Let's compare at a glance two teams from our favorite big city (favorite until Bill DiBlasio became mayor, anyway; Bill D is affectionately referred to by writer Michael Goodwin as Mayor Putz):
A simple comparison, actually - franchise win-loss records, playoffs, world series, and Hall of Fame inductees - note that the Yanks' HOF list does not include Mr. 100%, Mariano Rivera, and Mike Mussina, both just voted in:
Mets' Win Loss Record: 4,362 - 4,732 (.480).
As you will note below, the Yanks have done better.
As you will note below, the Yanks have done better.
To pull even, the task for the Mets going forward is simple:
Win 6,013 while losing just 3,049 (.664). Like I said, simple.
Playoff Appearances: 9.....Pennants: 5.....World Series: 2
Not very close, I'm afraid, to the Yanks' staggering #'s below.
Not very close, I'm afraid, to the Yanks' staggering #'s below.
Yanks' Win Loss Record: 10,275 - 7,781 (.569)
Playoff Appearances: 54.....Pennants: 40.....World Series: 27
But let's move on to FAME. How have the two franchises done at getting their guys into the venerable Hall of Fame? Well, again, it's lopsided, but due to far more than the fact that the Mets have only been around half as long.
The Mets just don't produce and keep their Hall of Famers. Draw your own conclusions. my younger, Mets-fan-from-birth brother, Steve, puts it simply to me quite often:
"The Mets suck. We picked the wrong team."
Hopefully, going forward, he is wrong, although to any objective observer, the Mets of pre-2019 and not as good as the team the Yankees have currently assembled - because the Yanks HATE being # 2, much less # 22, a number the Mets have been close to many a time in their history. Brodie VW needs to never let up in his quest for Mets' dominance.
Let's take a look at the two teams' Hall of Famers
(info from Baseball Reference):
Year | Name | Voted By | Inducted As | Votes | % of Ballots | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Mike Piazza | 1968- | BBWAA | Player | 365.0 | 83.0% |
2015 | Pedro Martinez | 1971- | BBWAA | Player | 500.0 | 91.1% |
2014 | Tom Glavine | 1966- | BBWAA | Player | 525.0 | 91.9% |
2014 | Joe Torre | 1940- | Veterans | Manager | ||
2011 | Roberto Alomar | 1968- | BBWAA | Player | 523.0 | 90.0% |
2009 | Rickey Henderson | 1958- | BBWAA | Player | 511.0 | 94.8% |
2003 | Gary Carter | 1954-2012 | BBWAA | Player | 387.0 | 78.0% |
2003 | Eddie Murray | 1956- | BBWAA | Player | 423.0 | 85.3% |
1999 | Nolan Ryan | 1947- | BBWAA | Player | 491.0 | 98.8% |
1995 | Richie Ashburn | 1927-1997 | Veterans | Player | ||
1992 | Tom Seaver | 1944- | BBWAA | Player | 425.0 | 98.8% |
1980 | Duke Snider | 1926-2011 | BBWAA | Player | 333.0 | 86.5% |
1979 | Willie Mays | 1931- | BBWAA | Player | 409.0 | 94.7% |
1973 | Warren Spahn | 1921-2003 | BBWAA | Player | 316.0 | 83.2% |
1972 | Yogi Berra | 1925-2015 | BBWAA | Player | 339.0 | 85.6% |
1966 | Casey Stengel | 1890-1975 | Veterans | Manager |
Note that in the Mets' list, the number of players who started with the Mets and pitched a substantial length of time for them is ONE - Tom Seaver.
Year | Name | Voted By | Inducted As | Votes | % of Ballots | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Lee Smith | 1957- | Veterans | Player | ||
2017 | Tim Raines | 1959- | BBWAA | Player | 380.0 | 86.0% |
2017 | Ivan Rodriguez | 1971- | BBWAA | Player | 336.0 | 76.0% |
2015 | Randy Johnson | 1963- | BBWAA | Player | 534.0 | 97.3% |
2014 | Bobby Cox | 1941- | Veterans | Manager | ||
2014 | Joe Torre | 1940- | Veterans | Manager | ||
2009 | Joe Gordon | 1915-1978 | Veterans | Player | ||
2009 | Rickey Henderson | 1958- | BBWAA | Player | 511.0 | 94.8% |
2008 | Rich Gossage | 1951- | BBWAA | Player | 466.0 | 85.8% |
2005 | Wade Boggs | 1958- | BBWAA | Player | 474.0 | 91.9% |
2001 | Dave Winfield | 1951- | BBWAA | Player | 435.0 | 84.5% |
1997 | Phil Niekro | 1939- | BBWAA | Player | 380.0 | 80.3% |
1994 | Leo Durocher | 1905-1991 | Veterans | Manager | ||
1994 | Phil Rizzuto | 1917-2007 | Veterans | Player | ||
1993 | Reggie Jackson | 1946- | BBWAA | Player | 396.0 | 93.6% |
1991 | Tony Lazzeri | 1903-1946 | Veterans | Player | ||
1991 | Gaylord Perry | 1938- | BBWAA | Player | 342.0 | 77.2% |
1987 | Catfish Hunter | 1946-1999 | BBWAA | Player | 315.0 | 76.3% |
