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  #1  
Old 09-28-2016, 09:24 PM
HawkFan70 HawkFan70 is offline
Ch.ris_Hel.mers
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Great looking card!
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  #2  
Old 09-28-2016, 10:17 PM
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the 'stache the 'stache is offline
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Aaron for me, hands down.

And better player? I do think Mays was the better player, but I think the margin is small.

Mays played center. Aaron right. Mays is one of the best defensive center fielders to ever play the game. He was dynamite. But Aaron was a damned good right fielder. The problem with his defensive reputation is that he played the same position, at the same time, as arguably the best right fielder to ever play the game. Aaron won three Gold Gloves between 1958 and 1960. Clemente then proceeded to win the next twelve.

Offensively, their metrics are nearly identical. For his career, Mays has a 156 OPS +. Aaron's is 155. Their career bWAR is pretty close, too, though Aaron did end up playing almost two more years worth of ball. Aaron has a 142.6 WAR. Mays is at 156.2. But he also gets a bonus to dWAR from playing a premium position (as he should). That accounts for the gap.

Base stealing? Mays stole more often, but, interestingly enough, they have nearly identical career efficiency. Mays swiped 338 bases in 441 tries, good for a 76.64% success rate. Aaron swiped 240 bases in 313 attempts, good for a 76.67% success rate. Mays gets the nod here because he went more often. But he was not a better base stealer.

And as for this stadium debate...I spent ten years attending games at Milwaukee County Stadium, and let me tell you, hitting the ball out of the park there is not as easy as some of you guys are making it. Yes, the Polo Grounds, where Mays played, was a canyon. Hitting it out of dead center field was nearly unheard of. But he left New York at age 26. The next two seasons were played at Seals Stadium. The power alley in left center was 364'. At Milwaukee County Stadium, it was 377'. Candlestick Park was ready in 1960. Mays hit 29 home runs that year, and the power alley in left was 397'. The next year, they brought the wall in, to 365'. The left field foul marker at the Stick was 335', and '320 at County Stadium. Well, 15' is a significant difference, but he benefited from the Polo Grounds and its 279' left field foul pole until he was 26, so....

And if you guys are going to bring up the wind coming from the bay in San Francisco, just stop. If you've ever spent a summer evening at County Stadium, you know the winds coming in from Lake Michigan can be pretty wicked. So, I don't buy this whole "Aaron had it easier because of where he played."

Look at their lifetime splits.

Aaron: 755 home runs. 385 home. 370 on the road.
Mays: 660 home runs. 335 home. 325 on the road.

OPS + adjusts for park factors. Their career OPS Is nearly identical. Aaron had the same career stolen base success rate. And he was a pretty good fielder.

I give Mays his due. Absolutely. But let's slow down with the "Mays was clearly the better player" spiel. It's not accurate.
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Last edited by the 'stache; 09-28-2016 at 10:23 PM.
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  #3  
Old 09-28-2016, 10:32 PM
JoeyFarino JoeyFarino is offline
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Mays was not clearly the better player and im surprised when people say that. Aaron was a beast and had nearly the same playing ability as Mays
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  #4  
Old 09-29-2016, 06:31 AM
tjenkins tjenkins is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JoeyFarino View Post
Mays was not clearly the better player and im surprised when people say that. Aaron was a beast and had nearly the same playing ability as Mays
I have a tendency to agree with this post! Hank Aaron's career major hitting stats all surpass Willie Mays. I counted Hank Aaron as playing 23 years and Mays for 21 (minus 2 years military service). I believe Mays missed part of the 1952 season and all of the 1953 when figuring average yearly stats. I think we can safely say he was a little better hitter. Mays was the better fielder and base runner but to follow the OP line of thinking Hank Aaron will always be my favorite, next to Harmon Killebrew of course!

Hank Aaron (23 yrs)
Batting Average .305 (plus 3 points)
Hits 3,771 (plus 488), yearly average 163
RBI 2,297 (plus 394), yearly average 100
HR 755 (plus 95), yearly average 33

Willie Mays (21 years)
Batting Average .302
Hits 3,283, yearly average 156
RBI 1,903, yearly average 91
HR 660, yearly average 31
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Last edited by tjenkins; 09-29-2016 at 10:52 AM.
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  #5  
Old 09-29-2016, 07:43 AM
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Rookiemonster Rookiemonster is offline
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Mays was not one of the best center fielders of all time . He was the best centerfielder of all time ! Oh wait there was no other great CF playing when he was right ? But Clemente took all the shine from Aaron ? NOWAY!

When talking about thee greatest singal player of all time Aaron is not in the debate . It's always between Ruth and Mays .


