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We Demand Justice

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  • Original_QuadO Offline
    Original_QuadO Offline
    Original_Quad
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    Some of the players you mentioned like Doby, Minnoso, and Irvin couldn’t compile stats because they spent years in the Negro leagues. But I do agree Stan should have more speed.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #5

    @eatyum said in We Demand Justice:

    Triples and stolen bases do not indicate speed. Yadier Molina stole 6 bases last year and 9 in 2017. You can be a smart base runner, you don't need speed to steal bases

    Steals are more of a "you have to want to steal" kind of stat. It's all about the players motivation, players like Doby probably could have stolen more if they wanted to. It isn't always an indication of speed

    Also I read up on the triples thing, apparently, Stan took more pride in hitting a triple then a home run, so that could also be chalked up to hussle, he loved getting triples.

    I tried to find sprint speed, but couldn't find anything, so I'm not sure where Musial gets his speed from, but I don't think looking at triples or stolen bases reflect speed either, so idk what the answer is.

    Well, hustle should factor in to a player’s speed attribute. It does for pitchers. Or should I say, LACK of hustle. We know many pitchers are fast; some are really good athletes. But when they hit, the almost never run hard to avoid injury. That’s why so many of them have such low speed ratings.

    But now that I bring up pitchers, how is it that Hal Newhouser has 43 speed and Stan The Man has 47?

    It’s criminal, I tell you!!

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  • ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #6

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    He also stole 78 bases, with a 52% stolen base success rate.

    That is a horrible SB percentage. Should have left that part out. Catchers that throw out 40% of baserunners are looked at as cannons behind home plate. The MLB avg for SB, today when it isnt a thing as much as it use to be, is still well over 70% last I looked.

    Also 78 SB for a career isnt much at all.

    Then you have to remember he has a 1 year card, not a sig or Prime card. So they cannot take his career numbers into account. Also for speed they use more actual speed metrics, not stats.

    maurice91932_PSNM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • abbyspapa_PSNA Offline
    abbyspapa_PSNA Offline
    abbyspapa_PSN
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    I thought this thread was for David Justice, now I'm just disappointed 😞

    samguenther1987_PSNS maurice91932_PSNM M 3 Replies Last reply
    12
  • maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by maurice91932_PSN
    #8

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    He also stole 78 bases, with a 52% stolen base success rate.

    That is a horrible SB percentage. Should have left that part out. Catchers that throw out 40% of baserunners are looked at as cannons behind home plate. The MLB avg for SB, today when it isnt a thing as much as it use to be, is still well over 70% last I looked.

    Also 78 SB for a career isnt much at all.

    Then you have to remember he has a 1 year card, not a sig or Prime card. So they cannot take his career numbers into account. Also for speed they use more actual speed metrics, not stats.

    Well, I wanted to be transparent. If I didn’t mention it, someone else would have brought it up.

    I gotta say, though, I thought way more people would supportive of this.

    I’m a little shocked that people don’t think hitting 177 career triples warrants more than 47 speed.

    People are arguing that triples and stolen bases aren’t an indication of speed.

    Okaaaayyyy....Then what else is SDS using to determine the speed of players from that long ago? I get we have all sorts of technology today that can track a player’s true speed (except for pitchers, apparently. They just make them all slow, even the one who played Wide Receiver at Notre Dame). But what are they using to determine a player’s speed from the 1950s and earlier?

    ChuckCLC_PSNC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • samguenther1987_PSNS Away
    samguenther1987_PSNS Away
    samguenther1987_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #9

    @abbyspapa said in We Demand Justice:

    I thought this thread was for David Justice, now I'm just disappointed 😞

    Same here, i thought the OP was demanding a David Justice card. I would have been completely on board.

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    1
  • maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #10

    @abbyspapa said in We Demand Justice:

    I thought this thread was for David Justice, now I'm just disappointed 😞

    Oh. Sorry....

    We demand David Justice, too!!!

    1 Reply Last reply
    5
  • raesONE_PSNR Offline
    raesONE_PSNR Offline
    raesONE_PSN
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    Upvote because you did a bunch of research. We need more of this around here.

    1 Reply Last reply
    6
  • ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by ChuckCLC_PSN
    #12

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    I’m a little shocked that people don’t think hitting 177 career triples warrants more than 47 speed.

