he gets to 500 HR it will be impossible to keep him out, but if not ... ?
Now a broader question: Is his career HOF-worthy? I remember when he was the most feared hitter in the league for a period of years, but he fell on injuries and hard times. If this were his last year, he would end with 450+ HR, 1500+ RBI, .300+ BA. In the days of less bulky ballplayers and fewer HRs, that would have been more than enough. Now? If he gets to 500 HR it will be impossible to keep him out, but if not ... ?
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Thomas has won two MVP’s but he has never been a solid defender and as you point out has spent most of the last few years injured and playing as a designated hitter.
Jeff Bagwell has grit and team leadership and perhaps the edge over Thomas. Although I think Thomas was certainly more feared during his most productive years. Bagwell will finish with 1500 RBI’s, over 2200 hits, an MVP, and nearly 500 homers and
doubles.
I think the jury is still out on both but both are nearing the end of solid production.
Speaking of first baseman, is Palmeiro a lock with his 500 HRs?
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That's a good question and I was thinking about him a few weeks ago. I think he'll make the 55 HRs if he stays healthy. HOF? Hard to say for sure. Overall, I think he has a great record - over .300 lifetime - has a couple of MVP's, all-star, no gold gloves to my knowledge? Even with 500 HRs, some are retooling their thinking - will there be a time when 500 is not a lock? Also, he's not on a team where he can show something post-season-wise? I think writers like to see guys who have performed in playoffs and WS's.
mike
IMHO, Yes.
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Thomas will hit 500 hr's but in my mind, doesnt qualify as HOF material.
Now as far as our own DBH, there's an entirely different hall of fame that he belongs in.
I think Thomas will reach 500 HR, and I expect him to be elected to the Hall as well - for much of the 1990s he was quite possibly the best hitter in baseball.
I'll take the opportunity to promote the best player no one talks about:
Craig Biggio for the Hall of Fame
Nick
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What numbers would pre '61 players have with 8 extra games a year? Or not taking prime years out to fight during WW2 and Korea?
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Griffins, if 300 wins is a lock, what about poor Bert Blyleven?
Somebody mentioned "cheater Giambi." Let's not forget that Palmeiro takes, uh, "performance-enhancing" supplements, too. In fact, he's a spokesman!
Don't mention Canseco's unsubstantiated steroid allegations, Palmeiro certainly NEVER looked like a roid user like Canseco, McGwire, Sosa etc. Viagara yes, but I don't believe roids. If you or I had ED, we would probably use Viagara too, bravo to him for not being afraid to admit it! I don't care if there were a lot of great first baseman during his time, not many will finish with his #'s!
1. Babe Ruth2. Ted Williams3. Lou Gehrig4. Barry Bonds5. Jimmy Foxx6. Hank Greenberg7. Manny Ramirez8. Mark McGwire9. Joe DiMaggio10. Rogers Hornsby11. Alex Rodriguez12. FRANK THOMAS
OK, you're saying he's a slugger, but can he get on base. The top 12 all-time in on base percentage:1. Ted Williams2. Babe Ruth3. Barry Bonds4. Lou Gehrig5. FRANK THOMAS6. Jimmie Foxx7. Ty Cobb8. Rogers Hornsby9. Mickey Mantle10. Edgar Martinez11. Jesse Burkett12. Tris Speaker
The only six names on both lists:Williams
Ruth
Bonds
Gehrig
Foxx
THOMAS
Yes, he was atrocious in the field and spent most of his time as a DH. Yes he was injured several times later in his career. But when you look at his hitting stats, he is one of the greatest hitters for both power and reaching base. He should be in (and easily) even if his career ended today. But given that he has never been a media darling (and much of that is his own fault), it might take several years. Of course, if he does reach 500 HR and/or the White Sox make the playoffs this year and Frank has a monster playoff run culminating in the White Sox first pennant in 46 years and first World Series championship in 88 years, then he's in for sure on the first ballot.
he will absolute have to have 500 homers and be a career .300 hitter. It scary to think what this guy could of done if he played as
many games as Raffy!
JS
<< <i>Stone, I'm hoping '90 Leaf is THE Frank Thomas rookie card, come 500-HR time. >>
John
The 90L is the "premier" card to have for the HOF collector - if he winds up in.
Back during the "bulk" buying days, a guy gave me 250 of them at 25 cents per - they were booking at 2 bucks at the time.
As was just said, 300 wins is not an automatic - some guys have to wait - e.g. Sutton if memory serves.
Now, with the steroid issue and some feelin the ball was "juiced"/changed, and guys just getting bigger and healthier, it may turn out that 500 HRs won't be a lock - a guy may still have to wait. Personally, in the big picture, and ruling out steroids, 500 HRs should always be a lock.
