T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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233.1 | Both are HoFer's | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rockie Mountain Ichthyolgist | Tue Aug 15 1995 18:47 | 6 |
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No comparison. Different leagues etc. etc. Mantle with a good pair of
legs may have been able to match Mays abilites in the field. The thing
many don't know or realize, Mantle spent a great deal of time injured
limiting his ability and playing time. To have played 18 years with his
physical condition is a tribute to his heart and love for the game.
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233.2 | Mays > Mantle on a yearly basis and for a career | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | How can people live in Florida? | Wed Aug 16 1995 11:19 | 50 |
| Here's the comparison between Mantle and Mays in their full seasons in
the 50s. Note that Mays, like Ted Williams, served in Korea in 1952
and 1953. An asterisk indicates that they led the league in that
category.
1954 G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA SLG
Mantle 146 543 163 17 12 27 102 102 107* 5 .300 .525
Mays 151 565 195 33 13* 41 110 66 57 8 .345 .667*
1955 G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA SLG
Mantle 147 517 158 25 11* 37* 99 113* 97 8 .306 .611*
Mays 152 580 185 18 13* 51* 127 79 60 24 .319 .659*
1956 G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA SLG
Mantle 150 533 188 22 5 52* 130* 112 99 10 .353* .705*
Mays 152 578 171 27 8 36 84 68 65 40* .296 .557
1957 G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA SLG
Mantle 144 474 173 26 6 34 94 146* 75 16 .365 .605
Mays 152 585 195 26 20* 35 97 76 62 38* .333 .626*
1958 G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA SLG
Mantle 150 519 158 21 1 42* 97 129* 120* 18 .304 .592
Mays 152 600 208 33 11 29 96 78 56 31* .347 .583
1959 G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA SLG
Mantle 144 541 154 23 4 31 75 94 126* 21 .285 .514
Mays 151 575 180 43* 5 34 104 65 58 27* .313 .583
1960 G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA SLG
Mantle 153 527 145 17 6 40* 94 111 125* 14 .275 .558
Mays 153 595 190* 29 12 29 107 61 70 25 .319 .555
It's clear from these numbers that Mays was more productive than Mantle
in every season except for Mantle's incredible triple crown year - 1956.
Mantle had only two more good seasons, 1961 and 1964, while Mays stayed
productive throughout the decade of the 1960s.
Here are their career numbers:
G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB BA SLG
Mantle 2401 8102 2415 344 72 536 1509 1734 1710 153 .298 .557
Mays 2992 10881 3283 523 140 660 1903 1463 1526 338 .302 .557
Mays is in the top ten all-time in games, at bats, hits, home runs, and
runs batted in, while Mantle is in the top ten only in home runs.
NAZZ
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233.3 | Please | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 11:24 | 3 |
|
Got there Postseason Stats??
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233.4 | | PEAKS::WOESTEHOFF | | Wed Aug 16 1995 12:39 | 13 |
| The title of the note is Mays vs Mantle but it just as easily could be
Mays vs Mantle vs Clemente. They all played at the same time. Mays and
Mantle hit more HRs than the Clemente but Clemente was better in every
other aspect of the game including the best outfield arm that baseball has
ever seen. Mays and Mantle both played in high profile cities while Clemente
played in a small market town. So he didn't get as much exposure. Before the
60 series, casey Stengel had his scouts rank the Pirate players against
all others in the NL. He was amazed when his scouts had Clemente ranked
as the top player in almost every phase of the game. But after the 71
series, everyone knew why the people in Pittsburgh called Clemente
"The Great One".
Keith
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233.5 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | The stars might lie, but the numbers never do... | Wed Aug 16 1995 12:44 | 17 |
|
None of the Mantle vs. Mays controversy gets decided unless you decide to:
o take the numbers as they are, or
o project what Mantle would have done if he had been healthy, played longer,
etc. The only problem I have with this method is that if it's carried
to an extreme, you see great numbers out of a lot of people
That's the first difference I see in the previous replies - different criteria.
I never saw Mantle play, and only saw Mays at the very end of his career, so
I have nothing to go by but numbers. And the numbers to me show Mantle better
at his peak, and Mays more valuable to have over a career.
Didn't Bill James do something like this in the Baseball Abstract somewhere
around 1987?
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233.6 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Where is the grass greener? | Wed Aug 16 1995 12:51 | 4 |
|
IMO they were both great players and are both in the HOF. My only
regret is that I'm to young and never saw them play. Its nice watching
highlights or old games though.
