Showing posts with label Joe Medwick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Medwick. Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Friday Five: Top 5 Raleigh Capitals Players

Earlier in the week I posted a card of Carl Yastrzemski that I picked up from a Carolina League All-Star set that was put out in the mid 1990s.  The card featured Yaz on the now defunct Raleigh Capitals who were an on and off again team that played in North Carolina's capital city until they shit their doors for good 1967 when they were merged with their crosstown rivals the Durham Bulls. 

The Capitals generally spent their time in the Carolina and Piedmont League, both leagues were in the lower levels in the minors.  Add in the fact that there were years were the franchise did not field a team, years where the franchise did not have an affiliation with a Major League team and the window for the Capitals to field quality talent was somewhat limited. 

While the top half of this list is loaded with talent, if I went past five players and expanded the list to say 10, there would be some really unknowns on the list.  Not the unknowns, like that guy played in 1910 and was a solid player, but unknown because the player appeared in 100 games in 1930.  Not good. 

Without further delay, the top 5 Raleigh Capitals players....


















5.  Johnny Allen - 1928 - Allen played for the Raleigh Capitals as a 23 year old pitcher on his way up to the Major Leagues.  The North Carolina native spent four years in the minors before making his debut with the Yankees in 1932.  His first few seasons spent in New York and Cleveland went very well.  In four seasons with the Yankees Allen won 50 games, including 17 as a rookie season.  The Yankees ended that season as World Champions.  Allen's first three seasons in Cleveland also were very strong as he posted a 49-19 record before his career drastically fell off during the second half of the 1938.  Allen made the All-Star that year, but was hurt during the break.  The injury was apparently reported with the same accuracy that most NHL teams, or the New England Patriots, report their injuries.  It was reported that Allen fell on a bar of soap, yet his arm was dead. 

















4. Wilbur Wood - 1960 - Wood played for the Capitals in 1960 during his first year in professional baseball.  I always think of Wood as a White Sox, but he started his career with the Red Sox.  He spent parts of four seasons in Boston and did almost nothing.  He literally never won a game for the Red Sox in four years, which was really 36 games with 8 starts.  Wood went on to have some great years for the White Sox in the early 1970s, winning twenty games four times between 1971 and 1974.  While the peak of his career was really sharp, he was a really really good pitcher for a brief time. 












3. Joe Medwick - 1951- Medwick was the star of the 1930s Cardinals Gashouse Gang teams which brought the team a World Series Championship in 1934.  He won the Triple Crown in 1937, the National League MVP in 1938, and lead the league in all sorts of offensive categories during the 1930s.  The Cardinals eventually traded to the Dodgers where his career started to fade.  Medwick bounced around between the Dodgers, Giants, Braves, and Cardinals at the end of his career.  He played his last Major League game in 1948 at the age of 36.  Medwick did not really retire at the point, but rather ended up in the Minors where he tried to revive his career.  In 1951, the 39 year old future Hall of Famer was hired to manage the Raleigh Capitals.  The team had no affiliation, so Medwick put his name in the lineup card for 60 games on a roster that filled with older local players who had been long time fixtures in the Carolina League including Duke graduate Crash Davis and Woody Fair. 

















2. Hank Greenberg - 1930 - Greenberg came through Raleigh as a 19 year old at the beginning of his career.  He played a total of 122 games for the Capitals and ended the 1930 season with a .314 average, 26 doubles, 14 triples, and 19 home runs.  Greenberg was on the Tigers by 1933 and was an offensive force with the team from the very beginning of his career.  He slashed .339/.404/.600 with 63 doubles, 26 home runs, and 139 RBIs during his first full season in 1934 helping the Tigers reach the World Series.  While his final career statistics are respectable, Greenberg served in World War II and basically lost five years of his career during the prime of his career.  In 1940, the season before he left for the war, Greenberg hit .340/.433/.670 with 50 doubles, 41 home runs, and 150 RBIs.  After World War II, he returned to baseball and put up three good season, the final with the Pirates, before calling it quits in 1947 at the age of 36.  Greenberg was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1956. 

















 1. Carl Yastrzemski - 1960 - Yaz spent his first season in professional baseball with the Capitals hitting .377/.472/.579 with 34 doubles and 15 home runs.  In 1961 Yastrzemski took over in left field for the Red Sox and spent his entire 23 year career in Boston.  He retired in 1983 with 3,419 hits, 452 home runs, 646 doubles, and 1844 RBIs.  Yaz's final career slash line was .285/.379/.462 with a Triple Crown in 1967 along with an MVP Award.  He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1989 and is considered the fourth best left fielder of all-time by Jaffe's WAR Score System behind Barry Bonds, Teddy Ballgame, and Rickey Henderson.

