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Showing posts with label All Time Home Grown Team vs All Time Acquired Team. Show all posts
Showing posts with label All Time Home Grown Team vs All Time Acquired Team. Show all posts

Is Mike Hampton the least popular New York baseball post season hero ever?










Usually post season glory in New York means immortality and a permanent place in the hearts of a passionate fanbase. Somehow that has eluded Mike Hampton.

He retired today. Yeah, it's the same Mike Hampton. This isn't like Mike Stanton where one retired and the Marlins got another one.

This isn't a Steve Ontiveros situation where somehow two people named Steve Ontiveros made it to the majors.

And it isn't the Mike Hampton who played in the Reds farm system in the 1990s.

The same guy who was a stud for the Astros in the 1990s hung up his spikes today. Last September I was stunned to see Hampton was still cashing a check as a member of the Diamondbacks.

So a big league career that began in 1993 with the Mariners ended in the Diamondbacks spring training camp today.

Of course he had incredible injury issues that forced him to miss two entire seasons and he famously (and expensively) flopped in Colorado. But he had a good solid career with a few terrific seasons sprinkled in there.

Along the way, he made a cameo with the 2000 Mets. The Mets sent Roger Cedeno and Octavio Dotel packing to the Astros after the 1999 season to get Hampton, who finished second to Randy Johnson in the Cy Young vote and won the Sporting News Pitcher of the Year award.

He was no slouch with the bat either, batting .311 with a .806 OPS for the Astros in 1999.

He was a free agent to be, but the Mets had a World Series run on their mind and adding Hampton to the rotation could have been just what the doctor ordered to catch the Braves.

He may not have been a Cy Young contender in 2000, but he won 15, pitched 217 2/3 innings and let up the fewest home runs per nine innings in the league.

He out pitched Andy Pettitte in a July 9th win against the Yankees.

The Mets finished a game behind Atlanta but made the playoffs as a Wild Card team. They defeated the Giants and advanced to the NLCS with revenge on their mind for their heartbreaking 1999 loss to the Braves. There would be no rematch as the Cardinals unseated the Braves.

Hampton pitched 7 shutout innings to win Game 1. Then, with the Mets up 3-1 in the series, took the ball for Game 5. The bullpen took the night off as once again, St. Louis couldn't score off of Hampton.

He went all 9 innings and the Mets won the pennant.



The image of Mike Hampton being lifted off the ground in triumph should be a cherished moment in Mets history.

Mike Hampton was awarded the NLCS Most Valuable Player Award for 2000.

He is the ONLY Mets player to win that award. (They didn't have an MVP for the 1969 and 1973 NLCS and Astros Mike Scott won the award in a losing effort for 1986.)

So he is a beloved Met, right?

At least a Met you'd give a standing ovation to, right?

When I wrote my Home Grown Vs. Acquired series a few years ago, I put Hampton on the All Time Acquired Mets Team. My rationale was I tended to honor players who had post season glory. And I didn't expect to get much flak from Met fans about honoring a guy who pitched the team into the World Series.

It was almost unanimous that I was dead wrong.
While the name calling didn't get as bad as this week's barrage from Met fans, they couldn't understand why I was heaping such praise on Mike Hampton.

"He won two games. Big deal!" One guy wrote to me.
Um, the clinching game of the League Championship Series IS a big deal! Or so I thought.

Most people thought I should have included Johan Santana based on his then one season with the Mets. (I wonder how many would still include him.)

But I have yet to hear from a Met fan who shares my praise of their lone NLCS MVP.

Perhaps it had to do with the fact that he beat the Cardinals and not the Braves that made his achievement lack any resonating emotion. (Beating Whitey Herzog's Cardinals in the 1980s would have been bigger.

Maybe it is because he pitched poorly against the Yankees in the World Series that any enthusiasm for his LCS triumph was muted.

Of course he made no friends in New York by leaving after one season and claiming his desire to go to Colorado had more to do with their school system than the fact that he got the biggest contract for any pitcher at that time in history. ($14 million a year should pay for tuition at a good private school.)

Either way it is unfortunate. For one season he pitched well for the Mets and joined a very short list of pitchers who clinched a pennant for the Mets:

Nolan Ryan, Tug McGraw, Jesse Orosco and Mike Hampton.

That should be worth some love.

