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BigSensFan
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join:2003-07-16
Belle River, ON

BigSensFan

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Tony Gwynn has died

»twitter.com/Boomskie/sta ··· 25336832


sad news

WK2
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join:2006-12-28
united state

WK2

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I couldn't believe the news when I saw it. RIP

ZZZZZZZ
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I just saw this...........terrible news.

R.I.P.

Lex Luthor
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Sad day. He was one of my favorite and most respected athletes.

ZZZZZZZ
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quote:
Tony Gwynn, a Hall of Fame outfielder who spent his entire Major League Baseball career with the San Diego Padres, has died after a multiyear battle with salivary gland cancer. He was 54.

"Major League Baseball today mourns the tragic loss of Tony Gwynn, the greatest Padre ever and one of the most accomplished hitters that our game has ever known, whose all-around excellence on the field was surpassed by his exuberant personality and genial disposition in life," MLB Commissioner Bud Selig said in a statement.

Gwynn -- known for slapping singles between third base and shortstop in his 20-year career with the Padres -- had 3,141 hits and a .338 batting average. He also was a 15-time All-Star. In 2007, Gwynn was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame with Cal Ripken.
Possibly from chewing tobacco?

WK2
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united state

WK2

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said by ZZZZZZZ:

quote:
Tony Gwynn, a Hall of Fame outfielder who spent his entire Major League Baseball career with the San Diego Padres, has died after a multiyear battle with salivary gland cancer. He was 54.

"Major League Baseball today mourns the tragic loss of Tony Gwynn, the greatest Padre ever and one of the most accomplished hitters that our game has ever known, whose all-around excellence on the field was surpassed by his exuberant personality and genial disposition in life," MLB Commissioner Bud Selig said in a statement.

Gwynn -- known for slapping singles between third base and shortstop in his 20-year career with the Padres -- had 3,141 hits and a .338 batting average. He also was a 15-time All-Star. In 2007, Gwynn was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame with Cal Ripken.
Possibly from chewing tobacco?

It was a factor
rody_44
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Quakertown, PA

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Dam, he was so young to. Man was a amazing player.

WK2
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Interesting fact from MLB Network...He could have gone 0 - 1000 and still would have had a .305 career batting average. Amazing.

HiVolt
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join:2000-12-28
Toronto, ON

HiVolt

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Sad news indeed. Unfortunately I never really watched him play, him playing in the National League. But looking at his stats, wow...

He was close to getting to that magical .400 in 1994, hit .394.

Metal Head
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With Tony Gwynn being just 1 year older then myself I was lucky enough to watch his greatness here in San Diego for his entire career. You will be sorely missed here in San Diego and baseball it's self!

RIP Tony!
Metal Head

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Here are just a few of his amazing stats:

• Gwynn hit .338 over a 20-year career. No one else whose career started after World War II has even gotten closer than 10 points of him -- at least no one with 5,000 plate appearances or more.

• In the 14 seasons from 1984 through 1997, Gwynn finished in the top five in the batting race 13 times. And in the only season he didn't -- in 1990 -- he missed by one hit.

• He had three different seasons in which he hit .370 or higher. In the 73 years since Ted Williams last hit .400, all the other hitters who passed through the big leagues -- a group that includes Williams, Joe DiMaggio, Stan Musial, Willie Mays, Wade Boggs, yadda, yadda, yadda -- combined to do it only eight times.

• No hitter born after 1900 reached 3,000 hits in fewer games (2,284) or at-bats (8,874) than Gwynn. In the history of baseball, only Ty Cobb and Nap Lajoie got there faster -- and when they played, the gloves were made of the same material as those trains they rode on.

• No 3,000-hit man who was born after 1900 had a higher lifetime batting average than Gwynn (.338). In fact, according to the Elias Sports Bureau's Steve Hirdt, no hitter born since 1918 (i.e., since Ted Williams) has even gotten 2,000 hits and had an average this high.

• No hitter who has played his entire career since the invention of the designated hitter has accumulated as many hits as Gwynn (3,141) without spending a large portion of his career in the American League. But Gwynn got every one of his hits in the National League. And he was proud of that.

• Gwynn had six straight seasons (and eight altogether) in which he struck out fewer than 20 times. Did you know there were 97 hitters in the big leagues who whiffed at least 20 times just last month?

