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February 25, 2013 Overthinking ItThe Best of Baseball's New Old VideosA little over four years ago, Shawn Hoffman wrote a piece at BP called "Opening Up MLB.com: How MLBAM Can Take Its Next Big Step." A couple key paragraphs:
It's taking longer than those of us—okay, all of us—who'd enjoy being able to access any play at any time would like, but we're gradually getting closer to Shawn's vision of internet baseball nirvana. Early in the 2011 season, MLBAM quietly made some of its videos of recent highlights embeddable. And right around the same time, just as quietly, it began to put some "classic" clips online. As I write this, there are 996 viewable MLB.com clips tagged "classic". The first one, of Anibal Sanchez' 2006 no-hitter, was uploaded on April 23, 2011. After that, almost a month went by without anything new, presumably because the anti-embed forces at MLBAM were waiting to see if the world would end. It didn't, and nearly a month later, on May 19, Derek Jeter's 1,000th career hit joined the archive. You can quibble with how "classic" some of these clips are—the sixth clip added, out of all the options from decades and decades of baseball broadcast history, is of catcher Brent Mayne pitching a scoreless inning and getting a win against the Braves in August of 2000. The fifth is of Devon White tripling in the 1998 All-Star Game. In other words, MLBAM wasn't exactly giving away the store. But the archive has gotten more interesting. Those 996 clips were added to the site over 672 days, a rate of roughly 1.5 per day. I'm writing this now because the pace seems to have accelerated: this year alone, the "classic" archive has grown by 148 clips, or roughly 2.8 per day. Granted, even at this rate, the expanding Sun might heat the Earth into oblivion in a billion years (if we haven't already done that ourselves) before every interesting baseball clip is available online. And it's still a weird mix of things you've seen many times before, like Mickey Mantle's 500th homer, and things you'd never want to see under any circumstances, like a June 1992 TV ad for a Rangers wristwatch giveaway that no one would ever wear. But it's progress. And to show MLBAM that it made the right decision by deciding to share, we should do all we can to spread the word, and the videos. It's free marketing for MLB, free fun for us. Everyone wins. Jonah Keri drew the internet's attention to the newly available videos at Grantland on Friday; because he's Canadian, four of the six plays he picked took place in Canada. I'm only half-Canadian, so my video choices are much more American. Here, in no particular order are my 10 favorite "classic" clips added this year. This would make a great slideshow, if we made slideshows. Darryl Strawberry homers off Al Nipper in Game 7 of the 1986 World Series Four of the 148 "classic" videos added this year, or 2.7 percent, are of Darryl Strawberry hitting homers. That seems like a lot, given that Darryl Strawberry didn't hit 2.7 percent of all the homers hit in major-league history. But it's nice that Strawberry homers are overrepresented, since I'd rather watch him hit homers than almost anyone else. You have that love that long, looping swing—and when describing Strawberry's swing, you have to call it "long" and "looping". This actually isn't the highest or the farthest Strawberry home run added recently, but it's probably the prettiest. Something else of note: this is one of the slowest home run trots I've ever seen. The slowest non-injury related trot tracked by the official Tater Trot Tracker was came courtesy of Bobby Abreu last September 28. It was clocked at 31.56 seconds. I'm not Larry Granillo, so this isn't an official reading, but I timed that Straw trot at 32.81. In that 500th homer clip, a banged-up, 35-year-old Mantle, whose bodyweight was probably 33 percent bandage, beats a 24-year-old Strawberry around the bases by at least 10 seconds. The Royals win the 1980 AL Pennant I like this one for three non-uniform-related reasons: 1. It's conclusive proof that the Royals have been a good baseball team. The Royals haven't appeared in a playoff game in my lifetime, so I appreciate the occasional reminder that they once won things. Imagine wearing those things under a catcher's mask. They almost are a catcher's mask. Albert Pujols' first major-league hit You know how you'll often see a grainy video of a player's first hit or homer, and you'll hardly recognize him? He's super-skinny, his stance looks different, his swing isn't as smooth? He looks like he could one day become the player you know, but he isn't that player yet. Not Albert Pujols. The picture on the left is Pujols before his first hit, and the picture on the right is Pujols before his 2,246th hit. His stance might be a bit more open now, his bat held at a slightly steeper angle, but that's the same balanced crouch, the same wide stance, and the same solid frame. Albert Pujols arrived in the majors as a fully formed product, a .329/.403/.610-hitting nightmare for opposing pitchers. Mike Mussina one-hits the Rangers In my chat last Tuesday, I was asked about my all-time favorite player to watch. I answered:
