Turn Off Ads?
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 21

Thread: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

  1. #1
    Maple SERP savafan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Cincinnati, Ohio
    Posts
    18,444

    After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    As the baseball season winds down, it's worth asking, are we seeing the last days of the career of perhaps this generations greatest player? While Griffey in Cincinnati didn't work out the way we had hoped, I feel blessed to have seen his swing in our uniform, in our stadium and in our city.

    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/200...08/20/griffey/

    The television in the Seattle Mariners clubhouse was tuned to the Brett Favre Channel. Everybody on the TV was talking about Favre's second unretirement, what it means for the NFL, what it does to Favre's legacy and whether cows in Wisconsin can ever bring themselves to produce milk again.

    Ken Griffey Jr. was not listening. He does not need to listen. He will never be that guy on the television set, parachuting in to be somebody's hero, looking for one more reminder of how important he is.

    "One retirement," Griffey said, when I asked him if he could see himself making a comeback someday. "And that's just the way it is. I don't think it's fair to organizations to go back and forth. I can't speak for other people. I just know for me that when I'm done, I'm pretty much done."

    Are you watching, America? This is how you go out. This is how you solidify your legacy: by letting it go.

    Griffey, who turns 40 in November, says he might play next year -- "I'm not going to force myself on anybody, but if it comes around, and I still feel like I can contribute, I'd love to come back" -- but that is a 50/50 call.

    This might be the last we see of Ken Griffey Jr. He might walk out of that Mariners clubhouse on Oct. 4 and never come back -- not as a player, and definitely not as a coach or manager, because Griffey does not play baseball for the life. He endures the life so he can play baseball.

    Whenever Griffey retires he will leave with his reputation intact. Nobody can prove these things, but Griffey is often held up as the one true superstar of his era, the guy who looked into the eye of the syringe and said no. Juicers often defend themselves by saying "you have no idea how hard I work in the weight room," but Griffey has an even better defense: he was never much of a weightlifter.

    "I'd bet my life that Ken Griffey Jr. never did steroids," said Sean Casey, who played with Griffey for six seasons in Cincinnati. "I'd bet every dollar I made in my career. He's the one guy I would bet on."

    For all the righteous indignation about Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens and Alex Rodriguez, it is pretty easy to see why they apparently injected their way to better numbers. The rules were lax, the enforcement nonexistent. The benefits were huge.

    The better question is: why not?

    People say Ken Griffey Jr. never needed steroids. They point to the beginning of Junior's career. He was the No. 1 pick in the draft, one of the best prospects ever. His father was a major league All-Star, and everybody figured Junior had more talent than Senior did. He was a sure Hall of Famer by his early 30s. He did not need steroids.

    But you know ... Barry Bonds did not need steroids, either. He was also the son of an All-Star, a high draft pick, a sure Hall of Famer by his early 30s. The difference with Griffey is that he doesn't need any of this. He never cared for the fame. He is an extremely wealthy man and lives like it, but he has never chased every last dollar -- he gave up at least $30 million, and probably closer to $50 million, when he forced a trade to his hometown Reds and signed a nine-year deal.

    If he had ... um, juiced properly, then he might have hit 800 home runs. But what would that mean? That he was the best ever? Griffey never bought it. He said he grew up listening to old-time black players like Joe Black, Brooks Lawrence and Chuck Harmon talk about their barnstorming days, and he decided before his first major league at-bat that he could never match what they had done.

    "I don't consider myself the top tier of guys who ever played the game, because it was a lot harder for them than it was for me," he said. "Willie Mays and Hank Aaron, what they had to go through in their career ... Can you imagine how much easier it would have been if they were playing now and could concentrate on baseball?"

    Griffey always had the kind of talent that leads scouts to say he had "no ceiling," but in his mind, that was his ceiling: he was just a ballplayer. It makes any other disappointment easier to take. The late-career injuries were frustrating, but not as bad as having to drive 20 miles to find a restaurant that would serve him. He will probably finish his career without playing for a World Series winner, but he says "it's just the luck of the draw. It's not something that is going to define me."

    Griffey is hitting .220 in his return to the Mariners. It is a good .220, as .220s go, with a little power and a lot of walks, but still: Ken Griffey Jr. is hitting .220. He is not going to let that define him, either.

