I'm bored... thought I would try to spark some conversation. Use whatever criteria you want and put together a 5th Anniversary Team based on the first 5 full seasons of the BLB (78-82) plus the 100 games of 83. Yeah.. yeah... I know it's over 5 years, but what else were you doing????
My team:
Catcher -- Malachi Stiver
You could certainly make a good case for Sergio Lumar and I think Lumar may end up with a better full career. But, since '78 Stiver gets the slight edge to me.
First Base -- Harry "Missing Link" Keppel
The most complete player the BLB has seen. Doesn't blow you away with one thing that he does better than everyone else... he does everything great.
Second Base -- Neil Hildebrand
Easily one of the deepest positions over the first 5 seasons with great players having great years. Hildebrand gets the nod, to me, over Nate Bermeo because of Nate's poor '82 season. Hildebrand is good with the stick and the glove and has been consistantly solid.
Shortstop -- Jose Sanchez
The kid gets on base, finds the gaps and does more than most people expect from their everyday SS. Thought his career has been plagued with nagging little injuries, he shows up everyday and gets the job done.
Third Base -- Alberto Grandon
Hard not to give the award to Nicolaus Arce, but the 25 year old Grandon is a special talent that should be gracing the BLB for another decade. Most impressive about Grandon is his growth at the plate in his first 5 seasons... slashing his K's by more than half and raising his on-base percentage by over 50 points.
Outfield -- Ken Cahill - Subaru Hiraki - Nick Latham
If it were a 3rd Anniversary Team, Pete Kellum would be a no-brainer. Unfortunately, his last 2+ seasons have taken Pete out of the equation. Cahill, who didn't even make the show until '80,teams with the in his prime Hiraki, and wiley vet Latham to form our rock solid outfield.
Starting Pitcher -- Russ McEvoy
No doubt that many will argue that Teagan Corrigan is the best the BLB has seen. Others could even throw in young guns like Jeff Franklin. But, for my money, no one has been more consistantly outstanding every single year than Russ McEvoy.
Closer -- Vernon Simmonds
Nasty, nasty, nasty. The BLB's premier fireman is practically untouchable. With a career WHIP just north of .9 and an ERA at 1.60, Simmonds may be the most dominant player in the BLB.
***
Discuss...
Make yours....
Whatever...
My team:
Catcher -- Malachi Stiver
You could certainly make a good case for Sergio Lumar and I think Lumar may end up with a better full career. But, since '78 Stiver gets the slight edge to me.
First Base -- Harry "Missing Link" Keppel
The most complete player the BLB has seen. Doesn't blow you away with one thing that he does better than everyone else... he does everything great.
Second Base -- Neil Hildebrand
Easily one of the deepest positions over the first 5 seasons with great players having great years. Hildebrand gets the nod, to me, over Nate Bermeo because of Nate's poor '82 season. Hildebrand is good with the stick and the glove and has been consistantly solid.
Shortstop -- Jose Sanchez
The kid gets on base, finds the gaps and does more than most people expect from their everyday SS. Thought his career has been plagued with nagging little injuries, he shows up everyday and gets the job done.
Third Base -- Alberto Grandon
Hard not to give the award to Nicolaus Arce, but the 25 year old Grandon is a special talent that should be gracing the BLB for another decade. Most impressive about Grandon is his growth at the plate in his first 5 seasons... slashing his K's by more than half and raising his on-base percentage by over 50 points.
Outfield -- Ken Cahill - Subaru Hiraki - Nick Latham
If it were a 3rd Anniversary Team, Pete Kellum would be a no-brainer. Unfortunately, his last 2+ seasons have taken Pete out of the equation. Cahill, who didn't even make the show until '80,teams with the in his prime Hiraki, and wiley vet Latham to form our rock solid outfield.
Starting Pitcher -- Russ McEvoy
No doubt that many will argue that Teagan Corrigan is the best the BLB has seen. Others could even throw in young guns like Jeff Franklin. But, for my money, no one has been more consistantly outstanding every single year than Russ McEvoy.
Closer -- Vernon Simmonds
Nasty, nasty, nasty. The BLB's premier fireman is practically untouchable. With a career WHIP just north of .9 and an ERA at 1.60, Simmonds may be the most dominant player in the BLB.
***
Discuss...
Make yours....
Whatever...
Comment