Having said that, 3000/500 should always be a first opportunity "lock" IMO.
mike
Talk of "bulk buying" and steroids made me think about that. 250 copies of Big Hurt's rookie, eh? Whatcha gonna do with all those gumballs, Popeye?
Juiced ball vs. dead ball, today's muscle-bound supermen vs. yesteryear's relatively small players (there were big guys, like Babe, but the percentage of them was less). Discount the modern HRs by 25% or whatever if you want, but 500 of 'em is still a considerable achievement.
I'm not sure a single faceted player like Thomas is worthy. If you put Thomas in for being a DH power hitter, do you put Edgar Martinez in for being a phenomenal DH for batting average?
<< <i>It's going to be interesting to see how the steroid era affects HoF voting. >>
I don't mean to jack this thread, and maybe I'm not, but I think HOF voting in the future will consider the boosted HR production of the Balco era the same way they look at the lowered ERAs of the raised mound era, the uncertain stats of the war era and the expanded pitching stats of the 19th century workhorse, not to mention comparing deadball to rabbit ball. Steroids use is just gonna be another statistical burp. Just my opinion.
"All evil needs to triumph is for good men to do nothing."
.308 37HR. . .121RBI. . . .429 OBP. . .110 runs
As someone else said, if this is what he's put up despite losing two full seasons imagine what he could do with a fully healthy career. I think Thomas and his numbers are a good example of what Mattingly could have been with 2-3 more healthy years. The difference is that Thomas achieved more than Mattingly could.
I'm sure Biggio will be elected if he gets to 3000 hits. . .but could you ever consider him a dominant player?
Mike
Frank Thomas was the best slugging first baseman for 1990's. He carried the torch for being the best slugger even for a very significant stretch in the 1990's. He and Griffey were the best. The only knock on Thomas was his defense--nothing like an Olerud, McGwire or Mattingly. However, he was so good offensively, that he can be forgiven. He not only hit HRs and Doubles, he had a very high OBP and a whole lot of plate discipline. He would take Walks and hit singles. He was the ultimate hitting machine, walking machine, and slugging machine. He was not a power hitter that struck out a lot. His BA was very high.
He is in the HOF with what he has. Scratching and crawling to 500 homers is not going to make me think any more of him. What is impressive about scratching, crawling, being mediocre on the way to 500 HR? Its just a nice round number and looks good, but you have to check the substance behind it too.
500 HR for Thomas means nothing. The fact that he can walk down the street in the early 90's and say he was the best player in baseball means more than scratching and crawling for a longevity number.
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That's the only reason he continues to play.
Here are two of my favorite Thomas cards: the first is the UD SP4 from the movie Mr. Baseball and the 2nd is from the 92UD Homerun Heroes subset - when this card was hot it set kids back about 20-25 bucks!
mike
DeutscherGeist is exactly right on Thomas. People get caught up on these round numbers, or clubs. Clubs are really nothing excpet for everything falling in place at the right time. They also get caught up on round numbers. So a guy with 498 home runs is questionable, and a guy with 501 is automatic?
Thomas was the absolute best hitter in the game for a good five years and that is an extremely difficult thing to accomplish. Plus he was also very good or excellent many other years too. There are far more accurate measures than total Hits or Home Runs.
At one time, as we all remember, Thomas's leaf rookie was on fire. We know it will never reach those heights. But, it is becoming painfully obvious that most fans think in the narrow terms of just round numbers and clubs, so if he does reach his 500 home runs he will legitimize his stature in the eyes of a lot more of the average fans. Plus some people do collect those milestone clubs regardlesss.
Plus, it is looking like he will have the national stage this year in October, and that should help the average Joe, who only tunes in for the playoffs, possibly rekindle some desire to take another look at the big hurt.
Well put along with DG - altho I am a fan of some "longevity" players and their accomplishments, I concur on Thomas. In the early 90s, Thomas was one of the focal points of card companies. 1993 Leaf featured subsets on the fortitude of Thomas. He was considered one of the "impact" players in sets. If one wanted to even try to collect everything there is on the guy, it would set you back some serious dough!
mike
as for Big Frank, maybe all those injuries will keep him out? even if he hits 500 hr?
Nick
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steve d
While we are on the topic, could we expect the PSA 9 1990 Leaf RC to garner $50 once he does join the CLUB? I just don't think that card is as mass produced as some other modern stuff. Aren't there more Griffey 1989 Upper Deck out there? A pop report will help if any want to contribute.
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I really like that Thomas/Selleck card. I never owned one before, but I think its time I look for one. Doesn't Tom Selleck remind you of Don Mattingly in that photo?