Here’s one comparison with Aaron, using the number of runs created (the old Bill James stat) per season, starting with the best season of each player’s career, going to second-best, third-best and so on.



Aaron eventually passed Mays -- but it took him 13 seasons to do it. And remember that Mays missed nearly two full seasons while in the Army early in his career; the first year he returned he won the MVP Award. The point is: When you're a tad bit better than Hank Aaron and played one of the most important defensive positions and played 150-plus games 13 consecutive seasons ...
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  #6  
Old 09-29-2016, 08:08 AM
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rats60 rats60 is offline
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Originally Posted by the 'stache View Post
Aaron for me, hands down.

And better player? I do think Mays was the better player, but I think the margin is small.

Mays played center. Aaron right. Mays is one of the best defensive center fielders to ever play the game. He was dynamite. But Aaron was a damned good right fielder. The problem with his defensive reputation is that he played the same position, at the same time, as arguably the best right fielder to ever play the game. Aaron won three Gold Gloves between 1958 and 1960. Clemente then proceeded to win the next twelve.

Offensively, their metrics are nearly identical. For his career, Mays has a 156 OPS +. Aaron's is 155. Their career bWAR is pretty close, too, though Aaron did end up playing almost two more years worth of ball. Aaron has a 142.6 WAR. Mays is at 156.2. But he also gets a bonus to dWAR from playing a premium position (as he should). That accounts for the gap.

Base stealing? Mays stole more often, but, interestingly enough, they have nearly identical career efficiency. Mays swiped 338 bases in 441 tries, good for a 76.64% success rate. Aaron swiped 240 bases in 313 attempts, good for a 76.67% success rate. Mays gets the nod here because he went more often. But he was not a better base stealer.

And as for this stadium debate...I spent ten years attending games at Milwaukee County Stadium, and let me tell you, hitting the ball out of the park there is not as easy as some of you guys are making it. Yes, the Polo Grounds, where Mays played, was a canyon. Hitting it out of dead center field was nearly unheard of. But he left New York at age 26. The next two seasons were played at Seals Stadium. The power alley in left center was 364'. At Milwaukee County Stadium, it was 377'. Candlestick Park was ready in 1960. Mays hit 29 home runs that year, and the power alley in left was 397'. The next year, they brought the wall in, to 365'. The left field foul marker at the Stick was 335', and '320 at County Stadium. Well, 15' is a significant difference, but he benefited from the Polo Grounds and its 279' left field foul pole until he was 26, so....

And if you guys are going to bring up the wind coming from the bay in San Francisco, just stop. If you've ever spent a summer evening at County Stadium, you know the winds coming in from Lake Michigan can be pretty wicked. So, I don't buy this whole "Aaron had it easier because of where he played."

Look at their lifetime splits.

Aaron: 755 home runs. 385 home. 370 on the road.
Mays: 660 home runs. 335 home. 325 on the road.

OPS + adjusts for park factors. Their career OPS Is nearly identical. Aaron had the same career stolen base success rate. And he was a pretty good fielder.

I give Mays his due. Absolutely. But let's slow down with the "Mays was clearly the better player" spiel. It's not accurate.
Aaron has a negative defensive WAR. Aaron had a good arm, but I think he was below average as a fielder. Mays' raw defensive numbers are significantly better than Aaron's even before defensive adjustments. Gold Gloves are a poor metric for defense, Derek Jeter has won Gold Gloves and he is terrible defensively. There is also no prohibition against 2 RF or 2 CF getting gold gloves, so the idea that Clemente prevented him from winning more is false.

Mays was a much better base runner. You only mention stolen bases. Mays took extra bases 63% of the time. He was arguably the best. Aaron took extra bases only 51%.

Both Candlestick and County Stadium were easy parks to hit the ball out of. Looking at the numbers, there is no advantage SF vs. Mil. Polo Grounds was an extremely easy park for HRS, but Aaron's advantage comes from his years in Atlanta. It was the easiest park to hit HRS in. Its nickname "the launching pad" was well deserved. Then the Braves moved the fences in where Aaron liked to hit the ball, the power alleys, making it even easier to hit HRs. Then after Aaron broke the HR record and Aaron was slowing down, they moved them back.
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  #7  
Old 09-29-2016, 10:42 AM
bbcard1 bbcard1 is offline
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Though it is not relevant to their skill as a player, I think Hank nearly always had the better baseball card. Both are evidently good teammates as neither was shopped as trade bait in their prime.

If I had to choose which I would take on my team, I would probably choose Mays. I always thought it astounding that he was the leadoff hitter for the 1970 all star team. He would have stolen a ton of bases in today's game and there were no holes in his game.

If I had the opportunity to have dinner with one of them, I would choose Aaron.
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