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233.7 | | CAMONE::WAY | Officer on deck! | Wed Aug 16 1995 12:51 | 14 |
| And somehow I feel that when you start projecting, and analyzing, and
dissecting, you're about as accurate as they are when the predict the track
of a hurricane....
Two days ago, they thought Felix might hit New England...
For me, and I guess I'm just a simple man, the grace and beauty and power
displayed by Mays and Mantle are unique, and cannot be compared, any more than
you could say "who was better, DiMaggio, or Williams?". Both are icons of
baseball greatness....
JMHO,
'Saw
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233.8 | | WMOIS::REEVE_C | | Wed Aug 16 1995 13:09 | 3 |
| Well said, but Aaron was better than both of them.
Chris
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233.9 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Yanks are ascared to play injuns in the playoffs | Wed Aug 16 1995 13:21 | 17 |
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Again Well Said but The Babe was the best EVER!!!
I too am sorry I was not old enough to see Mays or Mantle play. I
grew up watching Pete Rose, Reggie Jackson, Thurman Munson, Roger
Clemens. All great players but probably nowhere near the Aaron
Gehrig, Ruth,Mantle and Mays of the past.
One of the reasons I am so glad I became a Yankee fan when I was 8
years old was because of all the great players in the history of that
proud franchise. I've read so much about most of them, it's like I
actually was there.
Chap
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233.10 | It was painful being a Yankee-hater in those days | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | How can people live in Florida? | Wed Aug 16 1995 16:34 | 41 |
| I saw Mantle play in person many times. I saw Mays a few times on TV,
but not nearly as much.
Mantle was the key player on a great team that during the 50s had very
little opposition. The Yankees ruled the American, and a few owners
cared little about winning and regularly sold their better players to
the wealthy Yankees for cash. Kansas City specialized in this
practice. Bob Turley, Art Ditmar, and several others came to New York
this way. Plus, they always had the best farm system, bringing up guys
like Moose Skowron, Gil McDougald, Andy Carey, to supplement the
Mantle, Maris, Berra, Kubek heart of the lineup.
The Yankees of that era were as dominent as any baseball team that ever
played. Look at their win totals in a 154 game season from 1949 to
1964. Simply incredible.
YEAR WINS FINISH
1949 97 first
1950 98 first
1951 98 first
1952 95 first
1953 99 first
1954 103 second (Cleveland as first with 111 wins)
1955 96 first
1956 97 first
1957 98 first
1958 92 first
1959 79 third (Chicago won, Cleveland was second)
1960 97 first
1961 109 first (Detroit won 101, finished 8 out)
1962 96 first
1963 104 first
1964 99 first
They had a few close races in the early 50s, but by the time I was
seriously into baseball in the mid to late 50s, the Yankees rolled to
thge pennant every season. I remember 1959 as a wonderful year, even
though the wrong Sox won, but those damn Yankees were back in my face
for five more years!
NAZZ
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233.11 | Mick in his prime could fly! | MROA::RSCHOTT | | Wed Aug 16 1995 16:54 | 9 |
| It's interesting that although Mays was the better base
runner/stealer, the Mick had much better flat out speed. I recently
read an old interview given by Mantle where he stated that Vada Pinson
of the Reds was his only contemporary player who might have been faster
than he was. Mantle's elapsed time to first from the right side of the
plate has been tied, but not broken, if I remember correctly.
Russ
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233.12 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Aug 16 1995 17:38 | 13 |
| ... but Mays had more stolen bases, probably because he could read the
pitchers better.
Mantle always had great players hitting behind him like Maris, Bower,
Peppitone and others. Mays had McCovy, Cepeda, and the Alou's but they were not
in the same league as the guys following Mantle.
In general back then the N.L. was stronger than the A.L. Remember the string
of all-star wins? Mays had to deal with some of the best pitchers that ever
played the game but the only time Mantle ever had to face the best pitchers in
the A.L. was when he was drinking beer with them after the game.
George
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233.13 | So, is O.J. really gonna walk? | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 17:55 | 24 |
| George,
Please tell me about the O.J. trial happenings and try to just
cheer on the sox.
