MOFNY
Active member
I think BA is more universally respected. There is no OPS title, or OBP title, or XBH title, etc. Someone notices a .340 BA and probably thinks the guy is doing pretty good.
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My point is simply that BA is most necessary. While power helps when it comes with a high BA and there are players with solid BA's who do not get much press, the BA is needed. True Jeter combined it with NY, Ichiro with Japan, but you won't find a power hitter who got much hobby love without BA.bballcardkid said:The 2 go hand in hand. Your forgetting that Jeter is the face of the Yankees, Ichiro is the first Japanese superstar to make it big in America, and Tony Gwynn is a lovable teddy bear. What about guys like Derin Erstad, Todd Helton, Bill Madlock, Dave Parker, Willie McGee, Freddy Sanchez? Without the power, your not a stud. Without the average, your not a stud. You need a bit of both, but more importantly power.
Topnotchsy said:My point is simply that BA is most necessary. While power helps when it comes with a high BA and there are players with solid BA's who do not get much press, the BA is needed. True Jeter combined it with NY, Ichiro with Japan, but you won't find a power hitter who got much hobby love without BA.bballcardkid said:The 2 go hand in hand. Your forgetting that Jeter is the face of the Yankees, Ichiro is the first Japanese superstar to make it big in America, and Tony Gwynn is a lovable teddy bear. What about guys like Derin Erstad, Todd Helton, Bill Madlock, Dave Parker, Willie McGee, Freddy Sanchez? Without the power, your not a stud. Without the average, your not a stud. You need a bit of both, but more importantly power.
I agree 100% that the most popular players have a combination of factors, and that power is a significant player. All I'm saying is that BA is the stat that without it, there's basically no chance of hobby stardom (even if a guy has power, high OBP, etc. etc.)brouthercard said:I fail to see any compelling reason how you can argue that batting average is the single greatest indicator of hobby stardom. Honestly, it's popularity first, and that is driven by having good hitting numbers, home runs greatly outweighing BA.
Topnotchsy said:I agree 100% that the most popular players have a combination of factors, and that power is a significant player. All I'm saying is that BA is the stat that without it, there's basically no chance of hobby stardom (even if a guy has power, high OBP, etc. etc.)brouthercard said:I fail to see any compelling reason how you can argue that batting average is the single greatest indicator of hobby stardom. Honestly, it's popularity first, and that is driven by having good hitting numbers, home runs greatly outweighing BA.
As far as popularity, I was speaking about hitting stats so it wasn't included. "Popularity" in my mind equals "demand" when it comes to cards, so it's almost like saying an increase in demand results in increases in demand.
Disagree. Completely.Topnotchsy said:While a combination of power, batting average etc. is generally necessary for hobby super-stardom, and no single stat is enough, the only stat that IMO where a weakness pretty much precludes the possibility of hobby stardom is batting average.
Despite the fact that "chicks dig the long ball" there are tons of guys who have achieved stardom without it (Ichiro, Jeter, Gwynn etc. etc.) We can look at the all-time great homerun hitters, and it's only the ones with a reasonable batting average that get any attention. Adam Dunn, Greg Vaughn are some examples of big-time power hitters with no following. Ryan Howard plays in Phillie, is by far the best power hitter in baseball today, is outgoing and popular and won the WS last season, but his hobby popularity has dropped with his batting average. I'd even mention Grady Sizemore who is pretty popular, but is not a hobby superstar IMO because his batting average has been a bit low (despite the fact he was 30/30 last season with a great OBP.)
While there's no question that power helps, and the more positives (as far as personalyity, ballpark etc.) the better, but none is as integral IMO as batting average.
200lbhockeyplayer said:Disagree. Completely.Topnotchsy said:While a combination of power, batting average etc. is generally necessary for hobby super-stardom, and no single stat is enough, the only stat that IMO where a weakness pretty much precludes the possibility of hobby stardom is batting average.
Despite the fact that "chicks dig the long ball" there are tons of guys who have achieved stardom without it (Ichiro, Jeter, Gwynn etc. etc.) We can look at the all-time great homerun hitters, and it's only the ones with a reasonable batting average that get any attention. Adam Dunn, Greg Vaughn are some examples of big-time power hitters with no following. Ryan Howard plays in Phillie, is by far the best power hitter in baseball today, is outgoing and popular and won the WS last season, but his hobby popularity has dropped with his batting average. I'd even mention Grady Sizemore who is pretty popular, but is not a hobby superstar IMO because his batting average has been a bit low (despite the fact he was 30/30 last season with a great OBP.)