1985 | Enos Slaughter | 1916-2002 | Veterans | Player | ||
1981 | Johnny Mize | 1913-1993 | Veterans | Player | ||
1977 | Joe Sewell | 1898-1990 | Veterans | Player | ||
1976 | Bob Lemon | 1920-2000 | BBWAA | Player | 305.0 | 78.6% |
1975 | Bucky Harris | 1896-1977 | Veterans | Manager | ||
1974 | Whitey Ford | 1928- | BBWAA | Player | 284.0 | 77.8% |
1974 | Mickey Mantle | 1931-1995 | BBWAA | Player | 322.0 | 88.2% |
1972 | Yogi Berra | 1925-2015 | BBWAA | Player | 339.0 | 85.6% |
1972 | Lefty Gomez | 1908-1989 | Veterans | Player | ||
1970 | Earle Combs | 1899-1976 | Veterans | Player | ||
1969 | Stan Coveleski | 1889-1984 | Veterans | Player | ||
1969 | Waite Hoyt | 1899-1984 | Veterans | Player | ||
1967 | Branch Rickey | 1881-1965 | Veterans | Pioneer/Executive | ||
1967 | Red Ruffing | 1905-1986 | Run Off | Player | 266.0 | 86.9% |
1966 | Casey Stengel | 1890-1975 | Veterans | Manager | ||
1964 | Burleigh Grimes | 1893-1985 | Veterans | Player | ||
1964 | Miller Huggins | 1878-1929 | Veterans | Manager | ||
1962 | Bill McKechnie | 1886-1965 | Veterans | Manager | ||
1957 | Joe McCarthy | 1887-1978 | Veterans | Manager | ||
1955 | Home Run Baker | 1886-1963 | Veterans | Player | ||
1955 | Joe DiMaggio | 1914-1999 | BBWAA | Player | 223.0 | 88.8% |
1955 | Dazzy Vance | 1891-1961 | BBWAA | Player | 205.0 | 81.7% |
1954 | Bill Dickey | 1907-1993 | BBWAA | Player | 202.0 | 80.2% |
1952 | Paul Waner | 1903-1965 | BBWAA | Player | 195.0 | 83.3% |
1948 | Herb Pennock | 1894-1948 | BBWAA | Player | 94.0 | 77.7% |
1946 | Frank Chance | 1876-1924 | Old Timers | Player | ||
1946 | Jack Chesbro | 1874-1931 | Old Timers | Player | ||
1946 | Clark Griffith | 1869-1955 | Old Timers | Pioneer/Executive | ||
1939 | Lou Gehrig | 1903-1941 | Special Election | Player | ||
1939 | Willie Keeler | 1872-1923 | BBWAA | Player | 207.0 | 75.5% |
1936 | Babe Ruth | 1895-1948 | BBWAA | Player | 215.0 | 95.1% |
To be fair, your HOF lists should start in 1962 for both franchises since the Mets only came into existence then. I'm not quite sure how to read the dates in your lists as Wade Boggs, for example, it says 1958. That would seem to correspond to when he was born, but not not when he played.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I would try to substantiate the number of years each played for each team (or, whose cap are they wearing in the HOF). I know, for example, we lost out on Gary Carter because the Expos needed a representative.
Yanks have the upper hand, but I agree with Reese.....anything before 1962 should be removed from consideration in this context.
ReplyDeleteIt seems to boil down to dollars, doesn't it?
I think the Wade Boggs date is his birth year. I did not tinker with the schedule, in fear of messing it up :)
ReplyDeletePiazza and Carter were true Mets, though both played for a long time at their true peak with their predecessor teams.
Suffice it to say, the Yanks have had a lot more Hall of Famers, pennants and World Series wins than the Mets since 1962....I see a distinct correlation there.
Unless the Hall of Fame Committee changes its criteria, Wright won't make it.
But the Yanks will also have Jeter easily make it, and perhaps Pettite and possibly Posada. Posada had 275 homers, 1,065 RBI, and .273 in 6000 at bats. Carter, in nearly 2000 more ABs hit .262, with 324 HR and 1335 RBI.
So Posada was very comparable to Carter, just played less.
Possibly A Rod, too, of course.
Mike, dollars are a huge factor - more recently, the luck in getting Jeter and Rivera - Rivera, I heard today, was ready to go in the expansion draft to the Marlins, but just before that pick, the Rockies picked a Yanks guy and that made them hit their limit, so Rivera could not be selected. How lucky is that?
ReplyDeleteRemember also, as great as Rivera was, he never had to face the Yankees.
Listening to WFAN today, and everyone seemed to think Cone was better than Mussina, but Cone never got past year one because he only got 3.9% and you needed at least 5%!
ReplyDeleteCone ended up 194 and 126, with a 3.46 ERA and almost 2700 Ks.
His last last 3 seasons, he was 14-24, with an ERA of 5.93, and before that, he was 180-102 (.638%), with a 3.17 ERA - seems he should have made it.
Not to mention, Steinbrenner wanted to trade them both early, but then was barred.
ReplyDelete