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Babe Ruth

min0 lee

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It's been a while since I have posted anything about the Yankees so here goes my spam.
I found it somewhere else but it's all true.

Babe Ruth was a giant. Hank Aaron and Barry Bonds are midgets by comparison. Aaron hit 755 home runs but did it in 3,298 games with 12,364 at bats. Babe Ruth hit 714 home runs in only 2,503 games with 8,398 at bats. Aaron came to the plate 3,966 more times, the equivalent of 7 seasons.

Babe Ruth hit 714 home runs in the days when field dimensions were much longer. Fences were pulled in by the time Aaron played. By Barry Bonds' day, baseball was doing everything in its power to see that records were broken so that interest in the game was prolonged. Balls were livelier. Bats were of better quality. Pitching mounds were lower.

Bonds' use of steroids is well-documented. We have seen what steroids have done for other hitters, Mark McGuire and Rafael Palmeiro, for example.

The big difference between Babe Ruth and Barry Bonds is seen in their batting averages. Ruth was a .342 lifetime hitter. Bonds' career average is .299.

Bab Ruth is inexplicable. He did not look like an athlete. He loved the night life. Yet, he hit home runs when no one else did. His season totals were often higher than those of other clubs.

Ruth was an outstanding pitcher for several seasons, compiling a 94-46 win/loss record with an ERA of 2.28.

Babe Ruth is still the baseball player against whom all others are measured.

Babe Ruth http://www.baseball-reference.com/r/ruthba01.shtml
 
Wait....I feel his presence.....he wants to say something....give me a sign babe, what is it you want to say?

fenwayballparkev5.png
 
this thread was great until the second post.
 
HAHAHA that is pretty funny considering it is fenway!
 
It's funny you say that, the worst thing I ever witnessed in sports was seeing Boston celebrating at Yankee stadium....it really made me sick.
 
Babe who?

Dude needs to drink some Slimfast.
 
I simply cant compare players now to the old days. Athletes are much better conditioned these days. Many more pitchers throw 100+ these days. Mechanics are much better along with the hitters. As already mentioned the balls are livlier and the bats are better, but it comes with time. Players have had to adjust and if Bonds wouldve picked up a stick of 50+ ounces he may have adjusted well and been as good, who could ever say?

I am playing bad cop obviously. Hes the only Yank I ever liked!
 
Babe Ruth also has more career postseason pitching wins then Pedro if I remember right
 
ruth_5457.jpg





In a time when baseball, reeling from the 1919 Black Sox scandal, declining attendance and declining credibility, needed a revitalization, Babe Ruth's bat saved the day. The most visible, dominating, and popular athlete in American history, the Babe turned baseball on its head, sparking fan interest and excitement, and the birth of the most enduring dynasty in sports history. The Roaring Twenties were epitomized by the Yankee slugger.

Nicknames
"The Sultan of Swat," "The Bambino," "The Colossus of Clout," "The Wali of Wallop," "The Wazir of Wham," "The Maharajah of Mash," "The Rajah of Rap," "The Caliph of Clout," and "The Behemoth of Bust." He was first called "Babe" by teammates on the Baltimore Orioles, his first professional team.

Played For
Boston Red Sox (1914-1919), New York Yankees (1920-1934), Boston Braves (1935)

Managed
Ruth was offered the Tigers' managerial job after the 1933 season, but refused to give a firm answer before traveling to Hawaii for a publicity tour. When he returned, the Tigers had hired Mickey Cochrane.

Post-Season
1915 World Series, 1916 World Series, 1918 World Series, 1921 World Series, 1922 World Series, 1923 World Series, 1926 World Series, 1927 World Series, 1928 World Series, 1932 World Series

Ruth holds the record for the longest complete game victory in World Series history. In 1916, Ruth went 14 innings to defeat the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Coached
Ruth was on the sidelines as a coach for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the late 1930s. It was a publicity stunt and Babe was never given a real shot at managing the team, though he thought he would be given a chance.

