Official 8th Baseball ATD Thread (Picks Only)

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Tecumseh

Scorched Earth
Oct 20, 2012
9,315
727
Southbridge, MA
With the 496th pick in the 25th round, our penultimate pick, the Brooklyn Robins select 2B Jose Vidro

JoseVidro.jpg


12 year career

.298/.359/.445/.804
108 OPS+
1,524 hits
341 doubles
128 home runs
23.3 oWAR
3x All Star
1x Silver Slugger
 
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Winger for Hire

Praise Beebo
Dec 9, 2013
13,058
1,692
Quarantine Zone 5
With the 18th pick in the 258th round (498th overall), the Homestead Grays select, switch hitting Right Fielder, Reggie Smith


Smith batted with power and average from both sides of the plate, was a fine center fielder, had superior base-running speed, and had a legendary throwing arm that may have been the best of his era. In the argot of the game, he was a "five-tool player." He took a scientific, analytical approach to the game. His teammates describe him as a man who relentlessly learned to do new things and who strived to be great at everything he did. And the discerning Dick Williams, who managed him in Boston, places Smith on his All-Dick Williams team, a team that includes players from 22 years of helmsmanship and five first-place teams, two of which won World Series.

According to pitcher John Curtis, a teammate of Smith's on both the Red Sox and St. Louis Cardinals, "I will always remember Reg as one of the most complete players I ever saw. ...I know he labored under the weight of everyone's expectations. In Boston, the sportswriters would wonder aloud why Reg wasn't playing up to his demonstrated abilities. ... He once told me that the worst word in the English language was 'potential.'"1 At the same time, Smith was little-known because another outfielder named Reggie with a Hall of Fame career and a gregarious, exhibitionist personality overshadowed the more businesslike Smith in the eyes of national media. Curtis pitched against both and said, "On the basis of talent, I'd take Smith over Jackson any day. I played with both of them, and I wouldn't hesitate to take Smith's overall game over Jackson's showmanship."

Misc Info I can type on my phone

7 time All-Star
1 time Gold Glove
64.5 bWAR (94th position player)

.287 /.366/.489
.855 OPS (137 OPS+)
 

Vegeta

God Dammit Nappa
May 2, 2009
4,195
530
Capsule Corp.
The Tigers will select a man with an OPS+ of 137 and a 162 game average of 34 Homeruns, OF Darryl Strawberry.

 
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le_sean

Registered User
Oct 21, 2006
40,032
40,166
With their penultimate pick, the Montreal Royals select Manager Dick Williams

obit-williams-articleLarge.jpg


Accolades

BBHOF (2008)
1,571 Wins
Two World Series championships (1972, 1973)
Four pennants
Five division titles​

Dick was tough as nails but was a big reason why the Oakland Athletics were able to make the jump from really good team to the best team in the early 1970s. Dick was also a big motivator that led to the improbably 1967 Red Sox team that missed out on the World Series by one game (thanks to heroics by Bob Gibson).
 
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le_sean

Registered User
Oct 21, 2006
40,032
40,166
I would like to thank Pwn and the gang for allowing me to be a part of this and for helping me learn so much about the history of baseball.

With their final selection in their very first ATD, the Montreal Royals select their long relief pitcher, SP Roy Oswalt.

420599768_m.jpg


Accolades

49.9 career WAR
5x Top 5 Cy Young voting
3× All-Star (2005–2007)
NLCS MVP (2005)
NL wins leader (2004)
NL ERA leader (2006)
Pitched a combined no-hitter on June 11, 2003​

Roy Oswalt was one of the most consistent pitchers of the 2000s. He appeared in the top 10 in the National League in BB/9 rate seven times, as well as six times in strikeout-to-walk ratio, and had a career ERA+ of 127. In his stint with the Astros, he was 5-0 in the postseason. We feel comfortable handing the ball over to Oswalt for long relief or to make spot starts, if necessary.
 

