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Garko was technically not last in fielding percentage. For guys with over 100 games at first base, he tied with Carlos Pena at .993 for last, but Eric Henske, Nick Swisher, and Matt Stairs, each with over 40 games at first, had a lower percentage. And while a biography isn't a love letter to a player, there is also no reason to include his fielding percentage unless it was exceptionally good or bad. .993 in his first year in the majors at that position and only second full year at it overall isn't that bad. Now if his defense becomes an issue in his career, then I would see a reason for noting it.
LightningMan14:48, 23 October 2007 (UTC)reply
Truth in and of itself does not make it notable, you didn't rewrite the sentence to put in the caveat about qualifiers, and you still haven't justified its relevance. You apparently have a thing for citing the worst fielding percentages among qualifiers, but unless there is something notable about the "badness" of the fielding percentage, it's a minor stat of no relevance. If you notice, player boxes here do not mention fielding statistics at all.
LightningMan12:45, 1 November 2007 (UTC)reply
Player boxes only mention a few stats. I believe that there is a max of 5 or so. The major stats urls all mention fielding percentage. That is what makes it notable as a stat. And this fellow is a league leader in low fielding percentage. That is notable, as he has distinguished himself. I'm not aware that he has led the league in any other area during any year of his major league career. Your first points were baseless and arbitrary -- you picked 40 games, not the qualifying stats. Now, you are trying to concoct/assert other arguments. You also arbitrarily say that it might be relevant if it persisted over the course of his career, but not just for one year. That is an arbitrary POV, and against the grain of how baseball stats are looked at -- stats relevant for careers are relevant for league-leader's for one year, as a general matter. Further, this article is not limited to complimentary statements. Please do not edit war. If you have a problem with this, bring it to arbitration.--
Epeefleche15:07, 1 November 2007 (UTC)reply
First, he does not have the lowest fielding percentage for first baseman. He has the lowest fielding percentage for people who played over 100+ games at first. There were others who played significant numbers of games at first, 40+, who were lower. Next, if you read what I had typed earlier, you'd know that this is his first full year in the majors, which doesn't allow him a lot of time to have led the majors in anything. Next, I picked 40 to show that these people played enough first base to be considered a first baseman. Finally, your only defense of notability is that it occurred. By this standard, a player who had a fielding percentage of .998 would be noteworthy for having the lowest fielding percentage if everyone else had a .999. At any rate, I am amending your statement to include the caveat you left out. If you have a problem with that, perhaps you should be the one to bring this to arbitration.
LightningMan14:55, 3 November 2007 (UTC)reply
In the interest of ending our communication I will leave your addition in. Though it makes as little sense to me as it would to add it to the batting title leader.--
Epeefleche03:45, 4 November 2007 (UTC)reply
"He has also played for the Cleveland Indians, and the San Francisco Giants in Major League Baseball." Don't really need "also". It can be word easily added to sentences for no reason - I do it a lot myself!!
"Garko is seen as a good hitter with poor base running skills, and poor defensive instincts.[1] He is seen as a spray hitter, in that he hits to all sides of the field." Who says both of these?
"doesn't" - don't use contractions in formal text.
"While he attended Stanford University," better to use "when he attended..."
"Formerly a catcher," You've just said this above.
Is there any reason for so many references in the lead. The lead, (per
WP:LEAD) shouldn't introduce new facts that aren't in the many body of the article so there is rarely much reason to reference anything.
College
Most of the sentences follow a format "Garko did this... Garko did that ... Garko did this." The section could do with a brief re-write to make the writing more engaging.
Indians
What is "Short-Season"? And does it need to be capped?
2007 season
"it was said that Garko would have to improve on the defensive end to make the 25-man roster." Who said this? And why would he have to improve his defense?
"Towards the end of spring training, Indians' manager Eric Wedge noted that Garko had in fact made improvements on defense." "in fact" is redundant.
"A comment Garko made during the American League Championship Series sparked controversy after he stated, "The champagne tastes just as good on the road as it does at home."" Why is this controversial?
Others
No dablinks
Ref 5 to "NCAA And CWS, INC., Announce College World Series Legends Team" is dead.
Ref 67 "Oklahoma City 9, Portland 3: Ryan Garko's slam, Kevin Richardson's three-run blast power RedHawks over Beavers" also comes up with a strange error message.
I'd move the personal section to the start since chronologically this is where most of the details belong.
Most of the article is fine, well-referenced and seems to be very thorough. But coming back to the point I made for the "college" section, most other sections follow a similar format. It gives the feeling of "proseline" (see
Wikipedia:Proseline) rather than engaging text that has context and follows on well. I'd either suggest giving it a good read through yourself to reword or maybe ask writers with a knowledge of similar articles. It's not a major task, so I'll keep this on hold for the time being.
Brad78 (
talk) 23:35, 3 January 2011 (UTC)
Looks like the writer made all the fixes noted above.
WizardmanOperation Big Bear05:38, 19 January 2011 (UTC)reply
Further comments
The second point raised about the lead has not been addressed. Done
"During spring training, Garko wrote a series of journals for MLB.com about his experiences in the major leagues." It doesn't seem to be about his experiences in the major league to me. I was going to re-write it but not sure what to. Done
"By September, he was the starting everyday first baseman for the Indians after both Ben Broussard was also traded to Seattle." either something missing here or take out both. Done
This discussion is
transcluded from
Talk:Ryan Garko/GA2. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the reassessment.
I am nominating this article for demotion, as it is not currently at the 2013 standard of GAs. The lead is very short for the article size, and it neglects everything after 2006. There are references that are not properly formatted,
deadlinks, and the prose needs updated to reflect 2013. The "personal life" section is very, very short, and I can understand that if the player is trivially covered, but someone like Garko should have more than two sentences. There are further violations of proper prose I can go into if anyone is interested in fixing the article. As of now, I it fails
WP:WIAGA 1b and 3a, at minimum.
Albacore (
talk)
19:09, 11 August 2013 (UTC)reply
Most references use "Major League Baseball. mlb.mlb.com" but some (52 and 59) don't.
Don't mix "2013-08-12" with "Retrieved February 1, 2010". Check for consistency in the citation formats, it looks like you use {{cite web}} for most of the first references but {{citation}} for the rest. Be consistent in publishers for baseball-reference (25 uses Sports Reference LLC, which is proper, and "baseball-reference.com" two later). Ref 64 needs a language parameter. I'm sure there's more, you know what to look for.
Throughout I see years linked with {{mlby}} which is not for use in prose per
WP:EGG.
He is not strikeout prone; however, he does not generate a large number of walks. what makes this important enough for the lead? Can you mention some career stats for Garko, like RBI, hits, etc.?
Not sure we need all the stats from a summer league team, just keep the important ones.
He is still fifth all-time in doubles at Stanford, seventh in RBIs, and ninth in batting average and home runs. This should be changed to remove "still", perhaps "as of 2013".
Can you mention a year for the sophomore season so the reader can keep track of what year it was?
You could talk about how Stanford did as a team, how they made a College World Series appearance in 2008, his sophomore season.
Just use the important/notable stats for the AFL.
For the second straight season, Garko played in the Arizona Fall League at the end of the season.[22] This time, Garko played for the Mesa Solar Sox. Combine the two sentences, reads choppily now.
Just a note on the article in general, cut the unimportant stats from Garko's lines, especially from the minor league/AFL stats.
How did he do as a pinch hitter?
For all the AFL stats you give, you can't mention his MLB stats from 2005?!?
There shouldn't be an "Awards" section, that should be worked into the prose in the appropriate sections.
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