Ernie Banks Statistics - Baseball-Reference.com |
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http://www.baseball-reference.com/b/bankser01.shtml
Ernie Banks batting, fielding and pitching major league baseball lifetime statistics for each season and his career, and a list of any post-season awards he has won and his rank on various season and career statistical leaderboards. Also Career ...
posted 7/22/2007 in Ernie Banks Bookmarks
Links to http://www.baseball-reference.com/b/bankser01.shtml
CHICAGO CUBS - ALL TIME HOME GROWN TEAM vs. ALL TIME ACQUIRED TEAM
Published 3/17/2009 by Sully (info@sullybaseball.com) at SULLY BASEBALL
... I know what I'D brag about! It wouldn't be dear ole dad. STARTING SHORTSTOP ERNIE BANKS Ernie Banks' prescience is felt all over Wrigley Field and the Chicago Cubs in ways that I don't even ...
Saturday Name That Cub
Published 1/31/2009 by Al at Bleed Cubbie Blue
Today is the birthday of three Hall of Famers: Ernie Banks (78), Nolan Ryan (62), and Jackie Robinson, who would have turned 90 today.
The man depicted here is NOT in the Hall of Fame. Once again, a $10 gift card from Distant Replays will go to the first person who correctly identifies him.
Fun With Sim Scores: The Rest of The Ballot
Published 1/12/2009 by Dan Turkenkopf at Beyond the Box Score
... 906
3.
Chuck Klein*
892
4.
Hank Sauer
891
5.
Ernie Banks*
890
6.
Roy Sievers
888 ...
The Hall of Fame Case for Ron Santo (Part 3 of 3)
Published 12/7/2008 at The Cub Reporter (TCR) | A Chicago Cubs Blog
... One of the
arguments I have seen is that the late 60s-early 70s Cubs already
have three Hall of Famers in Ernie
Banks, ...
Varitek's a proxy for Jeter
Published 11/14/2008 by jnr98@yahoo.com (Jason @ IIATMS) at It's About The Money - A New York Yankees Blog
... retire a Yankee and only play for this team his entire career, he's going to have to adapt to the changing needs of the team and the changing level of his performance. Nearly all of the great SS's, particularly the bigger ones, eventually moved from SS to yield to a younger, more athletic body. Ripken, Yount, Ernie Banks to name just three. Yount moved from SS at age 29, when he was still young enough to make the all star team as a CF. Ripken waited until age 36. Banks moved to 1B at age 31. Hell, ARod moved from SS to 3B, yielding to Jeter, in 2004 at ...
October country’s refugees (part 2 of 2)
Published 11/10/2008 by Chris Jaffe at The Hardball Times
... were one of my obvious, core picks. The franchise had six straight winning seasons with a steady corps that included 3 Hall of Famers ( Ernie Banks , ...
The Closed Eye: Kurt Streeter On Maury Wills
Published 8/18/2008 by Rob (noreply@blogger.com) at 6-4-2 — an Angels/Dodgers double play blog
... of some large powerful entity or other, promoting spun stories as absurd on their face as any Lewis Carroll fantasy (and oftentimes more so). The latest example today comes from Kurt Streeter's Times column, which contains this graf regarding the former Dodgers great Maury Wills (hyperlinking mine and thanks much to Baseball-Reference's player linking tool):
Wills stacks up well against many infielders already perched in Cooperstown. Ernie Banks and Rod Carew never made it to the World Series. Pee Wee Reese and ...
Top 100 Baseball Players of All-Time
Published 5/5/2008 by Jake at Motown Sports Revival
... of the top 100 players of all-time. But, that’s not the case. Robin Yount, Dale Murphy, Roger Maris, and Juan Gonzalez are two-time winners who don’ crack the top 100 in my estimation. Ripken’s OPS+ is borderline-horrible for an all-time great at 112. I don’t mean to take anything away. He brought something to baseball that was totally revolutionary and that was a shortstop who could hit. It’s just important not to get carried away with Ripken’s reputation. 97). Ernie Banks Banks has to be the most overrated hitter in baseball history. Don’t confuse ...
14 days ’til Opening Day: Ernie Banks
Published 3/17/2008 by Gilbert at Obscure Sports Quarterly
... 14 is also the number worn by Ernie Banks, since retired by the Chicago Cubs. Banks was an amazing player and among the game’s all-time greats, hitting 512 career home runs as a shortstop. ...
Published 9/4/2007 by chris at A Large Regular
... - won the MVP in both the NL and in the AL (tie) Ernie Banks - Mr. Cub - 2 time MVP and 14 time All-Star (tie) ...
The Team Cooperstown Forgot
Published 6/8/2007 by Landon Evanson at Bugs & Cranks
... Santo drove in more runs than any Haller’s at the hot corner not named Schmidt, Brett, Mathews, or Robinson. It is true that he spent his career in the shadows of the enshrined “Mr. Cub” Ernie Banks and ...
The 100 RBI Men
Published 5/29/2007 by Dan Agonistes at Dan Agonistes
... Ernie Banks 1969 629 155 106 725 100 ...
The Baseball Fan's Hall of Fame Project (Update 29)
Published 5/26/2007 by DCScrap at Our Book of Scrap: Sports News
... Ernie Banks 100% ...
Was the 1990s Home Run Production Out of Line?
Published 5/3/2007 by David Vincent at Baseball Analysts
... (1968), Ernie Banks (1970), ...
The Griddle: Random Record of the Week #2
Published 4/9/2007 at The Griddle
... and then striking out Ernie Banks . There was a brief rain delay in the bottom of the first, but the Braves didn't score. The Cubs scored a run in the second on an RBI groundout from right fielder ...
Opening day memories (brrrrrrr)
Published 4/9/2007 by CCD at 1060west.net (archives)
... featured two homeruns by Mr. Cub. But those were early. The dramatic blow would come a little later with the Cubs down by one in the bottom of the 11th. Wonderful ...
The Baseball Hall of Merit Plaque Room: A-F
Published 3/13/2007 at Hall of Merit
... Ernie Banks – 1977 – SS/1B ...
BASEBALL: Let's Play To...46?
Published 3/1/2007 by Baseball Crank at Baseball Crank
... If Banks actually was six years older than believed, that changes the story of his baseball career considerably. Banks was signed by Buck O'Neill of the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Leagues in 1949, was in the Army in 1951-52, and became a major league regular in 1954. If you believe his current birthdate, he was 18 when he started playing pro ball, 21 when he got out of the Army and 23 when he became the Cubs' everyday shortstop, so neither the slow pace of integration nor his military service really cost him much of his productive years in the majors. O'Neill said he didn't really showcase his power until he returned from the military. Then again, once he had a full season to adjust to major league pitching he became a monster, smacking 44 homers at age 24 in 1955 and probably being the best player in a talent-rich National League between 1955 and 1960. But in 1961, at age 30, he moved to first base due to kn ...