Winger for Hire

Praise Beebo
Dec 9, 2013
13,058
1,692
Quarantine Zone 5
First, let me once again thank everyone for being welcoming and helpful in my first go-around. May we never forget "Bath Ruth" :laugh:

With the Homestead Gray's final pick in the 2016 ATD for baseball (503rd overall), we are going to select our field manager, Tommy Lasorda

OB-SK601_0329ca_H_20120329165504.jpg


Career Stats and Highlights

22 Season (all with the Dodgers) Managed
1599 Wins (20th All-Time)
31 Postseason Wins
Only Manager to win World Series and Gold Medal as a manager

2 World Series (1981, 1988)
4 NL Pennants (1977, 78, 81, 88)
1 Gold Medal (2000 Sydney Games)

4 All-Star Games Managed (1978, 79, 82, 89)
Sporting News Minor League Manager of the Year (1970)
2 time NL Manager of the Year (1983, 88)
6 time Top 5 Manager of the Year finisher
UPI & AP Manager of the Year (1977)
AP Manager of the Year (1981)

Managed 9 players who won Rookie of the Year under his coaching
- 2 strings of consecutive years (79-82, 4 years, and 92-96, 5 years)

Hall of Fame inductee (1997, 1st ballot)
#2 Retired (Dodgers)

1 Video Game

Tommy_Lasorda_Baseball_GEN_ScreenShot1.gif
 

Voight

#winning
Feb 8, 2012
40,689
17,062
Mulberry Street
With our final pick, we select 3B Josh "Bringer of Rain" Donaldson

He has only played 3 full seasons, plus another half-season but has already amassed 24.1 fWAR & was named AL MVP in 2015 (8.7 fWAR).

1297718586031_ORIGINAL.jpg
 

Tecumseh

Scorched Earth
Oct 20, 2012
9,315
727
Southbridge, MA
I would like to thank Pwn for welcoming me back for another ATD. This draft was even more fun than my first.

The last selection of the Brooklyn Robins will be a man who managed the Dodgers for many years wearing #2, was inducted into the Hall of Fame as a Dodger, Leo Durocher

Durocher-PI.vnocropresize.940.529.medium.33.jpg


Leo Durocher
Leo Ernest Durocher
Inducted to the Hall of Fame in: 1994
Primary team: Brooklyn Dodgers
Primary position: Manager

Known as one of baseball’s fieriest personalities who would do anything to win, Leo Durocher did just that: Win. Over 24 years as a skipper for the Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants, Chicago Cubs and Houston Astros, Durocher won 2,008 total games, three pennants and a World Series.

But it was Durocher’s controversial banter with umpires, executives and players that earned him his eternal reputation as “The Lip.â€

Durocher’s life in baseball began as a small, slick-fielding shortstop with the dynastic New York Yankees of the 1920s. While he was not an imposing hitter, Durocher’s scrappy play and maximum effort led Babe Ruth to call him “the All-American out.†Durocher won the 1928 World Series with the Yankees, then won another Fall Classic as captain of the St. Louis Cardinals’ “Gashouse Gang†in 1934.

In addition to his hustle, Durocher also garnered his famous nickname “The Lip,†or “Lippy,†for his hard-scrabble conversations with umpires from the dugout. His temper was thought to have stemmed from his relationship with another diminutive Hall of Famer, Rabbit Maranville.

“Never back up,†Maranville told Durocher when the latter was a boy in West Springfield, Mass. “The first backward step a little man takes is the one that’s going to kill him.â€

In 1939, Durocher was named player-manager for the Dodgers and quickly became known for his dirt-kicking tirades against umpires. He also clashed with Brooklyn’s front office, and claimed that he was fired and rehired by general manager Larry McPhail dozens of times.

Despite his antics, there was no doubt about Durocher’s record. In 1941, Durocher led the Dodgers, who were affectionately named “the Bums†by their own fans, to the franchise’s first pennant in 21 years.

"As long as I've got a chance to beat you I'm going to take it,†Durocher said simply.

In 1947, Commissioner Happy Chandler suspended Durocher for a year due to his “accumulation of unpleasant incidents†which included his accused association with gamblers. Led by Jackie Robinson, who Durocher staunchly supported when he broke the color barrier, the Dodgers captured the ’47 National League pennant.

In 1948, Durocher shocked the baseball world when he became manager of the Dodgers’ crosstown rival New York Giants – a squad Durocher had famously referred to when he remarked that “nice guys finish last.†It was at the Polo Grounds where Durocher found his greatest success. In 1951, his Giants capped off an incredible 13 ½ game comeback on the Dodgers with Bobby Thomson’s famous “Shot Heard ’Round the World†homer to win the pennant. Three years later, Durocher and the Giants swept the heavily favored Cleveland Indians in the 1954 World Series.

Durocher left New York after the 1955 season and became a color commentator for NBC’s baseball broadcasts. He returned to the manager’s office with the Cubs in 1966 and served his final nine seasons in Chicago and Houston.

