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Old 06-02-2010, 09:07 PM   #1
stevew
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The Kid calls it a career

1. One of the best players we'll ever see.
2. I don't think he was on the juice.
3. I now feel very old.


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Old 06-02-2010, 09:08 PM   #2
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Lebron?

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Old 06-02-2010, 09:10 PM   #3
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Too bad he suffered all of those injuries.

Hell of a player.
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Old 06-02-2010, 09:29 PM   #4
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Yeah, I'm sad
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Old 06-02-2010, 09:32 PM   #5
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I am with you Steve.

My best memories are of him having a 2-HR game here in Cincinnati. And another where he hit a homerun and threw a guy out at the plate from deep centerfield playing in the metrodome.

I am feeling very emotional about the whole thing.
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Old 06-02-2010, 09:38 PM   #6
Pumpy Tudors
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Sidney Crosby is done already? So Colin White has his name on the Cup more times than Sidney Crosby does? I'm not sure how I feel about this.
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Old 06-02-2010, 09:39 PM   #7
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Oh.
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Old 06-02-2010, 10:07 PM   #8
RedHawk00
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very sad day, i was living and growing up during his time in Seattle, no one could wear 24 on a baseball team because every kid wanted to. and millions of kids everywhere got to point to Griffey and say, but he wears his hat backwards and he isn't a catcher, so I can!
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Old 06-02-2010, 10:45 PM   #9
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One of the most complete 5-tool players ever, in his prime. It says something when my brother and I grew up as die hard Reds fans but he still had a Griffey (Mariners) poster hanging over his bed.
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Old 06-02-2010, 10:50 PM   #10
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Old 06-02-2010, 10:50 PM   #11
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Great player - too bad about the injuries. He's my age, so he was the perfect guy to root for as an M's fan. Real flair for the dramatic throughout his career. No question he had a huge impact on the long-term viability of the M's in Seattle, and it's only a slight exaggeration to say that Safeco is the "House that Junior built".

I just wish he'd called it a career after the end of last season - riding off into the sunset on the shoulders of his teammates would've been the ideal end to his career...
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Old 06-02-2010, 10:51 PM   #12
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Old 06-02-2010, 10:52 PM   #13
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What a catch. I'm betting many people don't realize that the M's miracle '95 season was done with Griffey only playing 72 games because of him breaking his wrist on this catch.
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Old 06-02-2010, 10:52 PM   #14
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:05 PM   #15
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As a Rangers fan, I hated the man, but as a baseball fan in general, I loved getting to see him. Farewell Ranger killer.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:09 PM   #16
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Best player I have ever seen play and someday will tell my son I got to watch him play much the way my Dad told me about how he saw Satchel Paige pitch.

Baseball is awesome.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:14 PM   #17
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He was the best. A shame with all the injuries and how some people may doubt how great of a player he was because of them. I'll never forget watching as a youngster the '95 Divisional Series against the Yanks.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:15 PM   #18
Tasan
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I remember thinking after those 45 HR in 1993 that this 23 year old had a real good shot at breaking the all time HR record. Its a shame his injuries didn't let him really get a shot at it.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:16 PM   #19
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One of my favourite athletes in any sport. I started watching baseball with the two Blue Jays World Series, so he got my attention fast as a young kid. Mariners became by 2nd favourite team (even before the Expos) because of him and Randy Johnson. There are only a handful of players I can think of that, if I found out were juicing, would ruin baseball for me forever... and he's one of them.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:22 PM   #20
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His post Mariners-career (original run) turned out to be just as long as his post-Mariners career. Kind of unreal. Sometimes it feels like he wasn't even in the league since 1999.

