hall of fame, next vote...

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (2651 of them)
I'm not sure how many pitchers in history meet your def of "great," Alex -- let's deal with the Hall you have, rather than the one you wish to have -- but the argument he makes is that Blyleven was better than several HOF pitchers, and comparable to *many* others. And he was.

That's the article I meant, MIR, thanks.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 23 December 2004 18:07 (nineteen years ago) link

Alex, to be fair to Neyer, he didn't bring Sutton and Ryan into the discussion. He was responding to the examples of Sutton and Ryan as mentioned in the reader's letter.

I think he's written a couple of other columns on Blyleven, maybe I can find them ...

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 23 December 2004 18:13 (nineteen years ago) link

Thanks for the link.

Those are some mind-numbing stats!

Thermo Thinwall (Thermo Thinwall), Thursday, 23 December 2004 18:14 (nineteen years ago) link

Michael Wolverton makes the case for Blyleven:
http://espn.go.com/mlb/s/2002/0728/1411078.html

This, and many other articles stating his HoF case are collected -- where else? -- on Blyleven's web page:

http://www.bertblyleven.com/hall_of_fame.shtml

xpost -- yeah, the Morris article is a bit of a numbers slog, but it's well done.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 23 December 2004 18:21 (nineteen years ago) link

"I'm not sure how many pitchers in history meet your def of "great," Alex"

Enough, believe me. And I saw him compare him to two HOF pitchers, one of whom is IMO a mistake and the other who is basically in the Hall because he had a zillion strikeouts and a slew of no hitters. Compare him to Carlton or Seaver or Hunter or any of the really great pitchers from his era, if you want to make your point (that this guy is getting job) don't just claim he was "better than Don Sutton" cuz my response to that is so the fuck what.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 23 December 2004 18:38 (nineteen years ago) link

getting jobbed, ahem.

That second ESPN article is much better btw and makes a pretty good case.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 23 December 2004 18:40 (nineteen years ago) link

Catfish "really great"? Come now... talk about a guy who lucked out. Look at Hunter vs Blyleven (or Sutton, for that matter) and tell me how Hunter's better.

No, Bert is not Seaver or Carlton.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 23 December 2004 18:58 (nineteen years ago) link

Bert's website is great btw. He should get in just for having that.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 23 December 2004 19:04 (nineteen years ago) link

Well I didn't see Hunter, but the perenial All Star games, the Cy Young, the top 4 in Cy Young voting four times, the fact that he supposedly one of the most respected pitchers of his era, the postseason accolades, the biggest free agent coup ever for his time and the very impressive statistics kinda indicated to me that he might have been good. Obv you know better though.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 23 December 2004 19:48 (nineteen years ago) link

All that stuff about Hunter is true, and of course that's why he got in. Looking deeper into the numbers though ... he pitched in extreme pitchers parks for his entire career, played for great teams, and generally didn't have great ERA's (he was in the top 3 three times, but never in the top 10 otherwise). He threw a lot of innings, but was overworked at a young age which is why he was washed up at 30, which is hella young for a HoF'er.

He played for fifteen years, and he had about four great years, four good years, and the rest were downright BAD. If he'd pitched for anyone other than the 70's A's and Yankees dynasties, there's no way he'd be anywhere near a serious HoF discussion.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 23 December 2004 20:51 (nineteen years ago) link

"He threw a lot of innings, but was overworked at a young age which is why he was washed up at 30, which is hella young for a HoF'er."

See this is where I get the impression that cold-dispassionate analysis of the stats lies a little. For 5 years (71-75), Hunter was probably hands down the most feared pitcher in baseball. No he might not have been Koufax, but he was still by all accounts pretty amazing. Those five years count for more to me than 20 some odd years of just pretty good workmanlike pitching (I will admit that these breakdowns of Blyleven's stats are making a pretty case that he was better than that.) (I do have to wonder WHY if Bert was so great, he um didn't get snatched up by better teams? I mean that can't all be bad luck, right?)