As for Mike Hampton, I salute you.
16 big league seasons, a Cy Young runner up, 148 wins, 2 All Star Game appearances, a Gold Glove, a 20 win season in 1999, 5 Silver Sluggers, a post season MVP and the experience of being the pitcher who gets mobbed after a clinching game are all things to admire.

$124 million in cashed checks is something we would ALL want.

Money might not be able to buy you love from Met fans... but we here at Sully Baseball will show your greatest highlight.








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Wondering where some of my anonymous critics are now

I was reading through some old posts of mine and I checked out the Mets Home Grown vs. Acquired entry I did back in December of 2008.

For whatever reason it is my most read post ever. And had the most spirited debate in the comments section.

And I noticed something interesting. I pointed out that I felt that Billy Wagner's injury caused the Mets to overpay for Frankie Rodriguez and J. J. Putz.

And I was consistent in that analysis because I felt buyers should beware of K-Rod and I felt Putz was nothing special. Evidently not everyone agreed with me.

Well let's just say I got some nasty e mails and some anonymous posts from angry Met fans.

My favorite ones:


Anonymous said...

overpay for rodriguez and putz>....wow, you really are red sox fan cause you have no clue what you're talking about.


Anonymous said...

you have to be a putz to say they over payed for putz, and k-rod for that matter.

Anonymous said...

Now, my basic Mets' prayer has been answered: we picked up KRod and JJ,



I can't help but wonder where those critics are now.

How do you like K-Rod beating up the elderly?
Or Putz pitching so badly that the Mets gave up on him after a year.

I wonder if I still don't know what I am talking about... being a Red Sox fan and all.

Ah well... enough gloating.





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Wait... was that Mike Hampton?

















It think it is.
The middle reliever for the D'Backs who let up the go ahead sacrifice fly... the lefty out of the pen. That was Mike Hampton. The same Mike Hampton who helped pitch the Mets into the World Series and then signed with the Rockies in one of the worst contracts in baseball history.

The guy who missed nearly 3 seasons to injuries.
The guy who I put on the Mets Home Grown vs. Acquired Series and the response from Met fans was similar to if I punched a puppy.

Here he is 10 years after throwing the complete game shutout to send the Mets to the 2000 World Series.

He's still cashing a check.
OK, not as big as the ones he got from Colorado... but still. Good for him.

Did anyone else know that Mike Hampton was a middle reliever for the D'Backs? Did I just miss that press release?


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A Correction and Honoring The Moon Man














In the off season between the 2008 and 2009 seasons, I wrote my blogging Opus... The Home Grown Vs. Acquired Series.

I made 62 twenty five man rosters (with bios) for each team's best All Time Team made of only Home Grown players and another one for only players acquired from other organizations.

That's 1,550 bios written.
And forgive me, I was bound to make a mistake or two.

My rules for what makes someone acquired is simple:

If they played a single game in another organization before joining the team, he must be considered acquired.

Roberto Clemente was in the Dodgers organization before joining the Pirates.
Carl Hubbell played a handful of games in the Tigers organization before becoming a Giant. They are on the acquired club. I had to be a tight ass.

Why? I wrote 1,550 bios.

Well an anonymous reader pointed out that the great Christy Mathewson, who I had in the Home Grown Giants team, was originally a part of the Reds organization and acquired in a trade involving future Hall of Famer Amos Rusie.

The reader was right.
So I made the correction and moved Mathewson to the Acquired Team.

Now that was good news for Gary Lavelle who I put into the Home Grown bullpen... but bad news for Greg "Moon Man" Minton. I moved Johnny Antonelli to the bullpen (he DID clinch the 1954 World Series as a reliever) and put Mathewson in the Acquired Rotation.

And that left Minton as the odd man out.

So while I feel the roster is more accurate, I felt the need to honor the Moon Man here.

This is the bio that originally was in the Home Grown Roster for Minton...



GREG MINTON

The Moon-Man was an All Star in 1982 when he went 10-4 with 30 saves while posting a 1.83 ERA over 123 innings, all in relief.

He threw 270 1/3 innings without allowing a home run before hanging a pitch to John Stearns in 1982.
I bet Stearns was due.

He had 5 solid seasons before wearing down and had the bad luck of being cut just before the Giants would finally win a division title in 1987.


