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Stubborn Calm

 

There’s a nice interview with Ken Singleton over at Fangraphs today (David Laurila asks the questions):

DL: Was on-base percentage underrated in your era?

KS: Most definitely. I think that nowadays — with the attention paid to OBP and OPS — people would have seen me in a different light. That said, I was fortunate enough to play for Earl Weaver, who, maybe before his time, knew what on-base percentage meant.

My first year in Baltimore, there really weren’t a lot of guys stealing bases. He called me into his office in spring training. I thought that maybe I was in trouble, but what he wanted to tell me was that I was going to lead off. I told him that I wasn’t capable of stealing many bases, and he said, “That’s not the idea. The whole idea is that you walk a lot, and Bobby Grich walks a lot, so you’ll bat first and he’ll bat second.” I set the Orioles record for walks that season [118] and it still stands. Bobby Grich walked 107 times that season.

My first at bat in the American League came in Tiger Stadium on a cold day. I drew a walk. I went to third on a base hit and scored on a three-run home run [by Lee May]. I scored our first run of the season. When I got back to the dugout, Earl Weaver looked at me and said, “That’s what I was talking about. Get on base.”

[Featured image via Corbis]

4 comments

1 ms october   ~  Sep 7, 2011 11:24 am

really nice interview.
kenny was before my time, but his numbers are solid.
i also really enjoy him on yes.

2 Eddie Lee Whitson KO   ~  Sep 7, 2011 11:24 am

I like Kenny, liked him as a player. Also like Earl. Dated my grandma, in fact. True story. A classy bloke.
Sabermetrics is a big word for common sense over-cooked.
Have a nice day. Love, Eddie

3 seamus   ~  Sep 7, 2011 11:37 am

yikes, did yinz see today's lineup?

4 RIYank   ~  Sep 7, 2011 11:41 am

[3] Holy smokes. Spring training.

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"This ain't football. We do this every day."
--Earl Weaver