When you frame the question as “the greatest center fielder,” to me that means “imagine center field. Who’s playing it?” I don’t imagine Ty Cobb in center field, I imagine Mays, or maybe Mantle (or like Jas09, maybe Jim Edmonds.)
I don’t imagine Cobb in center field, I imagine him on the bases, or laying down a bunt. I imagine Babe Ruth at the plate, not in right field.
I’m no sports fan and ignored the rest of these Baseball “Who is the best …?” questions, but I knew the answer to this one! As a youth I went to only very few professional baseball games, but whenever I did, #24 was in centerfield.
Checking Wikipedia, I was surprised to see Mays’ election to the Hall of Fame was not unanimous. About this one sportswriter wrote: “If Jesus Christ were to show up with his old baseball glove, some guys wouldn’t vote for him. He dropped the cross three times, didn’t he?”
Freddie (Rookie-of-the-Year and MVP in the same year) Lynn, wasn’t included in the list, so as a dedicated Red Sox fan, I chose … Yankee, Mickey Mantle. Over Willie Mays.
I’m not really sure what I’m thinking, but I’m sticking with the Mick.
Absolutely. And if Josh Gibson was on the catchers’ list I’d have chosen him.
That’s always hard to figure out, though. I mean, I’m pretty scure Oscar Charleston was a Hall of Famer calibre ballplayer, but was he a little better than Mantle but not as good as Mays but about even with Cobb… you could just never say for sure.
Yes, after his famous over-the-shoulder catch while running towards the fence. But it’s not that uncommon when the runner thinks the ball isn’t catchable and takes off around the bases. I saw the Houston Astros beat the Montreal Expos on the last play of the game like that, only the ball was thrown from from the left field fence. Another oddity on that play: Dave Smith had come in in relief for Houston ahead by one run and with one out and a runner on first. He threw one pitch that was a few feet short of a home run, and got two outs on the play and credit for the save.
Nope. Both runners returned to their respective bases(first and second),the lead runner then tagged up and advanced to third. No play at the plate. The Catch.
Ugh! I’ve just had to readjust my worldview. In my mind, one of the amazing things about the play was that he had thrown the runner out at first base (not at home plate–I didn’t read Septimus’s post closely enough). Ignorance fought, but painfully so.
The subsequent throw after The Catch is probably what saved the inning for the Giants, as it kept the lead runner from tagging up and scoring from second on the play, so you are within your rights to hang on (at least in part) to your worldview.
In my question about Mays throwing to Home Plate, I was not referring to The Catch. (Had that happened even I’d remember it, and Mays would be polling much higher than 68% here.)
Trying to make a put-out at home plate from centerfield must be relatively common but the shortstop or 2nd baseman almost always has to receive from centerfielder and then relay to the catcher. IIRC, Mays had an arm strong and accurate enough to throw all the way to the plate; but I couldn’t remember whether he’d actually done it or not.