And here is the UPDATED AND CORRECTED ROSTER.

Enjoy... and if you have any other corrections, let me know.



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Sully Baseball salutes FOUR FRIEND'S ALL TIME ALL STAR TEAMS

There is a terrific new blog out there that has come to my attention.

It is Four Friends All Time All Star Teams.

They are creating the best roster of players and splitting them between Pre 1950 and Post 1950.

I love that as a breaking point, if for no other reason than you take the pre integration teams and post integration teams and compare them amongst their proper era.

He's doing all of the teams and so far I've loved reading about the Red Sox and Tigers rosters.

It is going to become a destination site for me and it looks like a great write up for players that don't always get praised in the blog world.

You see a lot of blogs honor Charlie Berry these days?

It is kind of similar to my Home Grown versus Acquired Series from last off season.

There are some differences. Of course I broke them up based on how they joined the team rather than eras. Also I had no time limits. You played half a season with the team? That's enough for me!

I can't imagine writing about the Red Sox and not bringing up Dave Roberts or Dave Henderson.

I can't imagine writing about the Padres without bringing up Kevin Brown or the Twins without Jack Morris.

But Four Friends have a 5 year minimum... and that means a lot of different players in his series than mine!

And it means that I am going to be looking forward to each new entry.

So check it out.

I love the internet and finding the other lunatics out there!







Sully Baseball... your go-to source for the Yawkey's racism

I have never been shy about expressing my disgust at the Yawkey family.



As a Red Sox fan, I have nothing but venom towards Tom and Jean Yawkey, the two who controlled the team from 1933 until 1992 and then kept it in the family until 2002.


They controlled it for a period of time when the Red Sox won a grand total of zero World Series and decided not to be pioneers of integration and instead kept the stench of racism (and an inferior product) hovering over the Sox until both were long dead.




And I did so again when saluted Pumpsie Green.


But a throwaway comment I made in my Home Grown vs. Acquired post for the Dodgers has given me a great moment of pride.






After praising former Dodger Dixie Walker who came to terms with his racism and was turned around by the greatness of Jackie Robinson, I talked about Reggie Smith.



I wrote:



"Well we go from Dixie Walker's eyes being opened to the wrongs of racism to Reggie Smith... a product of the Red Sox farm system.


The Red Sox had a switch hitting, power hitting All Star Gold Glove winning outfielder with speed... and they traded him.



Hmmmm. Why would the Yawkeys trade a player like that?

I wonder!



Smith became a staple in the Dodgers line up finishing in the top 5 of the MVP two times and hit three homers in a losing cause in the 1977 World Series.



If only Tom or Jean Yawkey had a Dixie Walker moment. (Then again Yawkey was the one who turned down Willie Mays.)"




Not my greatest passage... but I can never resist slamming the Yawkeys for what they did to my team all of those years.


Well friends, I checked on my Blog Tracker and evidently I've been linked to the Tom Yawkey wikipedia page!


Someone, and I swear to the ghost of Josh Gibson it wasn't me, included the following sentence in the "Charges of Racism" section of the entry.


"Even after integrating, racism was believed to play a role in moves made by the Red Sox, notably the trade of star outfielder Reggie Smith in 1973."



That sentence is footnoted and linked to the Sully Baseball - Home Grown vs. Acquired Dodgers entry.


I couldn't be more proud.


Not only will I continue to hate the Yawkey family, but I have become a reference!


Hopefully some kid will be writing a term paper on the Yawkeys and use my site as a source. It would be an honor.


(In my days we couldn't cut and paste! We had to plagiarize from the World Book!)

BOSTON RED SOX - ALL TIME HOME GROWN TEAM vs. ALL TIME ACQUIRED TEAM


OK, let's start this whole Home Grown vs. Acquired Team obsession with my team... the no longer defending World Champion Boston Red Sox.

Lots of great players have come up through the farm, and with those players developed in the Yawkey Days, they tended to be whiter than a Sarah Palin rally.

Rico Petrocelli, Mo Vaughn, Mike Greenwell, Walt Dropo, George Scott and Butch Hobson (my first favorite player) failed to make the cut.

A bunch of the players actually WON a World Series title will be in the acquired column as the Sox cobbled together a winner in 2004 the same way The Dirty Dozen was formed.


First...

