Yankeefan5545
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Did not read the article yet, man passed from cancer at age 54, Good Grief
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He was my friend. This is one of the saddest days of my life.
According to some of the comments I've heard passed on MLB this afternoon I'm getting the idea that us folks on the East Coast just weren't aware of how good Gwynn was because he played on the West Coast. Stupid assessment on their part, if you follow the game, and you're a fan you knew how well that man played the game. When I came back from overseas in '84 I became well aware how good of a player Gwynn was. That '84 Padre Team was a good unit. The '98 Team that faced the Yankees was a good unit as well and I'm sure that more than a couple Yankee Fans were well aware of how great a player Tony Gwynn was.
He was my friend. This is one of the saddest days of my life.
I saw him get hit #2,999 in San Diego.... So sad!
In an interview, Gywnn once said: “some of my best hits were balls outside the strike zone”. Yet, Mr. Video, rarely struck out. (Reference: ***)
Tony used a 33“ Bat his entire career, one of the shortest length bats used in MLB.
- Gwynn currently sits 19th all-time in hits with 3,141, and 28th all-time in doubles, with 543.
- His .338 career batting average is the highest of any player who debuted after World War II.
- In 1994, he had the highest single season batting average (.394!) since Ted Williams in 1941.
- Gwynn led the National League in batting average 8 times, 5 of those times leading the Majors.
- Tony’s 8 batting titles, ties him with Honus Wagner for the most in history. (Pete Rose, who only won three.)
- Led the NL in hits seven times, with five of those leading the Majors as well.
- .338 Lifetime Batting Average, .847 OPS Lifetime;
.459 career slugging percentage.
- .In 19 consecutive seasons, (all but his rookie year, .289 B’Avg., Tony never hit less than .309 in 19 consecutive seasons. 2nd only to Ty Cobb all time.
- 7 time Silver Slugger
- 5 Gold Glove awards.
- ***His season high in strikeouts was 40, in 1988. In every season but his first, He had more walks than strikeouts, every year of his 20 year HOF Career.
- ***In his 20 year career, he drew more walks, than Strike Outs, every single season of his career. The Epitome of Ted Williams “The Art of Hitting”, cut down the strike outs, draw more walks than K’s.
- ***In 2,440 career games, Gwynn had only 34 multi-strikeout games. So, the odds were better that Gwynn would get four hits than striking out twice. Let that sink in.”
- The next bullet point is from a Yahoo Sports article, because the author put it so well: “Gwynn had nine five-hit games in his career. Only Pete Rose had more, with 10. Gwynn also had 45 games with at least four hits. That puts him 10th on the all-time list.
- A 15-time All-Star, yet somehow never won an MVP award and only finished top five in balloting once.
His statue outside of Petco reads, “If you work hard, good things will happen.” Words to live by from one of the hardest workers and greatest players to ever play the game(s).
RIP, Tony......
I think it was the season before he got 3,000, he tore his achilles and was laid up. He used to call me on the phone to talk because he was bored.
The first time I met him was at Jack Murphy Stadium in the locker room. I was wearing a "Chicago Cubs NL East Champions 1984" cap. The locker room door opened and there he was. He was only like 6'2", but he looked really tall in spikes. He took one look at my hat and turned it around so it was on backwards.
I've known quite a few athletes, and many are assholes and many are nice guys. Tony was special, nicer than the rest. I asked him what he did when he was on the road and his teammates were out at the bars... He told me he would play Nintendo in his room. Never the guy to get in trouble. As good a family man as I've ever seen.
He loved to talk about hitting. He was a student of the game. He knew basketball, too.
Denny thanks for sharing your stories, but I'm still trying to figure out why the hell you'd wear a Cubs hat into the Padres locker room, lol!
I was at that game too.
Crazy! what a small world
34 multi-strikeout games, meaning there are <34 pitchers over 20 years to ever strike him out twice in a game. I want to see that list of pitchers.
If any good could come out of this tragic & premature death now might be the time to ban chewing tobacco among players at all levels.
I remember watching a medical show one morning about 35 years ago where a kid 17 years old had to have his entire pallet removed due to constant use of chewing tobacco. Lenny Dykstra a huge tobacco user himself spoke out on the dangers of chew. Not more then 2 weeks later I saw that crazy hypocritical bastard in the Mets dug out with a wad so big in his mouth you'd have thought he was hiding a golf ball in his cheek.
I always prefered "Big League Chew" bubblegum...altho' there was a year, I preferred (no shit) to Chew Red-Man, and smoke a Cigar at the same time. Just one year, but NEVER on a ball field....!