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 23 December 2004 21:23 (nineteen years ago) link

Burt Blyleven:

Postseason Pitching


Year Round Tm Opp WLser G GS ERA W-L SV CG SHO IP H ER BB SO
+------------------+-----+--+--+------+-----+--+--+---+-----+---+---+---+---+
1970 ALCS MIN BAL L 1 0 0.00 0-0 0 0 0 2.0 2 0 0 2
1979 NLCS PIT CIN W 1 1 1.00 1-0 0 1 0 9.0 8 1 0 9
WS PIT BAL W 2 1 1.80 1-0 0 0 0 10.0 8 2 3 4
1987 ALCS MIN DET W 2 2 4.05 2-0 0 0 0 13.3 12 6 3 9
WS MIN STL W 2 2 2.77 1-1 0 0 0 13.0 13 4 2 12
+------------------+-----+--+--+------+-----+--+--+---+-----+---+---+---+---+
3 Lg Champ Series 2-1 4 3 2.59 3-0 0 1 0 24.3 22 7 3 20
2 World Series 2-0 4 3 2.35 2-1 0 0 0 23.0 21 6 5 16
5 Postseason Ser 4-1 8 6 2.47 5-1 0 1 0 47.3 43 13 8 36
+------------------+-----+--+--+------+-----+--+--+---+-----+---+---+---+---+

He didn't get many chances, but Blyleven pitched well in the playoffs and was a part of two World Series Champions.

Earl Nash (earlnash), Thursday, 23 December 2004 21:37 (nineteen years ago) link

I seem to remember Bert looking pretty good in the series with the Cardinals (aka the original You Don't Win If You Don't Play At Home series.)

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 23 December 2004 21:48 (nineteen years ago) link

I do have to wonder WHY if Bert was so great, he um didn't get snatched up by better teams?

Many of his best years came before free agency, so he didn't have much choice in the matter.

Even with free agency, it's only during the last ten years or so that all the best players end up on big-market winning teams at some point, since eventually those are the only teams that can afford them. If Jaret Wright can bounce around for a while, have one good season after a slew of crappy ones, and end up with a multi-year deal from a perennial contender, then Blyleven would have ended up playing for more winning teams too, if he was playing today.

Even so, every era has a few great players who toil away in relative obscurity. Look at Bobby Abreu, or even Carlos Delgado. If Delgado goes to the Mets, maybe in 20 years people will be saying "if he was so good, why did his teams always finish in third place?"

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Thursday, 23 December 2004 22:54 (nineteen years ago) link

Nobody says that about hitters (as their stats aren't at all dependent on their team being good.) They just look at the stats and marvel that nobody noticed at the time.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 23 December 2004 23:22 (nineteen years ago) link

I have no idea why previous subjective honors (Cy Youngs, All-Star selections) would be used as criteria for another subjective honor.

Alex, nobody's saying Hunter wasn't GOOD, just that Blyleven was better for MUCH longer, and that "good press" shouldn't be a measure of excellence. And I don't see Hunter '71-75 being "amazing" ... His most "impressive statistics" are wins (ie, having good teammates) and innings pitched (which blew out his arm, as MIR says). I think he got extra credit for the pennants and the sexy nicknames. And it's cute how you use high Cy Young finishes as relevant to Hunter, not relevant for Blyleven. (Also, I don't see Hunter's status as the first Big Splash free agent being relevant; see Marvin Miller's book for how clownishly Catfish handled that situation.)

The "cold-dispassionate analysis of the stats" is the most reliable evidence there is. Not "what you heard" (from Joe Morgan?). And it isn't so much that Blyleven toiled for bad teams (they were more often mediocre), but pitched in hitters' parks.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 26 December 2004 03:58 (nineteen years ago) link

Speaking of Marvin Miller, what are the odds of him getting in this year (the nu-Vets Committee votes this year, right?).

I hope it happens soon so that he lives to attend his own induction.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Sunday, 26 December 2004 08:04 (nineteen years ago) link

blah blah blah. my opinon is better than your opinion and i have proof! blah blah blah.


otto midnight (otto midnight), Monday, 27 December 2004 07:32 (nineteen years ago) link


I generally agree, OM. HOF debates generally bore me, especially when one side is "he was MONEY" or "folks sure wrote boilerplate hosannas about him in the '70s."

It's not lookin' good for Marv, MIR -- when the Vets voted last in '03, no one came close to getting 75% ... and of the 60 votes required for election, Miller got 35. He got three FEWER votes than Walter O'Malley -- or as we call him in Brooklyn, Satan.

