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Can't help it...
Regardless, Babe Ruth was not HALF the hitter that Barry Bonds is!
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"Do not anticipate trouble, or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight. " -Benjamin Franklin |
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I'm not conceding that he is now either. The debate can never be decisively won, but I choose not to give a cheater and soon to be felon many kudos. Though I appreciate your opinion, I doubt you have much more than familiarity with Bonds to base it on. |
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Games AB AVG OBP 2b 3b K RBI Ruth 2503 8398 .342 .474 506 136 1330 2217 Bonds 2730 9140 .300 .442 564 77 1430 1853 hmmmm I think the stats speak for themselves. To say Ruth is half the hitter Bonds is probably not a defensible position. IMHO |
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Just where are those dang keys?! |
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1927 NEW YORK YANKEES - Pitching statistics for WS and Regular Season: SERIES STATS | REGULAR SEASON Player G ERA W-L SV CG IP H ER BB SO | W-L IP ERA WHIP SO SV +-------------------+-+------+---+--+--+----+--+--+--+---+------+---+- Wilcy Moore 2 0.84 1-0 1 1 10.7 11 1 2 2 | 19-7 213 2.28 1.15 75 13 *Herb Pennock 1 1.00 1-0 0 1 9.0 3 1 0 1 | 19-8 210 3.00 1.30 51 2 George Pipgras 1 2.00 1-0 0 1 9.0 7 2 1 2 | 10-3 166 4.11 1.35 81 Waite Hoyt 1 4.91 1-0 0 0 7.3 8 4 1 2 | 22-7 256 2.63 1.15 86 1 I'm pretty sure that Grover Cleveland Alexander and Walter "Big Train" Johnson would take exception as well. Johnson threw 100 mph +. Pitching hasn't changed much since these guys pitched. If what you said were true, everyone would have hit 714 home runs. Instead, only the Babe did, out of all the other players of his era. Look at the ERA's of the '27 Yankee pitching staff.... 3 out of 4 with ERA's at 3.00 or better. Nowdays, anything under 4.00 is considered pretty good. Bonds would fair no better in those days than he does today, and Ruth would still be the Sultan of Swat in the Bronx right now!
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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Different games . . .
I'm not sure there can ever be a valid comparison.
Ruth began his career in the dead-ball era, primarily as a pitcher. Bonds MAY HAVE taken steroids; Ruth most certainly did not. By all accounts, Ruth did nothing for conditioning. He didn't work out and he certainly did not watch what he ate. Bonds plays in a league with 16 teams (and therefore 16 parks) plus interleague games. Ruth played 7 other teams and only saw a National League club (until he finished his career with the Braves) in the World Series. Bonds never played in Forbes Field, where Ruth hit his last two home runs. Ty Cobb was quoted as saying, "No one will ever hit a baseball out of this park," when looking at Forbes. Bonds never played in the Polo Grounds, either, Connie Mack Field, etc., etc. Maybe the only valid comparison is how many HR per AB Bonds has in Yankee Stadium, Old Tiger Stadium, Wrigley Field and Fenway Park, which, I am pretty sure, are the only fields he and Ruth have both hit in, and compare Ruth's HR per AB in the same parks. Even then, you might get a decent argument, because the position of closer had not been invented when Ruth played. What I am more interested in is how Bonds would compare with Hank Aaron, or even his godfather, Willie Mays. Strikes and outs! |
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barry bonds head is the most swollen head ive ever seen, ever. ive seen quite a few fat heads in my day. |
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