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View Poll Results: Curt Flood
Curt Flood changed baseball, and should be honored for it. 9 24.32%
Curt Flood? My eyes are flooding with tears of laughter! 28 75.68%
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  #1  
Old 01-01-2002, 06:48 AM
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Curt Flood

Quote:
Originally Posted by AlecBoy006
7 gold gloves
.293 hitter
Never struck out 100 times a season
3 times led the league in singles
I'm not automatically putting a player like that in the All-Star game if he can't hit for power, let alone the Hall.
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Old 11-30-2006, 08:46 PM
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Curt Flood

True, Curt Flood was an above average player at best, but he's a pioneer as far as I am concerned. Any pioneer should be in the Hall of Fame.

But however

7 gold gloves
.293 hitter
Never struck out 100 times a season
3 times led the league in singles

Curt Flood gets my vote. Don't think of him as a baseball player, but someone who did SOMETHING for baseball.
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Old 11-30-2006, 10:05 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AlecBoy006
True, Curt Flood was an above average player at best, but he's a pioneer as far as I am concerned. Any pioneer should be in the Hall of Fame.

But however

7 gold gloves
.293 hitter
Never struck out 100 times a season
3 times led the league in singles

Curt Flood gets my vote. Don't think of him as a baseball player, but someone who did SOMETHING for baseball.
For those of us that do not know what Flood exactly pioneered, you might consider clarifying what he is known for.
BTW, I voted nay, even dispite his contribution to the game of baseball.
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Old 11-30-2006, 10:06 PM
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Free Agency...
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  #5  
Old 11-30-2006, 10:23 PM
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--I'm not laughing at the idea, but I vote no.
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Old 11-30-2006, 11:27 PM
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As I stated in the thread about him, I feel the same way about Curt as I feel about Marvin Miller: a huge influence on the modern game, which should qualify him. Added to this is the undeniable fact of him being an outstanding player for a decade on some of the best teams in Baseball at that time.

His career numbers alone would leave him short, but the facts assembled together argue for his inclusion.
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Old 12-01-2006, 07:41 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Bravos
As I stated in the thread about him, I feel the same way about Curt as I feel about Marvin Miller: a huge influence on the modern game, which should qualify him. Added to this is the undeniable fact of him being an outstanding player for a decade on some of the best teams in Baseball at that time.


His career numbers alone would leave him short, but the facts assembled together argue for his inclusion.
Curt Flood is in no way, shape, or form a HOFer based on what he did on the field. If we put Flood in the HOF, why not Davy Force?

What Flood did in no way led to free agency. His case was lost; the Supreme Court shut the door on Flood, and on free agency. In truth, free agency was FARTHER away for the players after Flood lost his case. Flood was a lost cause, a rallying point, but his suit set the FA cause back.
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Old 12-01-2006, 08:31 AM
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Just another silly candidate. As a player he was distinctly average. The only thing he attempted to pioneer was player's "right" to break a contract.
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Old 12-01-2006, 09:31 AM
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I voted no. Heck, Flood lost his case. If you want somebody in the Hall for free agency who was also a player, you might as well toss in Andy Messersmith, who isn't even close to borderline status. Either you put in Marvin Miller (who I wouldn't put in) or just forget it.
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Old 12-01-2006, 10:56 AM
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I'm sorry, but am I the only one that sees Curt Flood as less of a pioneer and more of a selfish player who refused to go to work?
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Old 12-01-2006, 12:46 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EvanAparra
Free Agency...
Flood did NOT pioneer free agency. Was Flood the first free agent?
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Old 12-01-2006, 02:13 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by candy curveball cummings
I'm sorry, but am I the only one that sees Curt Flood as less of a pioneer and more of a selfish player who refused to go to work?