While there's no question that power helps, and the more positives (as far as personalyity, ballpark etc.) the better, but none is as integral IMO as batting average.
Based on your topic alone and the phrase "hobby stardom" along with "hitting stat" I don't think batting average is it. The three players you mentioned are completely isolated cases.
Ichiro - Ichiro was a star in Japan for 10 years before he stepped into a Mariners uniform. He is a hobby "star" due to his tremendous following in Japan.
Jeter - Jeter plays in New York and he is primarily a hobby "star" due to his location and a slew of rings as a young player.
Gwynn - Gwynn actually proves the opposite of your thought that batting average is integral. While a great player, Gwynn has never been a hobby "star." Ever.
Mark McGwire is probably the only player we need to even discuss. And while his .263 career batting average is impressive...it's those 583 home runs that made him a hobby "star."
For example, let's take a player named Johnny Prospect, he joins the big leagues and goes on a tear...hitting a .430 clip over his first 10 games, while his brother Jerry Prospect hits 5 homeruns over his first 10 games. Who are we talking about? Who is selling for more?
It isn't Johnny.
We'll have to agree to disagree I guess. The truth is that the superstar players are rarely the one's who are useful in examination, as most have many different reasons they are popular. I do agree 100% that power is something that impacts popularity heavily, all I am saying is that there is basically no one in the history of baseball who has achieved popularity without a reasonable batting average (McGwire is an exception, the only one I can think of. Obviously the result of the HR record, but a legitimate case never the less.200lbhockeyplayer said:Disagree. Completely.Topnotchsy said:While a combination of power, batting average etc. is generally necessary for hobby super-stardom, and no single stat is enough, the only stat that IMO where a weakness pretty much precludes the possibility of hobby stardom is batting average.
Despite the fact that "chicks dig the long ball" there are tons of guys who have achieved stardom without it (Ichiro, Jeter, Gwynn etc. etc.) We can look at the all-time great homerun hitters, and it's only the ones with a reasonable batting average that get any attention. Adam Dunn, Greg Vaughn are some examples of big-time power hitters with no following. Ryan Howard plays in Phillie, is by far the best power hitter in baseball today, is outgoing and popular and won the WS last season, but his hobby popularity has dropped with his batting average. I'd even mention Grady Sizemore who is pretty popular, but is not a hobby superstar IMO because his batting average has been a bit low (despite the fact he was 30/30 last season with a great OBP.)
While there's no question that power helps, and the more positives (as far as personalyity, ballpark etc.) the better, but none is as integral IMO as batting average.
Based on your topic alone and the phrase "hobby stardom" along with "hitting stat" I don't think batting average is it. The three players you mentioned are completely isolated cases.
Ichiro - Ichiro was a star in Japan for 10 years before he stepped into a Mariners uniform. He is a hobby "star" due to his tremendous following in Japan.
Jeter - Jeter plays in New York and he is primarily a hobby "star" due to his location and a slew of rings as a young player.
Gwynn - Gwynn actually proves the opposite of your thought that batting average is integral. While a great player, Gwynn has never been a hobby "star." Ever.
Mark McGwire is probably the only player we need to even discuss. And while his .263 career batting average is impressive...it's those 583 home runs that made him a hobby "star."
For example, let's take a player named Johnny Prospect, he joins the big leagues and goes on a tear...hitting a .430 clip over his first 10 games, while his brother Jerry Prospect hits 5 homeruns over his first 10 games. Who are we talking about? Who is selling for more?
It isn't Johnny.
Topnotchsy said:We'll have to agree to disagree I guess. The truth is that the superstar players are rarely the one's who are useful in examination, as most have many different reasons they are popular. I do agree 100% that power is something that impacts popularity heavily, all I am saying is that there is basically no one in the history of baseball who has achieved popularity without a reasonable batting average (McGwire is an exception, the only one I can think of. Obviously the result of the HR record, but a legitimate case never the less.200lbhockeyplayer said:Disagree. Completely.Topnotchsy said:While a combination of power, batting average etc. is generally necessary for hobby super-stardom, and no single stat is enough, the only stat that IMO where a weakness pretty much precludes the possibility of hobby stardom is batting average.
