SteveSarley wrote:
You sold me on the Minoso/HOF concept with your Irvin logic. Well played.
Nobody compared Williams' fielding to Minoso. I just don't think you should compare Williams and Brock.
Williams was better than you give him credit for.
Lastly, I think you are right about Clemente not being Mantle and Mays, but I think he is better than the guys you lump him in with.
Personally, my HOF only has about 25 ballplayers in it.
I don't know about just 25 guys, but I agree that I'd like to see it more exclusive than it is. Also, I think it's silly that the writers have set up a kind of hierarchy for the Hall wherein some of them will only vote for certain guys on the first ballot while they make other, supposedly lesser guys, wait. Either a guy is a Hall of Famer or he isn't. I'd suggest giving each player a single chance to get in five years after his career is over and that's it. That would force the writers to be more careful and likely result in a Hall of Fame with only truly elite players.
But this conversation has me thinking about why the legends of certain guys grow after their careers are over while others are diminished. With Clemente, the untimely circumstances of his death is obviously a factor. I'm not sure how old you are. I'm guessing somewhere close to my age. I remember seeing Clemente play but I was pretty young. One thing that I think has made a lasting impression on guys our age is the highlight reel from that Clemente World Series that got a lot of play during rain delays back in the seventies and early eighties. There's a lot of mythology that's grown up around him. Any discussion about where he fits is likely to include someone making a statement like, "My dad says he was the best outfielder he ever saw". As if that's any kind of objective analysis of his play. If you read old baseball magazines from Clemente's time, you'll see he wasn't regarded the way he is today. He was considered a whiner, a malcontent, and sometimes seen as a malingerer. He was sort of like Hanley Ramirez in that regard. And he was always upset that he wasn't considered the equal of Mays, Mantle, or Aaron. But there was good reason for that. He just wasn't of their caliber. But he's gotten the last laugh. In some circles he's now actually seen as greater than those guys. That's something I find utterly absurd.
On the other hand, take a guy like Stan Musial. When he was playing he was viewed as the Ted Williams of the National League. Today he is largely forgotten outside of St. Louis. And I guarantee you can find lots of guys who will tell you Clemente was a greater player. It's kind of silly, really.
Then you have a guy like Bob Gibson. He's almost like Paul Bunyan. The mere mention of his name evokes visions of quivering batters pissing their pants at the plate while he goes into his wind-up. Of course it wasn't really like that. Somehow he has grown to the point where he is largely considered greater than guys like Seaver, Marichal, and Carlton. I'm not sure what drives such viewpoints, but I suspect Tim McCarver might be a culprit.