--Neither. Flood did NOT do a great deal to help the cause of player freedom and there is no direct link between his case and the eventual victory of the players. I do think he had a right to refuse to go to Philadelphia when the Cardinals decided they would rather have somebody else. If my company wanted to transfer me to another city I would have the option of saying no and going to work where I wanted (assuming I was wanted there ). Ballplayers should have that same right.
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Old 12-01-2006, 02:21 PM
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Agreed leecemark. Hence, my reference to Andy Messersmith (and arguably Dave McNally) IF you want to put in a player instead of Marvin Miller (which is flawed logic, anyway).
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Old 12-01-2006, 03:11 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by candy curveball cummings
I'm sorry, but am I the only one that sees Curt Flood as less of a pioneer and more of a selfish player who refused to go to work?
You are not.
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Old 12-02-2006, 07:50 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KCGHOST
Just another silly candidate. As a player he was distinctly average. The only thing he attempted to pioneer was player's "right" to break a contract.
I'll agree that Flood's numbers aren't HOF worthy, but he was hardly an "average" player. A consistent .300 hitter and a superb CFer, Flood could chase down a flyball with the best, although it's ironic that the single play he is best remembered for was when he misjudged Northrups fly to deep cf in the 7th inning of game 7, 68 WS. Still, I saw him play a lot of excellent CF, especially at Sportsmans Park, my dad would buy tickets for the rf pavilion area and sit towards the cf end, because he loved to watch Flood play outfield. Also, because he was rather tight with a buck.

Flood didn't have much power and didn't get many walks, but he excelled at hitting behind the runner. It's anecdotal evidence, but it seemed that they the Cards would consistently score runs in the 60's with Brock getting on, stealing 2nd. Flood hitting a ball to the right side to move Lou to 3rd and them scoring on a sac fly or groundball to the right side.

As far as his refusal to go to Philly, yeah, I've thought it was mostly because of his self-interest, rather than out of some noble consideration of advancing the rights of MLB players. I've wondered what would have happened in 69 if Flood had been traded to say, SF or LA [Flood was from the Bay area] and offered a 20% salary hike, from the 90K he was making [an excellent MLB salary in 1969] My guess is that he wouldn't have objected. Instead, he was traded to Philly, the dung-heap of the NL at the time, where the fans treated a black superstar, Richie Allen, who was from the area, like a piece of dogcrap.
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Old 12-02-2006, 10:13 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KCGHOST
Just another silly candidate. As a player he was distinctly average. The only thing he attempted to pioneer was player's "right" to break a contract.
Well, an arbitrator later on decided that "one year" meant "one year". Of course, it wasn't Flood that got the players to that point.

Flood is not a credible candidate now, but I rechecked his stats. Through age 31, Flood had 1,851 hits. He was fast, and he was the best defensive CF in the NL in the sixties, if one goes by Gold Gloves won. He didn't walk a lot, but he didn't walk a little either; he walked just enough to where that issue didn't threaten his playing time.

Players of Flood's type usually age well. Flood had an off year in 1969, and that off year was worse than appears because of the improved BAs and conditions for hitters in 1969, but the whole Cardinal team had an off year that year; he was likely to rebound. Flood averaged 171 hits per 162 games, and that takes in his below average years, from age 20-22. Those years weren't good years; Flood wasn't a regular two of them, but he was in the majors at a young age. Given the improving conditions for hitters, plus the upcoming Astroturf era, Flood probably had a 40-45 percent chance at 3,000 hits, barring major injury.

Then, perhaps not. I've read Flood's autobiography The Way It Is, and it's not the writings of a happy camper. Flood was a very bitter man, and it is easy to see how Flood's bitterness could have impacted his career negatively. I used to blame Flood's flop with Washington as a matter of losing his skills after missing a year, but I don't think that's it. Bruce Bochte came back after a year off at an older age and had a better year than Flood; he didn't lose all that much, granting that he didn't have all that much to lose. I believe that Flood's 1969 dropoff was partially a result of that bitterness seeping in. Flood compared himself to a slave in his autobiography, and while the reserve clause was unduly restrictive, Flood was far from a slave, and everybody knows that.

But if he had gotten his head together enough to focus on playing, and if he had not been out of baseball in 1970, Flood may well have ended up a marginal HOF candidate. At worst, he would have been the new Doc Cramer, ending up with over 2,700 hits (let's say he didn't get the 3k which would have clinched the HOF for Flood). Flood, however, had several things going for him that Cramer never did:

(A) A bit more plate discipline
(B) Unquestioned defensive excellence in CF (Cramer's credientials on defense are debated)
(C) Being a key player on two world champions and a third pennant winner in a 5 year period. (Three of Flood's best seasons coincide with the years the Cards won the pennant; without Flood, the Cards would not have won all of those pennants, particularly the 1964 pennant.)

