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No strike, no PED’s. Let them in!
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Surely Harold Baines will give up his place in the HOF for any of these far more deserving players…surely…
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Maybe in the future there will be a change for PED users. Rafael looked pretty stupid lying to congress about his "alleged" steroid use. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAxo4pCITRM The denials from the abusers probably doesn't sit well with the BB writers. I'm not a Bonds fan, but if he didn't use PEDs, he probably would have been a HOFer with the raw talent he had. I just don't get how those guys could deny the use when their bodies were pretty much saying "yeah, I use PEDs". One PED user was honest about it. McGwire, at least, admitted to PED use and didn't deny it like the others. And he's not in the HOF. |
Maybe I missed, it but does anyone know the identities of the voters for this one ?
Is it a meeting where the voters get together, or do they just cast ballots without formal communications ? |
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Ortiz himself has confirmed he failed a test. It's not a rumor, it's not "supposedly", etc. https://www.cbssports.com/mlb/news/d...sted-positive/ |
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Rules for Election for Players for Contemporary Baseball Era Candidates to the National Baseball Hall of Fame Name: The Contemporary Baseball Era Players Committee ("The Committee") shall refer to the electorate that considers retired Major League Baseball players no longer eligible for election by the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) whose greatest contributions to the game were realized from the 1980 to present era. Membership: The Contemporary Baseball Era Players Committee shall consist of 16 members, comprised of members of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, executives, and veteran media members. The Chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, Inc. shall act as the non-voting chairman of the committee and shall act as non-voting Secretary of the Committee. Method of Appointment: The Hall of Fame's Board of Directors shall appoint the Committee. Term – Each appointee is to serve for a renewable term, with the Committee scheduled to meet on a cycle of once every three years. Time and Place of Election – Beginning in 2022, an election for Contemporary Baseball Era Player candidates shall be held once every three years at the Major League Baseball Winter Meetings. A quorum will consist of three-fourths of the total membership of the committee. Proxies are permitted in emergency situations only. In the absence of a quorum, a conference call with absent committee members will be permitted. No word on the committee members (that I have found) but the prior members, under the previous process, were disclosed. Scott |
I wrote an article on the candidates and their cards, if anyone is interested:
Investing In The Contemporary Baseball Era Hall of Fame Candidates |
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Sos
Why not Rose and Joe Jackson?
Using the old arguments are at least hypocritical and at best self serving. Besides, I want a price bump on my Rose collection when he goes into the hall :D |
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Chad |
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I also agree with you that David Cone and perhaps Kevin Brown deserve a second look. |
The worst thing about Lofton is that he immediately fell off the ballot after getting 3.2% his only year. I have never understood some of the guys who fell off immediately and never got any real consideration.
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The thing that bothers me with some of the players like Mattingly, Belle, and Murphy (all peak vs. longevity guys) is that this is their THIRD time on the ballot each...why not give others a chance and let more time pass before just throwing them on again? |
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Last ballot we saw Tim Hudson and Joe Nathan get the treatment. |
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Right you are. I was just thinking in terms of these veterans' committees in general. That question is more pertinent a couple years from now when the non-contemporary Veterans Committee meets. |
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my two centavos
Correct - I despise Schilling but if he had Clemens' numbers he would be in for sure. He's just not there stats-wise. I'd much rather see Orel Hershiser get in, or Billy Pierce, or Tiant.
McGriff played in an era of much less offense than the Bonds/Palmeiro group. He belongs in the Hall, I think. Mattingly I'm on the fence about. Murphy not quite... Quote:
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Bonds: 1986-2007 Palmiero: 1986-2005 |
By my count, there have been 19 pitchers with 200 career wins and 3,000 strikeouts.