World Champion?
Yes, seven times. He won three rings with the Red Sox (1915-1916, 1918), and four as a Yankee (1923, 1927-1928, 1932). Ruth hit .245 with five homers and 10 RBI in the three World Series his teams lost, and .382 with 10 homers and 23 RBI in the seven Series they won.

Ultimate Games (0-1)
1926 World Series Game Seven. Ruth was thrown out attempting to steal second base for the series' final out.

Honors
All-Star (2): 1933-1934. Ruth hit the first homer in All-Star Game history.

Stats
Career stats from baseball-reference.com

Similar Players
Are you kidding?
 
Position
Pitcher/Outfield. Ruth was a right fielder mostly, though he did play a few seasons in left early in his career.

Major League Debut: April 13, 1954

Full Bio
"He was a circus, a play and a movie, all rolled into one," said teammate Lefty Gomez. "Kids adored him, Men idolized him. Women loved him. There was something about him that made him great." Babe Ruth was more than a great baseball player, he was an American hero who became a legend and an icon. Long after his last home run, his name has come to signify greatness and strength.

Early in life it was not evident that George Herman "Babe" Ruth would be a slugger of legendary proportions. He was an awkward-looking young man from the streets of Baltimore, where he grew up in the care of his father, a saloon-kepper, and later in a boys home, after his parents gave up trying to keep him out of trouble. It was in the boys home that Ruth learned to harness his great energy and play the game of baseball. He signed with the mionor league Baltimore Orioles in 1912 and by 1914 he was in the major leagues with the Boston Red Sox, as a pitcher.

The Red Sox were the best team in the American League, and a perfect place for Ruth to learn to be a major leaguer. In 1916 he got his first chance to pitch in a World Series and made the most of his one appearance. After giving up a run in the first inning, he drove in the tying run himself, then held the Brooklyn Dodgers scoreless for the next eleven innings until his team could score the winning run. In the 1918 World Series he continued his pitching heroics, running his series record to 29 2/3 scoreless innings, a mark that stood for forty-three years.

With the talented Sox, Ruth went 18-8 in 1915, 23-12 (with a league-leading 1.75 ERA and nine shutouts) in 1916, 24-13 (2.01 ERA) in 1917, and 13-7 in 1918. He was the winningest left-handed pitcher in baseball from 1915-1917. The Red Sox won the World Series in 1915, 1916 and 1918. Ruth's pitching mark was 89-46 with the Sox, but his booming bat was too loud to be heard only every four days. Red Sox manager Ed Barrow, at the suggestion of outfielder Harry Hooper, began playing the Babe in the outfield in-between his starts.

In 1918, Ruth led the American League with 11 home runs, despite playing just 59 games as an outfielder. The next season he started just 15 games on the mound and led the loop in homers again, with an unheard of total of 29. He was gaining attention with his home run trot, rounding the bases with what one observer noted were tiny "debutante" ankles. In 1919, he played 130 games and was now an everyday player. He seemed poised to lead the Red Sox to the top of the league for years to come. But, despite Ruth's obvious value as a slugger, he was dealt to the New York Yankees prior to the 1920 season, in a deal that haunted Boston owner Harry Frazee for years to come. Over the next 15 years, Ruth would hit hundreds of homers while helping the Yankees to the World Series seven times. The Red Sox are still waiting to win another World Series title.

Crushed by his sale to the Yankees, Ruth was unsure of his future in New York. But his doubts failed to affect his performance in 1920. Ruth's 54 homers surpassed every other team in the majors except one. That same season, Ruth slugged an astonishing .847, a record that stood for more than 80 years. In 1920, the Yankees, coincidentally, became the first team to draw more than one million fans to a ballpark, more than double the attendance of any other club. As Yankee manager Miller Huggins said, "They all flock to see him," because the American fan "likes the fellow who carries the wallop."

As an encore in 1921, Ruth outdid himself, setting major league records with his totals of 59 homers, 457 total bases, 171 RBI and 177 runs scored. He had at this point in his career already hit more homers than anyone in baseball history. And he was only 26 years old. Off the field he was a superstar, the first real sports icon in American history. He did everything in a big way - he ate, he drank, he chased women, and he had a great time being "The Babe."

