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Home » Categories » Recreation & Leisure » Other Recreation & Leisure » The Greatest Hitters In The History Of Baseball » Printer Friendly

The Greatest Hitters In The History Of Baseball

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Submitted Saturday, August 16, 2008
Marvin J Markus (1,889)
http://www.ThePresidentialCandidates.US
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When considering the greatest hitters in baseball history there are a few criteria that must be taken into consideration. The first criteria is peak performance. The second criteria is career performance. How long was a hitter great? And the third criteria is era.When taking into account each of these criteria I've come up with the following list of the three greatest hitters in the history of major league baseball.

It is important to note when reading this that I am not considering defensive skill when compiling this list. It's entirely about hitting. I'm also not going to give a player more credit as a hitter because they are a shortstop instead of a left fielder. I realize that when considering "replacement value" a great hitting shortstop can be more valuable than an even greater hitting left fielder but that's beyond the scope of this article.

#1 Barry Bonds - Certainly this will be a controversial pick, but it's also the obvious choice. Barry Bonds is, in fact, the greatest hitter who has ever played the game of baseball. His major competition is Ted Williams and Babe Ruth who I believe should both be somewhat marked down due to inferior competition, but even without such a mark down, Barry Bonds dominates when talking about best peak performance.

Based on OPS+, Bonds had the three greatest seasons in baseball history (2002, 2004, & 2001 - in that order.) Babe Ruth had the next best 3 seasons and Ted Williams the next best 2 seasons. Incredibly it's then Bonds at #9 (2003) and Ruth again at #10 and #11. What's that mean? The top 11 greatest hitting seasons of all time were all by these three hitters. There's no surprise then that these are the top three hitters of all time in my list.

Bonds has to be #1 though, because his peak was higher than any other peak and he did it in a much more competitive era than did Ruth or Williams.

Of course Bonds also has some great career numbers (most obviously as the all time leader in home runs, but he's also the career leader in walks & runs created) but it's his peak performance numbers that make him the greatest hitter of all time. He holds the single season record for slugging percentage, on base percentage, OPS, OPS+, walks, & home runs.

It's also worth noting that of these three great hitters, Bonds is the only one who was a great base runner (over 500 career stolen bases) and while I did make note that I am not considering defense when compiling this list, I do think it's worth pointing out as a curiosity that Bonds is also the only one of the three who was a great defensive player (not counting Babe Ruth's amazing pitching skill of course.)

#2 Babe Ruth - If you look at overall career rate stats then Babe Ruth cannot be topped. Ruth is the all time career leader in slugging percentage & OPS. He's second in career on base percentage. But I do think it's not fair to give Ruth the #1 slot only because of these career rate stats. Ruth's career rate stats were not pulled down by early poor seasons like Bonds' were. Also, as mentioned earlier, the competition during this era was just not nearly as strong.

Still, you can make a strong argument that Ruth should be #1. To get an idea of how dominant Ruth was, he lead the AL in OPS 13 of 14 seasons from 1918 to 1931. The only year he didn't lead was his injury shortened season of 1925. Bonds streak as a truly dominant hitter was shorter but even more impressive.

#3 Ted Williams - Williams .406 season in 1941 is still the last season anyone has hit over .400, over 60 years later. Williams is the all time leader in career on base percentage (.482) Ted Williams is second all time in career slugging percentage (after only Ruth.) There are many career rate stats where Williams is only behind Ruth and many single season rate stats where Williams is only behind Bonds. But the fact is, in both instances, he is behind Ruth & Bonds and while I can still see a good argument for Williams to be #1, it seems in the end he loses out to Barry Bonds & Babe Ruth. He's my choice for the 3rd greatest hitter in major league history.

Honorable Mentions: Ty Cobb, Rogers Hornsby, Lou Gehrig, Mickey Mantle, Jimmie Fox, & the best hitter currently playing: Albert Pujols.

--------

Marvin J. Markus is a contributor to the big show baseball blog which includes a store with Barry Bonds memorabilia for sale. You can also
buy MLB baseball tickets online
there.





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