Even a Blyleven-esque* debate won't tarnish my memories of Mussina, as long as I can refresh them once in a while with clips like this one. That's from 1992, Mussina's first full season, when he was already showing near-perfect control, good fielding fundamentals, and a refined five-pitch mix with plus velo (not to mention the great grooming). He pitched 241 innings with a 2.54 ERA, walking 1.8 per nine innings and allowing 16 homers, and finished fourth in AL Cy Young voting. Dennis Eckersley saved 51 games and won the award. Here's more classic Mussina, from the most exciting game I've ever attended. Unfair, especially when mixed with 93-mph fastballs. That's a pitch that not even Jorge Posada's ugly receiving could ruin. *Question about Blyleven: Would it have been easier to convince the doubters he was deserving if we could have sent them a clip of him throwing a filthy pitch to close out a complete game and win the Pirates the pennant on their way to a World Series title? Maybe. Tony Perez homers off Bill Lee in Game 7 of the 1975 World Series When an eephus pitch works, it's wonderful. When it doesn't, it looks like the worst idea anyone has ever had on a baseball field. Jeff Nelson fakes to third and throws to first I might be the only person who would pick this as one of his top 10. In my fond farewell to the fake to third last year, I wrote:
And now we can watch him faking and throwing forever. So what does Nelson think of the recent outlawing of this move? Shockingly, he doesn't like it. Much of the "classic" clips archive consists of batters hitting homers that land in improbable places. Manny Ramirez hitting the fifth deck at the Skydome. Mark McGwire hitting the Budweiser sign in Cleveland and Mo Vaughn hitting the Budweiser sign at Shea. Adam Dunn hitting a ball so far in Cincinnati that we never see it land. Hill's homer is my favorite one of the bunch. There used to be a version on YouTube so pixellated that you could hardly see the ball, and I'd still watch it over and over. Now I don't have to do that (which is good, because it's gone). If the Mitchell Report is to be believed, Hill was using PEDs in 2000, when this homer was hit. Does it make me a bad person if this home run makes me miss the Steroid Era? Rey Ordonez makes a throw from his knees Fielding from his knees was Ordonez' signature move, and maybe it got to be that way because of this play, which he made in his first major-league game. Seven innings into Ordonez' career, Mets fans had seen him make Royce Clayton show the screen presence that earned him a part in Moneyball 15 years later and heard Howie Rose's call: "He was on his knees, Fran! ... He was on his knees!" That was bound to make an impression. According to Baseball-Reference's Total Zone stat, Ordonez' 1999 is tied with Brooks Robinson's 1968 for the 10th-best fielding season of all time. Again according to Total Zone, it was worth 33 runs, more than Ozzie Smith added with his glove in any single season. According to FRAA, that season—as well as Ordonez' career contribution on defense—was worth one run. I've always wondered whether Ordonez' signature knee play was like Jeter's jump throw, a flashy, distinctive maneuver that won him Gold Gloves and disguised the fact that he wasn't as good as we thought. Defensive metrics can't decide. Bo Jackson runs up an outfield wall This play inspired most of The Matrix: In 1990, Bo Jackson struck out once every three at-bats and hit a homer once every 14. And at least once every 146 putouts in center, he'd run up an outfield wall, just because he could. Bonds hits the first homer into McCovey Cove
Whoever selects which videos to add to this archive has a real soft spot for homers hit into McCovey Cove. No fewer than 45 videos tagged "classic" are also tagged "Giants Splash Hits". Most of them are by Barry Bonds, of course, but there's also J.T. Snow, A.J. Pierzynski, Michael Tucker, Jose Cruz, Randy Winn, Ryan Klesko, and two by Felipe Crespo, who hit 10 homers in his whole career. But the first is the best, because Lou Seal liked it:
Ben Lindbergh is an author of Baseball Prospectus. Follow @benlindbergh
14 comments have been left for this article.
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Man, that Strawberry blast. I timed it at 32.76 secs, so pretty much the same thing. I guess when you're Darryl Strawberry on those Mets and you've just secured the World Series, that's what you do.
The man just iced the world series. He can take as long as he wants