Durocher retired in 1973 as the fifth-winningest manager in history, and second only to Hall of Famer John McGraw in the National League. His 2,008 victories remain 10th on the current all-time list. In 1994, Durocher was elected to the Hall of Fame.


DID YOU KNOW

that Leo Durocher was the starting shortstop for the Brooklyn Dodgers when they hosted the Cincinnati Reds in the first televised major league baseball game, August 26, 1939?


"Leo Durocher claims he was sacked forty times (by Larry MacPhail) in his five years as Dodger manager, but I was there and I can verify only twenty-seven. "
– Harold Parrot






24 year career

2,008-1,709
1941, 1951, 1954 NL Pennant Winner
1954 World Champion
Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1994 by the Veteran's Committee
 

GarbageGoal

Courage
Dec 1, 2005
22,353
2,377
RI
With the 506th, and our final pick, the Providence Steamrollers choose Manager Danny Murtaugh to be the skipper of our club.

danny_murtaugh_autograph.jpg


1115-950
15 years
2 Pennants, 2 World Series wins (in 4 postseasons total)

MANAGERIAL CREDENTIALS

In 12 full seasons as Pirates manager (manager for parts of 15 seasons from 1957-1976), Murtaugh led his team to nine winning records and five league/division titles (1960, 1970, 1971, 1974 and 1975).
Won two World Series titles in two different decades (1960 and 1971) in both World Series appearances.
His two World Series wins ties him for ninth on the all-time World Series victories list by managers.
Finished second all-time in Pirates history in wins by a manager with 1,115, only behind XXXX-XXXX 1,602 (1900-1915).
Is one of only 36 managers in MLB history to win 1,000 or more games (1,115 wins).
His 165 games over .500 currently ranks him 28th amongst managers alltime on the most games over .500 list.
His number 40 was retired by the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1977.
Was the Associated Press Manager of the Year in 1958 (combined National League and American League), and 1960 and 1970 in the National League.
Two-time recipient of The Sporting News Manager of the Year Award (1960 and 1970).
Selected as Man of the Year by SPORT magazine in 1960
 

Pwnasaurus

Registered User
Feb 21, 2003
8,124
0
Robot City
The St. Louis Cardinals are pleased to select their long man/spot starter, SP - Burleigh Grimes. Old Stubblebeard adds another HOF pitcher to the staff.

- BBHOF (1964)
- World Series Champion (1931)
- 2 Times Top 5 in MVP voting
- 3 Times Top 5 in WAR
- 4 Times Top 5 in ERA
- 8 Times Top 5 in Strikeouts (Led League 1921)
 

td_ice

Peter shows the way
Aug 13, 2005
33,000
3,565
USA
With pick 513, The Pittsburgh Pirates are pleased to select, MGR, Chuck Tanner.


Manager of the "We are Family" 1979 World Series Champions.

Chuck was a shrewd baseball manager, and excellent at dealing with his players. He will make a perfect coach at dealing with a diverse team.


chuck-tanner-3.jpg
 

bluesfan94

Registered User
Jan 7, 2008
31,019
8,230
St. Louis
With pick 474, I'll take 1B Jake Beckley.
With pick 487, I'll take the best ears in the draft, Don Mossi
With my final pick, pick 514, I'll take the great centerfield defender, Chet Lemon
 

UL Washington

Registered User
Jun 5, 2008
853
0
The Brooklyn Bridegrooms continue the run on ex-Pirate managers and select MGR Fred Clarke.

One of the few people that could legitimately have been elected to the Hall of Fame as either a manager or player, Clarke managed the Pirates from 1897 to 1915.

He led his team to four National League pennants (1901, 1902, 1903 and 1909) and one World Series championship (1909). The 1902 Pirates lost only 36 games under Clarke's guidance, a modern-era record. In 1912, Clarke passed Cap Anson giving him the Major League record for wins by a manager. Clarke's record, in turn, was broken by John McGraw in 1918. In addition to the four pennants and one World Series, Clarke managed Pittsburgh to five second-place seasons and three third-place seasons.
 