THE ALL TIME HOME GROWN RED SOX TEAM



STARTING CATCHER
CARLTON FISK
Born in Vermont, raised in New Hampshire and hit the most dramatic (pre 2004) Homer in Red Sox history. Plus he had a Hall of Fame career too. If only they sent his contract in time after the 1980 season!






STARTING FIRST BASEMAN
CARL YASTRZEMSKI

Yeah he was primarily a left fielder... but let's just say that's the Red Sox deepest position.
And the first American Leaguer with 3,000 hits and 400 homers and the last triple crown winner and my grandmother's favorite player was the starting first baseman for a big chunk of his career.

It's MY list. I make the rules.




STARTING SECOND BASEMAN
BOBBY DOERR
A Hall of Famer... a perennial MVP candidate and one of The Teammates








STARTING SHORTSTOP
JOHNNY PESKY

Possibly the most loved Red Sox player in history.
The man did everything... played, coached, managed and even was a broadcaster.
Plus he gave me a baseball when I visited Red Sox spring training in 1980. And earned his 2 rings as a special advisor.
Who cares if he held onto the ball too long?




STARTING THIRD BASEMAN
WADE BOGGS

Did I ever mention that someone I know was friends with Margo Adams and tipped me and my brother about his affair a year before it became public?

Man, if only I had Sully Baseball then!
I was never the biggest Boggs fan. It seemed that most of his hits came after the 7th inning of 6-0 losses.
But he won 5 batting titles in a Red Sox uniform... which is nothing to sneeze at.




STARTING LEFT FIELDER
TED WILLIAMS

What?
Who were you expecting?
Kevin Romine?






STARTING CENTERFIELDER
FRED LYNN

Man, could you imagine what this man's career would have been if he hadn't been so injured?
How awful was that trade to the Angels?
We sent a guy off who looked like he was Hall of Fame bound for Frank Tanana, Jim Dorsey and Joe Rudi.

The Angels didn't even throw in tickets to Disneyland!!!!


STARTING RIGHT FIELDER
DWIGHT EVANS

The only player to play for the 1975, 1986, 1988 and 1990 Division Champs, had a cannon for an arm and an underrated bat.

He belongs on the list with a mustache or not. (I prefer WITH!)




STARTING DESIGNATED HITTER
JIM RICE
Hey Sabermetric Stat Geeks... you can take your OPS and shove it up your @ss!
Jim Rice was considered a top 5 MVP candidate 6 times between 1975 and 1986 (and got votes two other years).
He was the most feared right handed slugger of his era... and deserves extra credit for playing 15+ seasons under the Yawkeys!


THE STARTING ROTATION


ROGER CLEMENS

Oh you hate him NOW, Red Sox fans... but the guy won 3 Cy Young Awards for the Sox.
Probably should have won it in 1990.
And if he didn't have a bad August, he would have won it in 1988!

And he did all of that while he was still skinny.
I'm just saying.


SMOKEY JOE WOOD
For a few seasons was the equal to any pitcher of his era... including Walter Johnson and Grover Cleveland Alexander.

He went 34-5 with a 1.91 ERA for the World Champion 1912 Red Sox.
He completed 35 of his 38 starts and made 5 relief appearances over 344 innings pitched.

Think he was on a pitch count?
Later showed up in Ray Kinsella's corn field.




MEL PARNELL

Leftys aren't supposed to win in Fenway Park... but Parnell had a pair of 20+ win seasons, a pair of 18 win seasons and went 15-8 his rookie year.

Why didn't McCarthy start him in the one game playoff against Cleveland in 1948?






BRUCE HURST
Another lefty who won for the Sox.
An underrated big game pitcher, he completed 3 of his 7 post season starts.

His defection to the Padres was as devastating a loss as I remember in Red Sox history, and Hurst later said it was a mistake.




CURT SCHILLING

What is Curt Schilling doing in the home grown Red Sox you might be asking.
We all remember him being plucked from the Diamondbacks that fateful Thanksgiving.

That is true and I originally had him in the "Acquired Team" but a reader reminded me that he was indeed drafted by the Red Sox and traded away for Mike Boddicker during the 1988 pennant drive.

So technically that puts him in the home grown category... even if Ulysses had a more direct route home!

Can you imagine how baseball history would have been different if Theo didn't go have Thanksgiving with the Schillings?