Miller and other non-players are on the "composite" ballot. Here's this year's players' ballot:

http://www.baseballhalloffame.org/hofers_and_honorees/veterans/2005/2005_vc_candidates.htm


The only one I'm sold on is Santo, but Dick Allen and Tony Oliva have decent cases -- as does Curt Flood for courage and legal pioneering.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 27 December 2004 14:28 (nineteen years ago) link

Rocky Colavito was a bit like Jim Rice, he hit like he was going to the Hall until he hit his early 30s, then it was over. I have a dog eared card of his when he played in Cleveland.

Mickey Lolich won't get in the Hall, but his pitching in the 68 World Series may be the best performance ever in the fall classic by a starter. The guy out pitched Bob Gibson in Game Seven on TWO days rest. ESPN Classic was showed that game a few months back and it was great. Harry Caray was doing the play by play.

While I don't know if he is good enough player to make the hall, Al Oliver had a pretty good career and never gets put on these kind of lists.

Earl Nash (earlnash), Monday, 27 December 2004 16:38 (nineteen years ago) link

I don't think it looks good for anybody to get voted in by the nu-Vets committee anytime soon ... as Morbs said, nobody came close to getting 75% last time. If they go through two or three voting years with nobody getting elected, they'll probably change the rules.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 17:12 (nineteen years ago) link

Al Oliver was just "pretty good," ie a hitter not any more suitable for enshrinement than Rusty Staub or Vada Pinson. (His top BaseballRef comparables are Steve Garvey and Bill Buckner -- same story.)

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 27 December 2004 17:29 (nineteen years ago) link

Just out of curiousity how old are you Dr Morbius?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 17:43 (nineteen years ago) link

Exactly 5 years younger than Jesse Orosco!

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 27 December 2004 17:55 (nineteen years ago) link

(I suspected as much.) Anyway, I was talking with my family about Blyleven this weekend and apparently he had a reputation of not being particularly well-liked and kind of an odd duck to boot (although I'm guessing that being Dutch was probably considered totally bizarre enough for a lot of people.)

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 18:05 (nineteen years ago) link

Al Oliver didn't walk much

Riot Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 27 December 2004 18:22 (nineteen years ago) link

I hear that a few people didn't like Ty Cobb either.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 18:27 (nineteen years ago) link

Yes well luckily for Cobb he was a couple of generations removed from the people who were voting on his HOF induction so his jerkiness was more anecdotal than personal.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 18:38 (nineteen years ago) link


Cobb's last season: 1928
Inducted into HOF: 1936

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:15 (nineteen years ago) link

Cobb retired in 1928 and was elected in 1936. So many of the voters would have seen him play.

My general point is that "b...b...but he was a bit of an asshole" is a criticism that's used far too often despite being irrelevant most of the time. As long as the guy didn't compromise the game of baseball (Pete Rose being the most obvious example) then I couldn't care less if he was moody and didn't get along with everybody. If he could bring it on the field, then that's the most important thing.

(xpost)

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:16 (nineteen years ago) link

It wasn't a criticism. I was just pointing out that it might be a reason why he'd been snubbed (that and of course that people are overly fixated on 300 wins, which is also not a very fair reason.) Of course, people who can't read for shit might have trouble distinguishing the two.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:21 (nineteen years ago) link

"Cobb's last season: 1928
Inducted into HOF: 1936"

Haha I need to learn to check baseballreference.com before I say stuff sometimes.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:23 (nineteen years ago) link

And I didn't say that YOU specifically were the one doing the criticising. I was saying that anyone who would withhold a HoF vote in part because they felt that player needed an attitude adjustment are themselves in need of an attitude adjustment.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 19:33 (nineteen years ago) link

Well I think it's more complicated than that. I mean a player can throw up great individual numbers, but actually be such a poison in the clubhouse that it can hurt or distract his team (and by contrast the reverse the great team player who makes everyone else better.) It's easier to see the effects of this in say basketball than in baseball, but I don't think it is entirely absent from the latter and I think it's understandable that voters give it some discretionary weight. If it was all as simple as "it's all just stats" then there WOULDN'T even need to be voters there would just be some magic formula and voila! the HOF vote would be super easy to predict and no one would ever argue again.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 27 December 2004 20:32 (nineteen years ago) link

"Poison in the clubhouse" is another silly fabrication -- it's a term that gets thrown around as an excuse when teams don't win. People used to say Reggie Jackson was a clubhouse poison -- except when his teams were winning, then everybody said he was Mr. October. So we're supposed to believe that Reggie was a poison when his team lost, and a leader when they won? Does he have a split personality? Or were those teams so good that they won despite one of their best players? Come on.