Despite the fact that "chicks dig the long ball" there are tons of guys who have achieved stardom without it (Ichiro, Jeter, Gwynn etc. etc.) We can look at the all-time great homerun hitters, and it's only the ones with a reasonable batting average that get any attention. Adam Dunn, Greg Vaughn are some examples of big-time power hitters with no following. Ryan Howard plays in Phillie, is by far the best power hitter in baseball today, is outgoing and popular and won the WS last season, but his hobby popularity has dropped with his batting average. I'd even mention Grady Sizemore who is pretty popular, but is not a hobby superstar IMO because his batting average has been a bit low (despite the fact he was 30/30 last season with a great OBP.)
While there's no question that power helps, and the more positives (as far as personalyity, ballpark etc.) the better, but none is as integral IMO as batting average.
Based on your topic alone and the phrase "hobby stardom" along with "hitting stat" I don't think batting average is it. The three players you mentioned are completely isolated cases.
Ichiro - Ichiro was a star in Japan for 10 years before he stepped into a Mariners uniform. He is a hobby "star" due to his tremendous following in Japan.
Jeter - Jeter plays in New York and he is primarily a hobby "star" due to his location and a slew of rings as a young player.
Gwynn - Gwynn actually proves the opposite of your thought that batting average is integral. While a great player, Gwynn has never been a hobby "star." Ever.
Mark McGwire is probably the only player we need to even discuss. And while his .263 career batting average is impressive...it's those 583 home runs that made him a hobby "star."
For example, let's take a player named Johnny Prospect, he joins the big leagues and goes on a tear...hitting a .430 clip over his first 10 games, while his brother Jerry Prospect hits 5 homeruns over his first 10 games. Who are we talking about? Who is selling for more?
It isn't Johnny.
Again, I am not saying that the most popular players of all time were not all homerun hitters. Simply saying that HR's without BA rarely if ever equal hobby popularity, while you do find players with high BA's and low HR totals that are popular.
Reggie Jackson was arguably the biggest star of the 70s was he not? He reached a .300 average only once in his career and it was exactly .300. His career average was a whopping .262.Topnotchsy said:We'll have to agree to disagree I guess. The truth is that the superstar players are rarely the one's who are useful in examination, as most have many different reasons they are popular. I do agree 100% that power is something that impacts popularity heavily, all I am saying is that there is basically no one in the history of baseball who has achieved popularity without a reasonable batting average (McGwire is an exception, the only one I can think of. Obviously the result of the HR record, but a legitimate case never the less.
Again, I am not saying that the most popular players of all time were not all homerun hitters. Simply saying that HR's without BA rarely if ever equal hobby popularity, while you do find players with high BA's and low HR totals that are popular.
brouthercard said:What exactly is your cutoff for low batting average, and how many home runs does a player have to hit to be considered a hobby star?
I think really you are arguing semantics. Of course you need a decent average to be a hobby star, you need a decent average to play baseball in the majors, but not everyone who has a decent average becomes a hobby star.
More players who have higher home run totals become stars than players who have decent batting averages with no home run power.
AKA Coastal said:If Pujols was a (career) .254 40HR 100RBI guy he would be put in the same boat as Carlos Pena, Adam Dunn, Russell Branyan, Andrew Jones . He needs his average just as much or than he needs his HR's to be the star he is.
brouthercard said:AKA Coastal said:If Pujols was a (career) .254 40HR 100RBI guy he would be put in the same boat as Carlos Pena, Adam Dunn, Russell Branyan, Andrew Jones . He needs his average just as much or than he needs his HR's to be the star he is.
But do you understand the point that if Pujols has his career .335 average, but only 8 homers a year, he would be in the same category as Placido Polanco. It's his home runs that make him a hobby star, not high BA.
Pujols would be a bigger star with a .270 career average and 40 home runs a year, than with a .310 career average and 8 homers a year.
AKA Coastal said:brouthercard said:[quote="AKA Coastal":tuz7cvbw]If Pujols was a (career) .254 40HR 100RBI guy he would be put in the same boat as Carlos Pena, Adam Dunn, Russell Branyan, Andrew Jones . He needs his average just as much or than he needs his HR's to be the star he is.
But do you understand the point that if Pujols has his career .335 average, but only 8 homers a year, he would be in the same category as Placido Polanco. It's his home runs that make him a hobby star, not high BA.
Pujols would be a bigger star with a .270 career average and 40 home runs a year, than with a .310 career average and 8 homers a year.
rico08 said:Basically what I've been thinking.
There is no magic statistic or variable to define hobby success and I don't think collectors are as basic as "the guy bats .310 so I'll buy his stuff."
Players are special or popular for a bevy of reasons. Some guys hustle, some are fan favorites, some are sure-fire Hall of Famers, and some are all three.