My Top Five Favorite Cardinals Hall of Famers
October 22, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! The 2013 World Series week has officially started! This year’s contenders are the Boston Red Sox and the St. Louis Cardinals. Considering that I’ve already done a top five favorite Red Sox HoFers post, I decided that the time is right to post my top five Cards Hall of Famers of all […]
Feliz Cumpleaños a Gaylord Perry
September 14, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 1 Comment
Hey baseball fans! As some of you know, I share a birthday with no Hall of Famers. The only person who is close to becoming one is Alan Trammell. However, the people celebrating a birthday tomorrow do have a Hall of Fame birthday buddy: Gaylord Perry! Perry played with the Giants, Indians, Rangers, Padres, Yankees, Braves, Mariners, […]
Hangin’ Out with Joe Torre & Friends
July 26, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I’m back from camp and I have lots to tell. So today’s post is going to be pretty long, but it’s worth your time. While I was at camp, I was invited to go to Joe Torre‘s Safe At Home Foundation Charity Golf and Tennis Classic. I was involved in the golf portion […]
Bob Gibson’s 1968 Season Is Overrated
June 11, 2012 by Josh Robbins · 6 Comments
The 1968 MLB season featured the greatest pitching statistics in the live ball era (since 1920). However, thanks to the Factor12 (F12) Rating on 60ft6in.com, baseball fans can delve deeper into the statistical minutia and uncover the real truth. Bob Gibson 1968 F12: 22-9 / 1.12 ERA/ 0.85 WHIP / 28 CG / 13 SHO / 304.67 IP […]
El Regreso Del Bambino (The Return Of The Bambino)
September 29, 2011 by Andrés Pascual · Leave a Comment
Lo mismo da que hayan sido amarrados “pata y mano” por Bob Gibson en la Serie Mundial de 1967; que hayan desperdiciado el efecto ganador por demoralizante del “jonrón brujo” de Carlton Fisks en 1975; que a Bill Buckner lo haya “rajado como a una caña brava” un rolling fácil en el ultimo juego de […]
The Pitchers: The 4 Levels of Greatness – Part 1
September 26, 2011 by Michael Hoban · 3 Comments
In a previous series of articles, I presented the 5 Levels of Greatness for the 20th century position players who posted Hall of Fame numbers during their careers – according to the CAWS Career Gauge. We saw that there are one hundred sixteen (116) such players. In this series of articles, I will present the […]
Deviating from the Past
March 25, 2011 by John Cappello · 1 Comment
Every baseball ranking—even those based on statistics—is biased in some way. It’s what makes practically every list debatable. For instance, take a list as fundamental as “hit leaders.” As a counting stat, a player’s hit total is impacted by his place in the batting order as well as his lineup’s offensive strength, two factors that […]
Baseball Isn’t Cool?
February 16, 2011 by Terry Keshner · 3 Comments
When I saw that “GQ†was publishing an article proclaiming the “25 Coolest Athletes of All Time†I knew two guys would top the list: Joe Namath and Mario Andretti. Putting Namath on a list of cool athletes is like putting Bill Gates on a roster of rich people.  It’s just instant. No thought required. […]
Just How Good was Bert Blyleven?
January 10, 2011 by Michael Hoban · 3 Comments
Bert Blyleven is in the Hall of Fame at last!! It took fourteen years on the ballot to do it but the writers finally saw the light. This was a true victory for sabermetrics – as recognized in the following clip from the Associated Press. “The great curveballer won 287 games, threw 60 shutouts and […]
An Over-the-Shoulder Preview
October 24, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · 3 Comments
If it had been the Giants and the Yankees, the World Series would have had old world flavor and been a big television draw. Â The money lenders cannot win them all. Â Still, it will be an old fashioned World Series, one in which the very strong pitching of both teams will do much to decide […]
Sorry Albert, It’s Votto’s Time
October 11, 2010 by John Cappello · Leave a Comment
Ranking the 2010 NL MVP Candidates [Author’s note: Irony can be pretty ironic, I suppose. It’s not the first time that an MVP favorite tanked in the post-season, but Joey Votto did just that, going 1-for-10 against the Phillies as his Cincinnati Reds went three and out. It’s worthy to mention that the ballots from […]
Jim Lonborg: Coming Close
October 8, 2010 by Brendan Macgranachan · Leave a Comment
On Wednesday, Don Larsen was joined by Roy Halladay as the only two pitchers ever to throw a no-hitter during the postseason in MLB history. Back in 1967, Larsen almost had company in that group. Jim Lonborg was having a fantastic season for the Boston Red Sox. The third-year pitcher lead the American League in […]
Back to the Future: The SPORT Magazine 1969 Major League All-Stars
July 26, 2010 by Mike Lynch · 5 Comments
While going through my old magazines (again) I saw an article from the July 1964 issue of SPORT titled “A Look Into the Future: The 1969 All-Star Team” written by John Devaney. Devaney polled more than 50 big league managers, coaches, veteran players, writers and sportscasters to find the players whom they believed would be […]
Lower the Mound or Raise the Players
July 14, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · 2 Comments
The score was 1 – 0 heading into the seventh inning in last night’s All Star Game before the NL broke through for three runs. Â The low score became an issue this morning after the TV ratings were released. Â They were lower than any since 1972. Â What does it say? Â It is reminiscent of the […]
Surprising and Not-So-Surprising First Half
July 13, 2010 by Gabriel Schechter · Leave a Comment
Now that we’re on the verge of the National League’s annual humiliation in the All-Star Game, it’s time to review the first half of the 2010 season. For some teams and players it has been business as usual, with baseball’s daily smorgasbord punctuated by a number of surprises, most recently the failure of the Evil […]
All in the Cards
June 23, 2010 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Ozzie Smith, Lou Brock, Bob Gibson. Three names Cardinals fans and baseball enthusiasts know well. But those are just three of the Redbirds 42 Hall of Famers. What about Rabbit Maranville, Chick Hafey or Pud Galvin? Authors Greg Marecek and Myron Holtzman engage readers with story after story in “The Cardinals of Cooperstown.” Pick up […]
Rambling on About My Glory Days – Greatness Comes in Big and Little Sizes
March 14, 2010 by Jack Perconte · Leave a Comment
I usually get these questions from my students “Who did you play for?” or “What position did you play?” Adults usually follow up with “Who was the best pitcher you ever faced?” and “Who was the best player you ever played with or against?” I assume all former major league players get the same questions. […]
300-Win Club is Closed for Good
March 9, 2010 by Dan Schlossberg · 1 Comment
Put it in ink: the 300-game winner has gone the way of the buffalo nickel and Sunday doubleheader. The late-winter retirements of Randy Johnson and Tom Glavine mean that none of the 300-win pitchers are still active, although 10 are still alive: Steve Carlton, Roger Clemens, Greg Maddux, Phil Niekro, Gaylord Perry, Nolan Ryan, Tom […]