He'd probably be a Yankee.
He'd probably be blathering on and on about how he loves the tradition of Yankee Stadium.
He'd probably be saying "I'm glad to be on a team of professionals like the Yankees instead of an unkempt team like the Red Sox!"

And he'd collect his rings with the 2004, 2005 and 2006 Yankees.
And his bloody sock would have been seen as an omen than the Yankees beat the Red Sox with a guy wearing a red sock.

And the Curse would be alive and well.

(Shudder.)




THE BULLPEN


JONATHAN PAPELBON
Yeah, it's early in his career to be putting him on "All Time Teams."
But seriously, historically the bullpen has been the soft underbelly of the Red Sox.
And after 3 1/2 seasons, Papelbon has been awesome, had the cockiness we want from a closer and oh yeah... clinched a World Series!

Plus he's already talking about his career in a Hall of Fame context. I like that.


DICK RADATZ

Can you imagine a bullpen closer logging in 124+ innings?
How about a closer who wins 9, then 15, then 16 then 9 games all the while saving 20+ games a year?
And doing that on crappy teams!

And imagine that pitcher having attitude and a nickname like The Monster.

That my friends was Dick Radatz.


BILL LEE
OK, this might be a reach... but he was primarily a reliever his first 4 years with the Red Sox and went 9-2 out of the pen in 1971.

Plus this gives me a chance to pitch Spaceman featuring yours truly.








ROGER MORET
An underrated lefty out of the pen, went 14-3 for the 1975 pennant winners.
Later dealt to the Braves for Tom House.

Strange that the Yawkeys would trade away a black Puerto Rican pitcher for less than his value.
Oh wait.




BOB STANLEY
It kills me that Steamer is on this list and Butch Hobson isn't.
There is probably no Red Sox I hated more than Stanley.

But his first few years were good.
Then he signed a big contract.
And got fat.
And threw the ball away in the 10th inning of game 6.
If there is ever a sign that the Red Sox have done a lousy job developing relievers, its that I HAD to include Steamer.

THE BENCH


RESERVE INFIELDER
DUSTIN PEDROIA
2 seasons in and he has an rookie of the year, possibly an MVP, a flair for the dramatic in the post season including 5 homers for a guy who looks like he could have played an Ewok.






RESERVE INFIELDER
NOMAR GARCIAPARRA

The What Ifs of his career regarding his health are as plentiful as Fred Lynn's.

He was the biggest star in Boston sports for a while and his name became a battle cry.

Only the collective respect for Johnny Pesky kept him out of the starting line up.



RESERVE OUTFIELDER
TRIS SPEAKER
Baseball purists would no doubt be horrified that I put Fred Lynn ahead of the Hall of Famer Speaker.

As I said it's MY list.
And I never saw Tris Speaker play!!!





RESERVE OUTFIELDER
DOM DIMAGGIO
OK, we wasn't as good as his brother Joe. (How many in history were?)
But he was a tremendous player in his own right...

And we need to have all the guys from the Halberstam book!







RESERVE CATCHER
RICH GEDMAN
We NEED Geddy on this list!
I've always loved Geddy. He was one of US! He was from Woo-Stah! He understood what it meant to be a Red Sox player.

And nobody's career was more ruined by mid 1980s free agent collusion than Geddy's ill advised foray into free agency after the 1986 World Series.

If only he blocked Stanley's pitch.





25th MAN
BABE RUTH

I originally had Tony Conigliaro as the 25th man and I patted myself on the back for honoring Tony C who so many people in Boston spoke of with reverence.

Then an anonymous poster on my comment board wrote "This is a joke without Ruth."

And do you know what? That poster is right.

No matter what Tony C meant... or Mo Vaughn or Youk or whomever...
Babe Ruth's very aura hung over this team for generations.

Just as a player, he did it all. He won 18 games as a pitcher in 1915 and then rattled off back to back 20 win seasons.

He set World Series pitchers records, winning all 3 of his decisions in the 1916 and 1918 World Series.

Oh yeah, he could hit too. He set a home run record in Boston as a part time pitcher part time outfielder.

And then there was the trade... the sale really.
The transaction that defined the Red Sox AND the Yankees for nearly nine decades.
Babe Ruth's name was evoked in 1946, 1948, 1949, 1967, 1972, 1975, 1978, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1995, 1998, 1999 and 2003.

