Top baseball players of past 74 years

I have been a baseball fan since the 1952 season, when I was 7 years old. The 2025 season was the 74th that I have followed.

As a boy, I had a reputation for knowing all the players' batting averages, etc. In high school, I was statistician for the school team in football, baseball, and basketball, and wrote articles about the games in the local weekly newspaper. With my brothers and friends, I played APBA baseball, a highly statistical baseball game with cards and dice, for many years, from boyhood through college. (Another ex-APBA player is former Texas Rangers owner George W. Bush.) For 53 years, I was a professor of mathematics.

So it seems appropriate that I produce my own semi-scientific ratings of the best players during this 74-year period. My criterion for inclusion is that the player must have had several good seasons after 1952. This includes players such as Bob Feller, Ralph Kiner, Ted Williams, and Stan Musial, for whom their best years were prior to my awareness. For such players, their entire career is included. Some Hall of Famers who were not quite recent enough to be included were Joe DiMaggio (whose last year was '51), Johnny Mize, and Hal Newhouser, both of whom had several mediocre seasons after '52. I computed DiMaggio on my ratings and he ranked twelfth of the batters, between Frank Robinson and Joe Morgan. I distinguish batters from pitchers, with separate rankings for each group. I hesitate to say "batters," because baserunning and fielding also are incorporated.

I rate the batters in 14 categories and the pitchers in 15. All but one of the categories are numerically valued. The highest player scores 10 in that category and the lowest player 0; others are scaled linearly between these two values. The one category which is not scored this way is Hall of Fame. This one was a tricky one for the current players and others who have not yet been considered by Hall voters. For a discussion of how this category was handled, and a detailed description of all categories, see

Criteria.

Some categories, like this one, depend on others' opinions. These include MVP voting, Cy Young voting, all star teams, and Golden Glove awards. Others are based on statistics. Some of these are career totals, while others are based on the player's best five years. Some of my criteria are based on hybrid statistics, such as Baseball Reference's Wins Above Replacement. I had been using Bill James' Win Shares for several categories, but since he stopped doing that in 2024, I removed them, and rescaled some of the other categories to compensate. That changed the rankings a bit, but not drastically. For several of the criteria, adjustment is made for seasonal averages in the whole league. More discussion of this appears in the Criteria section. I have added a "post-season" category, but given it a small weight. "Pitchers" means "Starting Pitchers"; I do not rate relievers.

A crucial factor in the final ratings is the weights attached to each criterion. For a discussion of the criteria and their weights, see Criteria section. The placing of Sandy Koufax and many current players, players with several spectacular seasons but relatively short careers, is highly dependent on weights given to short-term effects compared to those for career effects.

I present the ratings of 118 batters and 41 pitchers. Other players' scores were evaluated and found to be insufficient. It is possible that I have overlooked someone, but I believe that the players that I rated, 19 firstbasemen, 14 secondbasemen, 10 shortstops, 16 thirdbasemen, 9 catchers, 45 outfielders, and 5 designated hitters, have the highest scores of all eligible people. A player is considered for the position at which he played more games than any other. The three outfield positions are not distinguished.

The table below lists the top five all star teams, considering four pitchers per team. The detailed tabulation of scores for all players in all criteria appears in the

Batters List and Pitchers List.

Although there is a good bit of similarity in the numbers, no comparison of batters versus pitchers should be inferred. A detailed discussion of all criteria appears in Criteria. The number after a player's name is his total points in all weighted criteria.

Pos'nFirst teamSecond teamThird teamFourth teamFifth team
P,1Roger Clemens, 281Tom Seaver, 190Bob Gibson, 157 Jim Palmer, 140Juan Marichal, 117
P,2Randy Johnson, 225Justin Verlander 175Bob Feller, 156 Max Scherzer 139Curt Schilling, 107
P,3Pedro Martinez, 214Warren Spahn, 171Sandy Koufax, 154 Robin Roberts, 136Gaylord Perry, 106
P,4Greg Maddux, 211Clayton Kershaw, 167Steve Carlton, 148 Roy Halladay, 132Tom Glavine, 100.
CJohnny Bench, 139Yogi Berra, 108Gary Carter, 102 Mike Piazza, 97Ivan Rodriguez, 94
1B Albert Pujols, 220Jeff Bagwell, 124Miguel Cabrera, 121 Eddie Murray, 102.7Willie McCovey, 102.6
2BJoe Morgan, 172Rod Carew, 127Jackie Robinson, 122 Ryne Sandberg, 114Robinson Cano, 102/td>
3BMike Schmidt, 227George Brett, 155Wade Boggs, 146 Eddie Mathews, 140Brooks Robinson, 138
SSAlex Rodriguez, 208 Cal Ripken, 160Ernie Banks, 124 Derek Jeter, 122Robin Yount, 107
OF,1Barry Bonds, 324 Hank Aaron, 249Mike Trout, 197 Ken Griffey, Jr., 165Roberto Clemente, 150
OF,2Willie Mays, 300 Mickey Mantle, 248.3 Rickie Henderson, 179 Carl Yazstremski, 159Mookie Betts, 139
OF,3Ted Williams, 262 Stan Musial, 247.7Frank Robinson, 170 Al Kaline, 153 Aaron Judge, 137
DHShohei Ohtani, 134Frank Thomas, 127 Paul Molitor, 86David Ortiz, 85Edgar Martinez, 81

I would appreciate your comments on this study at the e-mail address listed below.

Don Davis
Department of Mathematics
Lehigh University
Bethlehem, PA 18015
(610) 758-3756 (work)
(610) 865-9058 (home)
dmd1@lehigh.edu
http://www.lehigh.edu/~dmd1