And ya, it definitely makes me feel old. I remember getting his Upper Deck rookie card in middle school, a million years ago.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:26 PM   #21
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Dola-

Also looking back, wow did he take a below-market contract to play for the Reds. That first year with the Reds, when he should have been the highest paid player ever, he made less than Larry Walker, David Cone, Mo Vaughn, Raul Mondesi, and Shawn Green.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:27 PM   #22
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Always liked Griffey, even when he was on the M's. Hated Arod. Hated The Unit. Hated Buhner. Tolerated Martinez. Liked Griffey. Go figure.

Thanks for the memories, Junior.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:42 PM   #23
DrAFTjunkie
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His Upper Deck rookie card was like a golden ticket when I was a kid. It dethroned the Donruss Canseco rookie card. Still, neither were as cool as Billy "fuckface" Ripkin.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:52 PM   #24
korme
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Dola-

Also looking back, wow did he take a below-market contract to play for the Reds. That first year with the Reds, when he should have been the highest paid player ever, he made less than Larry Walker, David Cone, Mo Vaughn, Raul Mondesi, and Shawn Green.

One of the few players that would take a paycut to play for their hometown teams. Griffey was as selfless as he was talented.
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Old 06-02-2010, 11:56 PM   #25
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A great great player, and one of the most enjoyable guys around. Shame his day got upstaged. There will be some idiot who doesn't vote for Griffey on the 1st ballot of the HOF, but won't change the fact that this guy was one of the 30-40 best players of all time.
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Old 06-03-2010, 12:27 AM   #26
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A great great player, and one of the most enjoyable guys around. Shame his day got upstaged. There will be some idiot who doesn't vote for Griffey on the 1st ballot of the HOF, but won't change the fact that this guy was one of the 30-40 best players of all time.

30-40?

Are you including pitchers?

I say top 10 position players of all time.
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Old 06-03-2010, 12:36 AM   #27
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30-40?

Are you including pitchers?

I say top 10 position players of all time.

Yup. At CF, Mays and Mantle (and perhaps Speaker) were better, and Griffey's equivalence is probably DiMaggio. Without running the rest, I'd extrapolate that out (while accepting that CF is more of a premium position than RF) and 30-40 seems right. I'd be curious to see where WAR and other numbers come out.
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Old 06-03-2010, 08:13 AM   #28
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Definitely one of the best ever and, like others, feel that it's a shame that he suffered injuries or he could have rewritten some of the record books, giving Bonds a run run for his steroid money.

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Old 06-03-2010, 08:28 AM   #29
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"It's never iffy, if it's Griffey"

I'd take DiMaggio over Griffey. I think a better equivalence is Duke Snider.
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Old 06-03-2010, 08:52 AM   #30
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Definitely one of the best ever and, like others, feel that it's a shame that he suffered injuries or he could have rewritten some of the injury books, giving Bonds a run run for his steroid money.

SI

Was he an avid sportsmed book reader in his spare time?
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Old 06-03-2010, 08:53 AM   #31
RedHawk00
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i might still have one of his chocolate bars in the baseball card stash somewhere. one of the greatest moments of my life was being able to see Edgar hit that double to score Griffey, i was out in left field bleachers with my younger brother... definitely a game I will never forget.

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Old 06-03-2010, 08:53 AM   #32
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I'd take DiMaggio over Griffey. I think a better equivalence is Duke Snider.


Crazy talk. Griffey had twice the career of Duke Snider. Also, Dimaggio doesn't even approach Griffey unless you give him extra credit for the years he missed
during the war. Even with them, It's pretty even. And I'd give Griffey the bonus for playing in a more difficult era.
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Old 06-03-2010, 08:56 AM   #33
spleen1015
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#5 all time in HR.. with the way he played defense?

Top 10 all time most definitely.
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Old 06-03-2010, 09:10 AM   #34
sterlingice
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Was he an avid sportsmed book reader in his spare time?

D'oh, fixed

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Old 06-03-2010, 09:16 AM   #35
sterlingice
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#5 all time in HR.. with the way he played defense?

Top 10 all time most definitely.

