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Post by TheGoodMan19 on Apr 23, 2020 17:37:33 GMT
What about Eric Davis, does he fall into that category? To tack on to what Goodman was saying, just take a look at Davis' first few years. Basically from 1986 (his first full-time year) through 1990, he was among the preeminent players in the game with power and speed, to go along with gold glove defense. In 1986, he slashed .277/.378/.523 (.901) with 27 homers and 80 steals against only 11 CS. In 1987, his best year in the bigs, he went .293/.399/.593 (.991) with 37 HRs and 50 steals and only 6 CS. He dealt with injuries starting in 1990 and he had trouble staying on the field, culminating in a 1997 cancer diagnosis. Despite, he came back in 1997 and had a great year for the Orioles, posting a .970 OPS with 28 HRs. Plus, he had this gem of a brawl: Klaw, what to you think derailed Gooden? The injuries, the partying, the Mets downward spiral, the rape allegation, all of the above?
You seen him enough. The man was on another level. His 1985 season was one of the greatest pitching seasons in history. Put up by a 20 year old kid. He should have won the Cy Young as a 19 year old rookie. Still a very good pitcher in 1992. Then his career down down the toilet. I'm sure you read "the Worst Team Money Could Buy", I wonder if that circus didn't affect Doc. I hated him, like I hated the Mets at that time. But what a waste. A damned shame. He should have been one of the all time greats.
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