Hey look! It's late January and that means the white smoke is billowing from Cooperstown and the new Hall of Famers have been elected. I like that after years of obstructionism and hardcore posturing by the electorate, the lists have been constantly three and four players the last few years. With Jack Morris and Alan Trammell also elected, you've got a six-pack of players to give speeches in July. With Bob Costas and the Spink awark winner, have an extra cup of coffee before watching that one. Let's look at who the writers opened the ropes for:
Vladimir Guerrero.
Vlad was named on 392 of 422 ballots (92.2%) in his 2nd year of eligibility.
Guerrero is the perfect example of the notable bias some baseball writers have even to this day about electing players on their first ballot. Looking at Vlad's numbers: 449 HR 1496 RBI and a .318/.379.553 slash line, how is he not a hall of famer? Yet he jumped from 71% to 92% in a single year to walk into the hall; what changed between last year and this one? It's not like his stats changed or even got reexamined. There is the infuriating layer of voters who will never ever vote for a first year nominee because of Babe Ruth or some nonsense but the secondary layer is equally as frustrating. They decide that a player is good enough for the hall but not good enough for the honor of first ballot induction. The bar for who is a hall of famer is much much lower than Vlad Guerrero and yet the same shit still happens. While the hall has gotten better over the years about electing obvious players on the first ballot, that Vlad had to wait is why the election system needs to be completely overhauled.
Jim Thome.
Jim was named on 379 of 422 ballots (89.8%) in his 1st year of eligibility.
I am glad Thome didn't get the shabby treatment Vlad received and got in on the first shot. The only thing missing from Jim's resume is a good sturdy nickname. He was a jovial mountain of a man who hit baseballs really far. 612 homers and 1699 RBIs speak for themselves but his .402 OBP more than make up for what the uninformed would poo-poo as a pedestrian .276 average. He is a lot closer to Frank Thomas than Harmon Killebrew.
Trevor Hoffman.
Trevor was named on 337 of 422 ballots (79.9%) in his 3rd year of eligibility. Hoffman is proof positive that voters have no idea what to do with closers and especially newer one-inning closers. Goose Gossage had to wait 9 times to get into the hall yet Trevor waited 1/3 as long. The convoluted and arbitrary save statistic has come to be exploited in the modern setting and voters can't wrap their heads around what that means. Mariano Rivera and Trevor Hoffman have similar statistics but saying they were similar pitchers is like saying George Clooney and I are similar just because we are both adult men. I am not saying Hoffman isn't a great modern closer but with players like Edgar Martinez not in the hall, it really makes you wonder why Hoffman is.
Larry Wayne Jones.
Larry was elected with 410 votes out of 422 which is 97.2% of the vote in his first time on the ballot. Usually I castigate the voters who leave off an obvious, no doubt, slam dunk hall of famer but in this particular instance, I salute the 12 individuals who decided he wasn't. I will this one time admit a begrudging respect for how good a player he was but as a Mets fan who lived through the turn of the millennium, my default setting is "wow, fuck that guy." I made this page of cards for the inevitable day he was elected to the hall and now I can put it in the book and try to forget it and he ever existed. No, I'm not bitter, why do you ask?
3 comments:
Mets fans' reaction to players who have wronged their team are so interesting and amusing, sometimes.
We save most of our ire for ol' Larry, but yeah, there is no fury like a Mets fan scorned.
I didn't put Hoffman on my blogger ballot, but at the same time I totally understand why he was inducted. He is one of only two guys in MLB history to earn 600 saves and was at one point the MLB saves king. He's in because he was perceived as one of the greatest relief pitchers of his era.
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