I'm having a hard time placing him historically right now and I'm going to have to think on things. Fangraphs had a brief article up this morning about it and had this excellent graph:

More On Ken Griffey Jr.’s Career | FanGraphs Baseball



Now, I'm still not sold on using WAR as a be-all-end-all metric. Again, I think it puts too much weight on substandard fielding metrics but the author makes an excellent statement: "I don’t think anything quite sums up both the greatness and the disappointment of Ken Griffey Jr’s career as this graph"

I need to think more on where I would rank him all time and I'm sure many will try to do just that in the coming days.

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Old 06-03-2010, 09:20 AM   #36
sterlingice
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If you go just on WAR, he's the 36th best position player of all time right behind that 1800s duo of George Davis and Roger Connor. Huh?

It has him at -39.1 fielding and -2.6 positional for his career. Yeah, that's a load of bunk.

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Old 06-03-2010, 09:21 AM   #37
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Crazy talk. Griffey had twice the career of Duke Snider. Also, Dimaggio doesn't even approach Griffey unless you give him extra credit for the years he missed during the war. Even with them, It's pretty even. And I'd give Griffey the bonus for playing in a more difficult era.

Too bad there isn't a statistic that scores how simlar a player is to other players. We could even give it a funky name like "Similarity Score". Then we'd really know who the closest match is.

[I know...similarity scores definitely has flaws, as does career Runs Created (namely, the era adjustment), but this is still an interesting comparison]:

career runs created:
Griffey 1994
DiMaggio 1569
Snider 1477
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Old 06-03-2010, 09:25 AM   #38
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The best game I ever went to was the classic against the Yankees in August of '95 where, with the M's down by 1, Vince Coleman works his way on and steals 2nd and 3rd, scoring on a base hit to tie it up. Then Griffey comes up and hits a 2-run bomb with the crowd going wild to win it. That win sparked the comeback against the Angels which led to their first playoff appearance.

How that team, with the talent it had, never even made the World Series confounds me to this day. It had 3 first-ballot HoFers plus Edgar Martinez.
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Old 06-03-2010, 09:25 AM   #39
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Crazy talk. Griffey had twice the career of Duke Snider. Also, Dimaggio doesn't even approach Griffey unless you give him extra credit for the years he missed
during the war. Even with them, It's pretty even. And I'd give Griffey the bonus for playing in a more difficult era.

Joe Dimaggio is the 2nd greatest right handed hitter of all time (behind Rogers Hornsby) - you are too busy looking at "total" stats, without diving into the real stats. Dimaggio's hitting ability and his power/lack of strikeouts, puts Dimaggio's well above Griffey.

Since, you are so into "total" stats, add 2800 ABs to Duke Snider and see how close he comes to Griffey's "total" stats. I think the AVG,OBP,SLG, OPS, OPS+ fall in closer with Duke Snider than Joe Dimaggio.

and how is Griffey playing is a "more difficult" era? The expansion era with smaller ball parks?
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Old 06-03-2010, 09:26 AM   #40
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If you go just on WAR, he's the 36th best position player of all time right behind that 1800s duo of George Davis and Roger Connor. Huh?

It has him at -39.1 fielding and -2.6 positional for his career. Yeah, that's a load of bunk.

SI

I'm guessing most of that negative is his later years where he was almost a liability out there.
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Old 06-03-2010, 09:31 AM   #41
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I like Griffey, Jr. and all, but Top 10 all time?! REALLY? Are we talking Top 10 Centerfielders?
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Old 06-03-2010, 09:36 AM   #42
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I remember going to a Rangers game back in '94 or '95. A bunch of family was in from out of town, so we went as a group. The game went into extra innings, and it was a weeknight. We decided to stay to the bitter end. Griffey came up with men on the bases in the top of the 14th. The crowd started derisively chanting "Junior... Junior...". He proceeded to launch a bomb into the upper deck home run porch. Game ended about 1:30am. Had to be at work at 6am. Good times.
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Old 06-03-2010, 10:07 AM   #43
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Joe Dimaggio is the 2nd greatest right handed hitter of all time (behind Rogers Hornsby) - you are too busy looking at "total" stats, without diving into the real stats. Dimaggio's hitting ability and his power/lack of strikeouts, puts Dimaggio's well above Griffey.