• Finally, what does it mean to have piled up a .338 batting average over a 20-year career, over 9,288 at-bats? It means Tony Gwynn would have had to go 0-for-his-next-1,183 to get his average to fall under .300 (and even then, it would have "plummeted" to a mere .29997). We kid you not.

• Gwynn got hits off Tom Seaver, Nolan Ryan, Steve Carlton and Phil Niekro -- four men who won a combined 1,282 games.

• He hit .400 or better against eight different Cy Young winners -- Greg Maddux, John Smoltz, Bret Saberhagen, Vida Blue, John Denny, Dennis Eckersley, Mark Davis and Doug Drabek -- and batted at least .300 against seven more.

• He racked up 39 hits off Maddux (39-for-94, .415), 32 against Smoltz (32-for-72, .444) and 30 against Tom Glavine (30-for-99, .303).

• And none of these pitchers ever struck him out: Pedro Martinez (35 AB), Hideo Nomo (25 AB), Mike Hampton (33 AB) or, incredibly, Maddux (in 94 AB).

Source

HiVolt
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HiVolt

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Wow, those are some amazing feats.

Metal Head
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He was also an outstanding basketball player at SDSU where he still holds a few records.
quote:
Gwynn is still seen as one of the best hoops players in school history. He had 18 assists in a game against UNLV on Feb. 3, 1980, an Aztecs record that still stands, and he has the three best single-game assist outputs at SDSU. His 221 assists in 1979-80 (8.2 APG) and 590 career dimes for SDSU (5.5 per game) are still school records. He's seventh all-time in steals in basketball, and had 35 swipes on the bases in college.
Source

shaner
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Calgary, AB

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said by HiVolt:

Wow, those are some amazing feats.

This one is the most remarkable to me.

Gwynn had six straight seasons (and eight altogether) in which he struck out fewer than 20 times. Did you know there were 97 hitters in the big leagues who whiffed at least 20 times just last month?

Strikeouts are so, so, so very common that you wouldn't even notice less than 20 k's per season happening unless somebody pointed it out because you'd just expect a guy to strike out as a matter of due course. Think of how many guys whiff 3 or even 4 times in a single game. That would have been a bad MONTH for Tony Gwynn. Think about it. The season is 24 weeks or 6 months long. In those years, he struck out less than TWICE a month. In fact, 27 k's for a pitcher would be a perfect game.

ZZZZZZZ
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ZZZZZZZ

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What makes that feat even more remarkable is the pitching he faced in his career.

Imagine the pitchers knowing that they probably wouldn't get him to strikeout.

I think there is a few guys with at least 50 strikeouts already.

shaner
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join:2000-10-04
Calgary, AB

shaner

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Nolan Ryan, Steve Carlton, a young Randy Johnson, Tom Seaver, Pedro Martinez, Dennis Eckersley, Greg freaking Maddux. Like, Holy Shit Batman. Most hitters went up against those guys just looking to survive.

ZZZZZZZ
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ZZZZZZZ

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Check these stats out....wild

»mlb.mlb.com/news/article ··· news_mlb

Metal Head
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Re: Tony Gwynn has died

Here are some more stats:

- Eight batting titles, tied for second most in major league history with Honus Wagner (Ty Cobb had 11). He’s the only player to win four in a row (1994-97) since Rogers Hornsby won six straight from 1920-25.

- Excluding his 54-game rookie season in 1982, he hit better than .309 every year of his career, topping out at .394 in 110 games in the strike year of 1994 (one of his few completely healthy seasons in the second half of his career, he missed just one of the Padres’ 111 games that season and was in position to make a run at a .400 campaign).

- 15 All-Star Games, including 11 voted in as a starter. Only nine players had more All-Star seasons. For players who debuted after 1970, Gwynn is tied for second with Ozzie Smith behind Cal Ripken Jr.’s 19 appearances.

- Led the NL in hits seven times.

- Seven Silver Sluggers

- Five Gold Gloves

- Elected to the Hall of Fame in 2007 with the seventh highest percentage of the vote ever, a cool 97.6.

Source

ZZZZZZZ
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ZZZZZZZ

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I think this says it all.
quote:
Greg Maddux, one of the finest pitchers of his generation, told the Washington Post earlier this year that he was convinced no hitter could accurately differentiate between the speed of specific pitches, comparing it to attempting to gauge the speed of a car a quarter-mile away.

"You just can't do it," Maddux told The Post. "Except ... for that [expletive] Tony Gwynn."