I'll post as I read it, so you can bathe in my stream of consciousness
. Full disclosure: I'm an O's fan, so I'm sure I'll be outraged by the placement of some O's greats.
Aaand right on cue: Palmer in the high 80's? Wow.
Surprised Roberto Alomar is only 73. He's arguably the best defensive 2B ever and could hit, too.
We'll see how this goes, but I'm not sure how you put the best relief pitcher in history
(Rivera
) at 67. I'd better see nothing but starting pitchers the rest of the way.
Eddie Murray? The only switch hitter ever with 3000 hits and 500 hr's? 65? Not even in the top half?
Al Kaline's name is spelled the same as the word "alkaline". Why have I never noticed that before? And why didn't his parents?
Koufax? 44? Koufax?
Sandy Koufax?
Not happy about Brooks Robinson being 43, either, but I'll chalk that up to my Baltimore bias.
At least they put Ripken ahead of Jeter. Suck it, Yankee fans.
I don't think I'd put Randy Johnson ahead of both Seaver and Carlton.
Surprised George Sisler didn't make the list at all. He held the record for hits in a season for almost 100 years.
It's kind of like those top 500 songs of all time list. It's hard to argue too strenuously about it. Should someone be #51 instead of #35? How do you compare a pitcher from the 30's to a shortstop from today? Overall, I think they got most of the top 100 guys on the list, and you can't really argue with
(SPOILER ALERT
) The Babe being at #1.
Edited by jmk-brooklyn 2012-12-13 7:02 PM