SHAQAVELLI
We Are Penn State
Not showing them all cuz some of us -- like me -- actually pay for that kind of access 
http://insider.espn.go.com/mlb/blog...top-10-infields-baseball-history-mlb#comments
But here's the top-four..
The 2009 Rays are better than:
- Molitor/Yount/Cecil Cooper/Gantner
- Robby Alomar/Ripken/Surhoff/Palmeiro
- Jackie Robinson/Gil Hodges/Pee Wee/Billy Cox
- Jim Thome/Robby Alomar/Vizquel/Fryman
??????????????

You can keep all that sabrmetric sh1t, I know for a damn fact that the 2009 Rays are not one of the GOAT infields

http://insider.espn.go.com/mlb/blog...top-10-infields-baseball-history-mlb#comments
But here's the top-four..
Buster Olney Blog
Top 10 infields in MLB history
January, 23, 2013
JAN 23
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In part four of our six-part series this week, we rank the top 10 infields in history.
1. 1976 Cincinnati Reds
1B Tony Perez, 2B Joe Morgan, SS Davey Concepcion, 3B Pete Rose
Start with this: Joe Morgan posted an OPS+ of 186 that year, which is the highest for any middle infielder after 1935. Morgan was a Gold Glove winner at his position that year and won his second consecutive MVP award after posting a career-high OPS of 1.020, with 62 extra-base hits, 114 walks, 111 RBIs and 60 stolen bases in 69 attempts. That was the fifth of six consecutive seasons in which Morgan scored more than 100 runs.
Oh, by the way, the first baseman, Perez, had 57 extra-base hits and eventually would be voted into the Hall of Fame. Concepcion, the shortstop, also won the Gold Glove and hit .281, developing into a borderline Hall of Famer; I don't think it would surprise anyone if some veterans' committee sometime voted him into the Hall of Fame.
And, oh by the way, the third baseman hit .323, with a .404 on-base percentage, scored 130 runs -- and later became the all-time leader in hits. Pretty good.
If you argued that the Reds' infield performed even better in 1975, that would be more than reasonable.
2. 2009 New York Yankees
1B Mark Teixeira, 2B Robinson Cano, SS Derek Jeter and 3B Alex Rodriguez
The combined numbers for this group that season: 125 doubles, 112 homers and 391 runs. Cano had the lowest OPS+ of the four, at 121; Teixeira was at 141, Rodriguez 138 and Jeter 125. Teixeira hit 39 homers; Jeter hit .334 and generated a .406 on-base percentage, stole 30 bases in 35 attempts and scored 107 runs.
The Yankees won the World Series that year.
It's possible that all four members of that Yankees' infield will wind up being inducted into the Hall of Fame: Jeter's a lock, Rodriguez will get in if there is an evolution in how candidates linked to PEDs are considered by voters, and Teixeira (338 homers and four Gold Gloves) and Cano (three top-six finishes in the MVP voting) have put up really strong numbers in the first halves of their careers.
3. 1999 New York Mets
1B John Olerud, 2B Edgardo Alfonzo, SS Rey Ordonez, 3B Robin Ventura
Errors are often not a good barometer for infield play, but the '99 Mets were impossibly efficient -- the starting four combined for a total of 27 errors that year, which is the primary reason why the pitching staff allowed a total of 20 unearned runs that year. How good is that?
From Elias: Here are the teams with the fewest unearned runs allowed in a season since 1912 (Not counting 1918, which was a shortened season due to World War I; or 1981 and 1994, seasons that were shortened because of collective bargaining issues).
1999 Mets: 20
2012 White Sox: 30
1998 Orioles: 31
2010 Padres: 32
1995 Orioles: 33
2010 Twins: 33
2011 Braves: 33
2011 Philles: 34
2005 Braves: 35
2003 Mariners: 35
While their best work was on defense, the Mets' group stood out offensively, as well -- Olerud had a .427 on-base percentage, with 19 homers; Alfonzo hammered 27 homers and scored 123 runs; and Ventura hit 32 homers and drove in 120.
4. 2009 Tampa Bay Rays
1B Carlos Pena, 2B Ben Zobrist, SS Jason Bartlett, 3B Evan Longoria
As stats guru Mark Simon notes, that Rays team was one of 10 teams that had three infielders who each generated a WAR of at least 5 (using the Baseball Reference version) -- Zobrist, Bartlett and Longoria. Zobrist had a .405 on-base percentage and a .948 OPS; Longoria had 77 extra-base hits, 100 runs and 113 RBIs; Bartlett had the best year of his career, hitting .320 (with a .389 on-base percentage) while stealing 30 bases in 37 attempts. Pena's WAR was 2.8, but that was deceivingly low, considering his importance to the lineup that year: He hit 39 homers, drew 87 walks and scored 100 runs.
And the whole group was excellent defensively, as well, with Longoria winning a Gold Glove.
The 2009 Rays are better than:
- Molitor/Yount/Cecil Cooper/Gantner
- Robby Alomar/Ripken/Surhoff/Palmeiro
- Jackie Robinson/Gil Hodges/Pee Wee/Billy Cox
- Jim Thome/Robby Alomar/Vizquel/Fryman
??????????????

You can keep all that sabrmetric sh1t, I know for a damn fact that the 2009 Rays are not one of the GOAT infields
