The 25 Right Fielders With the Best Careers
March 17, 2008 by Michael Hoban · 7 Comments
Here are the 25 right fielders who had the best careers during the 20 th century (as measured by the NEWS HOF Gauge).
For a right fielder, a NEWS score of 280 is required to say that he has obvious
All numbers include the 2007 season.
Bold print = Hall of Famer
Italic = active player in 2007
CWS = Career Win Shares
CV=Core Value (sum of win shares for 10 best seasons)
NEWS = Career Value=CV+.25(CWS – CV)
Player | Years | CWS | CV | NEWS | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.
|
Babe Ruth | 1914-1935 | 756 | 460 | 534 |
2.
|
Hank Aaron
|
1954- 1976 | 643
|
356
|
428
|
3.
|
Mel Ott | 1926-1947 | 528 | 335 | 383 |
4.
|
Frank Robinson | 1956-1976 | 519 | 316 | 367 |
5.
|
Sam Crawford | 1899-1917 | 446 | 303 | 339 |
6.
|
Paul Waner | 1926-1945 | 423 | 304 | 334 |
7.
|
Reggie Jackson | 1967-1987 | 444 | 296 | 333 |
8.
|
Al Kaline | 1953-1974 | 443 | 268 | 312 |
9.
|
Dave Winfield | 1973-1995 | 415 | 259 | 298 |
10.
|
Roberto Clemente | 1955-1972 | 377 | 269 | 296 |
11.
|
Tony Gwynn | 1982-2001 | 398 | 269 | 294 |
12.
|
Harry Heilmann | 1914-1932 | 356 | 267 | 289 |
13.
|
Elmer Flick | 1898-1910 | 291 | 280 | 283 |
With the election of Tony Gwynn in 2007, all fourteen of the right fielders who have obvious
Note the balance of era within this group.Six of the right fielders played during the first half of the 20th century and eight of them during the second half.And in looking at this list of outstanding right fielders, I assume that the least well known of the group would be three of those who played early in the century: Sam Crawford, Elmer Flick and Harry Heilmann.
Here are the other twelve players who round out the top 25 right fielders with the best careers.
Player | CWS | CV | NEWS | |
---|---|---|---|---|
14.
|
Rusty Staub | 354 | 254 | 279 |
15.
|
Bobby Bonds | 302 | 264 | 274 |
16.
|
Sammy Sosa | 325 | 255 | 273 |
17.
|
Ken Singleton | 302 | 260 | 271 |
18.
|
Reggie Smith | 325 | 250 | 269 |
19.
|
Willie Keeler | 333 | 246 | 268 |
20.
|
Dave Parker | 327 | 248 | 268 |
21.
|
Vladimir Guerrero | 274 | 264 | 267 |
22.
|
Enos Slaughter | 323 | 246 | 265 |
23.
|
Bobby Abreu | 268 | 262 | 264 |
24.
|
Jack Clark | 316 | 247 | 264 |
25.
|
Dwight Evans | 347 | 234 | 262 |
Are some of these players also legitimate Hall of Famers?That, of course, is a matter of opinion.And, of course, Guerrero and Abreu are still active and could yet achieve the 280 NEWS benchmark.
Note that Sammy Sosa, despite having more than 600 home runs, does not have obvious
Here is the next right fielder.I mention this because Andre Dawson is still on the BBWAA ballot for the Hall of Fame.
Player | CWS | CV | NEWS |
---|---|---|---|
Andre Dawson
|
340 | 234 | 261 |
Here are five right fielders who are in the Hall of Fame but who did not make it into the top 25 at the position.
Player | CWS | CV | NEWS |
---|---|---|---|
Kiki Cuyler
|
292
|
244
|
256
|
Sam Rice
|
327 | 228 | 253 |
Harry Hooper
|
321 | 221 | 246 |
Chuck Klein
|
238 | 217 | 222 |
Ross Youngs
|
206 | 206 | 206 |
As you can see, there are seven right fielders who are in the Hall of Fameand who do not have obvious
Here are a few other right fielders who have been on the BBWAA or the Veteran’s Committee ballot over the past few years and who do not appear above.
Player | CWS | CV | NEWS |
---|---|---|---|
Rocky Colavito
|
273 | 243 | 251 |
Tony Oliva
|
245 | 234 | 237 |
Jose Canseco
|
272 | 206 | 223 |
Paul O’Neill
|
259 | 201 | 216 |
Roger Maris
|
223 | 209 | 213 |
Obviously, none of these players came close to the 280 NEWS benchmark for obvious
For more information on the NEWS
Interesting. Do you have a typo on your first list? I would assume that Elmer Flick should be 282 to get over the value of 280. Also, how do you assign which field guys are listed in? I believe Andre Dawson was a Centerfielder when he came up and remained so for many years, if my memory is correct. I also looked up Rusty Staub, and while he played right in his youth, I remember him as a 1B/PH/DH type. I was amazed to see that he led the league several times in assists. Did he actually have a good arm, or was everyone running on him? Great article as usual.
John,
Nice catch on Flick. That was indeed a typo and was my fault. Mike had it right on the list he sent me, I just had a brain cramp and missed it.
As far as Dawson goes, he came up as a center fielder, but actually played more career games (in RF( 1,284) than in CF (1,027). 55% of his outfield playing time came in RF, while 44% came in CF.
John,
You may also note another typo. The second list contains twelve names – not eleven. This happened because I originally had Willie Stargell as a right fielder instead of a left fielder (which he was). He will, of course, be on the list of left fielders. (Mike Lynch caught that one for me.)
Mike
Whoops! Sorry about that. I just fixed it.
Rocky Colavito isn’t in the Hall, which I would not have guessed. Andre Dawson remains probably the best position player I’ve seen who I was old enough to remember his entire career, since Mike Schmidt came up when I was still wrestling with the idea of subtraction in elementary school. I’m still just amazed at Staub’s numbers being that high. I’m going to have to re-think some of my assumptions, because I do remember a lot of his career and just don’t think it was really HOF worthy, he never impressed me as being one of the top players in baseball. A good player, yes.
Bobby Abreu should be interesting to watch over the next few years. He was never really popular in Philadelphia despite his statistical success. I was always a fan but most in Philly were not. Now, he’s silently cleaning up in New York but playing in anonymity behind A-Rod and Jeter.
If Bobby Abreu can play five more years at his current level, I believe that he will easily post HOF numbers (perhaps in less than five years).
If he has the numbers, will playing with ARod and Jeter help him to achieve the fame that he will need to be elected to the Hall (or will it hurt him?). I really am not sure. Only time will tell.