    Griffey has not always handled celebrity gracefully. If a fan heckles him, he is likely to heckle right back. By reputation, he would rather spend 10 minutes getting out of an interview than five minutes giving one. Writers who have dealt with him say there is a secret to getting time with Griffey: ask about his kids.

    "They're my kids to raise," Griffey says of the three kids he has with his wife, Melissa. "They're nobody else's. If they had a manual, I would have read it twice."

    Of course, he does not raise his kids like you raise yours. When his son Trey needs football advice, Griffey calls former NFL stars Thurman Thomas, Ricky Watters and Darryl Talley. His daughter Taryn's AAU basketball team is coached by longtime NBA players Antonio Davis and Dee Brown.

    Don't get me wrong. It's not like the kids get golf lessons from his neighbor Tiger Woods or anything. As Griffey says: "We haven't gotten to golf yet."

    This does not seem like a normal life, but Griffey says, "I try to keep my house as normal as possible. To the outside we may not be normal, but to us, we are normal. I'm a normal dad with an abnormal job. I try to make them understand: This is what we do. It's not who we are."

    Maybe that is it. He won't let his job define him, in the way Favre and Clemens and A-Rod let it define them. He could have helped his image by signing a few more autographs, but does not seem to get a kick out of it. He could give more sugary answers for TV, but he doesn't want to fake it.

    Griffey does not claim to be the perfect parent or perfect celebrity. But he is himself. Whenever he retires -- maybe in two months, maybe in a year -- he will emerge from superstardom with his sense of self intact. He does not see himself as a stat line.

    Griffey has a friend in Orlando record video of his kids' games, and Griffey watched them almost every day on his iPhone or laptop.

    Griffey usually gets two versions of Trey's football games. One is a highlights package. The other is the whole game, start to finish.

    I asked him which one he watches. Both, he said. But he prefers the whole game.

    "The highlights are just him doing exceptionally well," Ken Griffey Jr. said. "The whole game, I can see everything."
    My dad got to enjoy 3 Reds World Championships by the time he was my age. So far, I've only gotten to enjoy one. Step it up Redlegs!


  2. Turn Off Ads?
  3. #2
    Beer is good!! George Anderson's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Indianapolis
    Posts
    5,964

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    I think you might see Griffey overtake Tom Seaver for the highest HOF vote percentage. I think the writers will wanna send a message and reward a guy from the "steroid era" who did things the right way!!
    "Boys, I'm one of those umpires that misses 'em every once in a while so if it's close, you'd better hit it." Cal Hubbard

  4. #3
    Member cincrazy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    South Vienna, OH
    Posts
    4,693

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    Quote Originally Posted by George Anderson View Post
    I think you might see Griffey overtake Tom Seaver for the highest HOF vote percentage. I think the writers will wanna send a message and reward a guy from the "steroid era" who did things the right way!!
    I would like to think so, but I don't see it happening. He doesn't have the greatest reputation within the national press. He's rejected a lot of interviews over the years, doesn't throw himself in front of the cameras for attention. I think that will bite him in that regard.

  5. #4
    Retired
    Join Date
    Apr 2001
    Location
    Cincinnati, OH
    Posts
    3,934

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    Quote Originally Posted by cincrazy View Post
    I would like to think so, but I don't see it happening. He doesn't have the greatest reputation within the national press. He's rejected a lot of interviews over the years, doesn't throw himself in front of the cameras for attention. I think that will bite him in that regard.
    Perhaps so, but if he's not voted in on the first ballot it would be a total disgrace.

  6. #5
    Maple SERP savafan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Cincinnati, Ohio
    Posts
    18,444

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    Quote Originally Posted by Reds4Life View Post
    Perhaps so, but if he's not voted in on the first ballot it would be a total disgrace.
    He may be the only player from his era we see get voted in for a while, while guys like Blyleven, Dawson and Parker may finally get the nod.
    My dad got to enjoy 3 Reds World Championships by the time he was my age. So far, I've only gotten to enjoy one. Step it up Redlegs!

