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The most overrated position in sports

By Jim Caple When Jerome Holtzman, a legendary baseball writer and a good man, died two weeks ago, I hoped some closer would celebrate a save by pumping his fist, falling to his knees, pointing to the sky and shouting, "This one is for you, Jerome!"

The gesture would make me respect closers a little more. Which is to say, still not very much.

Holtzman made closers incalculable millions because he is the writer responsible for the save becoming an official baseball statistic. He invented the save in 1960 as a way to better measure the effectiveness of relievers and it became an official major league stat in 1969 (saves previous to that year were added to record books after the fact). Trevor Hoffman, at least, acknowledged his debt to Holtzman. The all-time saves leader told Tom Krasovic of the San Diego Union-Tribune he would light a cigar in the writer's honor (Holtzman loved cigars, which could be a minor annoyance if you had the misfortune of sitting next to him on deadline). "Obviously," said Hoffman, who has earned more than $60 million as a closer for the Padres, "I benefited quite a bit from him thinking that a reliever's value was something that could be quantified through a statistic."

The problem is that Holtzman's well-intentioned attempt to measure a reliever's worth has been cheapened, manipulated and bastardized to the point that the save is the most overrated stat in baseball and the closer is the most overrated and replaceable role in American sports.

We have hyped the closer into a ridiculously over-the-top role. They enter games to fanfare normally reserved for Oprah and pro wrestlers -- heavy metal entrance music is such a clich

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its got its moments. the reason i would say its not overrated is bc of the big games they come in they gotta perform like rival divisonal games,playoff,ws thats where there careers are. trevor hoffman has the most saves but why isnt he the best closer of all time? bc he didnt succeed in big games.

that author doesnt kno the pressure they are put under especially for a closer in ny,boston,chicago

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compare Mariano's value to anyone else

he was the "Staple" to the 1996-2001 yankees AND THEN ON

all those "0.00" ERA catagories in the playoffs (www.baseball-reference.com type in Mariano) are amazing when comparing him to anyone else in history

you gonna tell me Goose Gossage or Hoyt Wilhelm made no difference compared to having a Joe 6 Pack at closer? they aren't HOFers for nothing.

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