Example #2: replace "Reggie Jackson" with "Barry Bonds" in the above paragraph.

Or consider the Yankees and Red Sox of the last few years. When the Yankees were winning, they were "professional" and "disciplined". Their lack of comaraderie was viewed as an asset, i.e. "they're all business when they take the field". OTOH, the Sox were drama queens who didn't know how to win when it counts.

Fast forward to this past year. The Yanks are up 3-0 and they're winning because they're the professionals who respect the game and know how to win. Five days later, the exact same guys are described as "cold" and "unemotional" and that's why they lost. In the meantime, Manny and Pedro's weird quirks and selfishness are ignored, and suddenly all the drama becomes an asset because the Sox are "loose", "having fun", and "relaxed", and that's why they won.

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Monday, 27 December 2004 23:47 (nineteen years ago) link

Haha watch out conventional wisdom! Barry's coming after ya!

"So we're supposed to believe that Reggie was a poison when his team lost, and a leader when they won?"

I don't think anyone really said Reggie (or Barry or Albert Belle) was a leader at any point though (well maybe Reggie when he got older.) They just said when they won that they were very good players (which obv all three were) and at times very clutch players. That doesn't mean that they also didn't cause some problems in their respective clubhouses/franchises (which all three obv did.)

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 00:59 (nineteen years ago) link

I think "poisonous atmospheres" affect teams that are going down more, they're possibly more a symptom of a team self-destructing rather than the cause, i.e. Mercker going after Steve Stone and so on.

Riot Gear! (Gear!), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 01:22 (nineteen years ago) link

Yes, that's the sort of thing I'm talking about. People aren't light switches, personality conflicts don't vanish overnight. Take Manny Ramirez. He had a rep as being a difficult player in Cleveland, and now he's in Boston and nothing has changed in that respect. But when the team wins, nobody focuses on that stuff. The next thing you know, Manny's the WS MVP and is being hailed as a team leader. But *he* hasn't changed, the *team* changed, the team got better. Manny was his usual excellent self (at bat, not in the field, of course). But rest assured if Boston is struggling mid-season then he'll be blamed again for being a detriment to the team because of his clubhouse behaviour.

Great players are great players irrespective of their teams. You can be a great player on a good team or on a bad team. Similarly, if someone is a clubhouse cancer, then that should also be independent of the quality of the team. But it isn't. The same guy who is a cancer when the team loses is a leader when the team wins.

This doesn't mean that team chemistry doesn't count for anything. But it counts for a lot less than player performance.

Haha watch out conventional wisdom! Barry's coming after ya!

Next thing you know, I'll be claiming that there's no such thing as a clutch hitter!!

MindInRewind (Barry Bruner), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 01:56 (nineteen years ago) link

Manny will get a pass this next season for a bit, they have a new albatross named David Wells.

Reggie's championship teams in both Oakland and the Bronx were filled with hot heads, both on the team, the managers and owners. It was a crazy atmosphere, yet they won, mostly because they were freakin' loaded with talent top to bottom. One thing I find interesting about both of those clubs is that they both won titles with two managers, the A's with Dick Williams and Alvin Dark, the Yanks with Billy Martin and Bob Lemon. Both clubs had complete freak owners with big checkbooks with King George and Charlie Finley.

70s baseball was cool. You had both of these clubs and the Big Red Machine. KC, Baltimore, Philly, LA and Pittsburgh all also won their division more than once in 70s.

Earl Nash (earlnash), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 06:07 (nineteen years ago) link

http://www.webcom.com/collectr/bb/images/bpfosterg.jpg

Riot Gear! (Gear!), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 09:56 (nineteen years ago) link

Bill James has a fascinating article in the new Handbook about team "efficiency" -- prompted by the Red Sox persistently getting fewer wins out of their run differential than they should -- in which he writes, "Eventually, some TV broadcaster will begin talking about 'team character,' at which point it is time to hit the mute button before you throw something at the television."