In 1922, Ruth's raucous ways began to catch up with him. He ignored Baseball Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis's ban on barnstorming in the off-season and traveled with his own All-Star team. For his transgression, he was suspended for 39 days, missing the start of the regular season. In May, he threw dirt in an umpire's eyes, took off after a heckler in the stands, and when the crowd booed him, he stood on the dugout roof shaking his fist and yelling, "You're all yellow!" Once again he was suspended. In September he had another run-in with a fan, and was suspended again. He sat out nearly a third of the 1922 season and still hit 25 home runs, but he wasn't himself. In the World Series, the Yankees lost to the Giants and Ruth hit just .118.

Despite the terrible 1922 campaign, Ruth's arrival in New York signaled an era of success for the Yankees. After winning 95 games in 1920, the Yankees won the pennant in 1921 and 1922. After losing the World Series twice to the Giants, the Yanks finally won their first championship in 1923 - with new Yankee Stadium as the backdrop. Fittingly, it was dubbed "The House That Ruth Built," and the Babe blasted the first homer in the new stadium. The Yankees won the pennant again in 1926, and back-to-back World Series titles in 1927-1928. Ruth was a monster in the post-season, and he hit .516 with five homers, 11 RBI, 13 runs, and a 1.097 slugging percentage in the '27 and '28 Series combined.

With the Yankees, Ruth teamed with first baseman Lou Gehrig to launch a dynasty that would dominate baseball. Starting with their first flag in 1921, the Yanks won 29 pennants in 44 years from 1921-1964. It all started with the acquisition of Ruth from the Red Sox.
 
Can imagine how many more homers he would have had had he been an a every hitter, instead of hitting every 4 days?.

I'm sure he easily would have had over 800 home runs in his career.
 
Ruth reached his apex of stardom in 1927. Ruth belted a record 60 homers and established a mark that sluggers would aim at for years to come. The rotund slugger continued to knock the ball out of the park over the next few seasons, winning his sixth straight home run title in 1931. In 1932, the Yankees won their final title with Ruth, defeating the Cubs in the World Series, which featured Babe's famous "Called Shot." For the Babe it was his seventh World Series ring.

At the tail end of his career, Babe Ruth's determination to become a major league manager prompted him to turn down an offer from the Yankees to manage their top minor league team, the Newark Bears. Instead, in the spring of 1935 he joined the worst team in the National League, the Boston Braves, as an "assistant manager" and active player, lured by unsubstantiated overtures that he might become their manager the next season. As a player he was all but finished. He reported to the team grossly overweight, which threw his timing off at the plate and made him appear a buffoon in the outfield. There was a slanting terrace in left field in Cincinnati that acted as a warning track near the concrete left-field fence. When Ruth chased fly balls near it, he would stumble, fall, or catch balls in what appeared to be self defense.

On May 25, 1935, at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, Ruth flashed his greatness one final, glorious time. That afternoon, he hit three home runs; the last one, the first ball ever to be hit completely out of that park! He crushed the ball so convincingly that the Pirate players simply stood and watched it disappear behind the stands. The crowd of 10,000 let loose a mighty roar as the old slugger hobbled around the bases. When he rounded third, the pitcher, Guy Bush, tipped his cap to the Babe, who smiled and saluted back. It was the last home run he would ever hit, number 714. At that point in baseball history, no other player had ever hit even half that many. It was a record that would stand for nearly four decades.

A week later, Ruth announced his retirement from baseball. From that time until the day he died, he waited and waited for a call from some team, any team, to become a major league manager. A call that would never come.

Ruth's achievements were remarkable. Thirteen times he drove in over 100 runs, with a high of 171 in 1921. He hit over .300 seventeen times, topping out at .393 in 1923. Twelve times he led the majors in home runs and thirteen times he led the majors in slugging. His .690 career slugging average remains the highest in history. When he retired, his 714 home runs, 2,174 runs, 2,211 RBI and his 2,056 walks ranked at the top of the all-time list.

