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Gert T

Athletes you were wrong on

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On the radio today, a Reds TV commentator was talking about how he saw nothing in Wily Mo Pena being a good OF at the major league level. While Wily Mo is not a superstar yet, I also felt the same way.

 

So my question is (and going both ways) what players did you think would never be that good at the pro level had good-great careers and vice versa?

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Guest Vitamin X

I was one of those who thought Leaf would be a better player than Manning. He really did have the stronger arm, but his character/arrogance/injury problems led to him being the infamous bust that he is.

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Most everyone had Eric Lindros as the next big thing in the NHL, the guy to lead the league into the millenium as its star. They were very wrong.

 

I was wrong about Joe Thornton being the saving grace of the Bruins franchise, to step in for Bourque and be the man. But, at the same time, I thought Samsonov had 'bust' written all over him, the same with Bergeron. So, I was happily wrong there.

 

 

I never thought the Pedro Martinez trade would work out as well as it did. I thought the Red Sox had gotten a very good starter, but what followed were the Pedro Martinez: Man or Machine? years in Boston. A no-hitter waiting to happen every five days.

 

But, at the same time, I was wrong about so many numerous "big stars" in the Red Sox organization. "Stars" like Tim Naehring, Phil Plantier, Scott Cooper, Bob Zupcic, Aaron Sele, Jeff Suppan, etc. The list is a mile fucking long.

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Baseball is notoriously bad at hyping draft picks as "the next big thing" or "can't miss". With the farm system set up as it is, these guys can get lost in the shuffle very fast.

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Baseball is notoriously bad at hyping draft picks as "the next big thing" or "can't miss". With the farm system set up as it is, these guys can get lost in the shuffle very fast.

Great point, earlier in the day the same guy (Chris Welch FSN Ohio) commented the same thing about Homer Bailey. Bailey was the USA Today Player of the Year and a "can't miss" but he also mentioned a few of the other Reds pitching prospects who were can't miss as well, to the point I don't remember both their names!

 

I have to admit to I was in the same boat with Manning/Leaf.

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Count me in for those who thought Leaf would be better.

 

I also was PISSED when the Pistons decided to trade Grant Hill for only the two guys they had signed from Orlando(Ben Wallace + Chucky Atkins.) I always felt they should have tried to get a first rounder or something out of the deal, since teams seem to toss those around like candy anyway. In hindsight, I still would have loved to see a first round added, as it could have ended up being a decent first round pick. The Pistons still easily won the trade though.

 

I was also pissed when they fired Rick Carlisle and hired Larry Brown. I couldn't figure out why they hired the older Brown to win them an NBA Championship, when, at the time, he had never won an NBA Championship. Guess I was wrong about that one.

 

I thought the team of Charlie Batch and Germane Crowell were going to lead the Lions to the Super Bowl one day.

 

I thought Matthieu Biron was going to be a star at one point. Given, I didn't exactly like when the Lightning traded Adrian Aucoin to get him, but I felt he'd turn into something. On the plus side, Rick Dudley has the honour of being one of the few to be schooled in a trade by Mike Milbury. He must be very proud.

 

EDIT: How could I forget? Tim Biatkabutka(sp?) *shakes head*

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Great point, earlier in the day the same guy (Chris Welch FSN Ohio) commented the same thing about Homer Bailey. Bailey was the USA Today Player of the Year and a "can't miss" but he also mentioned a few of the other Reds pitching prospects who were can't miss as well, to the point I don't remember both their names!

 

The rule here is that high school pitchers are usually not prospects.

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I thought former Mariners minor league pitcher, 6'10" lefty Ryan Anderson a.k.a the "Little Unit" would dominate baseball for a long time. He was dominating in the minor leagues but some freak shoulder injuries hit him and I have no idea where he is now.

 

 

My biggest flub would be thinking Ryan Leaf was better than Manning. Being a Pac-10 guy I was hugely favoring Leaf. I saw Leaf as a 4,000 yard passer every year and Manning just being an ok starter who would bounce around the league.