Yeah, for purpose of analyzing a player's career worth, it all should come down to stats, or as I prefer to call them, FACTS. We can all spin our own fantasies of who's a "clubhouse cancer" -- one of my first choices would be late-career Saint Cal Ripken -- and it doesn't prove a damn thing.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 15:16 (nineteen years ago) link

00s baseball is pretty cool too though. I like the A's vs. Angels vs. Twins vs. Yankees vs. Sox drama year in year out. The National League is less consistent though.

I agree Mr. Cal could be pretty detrimental to his team by that point too, but Mr. Morb WHY if everything is so easy to calculate based on the "facts" (haha) do we even bother having votes then? Why isn't there just a formula?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 28 December 2004 16:12 (nineteen years ago) link

1. Because sportswriters like to feel important.

2. I'm not advocating a fucking formula, but INTERPRETING the record of the player's career.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 29 December 2004 14:25 (nineteen years ago) link

seven years pass...

Took me a second to figure this out--I thought he was still playing for somebody--but I-Rod's "officially" retiring:

http://cnnsi.com/2012/baseball/mlb/04/19/rodriguez.retires.ap/index.html#?sct=mlb_t11_a2

I guess he goes into the Bagwell group: automatic first-ballot if they vote on stats alone, some undetermined amount of time in limbo otherwise.

clemenza, Friday, 20 April 2012 16:04 (twelve years ago) link

thought the same thing when i saw he's retiring. who else are you putting in this group?

Porto for Pyros (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Friday, 20 April 2012 16:08 (twelve years ago) link

Bret Boone...just kidding. Those are the first two that come to mind--let me think about it.

clemenza, Friday, 20 April 2012 16:09 (twelve years ago) link

Thome, too. Got any others? The cloud-of-vague-suspicion group...

clemenza, Friday, 20 April 2012 16:17 (twelve years ago) link

Piazza?

Grimy Little Pimp (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Friday, 20 April 2012 17:33 (twelve years ago) link

was Pudge on any sort of nefarious "list"? a coworker of mine seems to think so.

Porto for Pyros (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Friday, 20 April 2012 17:34 (twelve years ago) link

p sure he was named in the mitchell report but didn't have to testify?

Grimy Little Pimp (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Friday, 20 April 2012 17:47 (twelve years ago) link

I wasn’t aware he was doing so poorly health wise

https://www.freep.com/story/sports/columnists/jeff-seidel/2024/08/29/chet-lemon-detroit-tigers-1984-team/74851096007/

omar little, Friday, 8 November 2024 01:44 (one week ago) link

I saw him during his Tigers heyday, but I'd be lying if I said I remember much--he was an integral part of the '84 team, along with Trammell/Whitaker/Gibson.

I don't even know that Posnanski's arguing Lemon should be in the HOF; he got so little attention in his day (as opposed to Parker, say), that it'd be kind of weird--especially when someone like Dwight Evans isn't in, who did have some measure of fame. But I'm glad he brought some awareness to what a good player he was.

clemenza, Friday, 8 November 2024 02:17 (one week ago) link

Chet Lemon was memorable to me primarily as a guy who had a great name and was obviously a good player, but fame-wise as a casual fan he was as famous to me as Lloyd Moseby or Cecil Cooper or Tony Armas.

I really don’t know why Dwight Evans hasn’t come closer to making it, I feel like they reward pitchers with mustaches, but penalize hitters with any facial hair. It’s the only other explanation I have for Munson and Grich.

omar little, Saturday, 9 November 2024 00:03 (one week ago) link

Barry Bonds shaved his off and they still kept him out ☹️

gyac, Saturday, 9 November 2024 00:23 (one week ago) link

I feel like they reward pitchers with mustaches, but penalize hitters with any facial hair

Needs to be codified into Bill James's Hall of Fame Monitor immediately!

Assuming Tiant/Allen/John go in this time--all three may not--my list now starts with Evans/Whitaker/Lofton/Munson/Delgado. (Grich too has had advocates for decades.)

clemenza, Saturday, 9 November 2024 00:33 (one week ago) link

After aging off the BBWAA ballot, Garvey is now on his fifth Era Committee appearance in the past decade and a half.

five strikes and

mookieproof, Saturday, 9 November 2024 01:33 (one week ago) link

I could have sworn Lemon's autograph was on the baseball I have autographed by most of the '80 (or '81) White Sox, but he's one of the missing names...