Not in the HOF: - Clemens (on this ballot) - Schilling (on this ballot) - Verlander (active) - Scherzer (active) - Sabathia (not yet eligible) If you prefer WAR, Schilling is 26th all time among SP's. Those above him not in the HOF: - Roger Clemens |
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"I will not participate in the final year of voting. I am requesting to be removed from the ballot," he wrote. "I'll defer to the veterans committee and men whose opinions actually matter and who are in a position to actually judge a player. I don't think I'm a hall of famer as I've often stated but if former players think I am then I'll accept that with honor." |
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I don't know if that's factual or not, but that's my take. Open to other interpretations. |
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We know the BBWAA is a fraternity and while many writers are stat-based and analytical, some are not. Players with positive attitudes that are good with interviews have always gotten bonus points for that, and likewise those with sour personalities get deducted for it. Nothing very insightful there, that is just the way it is. Rock Raines had to wait a long time to get in the Hall, Dick Allen is still not in. My focus when looking at HOF credentials has always been to look at a player's value on the field. But if you are an ambassador to the game, like Ernie Banks maybe, that should count for something too. Certainly Jackie Robinson would deserve his spot in the hall even if he put up Rabbit Maranville numbers. And on the other side, those who lessen the game by cheating, or otherwise putting the game in a bad light, should have that counted against them. Personally I don't think the controversial things Schilling has said since he retired from baseball should be much of a deduct, but on the other hand they sure don't help. |
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As we've seen in the threads here, it's hard enough to find consensus on who should be in and out without all those outside variables. |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_LGZUmD2Hk |
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His post-career behavior has clearly kept him out. He also won the Clemente award so he did have a period of good character for sure. |
Mattingly dont know why people think he is a hofer just because he played for the yankees. lot more players belong in there before him.
dave parker belongs in wayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy more then him |
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Dave Parker is in a similar boat. WAR absolutely hates Parker's glove. I think the pitching and defense components are highly questionable at best. |
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Schilling is a no brainer HOFer. He also happens to be a loud mouth, but based on his play he belongs and if we are all being honest is pretty obvious. |
Schilling checks all the boxes for being a HOFer.
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When Ed Wade was the Phillies GM, he described Schilling something like this - He's a horse every 5th day and a horse's ass the other four. Not sure if it's a direct quote, but apparently he wasn't beloved during his playing days. However, he did come up big in the postseason.
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Let's compare to his direct contemporaries.
Tom Glavine - 80.7 WAR - Elected first year of eligibility with 91.9% of the vote Mike Mussina- 82.8 WAR - Elected his sixth year of eligibility. John Smoltz - 69.0 WAR - Elected in his first year of eligibility with 82.9% of the vote. Curt Schilling - 79.5 WAR - Not a Hall of Famer at all. Schilling is closer to Pedro Martinez the he is John Smoltz by WAR, but Martinez is an all-peak kind of guy and generally held in a different tier. While his career overlaps significantly with Halladay, I would not consider them the same generation. Including Halladay would further bolster Schilling's case. I have cut out the roiders, Clemens and Kevin Brown as they are not looked at for statistical performance, but for an on-the-field problem. Maddux and Randy Johnson are obviously and undeniably in the top tier of HOF greatness and blow everyone else out of the water. I can't see a reasonable case that Schilling isn't a Hall of Famer. I can see a reasonable case that the Hall shouldn't include so many players and be much smaller, and Curt shouldn't be in that small hall, but that's not the Hall that actually exists. He clearly meets the standard of his generation. I will never understand the apparently numerous people who will deny anything if it doesn't suit their favored political narrative. |
Glavine is a 300 game winner which is basically an automatic entry to the HoF. Mussina won 54 more games than Schilling and was considered a questionable pick by a lot of people (from what I remember) when he was elected. Smoltz had almost the same win total as Schilling but also spent time as a closer and also has 154 saves. Glavine and Smoltz also won Cy Young awards which Schilling never did. I think his low win total compared to most starters already in the HoF worked against him with a lot of older voters even though several pitchers with comparable win totals have been elected more recently. He certainly didn't help himself with some of his comments, but I don't think that's the only reason he didn't get elected by the writers.
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Ortiz should not be in while the other better players who may have used as well are not in. If Schilling is not in due to his personality, then the same standard should be applied to every player, and then Dale Murphy should be in due to his personality being exemplary. Nobody is a capable judge on someone else's character unless they see that person's actions 100% of the time and every second of their life. All they see is an incomplete picture either positive or negative. There are a lot of wolves in sheep's clothing and you never really know. |
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If Ortiz is in, so should Bonds and Clemens and others who were undeniably better than Ortiz but kept out for being guilty of the same crime he is. Schilling being kept out as a political enemy is just as bad. If Schilling was an asshole who shared a meme joke about hanging Oath Keepers or whatever-the-boogeyman-of-the-day is, he would be voted in with little comment (actually, he'd probably be lauded for his 'brave stand'). It's not his 'personality', it's his personality as a political enemy. The writers used to treat the Hall as a baseball accomplishment; they no longer are. Perhaps one day we can return to rationality. |
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