When I attended a playoff game in Oakland in 2003, fans held up pictures of Babe Ruth wearing an A's cap. He had become more than a player... he had become a taunt.

It got your pal Sully exposure on HBO and made Dan Shaughnessy a mint.
And when 2004 finally came around, his name was brought up again.

Babe Ruth's effect on the Red Sox was not merely great stats.
It was metaphysical.

So thank you anonymous poster for setting me straight!




OK, you have an All Time line up, a really good rotation but the bullpen is the weak link.
Ring a bell, every Red Sox team between 1919 and 2003?


Now let's look at the other team.


THE ALL TIME ACQUIRED RED SOX TEAM

STARTING CATCHER
JASON VARITEK

Yup... The Lobster was picked up from the Mariners in the Heathcliff Slocumb trade along with Derek Lowe.
GMs get fired for less.

And if he does resign with the Red Sox, I will use this website to launch the "Call Varitek The Lobster" campaign.




STARTING FIRST BASEMAN
JIMMIE FOXX
Hey Sabermetrics guys.
Imagine a year like this...
A guy hits .349... knocks out 50 homers... throw in 33 doubles and 9 triples for a slugging percentage of .704.
And guess what? He walked 119 times only struck out 76 times.

How much drool is on your keyboard right now?
That was Jimmie Foxx in 1938 for the Red Sox.
That wasn't his best season.




STARTING SECOND BASEMAN
JERRY REMY

We forget he started his career with the Angels. But the Fall River native was had an All Star caliber career and now is the funniest announcer since Phil Rizzuto. Plus he sounds like a Red Sox fan. He IS a Red Sox fan. He's THE REM DAWG!

Plus my brother and I went to his baseball camp in the summer of 1983.



STARTING SHORTSTOP
JOE CRONIN

There are sometimes I do so much research trying to find the right unheralded player for this list that I look over someone obvious.

I had Vern Stephens here and debated sticking Orlando Cabrera in there too.

All the while I forgot a Hall of Famer who had four All Star seasons in a Red Sox uniform, later managed the team to the World Series and was the second number retired in Red Sox history.

Whoops! Sorry Joe Cronin! And thanks to the Anonymous poster who pointed out this terrific mistake!





STARTING THIRD BASEMAN
BILL MEULLER

His batting title in 2003 is reason enough to be considered. But it was his tormenting of Mariano Rivera that will make him loved for all time in Boston.

His game winning shot in the A-Rod/Varitek brawl game was great... but his base hit up the middle that sent Rivera to the ground and tied game 4 of the ALCS puts him among Boston's greats.

Not just the Red Sox... Paul Revere, John Adams, JFK, Aerosmith... EVERYONE.





STARTING LEFT FIELDER
MANNY RAMIREZ

Put the anger of how his Red Sox tenure ended away.
Remember his 5 MVP caliber seasons.
Remember his many HUGE post season hits.
Remember his World Series MVP.
Remember how NUTS he was.
Remember how funny he was.

They were 7 1/2 years we'll never forget. Let's not forget the good times folks. He was amazing.
And possibly insane.





STARTING CENTER FIELDER
JOHNNY DAMON

Oy vey. Another one every Red Sox fan hates now.
Look he wasn't faithful to the Royals... he wasn't faithful to the A's.
Hell, he wasn't faithful to his WIFE!

Why would he be faithful to us?
Just remember 4 years where he would run into a wall for the team.
Remember his two homers in game 7 at Yankee Stadium.
Remember his leadoff homer in the World Series clincher in 2004.

And remember, he looked better with the beard than clean shaven with the Yankees!

STARTING RIGHT FIELDER
JACKIE JENSEN

Stolen from the Senators after the 1953 season, became the prototype white guy power hitter for the 1950s era Red Sox.
Six straight seasons of 20 homers or more plus hitting knocking in over 100 runs in 5 of those 6 years.
The one year he didn't, he drove in 97.

Won the 1958 AL MVP.




STARTING DESIGNATED HITTER
DAVID ORTIZ
How happy is all of New England that the Twins chose to non tender Ortiz after the 2002 playoffs?
How happy is an entire region of the country that Theo was patient and saw Big Papi was a better option than Shea Hillenbrand and Jeremy Giambi and made the moves to give Ortiz playing time.