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I thought former Mariners minor league pitcher, 6'10" lefty Ryan Anderson a.k.a the "Little Unit" would dominate baseball for a long time. He was dominating in the minor leagues but some freak shoulder injuries hit him and I have no idea where he is now.

 

Still in the Mariners' organization. Various arm injuries have kept him out of action entirely since 2000. A report from USA Today says he could begin playing again any time now. No clue on whether or not he has anything left.

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I thought former Mariners minor league pitcher, 6'10" lefty Ryan Anderson a.k.a the "Little Unit" would dominate baseball for a long time. He was dominating in the minor leagues but some freak shoulder injuries hit him and I have no idea where he is now.

 

Still in the Mariners' organization. Various arm injuries have kept him out of action entirely since 2000. A report from USA Today says he could begin playing again any time now. No clue on whether or not he has anything left.

he was really great back in high school when he played at Dearborn Divine Child in Michigan. I was in like 6th grade and he was a senior, and his team played after our like middle school teams did. My dad who knew enough as a former draft prospect to make a somewhat reasonable analysis said that he would be a major league starting pitcher before he was 23 which i figure he would have been had not injuries got in his way. Hell the Tigers were thinking of taking the hometown star with the #1 pick in the 1998 Draft.

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He was good enough to play in the majors by 2001, when he was just 21. But that's the problem with pitching prospects. Injuries weed out a lot of them before they reach the big leagues.

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Everyone should be honest on LeBron James.

 

Alot of people thought he would bust and wanted him to bust.

 

I didn't think he would be as great as he was this season, but I thought he would develop into a great player. But he proved everyone wrong.

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I remember back in the late 80s / early 90s, when the Braves sucked, they had to pass on a must-pick prospect at the #1 slot named Todd Van Poppel because he said he wanted to go to college first. He subsequently signed with the Oakland As, the defending World Series champions.

 

They ended up taking someone who just sounded like a bust. I remember saying to myself "Chipper Jones? What the fuck kind of name is that?"

 

Considering that Jones is a great player and Van Poppel is a Trivial Pursuit answer, I guess we know who got the better end of that one.

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Van Poppel was throwing in the mid-90's range right out of highschool, being an A's fan, I was so juiced to get him, what a damn bust he was. He had chance after chance after chance....

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Guest Salacious Crumb

I'll agree about Willy Mo Pena. My friend and I were ripping on him pretty hard at the start of the season but he's been on fire since coming back with 13 HRs and a .295 average. He's been awesome as a pinch hitter as well.

 

Todd Jones has been a pleasant surprise this year as well.

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Pena was basically a joke of the Reds front office ineptitude and ownerships cheapness, as he had no business on the big league roster last season, but the Reds were out of options on Wily Mo.

 

But I'll say I am getting full on the Wily Mo crow pie.

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Guest Anglesault

After being really, really, really wrong on a certain Yankee about ten years ago (Who I will not name, because it embarasses me to this day) I've built up a long streak of pikcing the winners and losers to come through the organization.

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After being really, really, really wrong on a certain Yankee about ten years ago (Who I will not name, because it embarasses me to this day) I've built up a long streak of pikcing the winners and losers to come through the organization.

Brien Taylor???

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Guest Mindless_Aggression

I thought Michael Olowakandi was gonna be awesome.

 

He had size, speed, agility and some good post moves. He also had the work ethic of a crippled baby calf. Tis a shame.

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I thought Matthieu Biron was going to be a star at one point. Given, I didn't exactly like when the Lightning traded Adrian Aucoin to get him, but I felt he'd turn into something. On the plus side, Rick Dudley has the honour of being one of the few to be schooled in a trade by Mike Milbury. He must be very proud.

 

Dude, I was nauseated once I heard about that trade on the radio, here we are finally getting a No.1 Defenseman and we trade him for a prospect. I didn't care how good or bad he (the prospect) was it was a horrible mistake. As far as my blunders well, I was excited when the D-Rays picked up Ben Grieve... oh well.

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Guest Olympic Slam
Van Poppel was throwing in the mid-90's range right out of highschool, being an A's fan, I was so juiced to get him, what a damn bust he was. He had chance after chance after chance....

My stack of Van Poppel rookie cards..........could they be any more worthless?

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