June 13, 1948, was chosen to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of Yankee Stadium. Babe Ruth, the man who had hit the first home run in that stadium was ill with throat cancer, but was determined to be on hand. His wife and doctors kept the mortal diagnosis from him, but he knew the end was near. "The termites have got me," he told Connie Mack when Mack visited him. Surgery had stemmed the disease for a short time, but had damaged his larynx, shrinking his exuberant voice to an old man's rasp.

The clubhouse was lined with his old teammates and survivors of the 1923 team. They played a two inning exhibition game against veterans from other years. Ruth was too exhausted to take part. Friends helped him into his old uniform, which hung on his frail, thin body like a tent. It was raining that day and someone put a camel's hair coat over his shoulders. One by one, his old teammates were introduced, to booming cheers from the adoring crowd. Finally, announcer Mel Allen's voice called him to home plate. He shuddered out of his topcoat and using a bat (Bob Feller's) as a cane, walked out to home plate on the wave of a tumultuous ovation. When it subsided, he managed to croak a few words into the microphones, expressing his pride at hitting the first home run there and acknowledging the presence of some of his friends.

Soon he was back in the hospital, where he signed autographs, watched baseball on television, listened to his wife read him some of the hundreds of letters he got every day, and did his best to keep up a jovial front when visitors came to call.

Babe Ruth died of cancer at 8:01 p.m., August 16, 1948. He was only fifty-three years old. Over 100,000 fans paid their respects at Yankee Stadium, where he lay in rest. Grieving fathers held up their sons for a final look at the face of the greatest player in baseball history. Ruth's old teammates volunteered as pallbearers and the flag at Yankee Stadium flew at half-mast.
 
Many of Babe Ruth's records have been broken in the years since his playing days ended. But no one has ever come close to diminishing his legacy. His tremendous achievements and larger than life personality changed the face of the sport forever. There will never be another Babe Ruth.

Uniform #'s
#3 (1929-1935)

Transaction Data (courtesy Retrosheet.org)
Sold by Boston Red Sox to New York Yankees (January 3, 1920)

Best Season, 1920
In 1920, Ruth shattered the single season home run mark when he clubbed 54 for his new team, the Yankees. Though he would later tie or better that mark three times, he never had a better overall campaign. He hit .376, fourth best in the league; his slugging percentage was an absurd .847 - the highest total ever to that point by almost 200 percentage points. His .530 OBP was the highest in history to that point. He led the league in extra-base hits, runs, RBI, walks and total average, which was an all-time high of 1.934, or nearly two bases for every out made! His efforts brought the Yankees their first pennant.

FACTOID
On the morning of June 8, 1921, Ruth was arrested for speeding in New York City. Sitting in jail while he arranged for his release, Ruth was allowed to change into his uniform in his cell. He arrived at Yankee Stadium in time to play in New York's 4-3 victory over Cleveland.

Milestones
Collected home run #600 off George Blaeholder of the St. Louis Browns on August 21, 1931.

Hitting Streaks
Because he walked so frequently, the Babe rarely enjoyed hitting streaks of more than 10-15 games. But in 1921, one of his best seasons, he hit in 21 straight games.

Feats
Three home runs in a World Series game twice... The Babe hit 340 solo home runs, 252 two-run shots, and 98 three-run taters. He also slugged 16 Grand Slams... 51% of his homers came with a man or men on base... He hit 16 homers in extra-innings, 10 inside-the-park variety, and one as a pinch-hitter (in 1916 with the Red Sox)... 459 of his career regular season homers came against right-handed pitchers, or 64%. 219 times he blasted a circuit blow off a lefty... In six seasons with the Red Sox he hit 49 homers, 11 in Fenway Park, 38 on the road. With the Yankees in 15 seasons, he slugged 659 long blows, 334 at home, 325 on the road... Ruth hit at least one home run in 12 different ballparks... 72 times, Ruth slugged a pair of homers in a game, a major league record that still stands. He connected for three homers on May 21, 1930, with New York, and with the Braves on May 25, 1935, including the final homer of his career, off Pirate Guy Bush... His 686 home runs as an outfielder are the most by any player at any position. He hit 15 long balls as a pitcher... Collected RBI in 11 consecutive games in 1931... Stole home 10 times... Won two legs of the Triple Crown seven times (1919, 1920-1921, 1923-1924, 1926, 1928)... First player to hit three home runs in a single game in the AL and NL... 11 consecutive games with at least one extra-base hit (August 28 to September 8, 1921) the second longest streak in major league history... Holds the all-time single season record for most total bases (457 in 1921) and times reached base (375 in 1923)... Three times he had 4 extra-base hits in a game... Ruth had six five-hit games in his career... Scored five runs in a game twice... On April 20, 1926, he drove in eight runs, his career high... Collected more RBI than games played in six seasons. (1921-27-29-30-31-32).
 