  7. #6
    Beer is good!! George Anderson's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Indianapolis
    Posts
    5,964

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    Quote Originally Posted by Reds4Life View Post
    Perhaps so, but if he's not voted in on the first ballot it would be a total disgrace.
    Writers have shown over the years that they will punish a player who wasn't overly cooperative with them, but no player was more uncooperative than Steve Carlton and he got in fairly easy.
    "Boys, I'm one of those umpires that misses 'em every once in a while so if it's close, you'd better hit it." Cal Hubbard

  8. #7
    Haunted by walks
    Join Date
    Apr 2000
    Location
    Syracuse
    Posts
    9,950

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    I think the writers will like the story they'll have, the clean ballplayer goes into the Hall, more than they'll remember his grumpiness.

  9. #8
    Member cincrazy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    South Vienna, OH
    Posts
    4,693

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    Quote Originally Posted by BCubb2003 View Post
    I think the writers will like the story they'll have, the clean ballplayer goes into the Hall, more than they'll remember his grumpiness.
    I completely agree. But I don't think enough will forget about the grumpiness to get him past Tom Seaver.

  10. #9
    Member wally post's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2000
    Location
    New york state
    Posts
    1,496

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    Jr is cool - great guy in my book. I say even the writers will give it up - more than Seaver.

  11. #10
    Haunted by walks
    Join Date
    Apr 2000
    Location
    Syracuse
    Posts
    9,950

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    I know the votes are somewhat political, but it's hard to imagine any writer, even on the first ballot, going, "Griffey, Hall of Famer? No, I don't think so."

    And if they have some weird concept that he's a Hall of Famer, but not a first balloter, so they won't vote for him this time, then that's just... weird.

  12. #11
    Just The Big Picture macro's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    The Bluegrass State
    Posts
    6,150

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    As a Reds fan, I really hate to admit this, but after looking at the photo on the SI page, I think Junior looks more natural in a Mariners uniform than he did in a Reds uniform. He really needs to retire in that uniform, no matter what.

    Help stamp out, eliminate, and do away with redundancy.

  13. #12
    Churlish Johnny Footstool's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    Overland Park, KS
    Posts
    13,881

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    It's sad that he will go into the HOF as a Mariner -- sad that his time in Cincinnati wasn't better.
    "I prefer books and movies where the conflict isn't of the extreme cannibal apocalypse variety I guess." Redsfaithful

  14. #13
    Maple SERP savafan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Cincinnati, Ohio
    Posts
    18,444

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    Quote Originally Posted by Johnny Footstool View Post
    It's sad that he will go into the HOF as a Mariner -- sad that his time in Cincinnati wasn't better.
    I think he was always going to the HOF as a Mariner. He saved that franchise.
    My dad got to enjoy 3 Reds World Championships by the time he was my age. So far, I've only gotten to enjoy one. Step it up Redlegs!

  15. #14
    Haunted by walks
    Join Date
    Apr 2000
    Location
    Syracuse
    Posts
    9,950

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    At least it's not as a White Sock.

  16. #15
    Rally Onion! Chip R's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2000
    Location
    Cincinnati, OH
    Posts
    41,820

    Re: After many years, Ken Griffey Jr. has managed to keep legacy intact

    Quote Originally Posted by BCubb2003 View Post
    And if they have some weird concept that he's a Hall of Famer, but not a first balloter, so they won't vote for him this time, then that's just... weird.

    Welcome to the world of the baseball writers.
    Last edited by Chip R; 08-21-2009 at 10:57 AM.
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
    I was wrong
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
    Chip is right


Turn Off Ads?

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

Board Moderators may, at their discretion and judgment, delete and/or edit any messages that violate any of the following guidelines: 1. Explicit references to alleged illegal or unlawful acts. 2. Graphic sexual descriptions. 3. Racial or ethnic slurs. 4. Use of edgy language (including masked profanity). 5. Direct personal attacks, flames, fights, trolling, baiting, name-calling, general nuisance, excessive player criticism or anything along those lines. 6. Posting spam. 7. Each person may have only one user account. It is fine to be critical here - that's what this board is for. But let's not beat a subject or a player to death, please.

Thank you, and most importantly, enjoy yourselves!


RedsZone.com is a privately owned website and is not affiliated with the Cincinnati Reds or Major League Baseball


Contact us: Boss | Gallen5862 | Plus Plus | Powel Crosley | RedlegJake | The Operator