Growing up as a Mattingly fan, I also liked Tom Selleck movies. They both had that signature moustache--it made them look cool I thought as a kid.
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DG
On the 90L Thomas - I'm thinking at one point the card was in the 100 buck range graded a 9? Even when he goes into the hall, it just seems that anyone who wants one, already does.
But, I may just have to go thru the 90Bs and see if I can pick out a 10 to submit?
He was so hot around 1992 - the HH8 - homerun UD card was on every kids wantlist - along with the Jordan SP baseball card!
I kind of miss those days - running around town like a madman with my son looking for all the hot cards.
mike
<< <i>
While we are on the topic, could we expect the PSA 9 1990 Leaf RC to garner $50 once he does join the CLUB? I just don't think that card is as mass produced as some other modern stuff. Aren't there more Griffey 1989 Upper Deck out there? A pop report will help if any want to contribute. >>
Ken Griffey is 100 times the player that Thomas ever was....Griffey dominated the 90s like no other player has a decade, and the fact he was as nice a guy off the field as he was feared on it meant he was immensely popular. The fact that Griffey wasn't one dimensional (power hitter) and excelled at every facet of the game makes him much more popular too.
Look at the prices the mass produced 89 UD griffey gets compared to any other card of that era, and you'll see just how truly popular he is.
Pop reports won't show you anything other than there are more Griffeys than Thomas cards (as there should be, since his demand is so much higher).
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1989UD Griffey -- total graded 48,827 -- 15,221 PSA 9 -- 1,072 PSA 10
1990L Thomas -- total graded 11,949 -- 7,435 PSA 9 -- 1,216 PSA 10
The total graded figures are no surprise. Everybody knows 90 Leaf was relatively "limited," and enough Griffey UD rookies were printed to wallpaper a mansion. But I would not have guessed there are fewer UD Griffeys in PSA 10 than Leaf Thomas. Junior is more of a condition rarity in top grade, clearly.
No question the number of collectors who want the 1,072 gem mint Griffeys is much higher than those who want the 1,216 gem mint Thomases. Junior's place in the HOF is already assured and he probably won't reach any more milestones. The Big Hurt still has 500 and the Hall to shoot for (and post-season exposure), so maybe his cards will see some movement again. If he can stay off the DL.
<< <i>
Griffey dominated the 90s like no other player has a decade >>
Barry Bonds says "hi." So do Willie Mays and Mike Schmidt.
The knock against him is that he couldn't play defense and was relegated to DH. Yet the stats for defense, such as they are, don't seem to bear that out. In 971 games at first from 1990-2004 his fielding percentage is .991. The league fielding percentage is .993, the matter of a few plays better over 15 years. And his range factor is actually higher, 8.66 to 8.24. So is he Don Mattingly out there? No, but he is a lot closer to Don than he is to Dick Stuart. And besides, the fact is he wanted to play the field, at least for much of the 90s. Part of the disagreement he's had with managers is from them moving him around and failing to commit him to the field or DH, especially when they didn't have a Paul Konerko or Carlos Lee who could play and hit well enough to keep him off the field. And that lack of security in a position could affect anyone.
All in all, I really think there is so little room for debate about his candidacy that it's a non-issue. While people get wrapped up in the last 5 years, his injuries, his position, and his attitude, the fact is that he is one of the 3 premier hitters of the last 20 years, competent in the field, and clear of the steroid scandal. If not for a late surge in 2000 by Giambi and the A's, Frank would be a 3-time MVP and no one would even ask the question. He's not hanging around, padding numbers, Carlton-like, but attemtpting to continue to contribute, which he does mightily when he has the chance. A HOF career is a long one, and it's easy to focus on whatever period you're in at the time and use that as the gauge. That's why there's a 5 year interval before election. Is Frank a HOFer? Without doubt.
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It couldn't have anything to do with the fact that Biggio was never a dominant player at his position. If he gets in, it will be because he got to 3000 hits.
Mike
He was the NL's best second baseman for the 1990s.
7-time All-Star, 5 Silver Slugger Awards, 4 Gold Glove Awards, career totals that are already eye-popping (13th in doubles, 28th in runs, 33rd in times on base, modern-day record for HBP, top 100 in many other categories, and top 50 in several (plus 51st in hits, 2 hits away from top 50)).
In doubles, runs, and times on base, everybody ahead of Biggio all-time is either in the HOF, is active or recently retired and a shoo-in for first ballot election, or is Pete Rose.
Nick
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Look at Julio Franco, hitting .280 at age 46! (He's more than 500 hits away from 3,000, so forget it)
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