Tag Archives: Yankees dynasty

H2H 31: Joe DiMaggio vs. Ted Williams – Who was Better?

1941 was an iconic year in baseball history, highlighted by the great individual accomplishments of Joe DiMaggio of the New York Yankees and Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox.  Between the two, the Yankee Clipper’s record-setting 56-game hitting streak and the Splendid Splinter’s .406 season batting average have stood the test of time – nearly 80 years later, DiMaggio still has the longest hitting streak in baseball history and Williams remains the last man to hit .400 over a full season.  These two Hall of Famers and baseball icons have been forever linked by their overlapping careers (they were arguably the two best players of their generation) and the fierce rivalry between the Yankees and the Red Sox, which leads to the inevitable question:

Who was better – Joe DiMaggio or Ted Williams?

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H2H 11: Johnny Bench vs. Yogi Berra – Who was Better?

Catcher might be one of the most difficult positions to play in all of sports, and certainly in baseball, as it is both physically taxing (squatting behind the plate for three hours while wearing heavy equipment) and mentally demanding (calling the pitches, managing runners on base, etc.).  Given the heavy responsibilities bestowed upon the catcher, the focus for most baseball teams is to have a great defensive backstop, with any offense being icing on the cake; as such, this makes a catcher who is both offensively and defensively gifted a bit of a unicorn and thus, extremely valuable.  Throughout the history of baseball, there have only been a select group of catchers who have excelled in both facets of the game, and unsurprisingly, most of them are Hall of Famers. When it comes to the discussion around the greatest catcher ever, chief among the handful of contenders includes Johnny Bench, one of the engines of Cincinnati’s “Big Red Machine” in the 1970s, and Lawrence “Yogi” Berra, who backstopped the New York Yankees dynasty of the 1950s and 1960s and is remembered as much for his quirky Berra-isms as he was for his play.  In comparing the careers and achievements of the towering Bench and the diminutive Berra, the question is:

Who was better – Johnny Bench or Yogi Berra?

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H2H 4: Mickey Mantle vs. Willie Mays – Who was Better?

1957 was a year that rocked the baseball world in New York and marked the end of a golden age of America’s pastime in Gotham.  Of the three storied teams that had called New York home for more than a half century (the Yankees in the Bronx, the Dodgers in Brooklyn, and the Giants in Manhattan), both the Dodgers and Giants packed their bags and moved west to the greener pastures of California (to Los Angeles and San Francisco, respectively).  Up until that time, baseball fans had been treated to a trio of Hall of Fame sluggers patrolling center field in New York – Mickey Mantle for the Yankees, Duke Snider for the Dodgers, and Willie Mays for the Giants. While Snider was an outstanding player in his own right (an 8x All-Star with 407 career home runs who was inducted to the Hall of Fame in 1980), Mantle and Mays were considered not only among the preeminent players of their time, but are arguably two of the greatest center fielders in baseball history.  In stacking up their career achievements alongside each other, the question arises:

Who was better – Mickey Mantle or Willie Mays?

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