    There were a lot of ball parks that made triples much easier back then.

    Lou Gehrig had 163 triples and 102 SB in just 17 years compared to Musials 22. And about 3000 less PA's. Gehrig at best would have 60-65 speed, but probably not even that.

    For a guy who has a card in a year he had 7 SB's it sounds about right.

    maurice91932_PSNM 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by maurice91932_PSN
    #13

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    I’m a little shocked that people don’t think hitting 177 career triples warrants more than 47 speed.

    There were a lot of ball parks that made triples much easier back then.

    Lou Gehrig had 163 triples and 102 SB in just 17 years compared to Musials 22. And about 3000 less PA's. Gehrig at best would have 60-65 speed, but probably not even that.

    For a guy who has a card in a year he had 7 SB's it sounds about right.

    Explain Rogers Hornsby’s speed.

    Also, Gehrig may have stole 102 bases, but he was caught 100 times. His speed was 64 last year.

    So Gehrig, who retired before Stan’s professional career began, presumably played in even more triple-friendly parks. And his stolen base percentage is about the same.

    Why is he so much faster than Musial?

    ChuckCLC_PSNC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #14

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    I’m a little shocked that people don’t think hitting 177 career triples warrants more than 47 speed.

    There were a lot of ball parks that made triples much easier back then.

    Lou Gehrig had 163 triples and 102 SB in just 17 years compared to Musials 22. And about 3000 less PA's. Gehrig at best would have 60-65 speed, but probably not even that.

    For a guy who has a card in a year he had 7 SB's it sounds about right.

    Explain Rogers Hornsby’s speed.

    He was fast lol. IDK, I know they have some sort of metric. They arent just going back and looking at hitting stats for speed. I am sure they had stop watches back then and people knew who were fast and who wasnt. Not saying they get this stuff 100% correct, I am sure they dont, but I am just saying I dont think they did a crime with Musials 1948 season.

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  • maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #15

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    I’m a little shocked that people don’t think hitting 177 career triples warrants more than 47 speed.

    There were a lot of ball parks that made triples much easier back then.

    Lou Gehrig had 163 triples and 102 SB in just 17 years compared to Musials 22. And about 3000 less PA's. Gehrig at best would have 60-65 speed, but probably not even that.

    For a guy who has a card in a year he had 7 SB's it sounds about right.

    So are we using stolen base numbers to determine speed or not? You argued it was some other metric—not the numbers—yet you’re justifying his low rating by citing his 7 stolen bags. Doesn’t seem fair.

    I’m not trying to fight with you or anything. I’m enjoying our conversation.

    ChuckCLC_PSNC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by ChuckCLC_PSN
    #16

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    I’m a little shocked that people don’t think hitting 177 career triples warrants more than 47 speed.

    There were a lot of ball parks that made triples much easier back then.

    Lou Gehrig had 163 triples and 102 SB in just 17 years compared to Musials 22. And about 3000 less PA's. Gehrig at best would have 60-65 speed, but probably not even that.

    For a guy who has a card in a year he had 7 SB's it sounds about right.

    So are we using stolen base numbers to determine speed or not? You argued it was some other metric—not the numbers—yet you’re justifying his low rating by citing his 7 stolen bags. Doesn’t seem fair.

    I’m not trying to fight with you or anything. I’m enjoying our conversation.

    Lol, na it is cool.

    No I said I am sure they use some other metric. There has to be some record of players speed from home plate to first base type of thing. Even in LL and HS we did those times.

    maurice91932_PSNM 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #17

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    I’m a little shocked that people don’t think hitting 177 career triples warrants more than 47 speed.

    There were a lot of ball parks that made triples much easier back then.

    Lou Gehrig had 163 triples and 102 SB in just 17 years compared to Musials 22. And about 3000 less PA's. Gehrig at best would have 60-65 speed, but probably not even that.

    For a guy who has a card in a year he had 7 SB's it sounds about right.

    So are we using stolen base numbers to determine speed or not? You argued it was some other metric—not the numbers—yet you’re justifying his low rating by citing his 7 stolen bags. Doesn’t seem fair.

    I’m not trying to fight with you or anything. I’m enjoying our conversation.

    Lol, na it is cool.

    No I said I am sure they use some other metric. There has to be some record of players speed from home plate to first base type of thing. Even in LL and HS we did those times.