Say Hey Kid

War, children, it’s just a shot away
Dec 10, 2007
23,881
5,650
Bathory, GA
220px-Monte_Irvin_1953.jpg


The As are going to add a HoFer who lead the league in RBIs in 1951 and finished 3rd in MVP voting, LF/1B Monte Irvin.
He was approached in 1945 by Brooklyn Dodgers executive Branch Rickey about being signed for the major leagues, but Irvin felt he was not ready to play at that level so soon after leaving the service.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_Irvin

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MONTE IRVIN

Monford Merrill Irvin

Inducted to the Hall of Fame in: 1973
Primary team: Newark Eagles
Primary position: Left Fielder
Monte Irvin was not the first African-American player in the modern major leagues, but of all the talented players who made the perilous trip from the Negro leagues to the big leagues in the late 1940s, Irvin may have been the best.

Monte was the choice of all Negro National and American League club owners to serve as the No. 1 player to join a white major league team,” said Hall of Famer Effa Manley, owner of the Newark Eagles. “We all agreed, in meeting, he was the best qualified by temperament, character ability, sense of loyalty, morals, age, experiences and physique to represent us as the first black player to enter the white majors since the Walker brothers back in the 1880s. Of course, Branch Rickey lifted Jackie Robinson out of Negro ball and made him the first, and it turned out just fine.”

It also turned out fine for Irvin, who starred for eight seasons in the majors with the Giants and the Cubs before being elected to the Hall of Fame in 1973. “I always respected Monte Irvin as much as any player I played with,” said teammate Bobby Thomson, whose homer in the ninth inning of Game 3 of the historic 1951 National League playoff series against the Dodgers lifted Irvin and the Giants into the World Series. “He would show up and do the job every day; one of the strong guys on the ball club.”

Irvin, born Feb. 25, 1919 in Haleburg, Ala., was a four-sport athlete in high school and began playing professional baseball while in college under an assumed name to keep his amateur status. He joined the Newark Eagles and quickly became an outstanding all-around player. He could hit for power, was a strong fielder at shortstop and could steal bases. One of the league’s biggest stars, he was elected to four East-West all-star games. After asking for a raise and being denied, Irvin took off for Mexico and won the Triple Crown there.

He returned to the Eagles in 1946 where he won his second batting title and helped win the Negro World Series. In 1949, the New York Giants bought Irvin’s contract from the Eagles. In 1951 as New York’s regular left fielder, he sparked the Giants to win the pennant, hitting .312 with 24 home runs and a National League-best 121 RBI, en route to a third-place finish in the MVP voting. Although the Giants lost to the Yankees in the World Series, Irvin batted .458 in the six-game series.

He played for the Giants for seven seasons, was elected to the 1952 All-Star Game and won a World Series with them in 1954. After an ankle injury, spent his final season with the Cubs in 1956. He finished with a .293 career batting average, 97 doubles, 99 home runs, and 443 RBIs in the major leagues.

Following his playing career, Irvin became a scout for the New York Mets and later spent 17 years as a public relations specialist for the commissioner’s office under Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. Of Irvin's character, Kuhn once wrote, “If they ever decide to start the Hall of Fame all over and place decency above all else, Monte would be the first man in.”

In 1973, Irvin was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Special Committee on Negro Leagues.

“Baseball is a game you’d play for nothing,” Irvin said. “And I am so happy the Lord gave me a little ability, because it allowed me to meet a lot of good people and see so many exciting places.”

"I always respected Monte Irvin as much as any player I played with... He would show up and do the job every day; one of the strong guys on the ball club. " Bobby Thomson

CAREER STATS
ESSENTIAL STATS
Year Inducted: 1973 See 5 more from 1973
Primary Team: Newark Eagles See 4 more from Newark Eagles
Position Played: Left Fielder See 19 more from this position
Bats: Right See 163 more right handed batters
Throws: Right See 220 more right handed throwers
Birth place: Columbia, Alabama See 11 more from Alabama
Birth year: 1919 See 1 more born this year
Died: 2016, Houston, Texas
Played for:
Newark Eagles (1937-1942)
New York Giants (1949-1955)
Chicago Cubs (1956)

CAREER AT A GLANCE
...
Batting Average
.293
OPS
.858
On Base %
.383
Slugging %
.475
 

GIN ANTONIC

Registered User
Aug 19, 2007
18,875
14,867
Toronto, ON
With their final pick the Toronto BJs select Clay Carroll

f55b443dff75775efc576672b132b1f7.jpg


15 Seasons
1353.1 IP
96-73
143 Saves
2.94 ERA
121 ERA+
1.284 WHIP
2 x All-Star
2 x Top 10 in Cy Young Voting (#5, #8)
 
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