Moderator: Andrew
Enigma869 wrote:Yankees just announced they have signed Teixeira to an 8 year, $180 million dollar contract. This is not good news for all the other teams in the AL East. Time for the Red Sox to wake the fuck up and find someone to sign! Somehow Adam Dunn doesn't excite me.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3790141
StocktontoMalone wrote:There's always Milton Bradley.....
Rockindeano wrote: JFB, Toronto is better than the Sox this year.
Rockindeano wrote: except Manny and there is no way he is going to Boston, but he may very well go to the Yankees.
Saint John wrote:I remember when guys took pay cuts to come to the Yankees in hopes of the elusive ring. Wade Boggs immediately comes to mind.
Boggs was my of my hitting idols as a kid. He and Gwynn were just amazing. Rod Carew was an incredible hitter as well. Is it obvious that I bat left-handed?conversationpc wrote:Saint John wrote:I remember when guys took pay cuts to come to the Yankees in hopes of the elusive ring. Wade Boggs immediately comes to mind.
Boy, it still bugs me that Boggs went to the Yankees. That being said, he had his best years, easily, in Boston and had hit .259 the previous year.
Saint John wrote:Boggs was my of my hitting idols as a kid. He and Gwynn were just amazing. Rod Carew was an incredible hitter as well. Is it obvious that I bat left-handed?conversationpc wrote:Saint John wrote:I remember when guys took pay cuts to come to the Yankees in hopes of the elusive ring. Wade Boggs immediately comes to mind.
Boy, it still bugs me that Boggs went to the Yankees. That being said, he had his best years, easily, in Boston and had hit .259 the previous year.
I think the hunger for a championship and what used to be the proud donning of a Yankees cap propelled then him to 4 straight .300 seasons. I think he could have hit .280 til he was 70.conversationpc wrote:Saint John wrote:I remember when guys took pay cuts to come to the Yankees in hopes of the elusive ring. Wade Boggs immediately comes to mind.
Boy, it still bugs me that Boggs went to the Yankees. That being said, he had his best years, easily, in Boston and had hit .259 the previous year.
Saint John wrote:I think the hunger for a championship and what used to be the proud donning of a Yankees cap propelled then him to 4 straight .300 seasons. I think he could have hit .280 til he was 70.conversationpc wrote:Saint John wrote:I remember when guys took pay cuts to come to the Yankees in hopes of the elusive ring. Wade Boggs immediately comes to mind.
Boy, it still bugs me that Boggs went to the Yankees. That being said, he had his best years, easily, in Boston and had hit .259 the previous year.
Blueskies wrote:That guy ate Andrew??Saint John wrote:He's got a little McNeice in him.![]()
![]()
With the pitching these days Gwynn could still hit over .300 assuming his fat ass could still make it to first base without stopping and flagging down the hot dog vendor.conversationpc wrote:Interestingly, both Gwynn and Boggs hit over .300 in their final seasons at the age of 41.
conversationpc wrote:Interestingly, both Gwynn and Boggs hit over .300 in their final seasons at the age of 41.
Saint John wrote:With the pitching these days Gwynn could still hit over .300 assuming his fat ass could still make it to first base without stopping and flagging down the hot dog vendor.
A lot of those ridiculously high averages come front the infant stages of baseball when the ball was lobbed and the fielders wore fucking oven mitts. I doubt those guys could go 70-100 years ahead in time, but I will guarantee you that the 3 aforementioned amigos could go back in time and crush line drives like they did their entire careers. And fuck Todd Helton. Since baseball cracked down on HGH and steroids his numbers have hit the floor faster than a bra-less Dolly Parton. Fucker went from 40+ homers to about 15. What does that tell you? Granted, he is now 35, but I doubt he'll sniff anything substantially over .300 again. Boggs would hit .300 next year if he wanted to give up those cool hair club commercials.Enigma869 wrote:conversationpc wrote:Interestingly, both Gwynn and Boggs hit over .300 in their final seasons at the age of 41.
The amazing thing about guys like Boggs, Gwynn, and Carew is that only Gwynn even ranks in the top 20 all time for career averages (and he's ranked 17th). While Wade Boggs' career average is .328, it's also the career average of Todd Helton which puts things into perspective a bit.
Agreed. And you only have to jog when you hit balls in the gap.Enigma869 wrote:Saint John wrote:With the pitching these days Gwynn could still hit over .300 assuming his fat ass could still make it to first base without stopping and flagging down the hot dog vendor.
That the amazing thing about Boggs and Gwynn...neither of them ever got any infield hits. Gwynn outweighed Boggs by 100lbs but Boggs was every bit as slow. Guys like Carew got a shitload of infield and bunt hits to help with that average.
Saint John wrote: Gwynn was a burner for a few years though, John. I think he stole 40 or 50 bases in his early years.
Saint John wrote:Agreed. And you only have to jog when you hit balls in the gap.Enigma869 wrote:Saint John wrote:With the pitching these days Gwynn could still hit over .300 assuming his fat ass could still make it to first base without stopping and flagging down the hot dog vendor.
That the amazing thing about Boggs and Gwynn...neither of them ever got any infield hits. Gwynn outweighed Boggs by 100lbs but Boggs was every bit as slow. Guys like Carew got a shitload of infield and bunt hits to help with that average.Gwynn was a burner for a few years though, John. I think he stole 40 or 50 bases in his early years.
Wow...56. I thought it was mid 40's tops. 319 is a very respectable career number. Boggs resembled James Caan in Misery when he was rounding the fucking bases.conversationpc wrote:Saint John wrote:Agreed. And you only have to jog when you hit balls in the gap.Enigma869 wrote:Saint John wrote:With the pitching these days Gwynn could still hit over .300 assuming his fat ass could still make it to first base without stopping and flagging down the hot dog vendor.
That the amazing thing about Boggs and Gwynn...neither of them ever got any infield hits. Gwynn outweighed Boggs by 100lbs but Boggs was every bit as slow. Guys like Carew got a shitload of infield and bunt hits to help with that average.Gwynn was a burner for a few years though, John. I think he stole 40 or 50 bases in his early years.
He had 56 one year and 40 another and over 20 several other times. He had 319 for his career.
conversationpc wrote:He had 56 one year and 40 another and over 20 several other times. He had 319 for his career.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 39 guests