    Fair enough.

    Well Devs, feel free to jump in and let us know how you are determining a player’s speed.

    Perhaps if it was a Sig card he’d be faster. But in 1948 Stan Musial was in his prime. He led the majors in triples that year. One of three years that he did so, and one in five in which he led the NL.

    I want to know why he’s a 47 when his numbers are better or equal to players who are faster than him.

    I mean, what did you use to determine that Ernie Banks and Joe Torre were both faster than Stan Musial?

    ChuckCLC_PSNC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #18

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    I want to know why he’s a 47 when his numbers are better or equal to players who are faster than him.

    Wish I could give you a real answer.

    But here is a comparison. Jeff Bagwell could swipe some bags back in his day, actually stole 30 or more a couple times. And was one of the best ever at running the bases, first to 3rd when others wouldnt, stretching singles into doubles ect. But I specifically remember him when asked about speed once saying he was only faster than 3 guys on the team. Dont remember who they were, but he was serious. If they had a foot race he admitted to being one of the slowest guys on th e team. But he was a very smart baserunner therefore could swipe bags and get the extra bases. That is why you arent gonna see Bagwell with any 80+ speed cards despite stealing a good amount of bases.

    maurice91932_PSNM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #19

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    I want to know why he’s a 47 when his numbers are better or equal to players who are faster than him.

    Wish I could give you a real answer.

    But here is a comparison. Jeff Bagwell could swipe some bags back in his day, actually stole 30 or more a couple times. And was one of the best ever at running the bases, first to 3rd when others wouldnt, stretching singles into doubles ect. But I specifically remember him when asked about speed once saying he was only faster than 3 guys on the team. Dont remember who they were, but he was serious. If they had a foot race he admitted to being one of the slowest guys on th e team. But he was a very smart baserunner therefore could swipe bags and get the extra bases. That is why you arent gonna see Bagwell with any 80+ speed cards despite stealing a good amount of bases.

    They gave Bagwell 61 speed. Not too bad. He stole over 200 bases in his career, though. Maybe he should be faster, too.

    And if he really was slow, yet his smarts enabled him to push singles into doubles and doubles into triples, surely it was those same smarts that propelled Musial to 177 career three-baggers.

    But thanks, Chuck. You’ve brought up some interesting points. I’m scratching my head even more now trying to figure out how they determine a player’s attributes, especially speed.

    ChuckCLC_PSNC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSNC Offline
    ChuckCLC_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by
    #20

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    And if he really was slow, yet his smarts enabled him to push singles into doubles and doubles into triples, surely it was those same smarts that propelled Musial to 177 career three-baggers.

    I believe that is what the "stealing" and "baserunning" attributes are for though. I am not sure what they gave Musial for that.

    maurice91932_PSNM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSNM Offline
    maurice91932_PSN
    replied to Guest on last edited by maurice91932_PSN
    #21

    @ChuckCLC said in We Demand Justice:

    @maurice91932 said in We Demand Justice:

    And if he really was slow, yet his smarts enabled him to push singles into doubles and doubles into triples, surely it was those same smarts that propelled Musial to 177 career three-baggers.

    I believe that is what the "stealing" and "baserunning" attributes are for though. I am not sure what they gave Musial for that.

    Certainly the base stealing and aggression attributes help with getting a good jump when stealing a bag. But in this game, when it comes to hitting doubles and triples, speed and the arm of the fielder is all that matters.

    IRL, I’m sure Stan took advantage of some subpar fielders whenever he could. For us users in this game, though, we usually only see canons out there. Unless the game is at Polo, Musial cannot hit a triple.

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  • wingspan1985_PSNW Offline
    wingspan1985_PSNW Offline
    wingspan1985_PSN
    wrote on last edited by
    #22

    I too thought this was a David Justice petition, which I endorse fully. I'd take a faster Stan too, so I agree with everything.

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  • Quint75_PSNQ Offline
    Quint75_PSNQ Offline
    Quint75_PSN
    wrote on last edited by Quint75_PSN
    #23

    Musial should be at least a 60 for speed. It really is baffling. Hell, Ruth is a 60 and he was not faster than Musial. Nor was Ted Williams. As Bill James said, Musial always left the batters’ box on a dead run. His speed in the game is insulting.

    maurice91932_PSNM 1 Reply Last reply
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