Is Piazza the worst catcher ever?

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Well he was pretty good in his role as a punk kid in the movie "Teen Wolf"
 

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Those dudes were pretty handsome...I must admit.

lmao.... that is some funny shit
 

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Victor Martinez has thrown out exactly ONE stealer this year.

Others who started out as catchers - Dale Murphy, Craig Biggio, Brian Downing.
 

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I don't think you want him as your catcher now, maybe 5 years ago.
 

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Doug said:
I don't think you want him as your catcher now, maybe 5 years ago.
Good catchers seem to have the life span of a good wide reciever
 

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RobFunk said:
Good catchers seem to have the life span of a good wide reciever

Which, ironically, it sounds like Mike does both equally :devilex:
 

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Railbird said:
Brent Mayne worse catcher ever, sub 350 slugging pct, ZERO tool player. had a 17 yr career on because he was Left handed AB.

True, but in one of the weirdest games Ive ever seen he came in relief (against Atlanta I think) pitched a solid inning and got the win. To make things even stranger there was something wrong with his left hand so he couldnt hit, and a starting pitcher (who couldnt pitch that game) pinch hit for him and got a hit.
 

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Clip Joint said:
I remember Todd Hundley was pretty brutal...had a stretch there where he couldn't even throw it back to the pitcher. Anyone remember that?

That was Sasser not Hundley. Hundley was pretty good on defense.
 

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Hmm. The thing about Mike being on teen wolf was just an urban legend. Jeez, they even faked an interview.
 

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CONGRATS MIKE!!!

http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mlb-b...ected-to-baseball-hall-of-fame-221800912.html

Ken Griffey Jr., Mike Piazza elected to Baseball Hall of Fame

Of the 32 names on this year's Hall of Fame ballot, only two were approved Wednesday by baseball writers to join the immortals inside Cooperstown: Ken Griffey Jr. and Mike Piazza. They're two iconic sluggers of the 1990s with 1,057 homers between them, whose paths will cross again when they're inducted July 24.<figure class="cover get-lbdata-from-dom go-to-slideshow-lightbox" data-orig-index="0"> View gallery
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201601050855321116001
</figure>(AP)

Griffey, on his first ballot, earned 99.3 percent of the vote, a total that surpasses Tom Seaver's record of 98.84 in 1992. Griffey missed three ballots.
Piazza, in his fourth Hall of Fame campaign, received 83 percent, up from the 69.9 percent that left him outside of Cooperstown a year ago.
[Related: Ken Griffey Jr. sets Hall of Fame record with 99 percent of votes]
The next highest vote totals belonged to Jeff Bagwell (71.6 percent), Tim Raines (69.8) and Trevor Hoffman (67.3). Other notables: Curt Schilling (52.3), Edgar Martinez (43.4) and Mike Mussina (43.0).
Players need 75 percent of votes from eligible Baseball Writers Association of America members for enshrinement in the Hall of Fame. This year's election included 440 ballots, down from 549 a year ago after the BBWAA pared down its electorate. The entire voting results are on the Hall of Fame website.
Many predicted the smaller voting panel, younger and more progressive, would help the PED-clouded cases of Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens, the most contentious names on the ballot. Both saw their vote totals rise this year. Bonds finished at 44.3 percent up from 36.8 a year ago. Clemens earned 45.2 up from 37.5 last year. Both have a ways to go to reach 75 percent, but their eventual enshrinement looks more possible now than it had in the past.
Alan Trammell (40.9) and Mark McGwire (12.3) were on the ballot for the final time and neither did particularly well. The packed ballot mean tough calls for voters and because of that some players with legitimate Hall of Fame cases saw lackluster results. Billy Wagner, a first-timer, finished with 10.5 percent. Sammy Sosa was at seven percent. Gary Sheffield received 11.6 percent.

<figure class="cover get-lbdata-from-dom go-to-slideshow-lightbox" data-orig-index="1"> View gallery
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201601050855321496013
</figure>(AP)

Nomar Garciaparra received just 1.8 percent and Jim Edmonds got 2.5 percent, which means they're now fallen off the ballot for not reaching five percent. Others receiving votes but falling off the ballot include: Mike Sweeney, David Eckstein, Jason Kendall and Garret Anderson.As for those who did make it: Griffey and Piazza are quite a pair. Griffey is baseball's first Hall of Famer to be drafted No. 1 overall, his pedigree unquestioned and the career that followed living up to the hype with 630 homers, an MVP award, 10 Gold Gloves and 13 All-Star appearances.
Piazza, meanwhile, was drafted in the 62nd round, at No. 1,390 overall. He was an against-all-odds star, who became one of the greatest offensive catchers of all time, hitting more homers than any catcher before him. He finished with 427 homers, 396 of them as a catcher.
Their paths were different to say the least, but that's what makes baseball great, doesn't it?
Griffey and Piazza, the natural and the unlikely star, they're finishing in the same place. Cooperstown.
 

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