Is he the best big game player in Boston history?
Is he better than Bird, Russell, Orr or Brady?

Maybe, maybe not. But none of them will ever be as loved as Papi.



THE STARTING ROTATION

CY YOUNG

How good was Cy Young?
They named the f---ing award after him.

Great pitchers are described as Cy Young Caliber.
He is the Joseph Pulitzer of pitchers.







PEDRO MARTINEZ
Seriously... how was he NOT the MVP in 1999?
The Pedro era was the most fun and most liberating in the history of the franchise.

Here's hoping someday #45 is rightfully retired!






LEFTY GROVE

Another Hall of Famer picked up by the Sox, Grove's best years were with the A's, but he did have a 20 win season plus a few 17 win years in Fenway.









LUIS TIANT

El Tiante was cut by the Twins in spring training of 1971.
The Braves took a flier on him but cut him before he threw a pitch in Atlanta.

The Red Sox picked him up... and found an ace.
His defection to the Yankees before the 1979 season was the first "I hate the Yankees" moment of my life.





JOSH BECKETT
You know I had Tim Wakefield in this spot...
I am a Tim Wakefield fan. He's been a Red Sox for a long long time and had some highlights, low lights but has been a class act all the way.

But I could not look myself in the mirror knowing I left Beckett off the list.

He was brought in to be an ace and make up for the loss of Pedro Martinez.
He had a shaky 2006.
He had a shaky 2008 and an inconsistent playoffs.

But his 2007 was so terrific that if that is his only great year in a Red Sox uniform, then it would be enough to be on this list!

20-7 with 200+ innings and a 3.27 ERA.
And his post season where he went 4-0 with a 1.20 ERA and 35 strike outs in 30 innings.
That doesn't even factor in the bad ass quality.

Sorry Wakes.
This is Beckett's spot.


THE BULLPEN

KEITH FOULKE
Foulke was brought over to the Sox for one purpose only... clinch the last game of the World Series.
MISSION F---ING ACCOMPLISHED.

I've said a few times that he is the most underrated hero of 2004. The stability he gave the pen during the regular season was unlike anything I've seen from a Red Sox team (especially after the disastrous bullpen by committee in 2003 that made Grady gunshy to pull Pedro in the playoffs.)

He essentially sacrificed his career for the 2004 Red Sox.
He should be worshipped like a God in Boston.


HIDEKI OKAJIMA
O-Kee was brought over to the 2007 Red Sox for one reason only... to keep Daisuke Matsusaka company.
There was a grand total of ZERO expectations for Okajima.
At one point I said he should have legally changed his name to "The Other Japanese Pitcher."

But out of nowhere he became an All Star.
As late as August 8th, he had an ERA under 1.00!!!!

He faded down the stretch and Francona had the good sense to rest him where he kicked butt in the post season and had a solid 2008 playoff record as well.

And he kept Dice-K company.

LEE SMITH
In 1987 the Red Sox had a disastrous bullpen. Wes Gardner lead the team with 10 saves. They only 16 saves total as a team.
How is that possible? And they had dead weight in their pitching staff like Calvin Schraldi and Al Nipper.
The team desperately needed a closer.
I remember coming home from school to our home in Palo Alto and reading the afternoon paper (remember those) that the Red Sox had traded Al Nipper and Calvin Schraldi to the Cubs for Lee Smith.

Now this was the age when following a team not in your market without the internet required some patience. I had to wait until the 6:30 Sports Center to confirm it.

Yup, the Cubs traded an All Star Closer for two worthless arms.
The Red Sox won the division in 1988 but then dealt Smith away in 1990. Another brilliant Yawkey era "Get the non whites off the team" move.


JEFF REARDON
Lee Smith was dealt to make room for a nice white boy from Malden and a graduate of U. Mass Amherst.
But to be fair, Jeff Reardon did a solid job for the Red Sox, clinching the division title with the help of a diving catch from Tom Brunansky (who was picked up in the Lee Smith trade.)

He later went nuts when he was off of his depression medication.
But at least he has a ring!

TOM GORDON
It's easy to forget that Gordon was once such a popular and such a good pitcher for the Red Sox that Stephen King used him in the title of one of his books.

