Case Closed: Babe Ruth was the Best Baseball Player Ever
And Barry Bonds Isn't Even Deserving of Mention
There's still enough speculation going on to make it apparent that those who know little about the game's history can be hoodwinked into buying into the myth that even without the help of steroids-ALLEGEDLY-Barry Bonds somehow has even a tenuous claim to the honor of being mentioned as the best who ever played the game. Let's look at some stats.
This article is going to take the position that when it comes to who was the best baseball player in MLB history, there is no argument. It was Babe Ruth. Not only was he clearly the best, but Barry Bonds isn't even deserving of being mentioned in the argument.
Barry may hold on long enough to break past Babe's home run mark of 714, though it's becoming increasingly doubtful that he can pass Hank Aaron's all time mark. An argument against the Babe is that he played in the segregated era and therefore didn't really have to face the all best pitchers in the game. True enough, Ruth's numbers may well have suffered a bit had he been forced to face the likes of Satchel Paige and the other pitching greats of the time who were unfortunate enough to have been born black. However, it's equally deserving of mention that in the recent expansion era Barry Bonds has had arguably the even greater fortune of being able to face, and very often at that, pitchers who wouldn't even have made it onto the rosters of the teams in the MLB or the Negro leagues of Ruth's time. Ruth played during the days of the four man rotation, while Barry plays against a five man rotation. An extra pitcher on a league with far more teams makes it very likely that Barry Bonds has at the very least anywhere from 50 to 100 homers under his belt off pitchers that would never have made it out of the minors as little as twenty years ago, much less during the days Ruth was playing. Much talk is made of how fearsome Barry is, to the point where he's intentionally walked an inordinate number of times; he's even been intentionally walked with the bases loaded! What's left out of this conversation is the fact that most of those intentional walks have come against these very same pitchers that desperate owners are forced to use down at the bottom of the rotation. If Bonds was facing the caliber of pitchers that Ruth faced, he wouldn't be getting so many free passes.
The Babe's reputation has pretty much always rested upon his stature as the greatest power hitter of his time, but in fact George Herman Ruth was also a great hitter for average. In fact, unless Barry goes on a rampage unseen in the annals of baseball history, he stands to end up with a lifetime average thirty to forty points below Babe. That's THIRTY to FORTY points! You want to tell me how the greatest player of all time can have a lifetime average hovering around the .300 mark? If he plays long enough in order to break Aaron's record, he may just wind up below .300. He may wind up significantly below .300.
As it stands now, Bonds trails Ruth in all time numbers in the following big-time categories: home runs, hits, triples, RBIs, runs, slugging percentage, on-base-percentage, and batting average. Disregarding the averages, Bonds trails Ruth in homers, hits, triples, runs, and RBIs even though he's played in more games and had more at-bats than the Babe. And guess what?
I don't really even take that into consideration when I say that Babe Ruth is far and away the better baseball player. Because, yes, there are other players who have bettered Babe Ruth in those categories. And, no, I don't think they rate as better players.
So what is it that makes Babe Ruth stand out as so clearly being the best player of all time, then?
When you picture Babe Ruth in your mind, what do you see? A rather large, ungainly, perhaps even fat man, right? Barry Bonds' stolen base number may seem titanic compared to Ruth's, but did you know that this fat man stole home ten times in his career? Most of the great base-stealing legends never stole home that often. But even that isn't what separates Babe from the rest of baseball.
In order for Barry Bonds to have a chance at truly deserving of being called the greatest baseball player of all time, first he must pass Ruth's numbers in homers and RBI. He'll never get to Ruth's batting average, so forget about that. But once he passes Ruth's power figures-if indeed he ever does-then he's going to have do something else.
He's going to have to go out onto the pitcher's mound and win 95 games. Then he's going to have pitch 30 consecutive scoreless innings in the World Series. (First he'll have to actually get to a World Series, of course, but that's another matter).
You see, in order for Bonds or any other player to lay claim to being the best to ever play the game, they will have to prove themselves not only as one of the best hitters ever, but also as one of the best pitchers ever. Had Babe Ruth never started to bang home runs out of the park, his name would still echo through the history of baseball and he'd still be in the Hall of Fame. As a pitcher. Judging by his stats, it's easy enough to predict that he'd have won at least 200 games as a pitcher if he'd just stayed on the mound. No matter how many home runs are ever hit, no many how many RBIs are ever driven in, no matter how high a career batting average a batter reaches, the fact remains that those numbers won't matter; they won't be enough to entitle the bearer to the title of greatest player ever.
Until they also prove they could have been one of the greatest pitchers ever.
And it sure would be nice if the player who attains those lofty goals-provided they are ever attained again-could do it without a cloud of mystery surrounding his physical abilities.
Published by Timothy Sexton - Featured Contributor in Arts & Entertainment
Timothy Sexton was named this site's very first Writer of the Year. Today he has several columns on Yahoo Movies and a weekly column on The Simpsons on Yahoo TV. He has published over 8,000 articles coverin... View profile
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- Barry Bonds has played more games but has fewer homers, RBIs and runs than Babe.
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40 Comments
Post a CommentBabe Ruth by far is the greatest all around baseball player. The man hit over 700 home runs, a lifetime batting average of over .340, and was six shy of winning 100 games as a pitcher. Tell me who will ever live up to those numbers. I am a big Cardinals fan and Pujols could down as the best hitter, but not the best all around baseball player. The number three should be retired by Major League Baseball in his honor.
Babe Ruth is the most sexist player that ever lived. Fact- after Jackie Mitchell struck him out, he told reporters the following
"You know why you don't see women playing ball? because they're weak, that's why. it would kill them to play ball every day."
I practice pitching every single day, and I am still ELEVEN.
Take that you a-hole!
dude. no i do not agree with these next to. ken griffey jr. is not the best baseball player ever, i can tell you that right now.
yeah, the babe did play with some shitty people back then but at least they had the guts not to cheat, and play dirty. The babe made the game today as it is.
BABE RUTH IS THE BEST BASEBALL PLAYER EVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!............that is all
FOLKS, BABE RUTH WAS TRIPLE A BASEBALL. THAT'S ALL.
im gayyy and i likke boyyss
babe ruth is hot
BABE WAS THE BEST STATS DONT LIE WALKS MEAN NOTHING AND STEROIDS MIGHT AS WELL FILL IN THOSE WALKS
IT IS RUTH
this is not about black or white. this is about who is the best player, and being the best one can. just being good at hitting the ball does not make you the best player. In my opinion, the best player is babe ruth.
The only thing Bond does is hit home runs and that is not enough to be the best. Alex Rodriguez is a much better overall player than Bond. Rodriguez surpasses Bond in almost every area; running, catching, even batting.