WmC, Saturday, 9 November 2024 01:41 (one week ago) link

Are Fisk and Baines on there?

clemenza, Saturday, 9 November 2024 03:23 (one week ago) link

Neither of them. But I just realized this one squiggle is Orlando Cepeda's signature on there -- he was a coach in '80.

WmC, Saturday, 9 November 2024 04:21 (one week ago) link

Lou would be my top pick for “get him in immediately”, his last two seasons combined into one nice swan song.

.298/.375/.503/4.0 bWAR

571 AB
103 hits
170 runs
35 doubles
2 triples
26 hr
87 rbi
6 sb
72 bb
88 so

omar little, Saturday, 9 November 2024 15:56 (one week ago) link

The other thing about Whitaker is, it's bizarre to have Trammell in there without him. Have two teammates ever been so closely aligned? Ruth-Gehrig, obviously, and I suppose there are others, but it's amazing how closely their careers tracked each other--'77 to '95 with the same team (Trammell lasted one extra season). They're even high on each other's Similarity list, even though they played different positions. Whitaker's five games ahead in bWAR, 75 to 70. The only real edge I can see for Trammel is that he had one monster season ('87, should have won MVP) and Whitaker didn't.

clemenza, Saturday, 9 November 2024 17:24 (one week ago) link

Tinker to Evers to Chance?

Glavine and Smoltz come to mind, but Glavine has those swan song years with the Mets, plus psychologically their association is a bit diluted by being a trio with Maddux for some but not all of their reign. I think Trammell and Whitaker have as much claim to the closely-aligned crown as anyone

Lavator Shemmelpennick, Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:28 (one week ago) link

one thing I’ve gotta say about the tigers is for a solid decade starting with that World Series team they were one of the coolest squads, they had so many underrated players whose primary talent was they hammered the shit outta the ball. Whitaker, Trammell, Gibson, Lemon, Parrish, Evans, Nokes, Fryman, Tettleton, Phillips, Deer…they even had Incaviglia for a minute.

omar little, Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:32 (one week ago) link

and Fielder obv

omar little, Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:38 (one week ago) link

The three Atlanta starters are a good match. And even though Maddux was clearly superior to the other two, it would be silly if two of the three were in the HOF and the other guy still waiting.

clemenza, Saturday, 9 November 2024 19:49 (one week ago) link

FB reminded me today that Curt Flood's still not in the HOF, so let me amend my list to include him near the top (different thing, obviously, though he did exceed 40 bWAR in a career that ended after his age-31 season).

clemenza, Monday, 11 November 2024 16:37 (one week ago) link

Whitaker is 84th all time in bWAR (tied with Johnny Bench). Everyone ahead of him is in the HOF, with the exception of a few 19th century players, still-active slam-dunk candidates (e.g. Kershaw, Verlander), recently retired slam-dunk candidates (Greinke, Pujols), PED-suspects (Clemens, A-Rod), and "extenuating circumstances" players (Schilling, Rose).

tl;dr version: Whitaker may very well be the very best player who is eligible but isn't in, with the exception of PED-suspects who have fallen off the regular ballot.

NoTimeBeforeTime, Tuesday, 12 November 2024 08:51 (one week ago) link

just a bit of fun, let's be cool, the current top 25 active players in bWAR, dropped here for easy reference. apologies to Soto and Acuna and Alvarez, who just haven't played enough to make the list.

Mike Trout (14, 32) 86.2
Justin Verlander (19, 41) 80.5
Clayton Kershaw (17, 36) 79.4
Max Scherzer (17, 39) 75.4
Mookie Betts (11, 31) 69.6
Paul Goldschmidt (14, 36) 62.8
Freddie Freeman (15, 34) 60.7
Manny Machado (13, 31) 57.9
Nolan Arenado (12, 33) 56.7
Chris Sale (14, 35) 53.3
Jose Altuve (14, 34) 52.8
José Ramírez (12, 31) 52.4
Aaron Judge (9, 32) 52.2
Bryce Harper (13, 31) 51.1
Francisco Lindor (10, 30) 49.7
Andrew McCutchen (16, 37) 49.3
Marcus Semien (12, 33) 45.8
Jacob deGrom (11, 36) 45.2
Giancarlo Stanton (15, 34) 44.7
Carlos Correa (10, 29) 44.4
Shohei Ohtani (7, 29) 43.8
Gerrit Cole (12, 33) 43.3
Christian Yelich (12, 32) 41.9
Jason Heyward (15, 34) 41.8
Xander Bogaerts (12, 31) 40.8

omar little, Tuesday, 12 November 2024 20:37 (one week ago) link

Wild to think that trout in an inner circle guy and how much longer the runway is for manny harper ohtani and judge