And for good measure he was so miserable AGAINST the Red Sox in the 2004 ALCS that he helped ice the pennant for his former team!





THE BENCH



RESERVE INFIELDER
VERN STEPHENS

Snatched from the Browns in a salary dump after the 1947 season, he gave the Red Sox unbelievable power from the shortstop position. His best year was 1949 when he hit 39 homers, drove in 159 with a .290 average and walked 101 times.

None of the 6 players sent to the Browns did squat. Not sure where the $310,000 the Sox sent to St. Louis was spent.




RESERVE INFIELDER
MIKE LOWELL

Remember how Mike Lowell was considered the baggage of the Josh Beckett deal?
"You want a potential stud? Well then take this $9 million a year albatross off of our hands!"

The Red Sox took him and he looked like another washed up, power mysteriously disappearing when testing started has been.

Instead he became a leader in the clubhouse, an All Star in the line up and picked up a few MVP votes along the way.

Oh yeah... he was the MVP of the 2007 World Series.

Nice baggage!


RESERVE OUTFIELDER
DAVE HENDERSON

He was brought in to be a late inning replacement for Tony Armas (a personal favorite of mine who nearly made the list.)
He almost became a goat in the 1986 ALCS when he dropped Bobby Grich's flyball over the wall. Instead his 2 strike homer saved the season and is still one of the most dramatic homers in baseball history. His 10th inning homer in game 6 of the World Series gave the Sox the lead. If that lead held, Hendu would be nothing short of a God in Boston. That title would have to wait for another Dave who was a late season pick up to be a 4th outfielder in a pennant drive.



RESERVE OUTFIELDER
DAVE ROBERTS
Oh there have been outfielders who have put up bigger numbers for the Red Sox than Dave Roberts.
Dave only played in 45 regular season games and started in only 18 games for Boston.
He started in no post season games and didn't even play in the World Series.

But his stolen base was to the ALCS what Paul Revere's ride was to the Revolutionary War.
And they should put a statue of Dave Roberts right next to Revere's.
He's that loved in Boston. And if I am forced to put Bob Stanley on this list, then I am damned if I am not going to mention Dave Roberts!!!




RESERVE CATCHER
BIRDIE TEBBETTS

Acquired from Detroit late in his career, Tebbetts put up a pair of All Star seasons for the Sox and helped them get to the verge of the World Series in both 1948 and 1949.

Unfortunately, he popped up to end the Red Sox Pennant hopes for 1949.



25TH MAN
BILL BUCKNER

There are a lot of people I could have put here.
Tim Wakefield deserves a lot of love.
Others would say Kevin Millar with his club house spirit and that walk he drew off of Rivera.
Some could say Jason Bay, or maybe Don Baylor who woke up the 1986 clubhouse.

But I'm putting Buckner on there because he got waaaaaay too much cr@p for the most overrated play in baseball history.
Again, there are two misconceptions about the error.

1) If he made the play the Red Sox would have won the World Series.
2) When the ball went through his legs, the Mets won the World Series.

Neither are true.

1) The game was already tied.
2) The win tied the series, it didn't end it.

And Buckner was a terrific player. He drove in over 100 runs for the Sox in 1985 and 1986.
He played hurt. He played with heart. And he brought a great intensity.
Who was the first off of the bench to hug Hendu after his homer?
Who flopped head first to score a key run in game 5 of the World Series?
Who jawed with Rick Aguilera in the top of the 10th inning of game 6 of the World Series?

Buckner made peace with the Red Sox and their fans on opening day 2008.
Only idiots still blame him for anything.

So do you think this is excessive praise for Bill Bucks?
Well he got excessive blame for too long. He deserves to have the pendulum swing the other way for a while.



SO WHO WOULD WIN IN A HEAD TO HEAD SERIES?

The Home Grown Red Sox would have the superior line up...
But the Acquired Red Sox have a better rotation, a better bullpen and two Dave's coming off the bench.
Not to mention Papi, Manny, Pedro, Damon, Meuller, Foulke, Lowell, Okajima, Cabrera, Wakes and The Lobster...
You know the guys who actually WON the World Series!

But guess who the home grown team has:
The Bambino!

And they are not trading him this time!!!

VERDICT: THE BABE PITCHES AND HITS THE CURSE-LESS HOME GROWN TEAM TO VICTORY

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