Friday, January 16, 2015

Friday Five: Top 5 Cardinals Left Fielders

5.  Vince Coleman 



Coleman spent six years with Cardinals from 1985 through 1990.  He was original called up to join the Cardinals to fill in for an injured Lonnie Smith, but his great play forced the Cardinals to deal Smith to the Royals in order to open up left field for Coleman.  During the 1985 Coleman hit .267/.320/.335 with a rookie record of 110 stolen bases.  He was awarded the National League Rookie of the Year and helped the Cardinals reach the playoffs that season.  While the Cardinals made it to the World Series, Coleman missed the playoffs that season after his leg got caught up in the automatic tarp at Busch Stadium.  Coleman stole 100 bases each of his first three season and would lead the National League all six seasons he played for the Cardinals.  Between September 1988 and July of 1989 he stole 50 consecutive bases breaking the old mark of 38 which was held by Davey Lopes.   He signed with the Mets after the 1990 season, but ended his Cardinals career with 628 steals.  Coleman is 6th all-time in Major League history and ended his 752 steals.  


4.  Matt Holliday 



The current left fielder ranks 4th all-time at a pretty position for the Cardinals.  Holliday has 6 years with the Cardinals under his belt and has posted a .300/.386/.505 line with 132 home runs, 201 doubles, and 519 RBIs.  He also helped the Cardinals to the 2011 World Series pennant, 2013 National League pennant, and 3 other playoff appearances for a total of 5 in six years.  Holliday is generally under appreciated player, by both Cardinals fans and non-Cardinals fans, but has been a very good and very consistent player for more than a decade.  His best season with the Cardinals probably came in 2010 when he hit .312/.390/.532 with 28 home runs, 103 RBIs, an OPS+ of 149, and a WAR of 5.2.  Holliday is still under contract with the Cardinals for two more years, but at 35 Holliday's best years are probably past him.  Still a great Cardinal.  

3.  Lou Brock 



Top 3 on my list is all Hall of Famers.  Pretty tough to put Lou Brock as the third best left fielder in Cardinals history, but I believe this is where he belongs on this list.  Brock came over to the Cardinals in a lopsided trade with the Cubs, an attempt to counter the Dodgers and Maury Wills, and immediately helped the Cardinals win the 1964 World Series.  Lou went on to spend 16 years as a Cardinals where he crossed the 3,000 hit mark and retired as the all-time stolen base leader with 938 thefts.  His best season came in 1968 when led the National League in triples, doubles, and steals and helped the team reach the 7th game of the World Series.  Brock also would set the single season mark, which has since been broken, in 1974 with 118 steals.  In all Brock led the Cardinals to two World Series titles (1964 and 1967) and a National League Crown (1968).  While Brock has a lot of hits and a lot of steals, there are not a lot of other numbers to his career stats.  While he was primarily a lead off hitter his career OBP was only .343.  Jay Jaffe rates him as the 35th best left fielder of all-time using his JAWS rating system right behind Matt Holliday.  



2.  Joe Medwick 


Medwick was a key cog on the 1930s Cardinals teams and a really underrated player in Cardinals history.  Why hasn't the team retired his number?  Medwick was a Cardinal was 11 seasons, 9 years to start his career, then 2 more at the very end.  We are mainly going to deal with the first 9.  The last two seasons totaled 95 games and just 186 plate appearances.  So, back to those first nine years.  It's not quite Albert Pujols, but it's not that far away either.  His best years with the Cardinals were probably 1936 and 1937.  In 1936 Medwick led the National League in hits (223), doubles (64), RBIs (138), while hitting .351/.387/.577.  He also had 13 triples and 18 home runs that season.  In 1937 Medwick led the NL in runs (111), hits (237), doubles (56), home runs (31), RBIs (154), batting average (.374), slugging .641), OPS (1.056), OPS+ (182), and total bases (406).  Medwick won the Triple Crown and the MVP that season and is the last National League player to accomplish the feat.    Easily one of the best offensive seasons in team history.  Medwick's numbers with the Cardinals declined after his Triple Crown run, but he still hit above .300 for the last 3 years of his good years with the club.  He spent a few years with the Dodgers and Giants and a half a year with the Braves before finishing his career back with the Cardinals.  Joe Medick was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1968.  


1.  Stan Musial 


I thought the answer was right field, but Stan actually played more games in left field than any other place on the field.  I was surprised, but if Stan is on a bunch of these countdowns nobody is really going to complain.  It's not like I put on the pitchers list (1 game) or center fielder list (331 games).  What has not been said about Stan on previous posts?  Greatest Cardinals ever, World Series winner, MVP awards, harmonicas, and just generally awesomeness as a baseball player.  If you want a rehash of the numbers, consult my first base post here, which also includes an awesome Seinfeld video with Keith Hernandez.   

106.

Blake Snell number 106 is just a red herring to make two other announcements.      Announcement #1- I have not written very often in this sp...