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The 100 Greatest Angels - #69, Jason Thompson

#69 - Jason Thompson, - 1B

Career Stats

He only played 102 games for the Angels, all of them in the 1980 season, and he was traded away just before the start of the 1981 campaign. But in the single season records of the Angels, no player ever accrued a higher On Base % (.439) than Thompson, and his OPS from that season ranks 5th all time for the franchise.

Call up your favorite Stathead and ask him which Angel holds the single season OPS+ mark at 166...
Is it Tim Salmon in 1995, Bobby Grich in 1981, Vlad Guerrero in 2004 or 2005, or Jason Thompson in 1980.
They are all quite close, but Jason Thompson wears that crown in Halo lore.

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Comments

My two cents
Originally drafted by the Dodgers, the Tigers redrafted him after playing for CSU Northridge; he came up with them in 1976 at the tender age of 21. The next two seasons, he made the All Star team, a fact that was no doubt influenced by the fact that he hit 15 and 17 homers in the first three months of the 1977 and 1978 seasons.

The 1979 Angels squad was both injury-plagued and lacking in power. Injuries to Don Baylor and Brian Downing, which had forced a trade of Al Cowans the year before, were multiplied by injuries to Joe Rudi and Dan Ford.  It was also a trade of one disappointing player for another; Thompson hadn't hit anything like the 31 homers he clubbed in his sophomore season for the Tigers, and Cowans hadn't done much of note since his atypical 1977 season, when he hit 23 homers (he was in single digits all other years).  Buzzie Bavasi justified the trade at the time by saying, "... we made the deal not only for this year, but for the future as well."

It was, of course, self-delusion, as the Angels of that era found it impossible to settle on a strategy to build the club, a situation made worse by the ALCS loss to the Orioles.  With pitching now becoming the thing missing at the moment, Bavasi traded Thompson to the Pirates for catcher Ed Ott, who was to play only one more year in the majors, and swingman Mickey Mahler, who pitched a grand total of 14.1 innings over two seasons with the Angels.  Upon hearing of his trade, Thompson said he thought the Angels had panicked about the pitching situation; it turned out he was right.

Cowens Double Digit Home Run Seasons
Al Cowens actually had four (4) double digit home run seasons:

Year  HR
1977  23
1982  20
1984  15
1985  14

Yes, I know
... but I was concerned with the Angels' viewpoint at the time of the trade, not his overall career.
Somehow....
I don't think the statheads will say "Hmmm...maybe OPS+ is a shit statistic that doesn't mean a damn thing".

Yeah, right.

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