Most Walk-Off Home Runs, Career
Jimmie Foxx........12
Mickey Mantle......12
Stan Musial........12
Frank Robinson.....12
Babe Ruth..........12
Tony Perez.........11
Dick Allen.........10
Harold Baines......10
Reggie Jackson.....10
Mike Schmidt.......10

"The Curse of the Bambino"
Babe Ruth may have become the greatest player in Boston Red Sox history, if not for the greed and short-sightedness of one man. In 1917 the team was purchased by H. Harrison Frazee, a high-living, hard-drinking theatrical producer who loved baseball but loved Broadway more. He saw the Red Sox as a means of financing his theatrical operations, and began selling off all of his best players to Colonel Jacob Ruppert, owner of the New York Yankees, to raise cash for a number of Broadway ventures. Ruth became victim to this practice in 1920, when Frazee sold him to Ruppert for $125,000 and the promise of a $300,000 personal loan with which to finance his plays. Fenway Park was put up as security for the loan. The Red Sox have never recovered from the loss of Ruth. They had won five of the first fifteen World Series, but would not play in another for 28 years. To this day, they have yet to win a World Series since 1918. Red Sox fans refer to this as "The Curse of The Bambino."

Credit Where Credit is Due
Most historians give the credit for Ruth's move to everyday outfield status to Boston manager Ed Barrow. In fact, the idea was first mentioned seriously by Red Sox Hall of Fame outfielder Harry Hooper, who saw the value in the Babe's bat and glove in the outfield on a regular basis. Barrows does deserve the credit for going through with the switch.

FACTOID
On May 6, 1915 Babe hit his first major league home run off Jack Warhop, who pitched, ironically enough, for the Yankees.

Babe and Lou
In 10 seasons together, Ruth and Lou Gehrig homered in the same game 72 times, and in the same inning 19 times. The two combined as teammates for 783 homers (434 for Babe, 349 for Lou), the highest total ever, until Henry Aaron and Eddie Mathews.

Grand Slams
1919 (4), 1922 (1), 1925 (1), 1926 (1), 1927 (2), 1929 (3), 1930 (1), 1931 (1), 1932 (1), 1934 (1). (16 total)

In 1927 he hit a grand slam in consecutive games, September 27th and 28th.

FACTOID
In 490 at-bats as a pitcher, Ruth hit .304 with a .504 slugging percentage. He scored 75 runs, had 34 doubles, 11 triples, 15 home runs, and drove in 73.

The Called Shot
Babe and the Yankees were back in the World Series in 1932, playing the Chicago Cubs. There was no love lost between the Babe and Chicago fans. They jeered and spat upon him and his wife as they entered and left their hotel. As the Series progressed into its third game, the stage was set for one of the most remembered events in baseball history.

In the first inning, Ruth hit a three-run homer off pitcher Charlie Root. When he came to bat again in the fifth, the crowd and the Chicago bench released a torrent of abuse upon him. Babe waved his arm and shouted something, though due to the loud noise, no one heard exactly what he said. Whether he was gesturing toward the Cubs bench, to Root or the fence beyond is anyone's guess. But what happened next is beyond doubt. On Root's next pitch, Ruth swung mightily and connected with a home run over the center field fence, farther than any home run had ever been hit at Wrigley Field. Had he really called his shot? He was evasive when questioned, responding with, "Why don't you read the papers? It's all right there."

