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mariano rivera closer 4 the nyy 413 saves 2.29 era and in the postseason 0.80 era and 34 saves 4 worlseries rings amazing i want 2 know your opinion

2006-12-02 10:31:58 · 28 answers · asked by Janet ♥(YFFL) 7 in Sports Baseball

28 answers

No doubt about it. Mo is the best!

2006-12-02 15:01:28 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There are two schools of thoughts on the closers.

They used to be called "firemen" because they put out the fires,
stopping the opponent from scoring. They often pitched 2 or 3 innings to finish the game. Pitchers in this class were Rollie Fingers, Rich "Goose" Gossage, Bruce Sutter, and John Hiller.

Tony LaRussa started the new idea of the closer with Dennis Eckersley back in the late 1980's. The closer would finish the game if it was a save situation (a 3-run lead or less) by coming into the game at the start of the 9th inning. While these are stressful situations, it is not like coming into the game with runners already on base.

I must give two names for the two styles of closers. From the earlier era, Goose Gossage was the best. He simply shut the opposition down, pitching for the White Sox, Pirates, Yankees, and Padres as the closer.

Mariano Rivera is the best in the new style of pitching. Absolutely no disrespect for Rivera, but I would rather have Gossage or Fingers in his prime over Rivera.

2006-12-02 11:59:12 · answer #2 · answered by jpbofohio 6 · 3 2

Mariano Rivera may have the great numbers in the World Series and postseason in general, but keep in mind with those numbers he is also at those times surrounded by some of the best teams in the past twenty years..... many people could have gone in there and done what he did.
Seriously though overall I would have to go with Dennis Eckersley or Lee Smith...... those two put fear into the eyes of opposing hitters, and were consistently dominant..

2006-12-06 07:14:37 · answer #3 · answered by bugpoppa 3 · 0 2

those different relievers were tremendous, yet Rivera must be the proper ever. some them palms, Gossage, and Sutter, for many his occupation, pitched different innings for saves, which hardly ever finished anymore. Rivera is a one-inning guy now, yet till the perfect few years ought to commonly pitch more beneficial than one inning, and an excellent type of his saves are 2-innings. an excellent type of folk ignore that he replaced into pitching in his 2d inning in sport 7 of the 2001 international sequence at the same time as he replaced into overwhelmed through Luis Gonazlez, whom i believe he had struck out the inning in the previous. Rivera's saves list should not be touched for a lengthy time period, if ever. the purely guy who has a pragmatic threat at present ought to correctly be Craig Kimbrel, who's 25 and has 100 and fifteen saves, yet he ought to need 523 basically to catch Rivera, even if Mo retired at present--and purely 2 men in historic previous have even reached 500 saves, Rivera and Trevor Hoffman. So, the Rivera's list will be damaged easily interior the subsequent 2 a lengthy time period and various of alternative pitchers will attain 500 saves? really? that's some crystal ball you've there. Any fan with straightforward experience is conscious that relievers commonly have up-and-down careers. some men have an exquisite good initiate, then flame out (like Francisco Rodriguez), some men have some good years, then lose their stuff (Heath Bell), and some relievers are journeyman who've one good 12 months, then come again all the way down to earth (Fernando Rodney). I used Kimbrel as an social gathering, because he ought to have the proper threat--yet he ought to straightforward 50 saves for the subsequent 10 years, which he received't, and he ought to nevertheless be short of Rivera. you're making it sound as if it really is effortless to pitch purely one inning, yet relievers pitch an excellent type of video games, warmth up in others the position they don't are available in, and no human being has practice as many tremendous years as Rivera. i wager you've been pertaining to my answer and that i did not say no you are able to destroy it, yet that it will likely be a lengthy time period in the previous someone does, in the adventure that they ever do.

2016-10-16 11:32:26 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

He deserves to be in the list,but he isn't even the best in Yankee history.The Goose was a better closer,he pitched in the day where you actually had to pitch a little to get the save.Hitters feared Goose Gossage.He'd knock someone down if he had to.They aren't afraid of Rivera.There are several dominant closers in MLB today,and there can be an argument made for each of them as being the best,but best ever?Stats are sometimes misleading because they don't have any way to account for the changing rules of the game,so don't base your "best ever" analysis solely on statistics.

2006-12-02 13:53:36 · answer #5 · answered by Michael R 6 · 0 1

I have to agree. Mariano Rivera is the best closer of this time and perhapes the best closer that baseball has ever seen. Maybe in the future a greater one arises, but now he is the best one out there.

2006-12-02 10:38:11 · answer #6 · answered by jeep10455 2 · 2 0

I love Mariano Rivera but i would have to say with active players it would be Trevor Hoffman his #s don't lie!
482 Saves 49 wins 2.71 era 965 S.O

2006-12-02 12:09:06 · answer #7 · answered by Richard Serenity 4 · 0 1

Trevor Hoffman is the best closer ever. Then Lee Smith and the Bruce Sutter. Mariano Rivera may be the best postseason closer ever.

2006-12-02 11:15:09 · answer #8 · answered by netbatsmurf 2 · 1 2

No. He is a good closer but the best closer is Trevor Hoffman. I mean the guy get a save almost every night, rarely does he blow a save, and he has the all-time saves?! That says something right there!

2006-12-02 12:01:55 · answer #9 · answered by ~*mU$t@Ng B@sEb@lL*~ 2 · 1 2

well, as a rookie (you could say) yes, but we will see as he gets to be a veteran. In my opinion Trevor Hoffman takes the cake. He has a era of 2.71 and 482 saves.

2006-12-02 17:31:38 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Up front - I hate the Yankees! Now, for an unbiased opinion, yes, he is the most dominate closer ever, no question. His excellence and longevity make it a no-brainer. Thankfully for fans who hate the Yankees, he is slowing down and is starting to fail more often.

2006-12-02 10:38:07 · answer #11 · answered by whitedog65 2 · 3 1

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