So he's another "what if" case. Flood should not go into the HOF, but he was making better progress toward the HOF at the point where he walked away from it all at age 31.
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Old 12-02-2006, 08:30 PM
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I'm not wading through all the hidebound rhetoric and faulty assumptions here on a point by point basis.
Deny him credit for his part in a long term multifront strategy to overturn a rather patently absurd set of rules, impugn him personally...whatever. I think the record on the matter is clear.
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Old 12-03-2006, 06:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Bravos
I'm not wading through all the hidebound rhetoric and faulty assumptions here on a point by point basis.
Deny him credit for his part in a long term multifront strategy to overturn a rather patently absurd set of rules, impugn him personally...whatever. I think the record on the matter is clear.
Bravos,

You and I were on the same side on Miller, but we're not on Flood. The difference--Miller was part of the winning strategy. Flood was a failed part of that strategy at an earlier time. Miller had to get the arbitration system in place and try again to have success. That interim separates Flood's stand (brave, foolhardy, egotistical, or some combination of the three) from the success in overturning those rules. It's kind of like a player coming to a team and helping make them good, but leaving before they develop into a World Series winner. That player doesn't get a ring for helping start the trend because he wasn't there when the payoff came. Harsh, perhaps, but it's the way of the world.

Had Flood's risk paid off with a win in court, I could see honoring him for the risk he took. But he lost--and his ballplaying career, as it is, isn't particularly close to HOF levels. It's not enough for the HOF in my book.

Jim Albright
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Old 10-17-2007, 04:14 AM
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Curt Flood

Simple question. Feel free to explain, though.
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Old 10-17-2007, 09:01 AM
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Thumbs down

Not much to explain. An average hitter with above average defensive skills. On the field he will always be remembered for his misplay in CF in the 7th game of the WS that might have cost the Cardinals a championship.

Mostly remembered for his Quixotic law suit that people put way too much stock in.
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Old 10-17-2007, 01:27 PM
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merged the new thread with a previous one.
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Old 10-17-2007, 02:46 PM
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The ironic thing is Flood wasn't seeking the ability to bring his services elsewhere. He wanted to stay in St. Louis. If the Cardinals had wanted to keep him, Flood was contented as could be with the reserve clause. Miller latched onto his case, but Flood is hardly a pioneer and far from worthy of the HOF.
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Old 10-17-2007, 08:29 PM
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Exclamation

I reiterate my last post.
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Old 09-21-2009, 04:53 PM
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I don't really think Flood is Hall of Fame worthy. Should we put Rob Blomberg in the Hall of Fame? He was the first DH after all.

Flood was a very solid player defensively, however.
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Old 09-21-2009, 10:11 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Bravos View Post
I'm not wading through all the hidebound rhetoric and faulty assumptions here on a point by point basis.
Deny him credit for his part in a long term multifront strategy to overturn a rather patently absurd set of rules, impugn him personally...whatever. I think the record on the matter is clear.
Flood chose to sue baseball over a contract issue. His suit had ramifications for every player active in the game. But the outcome of Flood v. Kuhn for EVERY player in MLB was simple; they were stuck with the reserve clause. Period. On top of being still stuck, the Reserve Clause was now reaffirmed by a new Supreme Court decision, and at a time where the Court was still a relatively liberal body.

I see no evidence that Flood took this action as some kind of martyr for the body of MLB. Flood did this for himself, for his own reasons. Anyone who wants to ascribe greater altruism to Flood's motives need to read his autobiography The Way It Is and judge for themselves what Flood's motives were. My read on this is that Flood was motivated not so much by money as by an incredible sense of personal bitterness; he was ALWAYS an iconoclast and a loner, and never a "team player", even in his reserve clause challenge.

Not that I judge Flood harshly for his bitterness. Flood had things to be bitter about; things that money (and he made good money, even if it wasn't today's money) didn't make go away. It was good for other players that a guy so motivated by bitterness would take up this particular torch; more contented individuals would accept the reserve clause as a concession to the shortness of both their careers in baseball and to life, itself. But I don't see him as part of a "team" strategy to overturn the reserve clause; Flood was going to do this if he had to go it alone, and it was about his own issues, and not about the issues of others.

If Flood is going to be honored, it is more fitting that he be honored by the Labor movement in America. He turned out to be a bit of a martyr, even if he didn't intend to be one. He's become a rallying point for the MLBPA; Marvin Miller often told players of a particular benefit "Curt Flood got you this." But that wasn't really true; MARVIN MILLER got them this, together with the solidarity of the MLBPA, which is quite remarkable, given the money ballplayers make and the general conservative narcissism and self-centeredness of so many jocks. Nathan Hale died for his country; Hercules Mulligan lived to become an invaluable spy for the Colonial army. In recognizing who became the rallying point, one also needs to recognize who actually did more to advance the cause at hand.
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