Years later a film of the event showed that the Babe was probably not signaling to the bleachers, but rather to his tormenters ??? the Cubs bench. Nevertheless, the legend of "The Called Shot" remains.

FACTOID
When Babe Ruth hit 60 home runs in 1927, he hit 14% of all home runs in his league that year. For a player to hit 14% of all home runs today, he would have to hit over 300 home runs in one season.

Worst Stolen Base Percentage, All-Time
(Minimum 200 attempts)

Lou Gehrig... 50.2% (102-for-203)
Babe Ruth... 51.3% (123-for-240)
Greg Gagne... 52.9% (108-for-204)
Charlie Jamieson... 54.4% (131-for-241)
Pete Rose... 57.1% (198-for-347)
 
Well, you have to be a pretty good player to attempt 200 steals. Ruth was known for his hubris - he thought he was faster than he was. Gehrig was said to be quick, but for whatever reason he stole bases at a poor clip. The other three players: Gagne, Jamieson and Rose, couldn't afford to be poor base stealers as much as Babe and Lou could. Had Rose never tried to steal a single base in his career, he may have scored the 80 or so runs he needed to catch Ty Cobb on the all-time list.

Clobbered
Ruth blasted A's hurler Rube Walberg for 17 home runs in his career, one of 216 different pitchers he victimized.

Replaced
Ruth entered the Red Sox rotation in place of Ray Collins, the lefthander who had helped anchor the 1914 staff. By 1918, Ruth had begun to see action in the outfield. Previous Sox flychasers whom he took playing time from included: Chick Shorten, Tilly Walker and Jimmy Walsh. But it was really the exit of Duffy Lewis that helped open the way for Ruth to become an everyday outfielder. In New York, Ruth and Lewis met again, with the same result. The Yankee outfield in 1919 had been Lewis, Ping Bodie and Sammy Vick. In 1920 Ruth and Bob Meusel grabbed playing time, while Bodie and Lewis were relegated to fighting over the third spot. It wasn't until 1923 that the pinstripers had a three man outfield in place with Meusel, Ruth and Whitey Witt.

Replaced By
That unfortunate task fell to George Selkirk, a one-time wrestler, who decided to try his hand at baseball and found himself in the major leagues with the Yankees after Earle Combs was hurt in 1934. In 1935, after Ruth exited for Boston, Selkirk took his spot. The team didn't make it easy on him, giving him Babe's old #3 uniform number and his third spot in the lineup. Selkirk was a left-handed batter more familiar with left field than right. Longtime minor league teammate Myril Hoag battled him for the open outfield spot created by Ruth's departure, but Selkirk, nicknamed "Twinkletoes", won out. In '35, he hit .312 but slugged just 11 homers. In 1936, he upped it to 18 with 107 RBI, but the numbers were too low for a Yankee outfielder. By 1937 he was pushed out by Joe DiMaggio's arrival, and used sparingly until World War II ended his career.

Best Strength as a Player
Power

Largest Weakness as a Player
Judgement on the basepaths.
 
Didn't want to create a new thread so I thought it fit in here.

They are expected to annouce the 2008 all-star game will be held at Yankee Stadium ( the house that Ruth built) With the expectation of the new stadium being complete by 2009
 
babe ruth didnt get in the hall of fame on first ballot.
 
Cause they have Gay media who votes. And vote with biasis and stupidity.
 
Didn't want to create a new thread so I thought it fit in here.

They are expected to annouce the 2008 all-star game will be held at Yankee Stadium ( the house that Ruth built) With the expectation of the new stadium being complete by 2009
This deserves a new thread!
Anything that has to do with the Yankees and especially the Babe is headline news.
 
I heard about about this before, the thinking is they want to say goodbye to all the good memories the house of Ruth built left behind.
 
Cause they have Gay media who votes. And vote with biasis and stupidity.

i kno but w/the babe like no matter what type of biases u may have against him even if he stole ure daughters bag of fkin cheetoes that shouldnt affect ure vote...
 
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