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What is the fascination with David Eckstein?

A guy that busts his ass seemingly 162 games a year and shows that he has fun doing it, the horror.
 
There's tons of reasons.

Watch him run. He looks like he is busting his ass. Maybe other players are. I know some aren't. But the way he's pumping his arms wildly, his face clenched - he sure as heck looks like he's trying, all the time. Average fans recognize that.

In Anaheim, before games, there was ONE player who signed autographs every day before the game. You could see the line, 45 minutes before the game, just past the home dugout. Other players may sign for a day. Some players never signed at all. But only one player signed every single day. Eckstein. My guess is that its still going on in St. Louis. Fans recognize that.

Three of Eckstein's family members have undergone kidney transplants. His dad's on dialysis. There's a real, underdog, human interest story there.
 
Walter_Sobchak said:
The real discussion is why a guy with mediocre stats gets voted for sainthood because he likes to run out grounders and will occassionally dive to make a play in the field.

I don't think it's so much that he likes to run out grounders and occassionally dive in the field. It's that he NEEDS to run out grounders, wind up like a cartoon to get the ball across the infield, and dive for grounders. While Jose Reyes could routinely beat out infield singles, Furcal can fire a cannon shot from the outfield grass, and Tejada can drive in runs like pennies in a wishing well...Eckstein cannot. But since it's not Little League where parents could say, "oh, isn't it cute how that David is trying so hard?" he has to do whatever he can to stick in the league. That's recognized and percieved, in some circles, as old school, gritty, whatever. Somewhere the word 'intangibles' is associated with Eckstein, all that stuff. It's also cause he's personable, by all accounts, and appears to be.
I think there already is a movie about him, though, starring Sean Astin.
 
Shaggy said:
I think he's a decent player, nothing less, nothing more.

Eckstein is a decent player with two World Series rings. If he played in New York, he'd already have his jersey retired and be in line for the Hall of Fame.

Funny how the Edgar Renteria-Orlando Cabrera-David Eckstein merry-go-round worked out.

Boston wins a WS with Cabrera, but signs Renteria away from the Cardinals (WS runner-up) for big money. The Angels sign Cabrera to a big deal and let Eckstein walk. Renteria gets traded to Atlanta after one rough season in Boston. Then Eckstein helps St. Louis win two NL Central titles and a World Series.
 
He's the Wojo of MLB. I half expect to see him slapping the infield dirt with both hands before a big at-bat.
 
bigpern23 said:
He's the Wojo of MLB. I half expect to see him slapping the infield dirt with both hands before a big at-bat.

fork Wojo! He couldn't hold Ed Cota's jock strap. [/uncfanboylooser]
 
Anybody that doesn't understand that David Eckstein is a great player and leader by example is not paying attention to baseball. There is nothing not to like about the guy. He is humble, works hard and never has character issues. I am glad he won the World Series MVP. Maybe now he is finally getting the credit he so richly deserves.
 

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