First you say McCovey(HofF),Cepeda(deserves HoF but had drug
incident), Felipe Alou(top echelon,better than Bauer and Pepitone) and
an assortment of Harts,Kuenns, and a pretty good catcher I can't quite
recall. These were much stronger than Mantle's cast except when Maris
was hot in '60-'62 - Mantle missed the early part of '60, '61 speaks
for itself and by '62 Maris has slowed. Yes there was always Berra and
good hitters but no McCoveys or Cepedas (hell he was creaming the ball
in '73 with the sox).
Second, A.L. was behind the N.L. because it was slow to recruit the
latin and black athletes. However, it had the money and bought the
very best pitching and those pitchers like Billy Pierce went to the
N.L. and were very effective. And the Terrys and Larsens did pretty
well in the series as did Dick Donovan in '59. Mays did not face
harder pitching, probably the opposite.
You mention all star games where the dominance of N.L. really came
after Mantle's time and partly reflected an American league relaxed
attitude and the pitching oddities of the game. With very little inter-
league movement it isn't easy to prove or disprove my pitching equality
contention not vv.
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233.14 | | ERICF::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Aug 16 1995 18:12 | 23 |
| RE <<< Note 233.13 by AKOCOA::BREEN >>>
> Second, A.L. was behind the N.L. because it was slow to recruit the
> latin and black athletes. However, it had the money and bought the
> very best pitching and those pitchers like Billy Pierce went to the
> N.L. and were very effective. And the Terrys and Larsens did pretty
> well in the series as did Dick Donovan in '59.
Your argument makes no sense. You are saying that A.L. pitching was strong
because of Yankee pitching, but Mantle never had to face Terry or Larsen.
As for hitting, the Yankees always had an all-star lineup where as the
Giants had some good hitters some years but not others.
Until the early 60's Mantle always played on a team that was almost an
all-star team and was clearly the only decent team in the American League. Mays
played on a team that was a contender from time to time but only won the
Pennant twice in his career and even then in '62 it was pretty close.
And as I said before, there's no way that Mantle ever had to face guys
like Koufax, Drysdale, Spahn, or Gibson in regular season play.
George
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233.15 | Life, I don't need no stink'en life | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Wed Aug 16 1995 18:49 | 40 |
| > Your argument makes no sense. You are saying that A.L. pitching was strong
>because of Yankee pitching, but Mantle never had to face Terry or Larsen.
I said it's hard to compare because most of the A.L. pitching that
faced the National League came from New York. I took two mediocre
yankee pitchers that were very effective against the N.L to emphasize
that the Lemons, Brewers, Larys, Wynns etc were similar to the top of
the N.L. Koufax and Gibson excepted - two rare, all time HoFers. Spahn
and Drysdale had their equivelents in the A.L. and I believe the merely
good A.L. pitchers were the equal of their N.L. couterparts.
> As for hitting, the Yankees always had an all-star lineup where as the
>Giants had some good hitters some years but not others.
> Until the early 60's Mantle always played on a team that was almost an
>all-star team and was clearly the only decent team in the American League. Mays
>played on a team that was a contender from time to time but only won the
>Pennant twice in his career and even then in '62 it was pretty close.
No, the Giants had an all-star lineup from '58 - '65 with McCovey and
Cepeda unique hitting talents (Willie McCovey about '59) that no
Yankees other than Mantle came close to.
And yes with all that Talent Mays was unable to get a pennant other
than '62. '51 and '54 were different teams altogether and Mays btw
would have certainly added 60-70 homers if he hadn't been in the
service in '52,53.
So in conclusion the stats comparison is difficult because of the
difficulty of comparing pitching but is skewed because Mantle was
walked where Mays wasn't and second Mantle's .310 was the equivelent of
(I'm guessing) .325 in the N.L.
I also theorize (and please shoot statisticians that post doubles and
triples and leave out runs) that when you see high run totals alongside
high Homer totals that pitchers are willing to borrow from Peter to pay
Paul (eg, let anyone but Mantle beat them).
That final assertion, that his league opposition singled him out far
more than Mays (yes, difficult to prove) is why Mantle > Mays.
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233.16 | | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Aug 17 1995 10:56 | 6 |
| > And as I said before, there's no way that Mantle ever had to face guys
>like Koufax, Drysdale, Spahn, or Gibson in regular season play.
Yeah, but given his pretty extensive WS play, and his great success in
the WS, it's safe to say he'd have done equally well had he faced these
guys in the regular season too.
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233.17 | how many runs did the Yanks need ? | USCTR1::GARBARINO | | Thu Aug 17 1995 10:59 | 3 |
| re: SBs
How often was Mantle required to steal ?
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