Since, you are so into "total" stats, add 2800 ABs to Duke Snider and see how close he comes to Griffey's "total" stats. I think the AVG,OBP,SLG, OPS, OPS+ fall in closer with Duke Snider than Joe Dimaggio.

and how is Griffey playing is a "more difficult" era? The expansion era with smaller ball parks?

As a fellow Yankee fan, I love Joe D. But this era has integration, better scouting, and specialists. It's much harder to dominate now than it was then. I give all the WW2 players extra credit for the years they missed. But Griffey was a far better player than Snider. I'd also put him equal to Joe D.
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Old 06-03-2010, 10:12 AM   #44
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I like Griffey, Jr. and all, but Top 10 all time?! REALLY? Are we talking Top 10 Centerfielders?

IMO in the prime of his career he was one of the ten best players ever, and certainly the best I ever saw in 30 years of watching baseball.

If you want to factor in longevity and injuries into the equation and say he didn't have one of the top ten careers that's fine, but in the prime of his career there weren't many better, ever.
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Old 06-03-2010, 10:18 AM   #45
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As a fellow Yankee fan, I love Joe D. But this era has integration, better scouting, and specialists. It's much harder to dominate now than it was then. I give all the WW2 players extra credit for the years they missed. But Griffey was a far better player than Snider. I'd also put him equal to Joe D.

How do you explain the similarities (Snider/Griffey) in AVG OBP OPS OPS+?
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Old 06-03-2010, 10:31 AM   #46
ISiddiqui
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IMO in the prime of his career he was one of the ten best players ever, and certainly the best I ever saw in 30 years of watching baseball.

If you want to factor in longevity and injuries into the equation and say he didn't have one of the top ten careers that's fine, but in the prime of his career there weren't many better, ever.

One can't ignore he played two decades, regardless of how many want to assume he stopped playing in 2000.

And assuming that you want to disqualify Barry Bonds because of steroid usage, just about everyone agrees that Bonds started after 1998... and therefore you either didn't watch the Pirates/Giants during that same era (until 1998, of course).

And then again, if are talking prime of careers in the last 30 years, Barry Bonds may finish second to Albert Pujols (though Bonds did have the ridiculous steals numbers).
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Old 06-03-2010, 10:49 AM   #47
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The best game I ever went to was the classic against the Yankees in August of '95 where, with the M's down by 1, Vince Coleman works his way on and steals 2nd and 3rd, scoring on a base hit to tie it up. Then Griffey comes up and hits a 2-run bomb with the crowd going wild to win it. That win sparked the comeback against the Angels which led to their first playoff appearance.

How that team, with the talent it had, never even made the World Series confounds me to this day. It had 3 first-ballot HoFers plus Edgar Martinez.

Well, sparked the winning from the M's side anyway.

Meanwhile, the Angels lost the heart of their team in Gary Disarcina near the start of August this year, which sparked the losing from their side.
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Old 06-03-2010, 10:54 AM   #48
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I am eliminating Bonds and IMO Jr. was better than Pujols, especially if you factor in Jr. played an amazing defensive CF while Pujols plays 1B.

And again, I'm not disputing the back end of his career loses him some points, but when I watched him play in his prime I have never seen anyone better on both sides of the ball.
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Old 06-03-2010, 11:00 AM   #49
ISiddiqui
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I think its an interesting comparison... Griffey, Jr. was more valuable defensively in his first decade, but Pujols is far superior offensively in his first decade (look at OPS+ and RC/G for two example measures).
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Old 06-03-2010, 11:14 AM   #50
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I'm less surprised by top 10 all-time than I am that he was called The Kid all these years and I didn't know it.
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