Buddy
Lewis (b. 1916) was a two-time All-Star who played for the
Washington Senators his entire career.
Only Ty Cobb had more hits before the age of 24 than Lewis, who had
played six seasons up to that point. He
then left baseball for three seasons in the prime of his career to serve in the
Air Force during World War II. http://fairandunbalancedblog.blogspot.com/2012/01/baseball-losses-in-2011.html
Johnny
Damon, DH/OF (2.1 WARP, Rays)—The Rays surprised many in baseball
when they opted to sign Luke Scott to a one-year, $6-million contract to
replace Damon as their designated hitter. Scott hit .220/.301/.402 with nine
home runs and .a 256 TAv in 236 plate appearances last season before undergoing
shoulder surgery. Damon had a .261/.326/.418 slash line with 16 homers and a
.284 TAv in 647 trips to the plate. Scout's take: "He can still play, and
he can still help someone. I'm really surprised the Rays didn't bring him back,
because he seemed like a good fit there. He's getting older. He's 38 and
doesn't have the home run power he used to, but he can still help and be a
productive player. It's just hard for me to believe he's going to wind up as
either a platoon player, a bench guy—or even out of baseball." http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=16004
Manny
Ramirez is one of the best right-handed hitters of his
generation. As his career hits its
twilight, you can argue either way that he does or does not have a Hall of Fame
career. On one hand, he was suspended
twice for PED usage. Once for 50 games
in 2009 with the LA Dodgers after testing positive for a female fertility drug,
and the other a 100 game ban in 2011, in which he decided to retire with the
Tampa Bay Rays. However, after sitting
out the full season, Major League Baseball has agreed to reduce the sentence to
50 games after Ramirez stated his interest in returning for the 2012
season. On the other hand, Ramirez has
accumulated 69.6 fWAR, with a career OPS+ of 154. He has hit 555 home runs in 19 seasons, is a
12-time All-Star, 9-time Silver Slugger, and finished in the top 10 of MVP
voting 9 times http://mlbreports.com/2012/02/10/manny-jays/
First, Irish players had to
display superior performance to earn regular positions. Second, they generally
were relegated to less important field positions. Regular Irish players were
also more likely to be assigned to fill in at field positions other than their
regular ones. Last, the Irish were underrepresented as managers. The evidence
also suggests fan discrimination, with the presence of Irish players positively
correlated with their cities’ Irish populations. These patterns, again with the
exception of pitcher, mirror those observed for African Americans in the first
decade or two after Jackie Robinson broke the MLB “color line” in 1947. http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/index.php/baseball-racism-the-irish-in-1880/
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