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Bill Chuck of Billy-Ball.com has a post upat the NY Times Bats Blog stacking up Jorge Posada among all the Yankee’s catchers.
The piece is basically just a list enumerating how Posada’s career offense stats stack up with the likes of Yogi Berra’s, Bill Dickey’s and Thurman Munson’s; and I’m not sure what, if any, point Chuck is trying to illuminate.
I do know that the list does reveal that for all his excellence, competitive fire and clutch hitting, Posada ain’t no Yogi or Bill Dickey. Although Posada has 41 more career HR than Dickey and basically the same number of doubles, he’s driven in 245 fewer runs. True Posada’s played 218 fewer games. But in his prime Dickey was simply more productive. Posada never had four years in a row like Dickey had from 1936-1939.
1936: .362 BA, 22 HR, 107 RBI
1937: .332 BA, 29 HR, 133 RBI
1938: .313 BA, 27 HR, 115 RBI
1939: .302 BA, 24 HR, 105 RBI
He’s no Berra either. Berra’s a three-time MVP with five 100-RBI+ seasons (to Posada’s one). And, although Posada’s been a prolific winner, with 4 rings, no one in baseball compares with Yogi’s 10 (though Dickey’s no slouch with 7).
Furthermore, as Chuck’s list makes abundantly clear Posada (beside being a passed-ball machine) has been the master of the unproductive out, striking out 1278 times in 6312 plate appearances. Posada has struck out in 20% of his career plate appearances, a remarkable rate particularly compared to Berra’s 5% and Dickey’s 4%. Furthermore, Posada is a walking double play. As Chuck notes he’s hit into 163 in his career leading the league twice.
I don’t want to bad mouth Posada. I really like him. His fiery character has been crucial to this modern Yankee dynasty and while his defense has always left something to be desired (he can thow but he can’t catch and he never blocks the plate), even at his advanced age he’s still a productive and clutch hitter. But as Posada’s career nears its end the Posada as HOFer meme has started to gain a bit of momentum. As Chuck’s list makes clear, at best Posada’s HOF credentials remain borderline. His career totals are similar to Roy Campanella’s but Campy did it in an injury shortened 10 seasons, was a 3-time MVP, and had better years in his prime (MVP years in fact) than Posada ever had.
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