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Tuesday, 12 November 2024 22:34 (one week ago) link

Carlos González
Curtis Granderson
Félix Hernández
Adam Jones
Ian Kinsler
Russell Martin
Brian McCann
Dustin Pedroia
Hanley Ramírez
Fernando Rodney
CC Sabathia
Ichiro Suzuki
Troy Tulowitzki
Ben Zobrist

New ^

gyac, Monday, 18 November 2024 17:24 (yesterday) link

Will be curious if Ichiro gets 100%. Probably not. Otherwise, it's CC and Felix who'll be the ones to watch. CC will go in, though maybe not first ballot; Felix, I don't know. I'll be personally paying a visit to each and every writer who votes for Troy "I'd much rather be in Colorado, I just want to be clear" Tulowitzki.

clemenza, Monday, 18 November 2024 18:45 (yesterday) link

Closer look, and Felix is a no. Great peak, right on track till he's 30, but that's basically it.

clemenza, Monday, 18 November 2024 19:03 (yesterday) link

For carry-overs, Wagner should be a cinch (73.8% last time), but this is his last shot. Andruw is at ~60% with two years to go.

clemenza, Monday, 18 November 2024 19:34 (yesterday) link

without looking, i would have though King Felix would have had a better shot and never really though of CC as a HoFer, but he def has a better case

CC was a much better pitcher for sure

brony james (k3vin k.), Tuesday, 19 November 2024 03:46 (sixteen hours ago) link

i'm sure CC will get in -- 3093 strikeouts is a lot -- but honestly he's kinda marginal stats-wise

his run with the brewers in 2008 was incredible tho, and i appreciate that

mookieproof, Tuesday, 19 November 2024 04:22 (fifteen hours ago) link

This is a really interesting crop of first ballot players. Obviously Ichiro is a no-brainer, but at least half of them had legitimate 4-5 year HOF peaks. Pedroia would have cleared the bar easily if he hadn't gotten injured. CC wasn't an elite pitcher after his age 31 season and was a compiler after that, but a lot of people argue for Andy Pettitte and he was far, far better than Pettitte with similar career numbers. Felix was unquestionably a HOFer in his 20's and then fell off a cliff, but so did Andruw Jones and he's probably going to get in soon.

NoTimeBeforeTime, Tuesday, 19 November 2024 09:18 (eleven hours ago) link

he was far, far better than Pettitte with similar career numbers

Far better at his peak, that is.

NoTimeBeforeTime, Tuesday, 19 November 2024 09:19 (eleven hours ago) link

Ian Kinsler is a guy who might not deserve to make the Hall of Fame but when you look at his career, playing 14 seasons and putting up 4.6 bWAR per 162 games is pretty impressive.

Pedroia was even better obv, i’m a bit more pro when it comes to his case, he had a great career that was cut short by injury, I think one could argue he belongs in based on what he accomplished, kind of like Kirby Puckett.

Sabathia is a weird case, I don’t actually think he’s that much better than Andy Pettitte, I think they both wind up in the realm of guys who had very good careers with several Hall-worthy seasons apiece.

omar little, Tuesday, 19 November 2024 16:31 (three hours ago) link

in within first few years: Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia

catchers who will have to wait a while: Russell Martin, Brian McCann

hall of famers who were destroyed by injuries in their 30s: Felix Hernández, Hanley Ramirez, Troy Tulowitzki

King Felix might make it anyway

z_tbd, Tuesday, 19 November 2024 17:46 (two hours ago) link

for the catchers a lot depends on what you think about catching stats and "value" and all that shit

z_tbd, Tuesday, 19 November 2024 17:47 (two hours ago) link

God help me RM seemed HOF worthy to me at the time whereas McCann the Tiger did not

Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Tuesday, 19 November 2024 19:25 (fifty-five minutes ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.