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T206 players who should be in the Hall of Fame, but are not
If you only had 2 votes...Mine would be Ed Reulbach (Chi.) and Bill Dahlen (Brooklyn/ Bos.) Reulbach had incredible stats, and pitched 2 one hitters in the same double header. Dahlen hit safely in 72 of 73 consecutive games and was a great player and competitor....
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Dahlen came to mind as soon as I read the question.
My other choice is Mike Donlin, but he's my favorite player from this era, so I'm biased. :p |
Wild Bill Donovan
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t206'ers who should be in the hall
Gavvy Cravath and ed reulbach come to mind...
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george mullin put up some very nice numbers, and if i remember correctly threw a no-no on the 4th of july
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I agree with Kevin that Bill Dahlen should be in the hall.
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Is there a time limit after which a player can no longer can be considered for the HOF? Dahlen for sure, not sure on second choice yet
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Any common player I own with a so called "rare" back should be put into the HOF.
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Dahlen was very close on the last vote of the pre-integration veterans committee. I think he only missed by a couple of votes. He could make it next time that committee votes-- which is in 2015 I think.
Ginger Beaumont also deserves consideration. He was one of the very top hitters of the first decade of the AL. |
I'd go with Bill Dahlen also. There's no real clear cut 2nd choice. I agree with Ginger Beaumont being a decent candidate. If Nap Rucker pitched for the Giants rather than the Dodgers he might already be in as well.
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How about Wilbur Cooper? Not sure if he is part of the set, but he was the
1st lefty in the NL to win 200 games and he is probably the best pitcher that the Pirates have ever had. |
Dahlen and Rucker
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Deacon Phillippe
http://www.baseball-reference.com/pl...hillde01.shtml Won 20 games 6 times...2.59 ERA |
Reulbach and Dahlen. Beaumont - maybe.
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Chase ;)
Rucker. |
Larry Doyle.
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Hal Chase here, other then gambling from what I read he was the best of his time
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None. It is not the Hall of "Very Good."
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Steven,
Take a look at some of the T206 hofers. Many are just "very good." Dahlen was better. Rob |
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Sure. And other than that, how did you like the play Mrs. Lincoln? |
Johnny Kling, the Cub catcher, was a winner and his stats match up pretty much with Bresnahans.
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We probably could do a better thread on players in the T206 set who are in the hall of fame but shouldn't be...but that wouldn't be nice. I always though Turkey Mike Donlin was worthy and I definitely could see Larry Doyle.
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I would say the most likely future HOFer is Bill Dinneen. It would be as an umpire but it counts! Umpired 8 WS tying Connolloy's AL record, first AS game.
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As a player, Phillippe should be in.
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Johnny Kling was the best catcher of that era and one of thebest ever. The only year between 1906-1910 the cubs didnt get to the worls series was the year Kling took off. nuff ced!
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Larry Doyle. He was the best NL second baseman of his generation. When he retired he held the career records for a second baseman in slugging percentage, hits, doubles, triples, total bases, and extra base hits.
If you're the best player of your generation at your position in your league you should be in the HOF. |
George Mullin. He has some nice stats. 230 career wins. 2.82 career ERA. Won 20+ games multiple times (6x maybe?). Worthy....
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Bill Dahlen for sure. He fell just two votes short last year but I think he will make in 2015 when he is up for consideration again.
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I absolutely agree. A power hitting second baseman with a batting title and MVP. I think, even for his time, Doyle was underappreciated. |
I just don't understand what's keeping Doyle out. You can't compare him to players after his time. In his own time he was hands down the best second baseman to ever play in the National League. No one before him was better. How is he not in?
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I also agree with Larry Doyle and Johnny Kling being good choices...
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Here's to hoping. My collection's sole surviving signed T206
http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m...s/DoylePSA.jpg |
Glad I am not the only one who thought Doyle should be in. Agree with all of the above reasons, personally I think had the Giants won the world series one of those three years they took the pennant, that would have changed things in more people's mind at the time of his playing and even shortly after.
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Deadball Greats
Running through those who have been offered, I would support the following, with a few added:
Ginger Beaumont Gavvy Cravath Bill Dahlen Bill Dinneen (as an umpire) Turkey Mike Donlin Wild Bill Donovan Larry Doyle Johnny Kling Ed Konetchy Arlie Latham Tommy Leach Sherry Magee Clyde Milan George Mullin Deacon Phillippe Jack Quinn Ed Reulbach Nap Rucker Wildfire Schulte Cy Seymour Jimmy Sheckard George Stovall Jesse Tannehill Fred Tenney Doc White Close to HOF status: Bob Bescher Eddie Cicotte Harry Davis Chief Meyers Al Orth Heinie Zimmerman |
Can we please agree that Eddie Cicotte, Hal Chase and Heinie Zimmerman not be inducted into the HOF regardless of their talents or statistics? They all played greater roles than Shoeless Joe Jackson did in the gambling problems that plagued baseball in that decade.
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How could we forget Fielder
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How could we forget Fielder Jones? Paul Mac Farlane, former archivist for The Sporting News, makes Fielder's case on the back of a 1987 baseball card (see attached scans).
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I guess not - at least not until the steroids issue is settled. Check out these figures for WAR (Wins Above Replacement) from Baseball-Reference.com. Until the steroids issue is resolved, for me the Bondses and Clemenses will be on my "close to HOF" list - together with Cicotte and Zimmerman. With the cloud surrounding their on-field performances, they hardly rank among the all-time great Hall of Famers that the list below might imply. Babe Ruth 163.20 Barry Bonds 162.53 Willie Mays 156.09 Ty Cobb 151.08 Hank Aaron 142.39 Roger Clemens 140.30 Tris Speaker 133.94 Honus Wagner 130.59 Stan Musial 128.13 Rogers Hornsby 126.97 Eddie Collins 123.99 Ted Williams 123.16 |
You can think whatever you like about steroid users, but they took these drugs in an effort to improve their performance.
Cicotte, Chase and Zimmerman deliberately allowed their teams to lose in order to collect money for themselves. I'm not defending steroid use, but not all cheating is the same. Steroid users still tried to win at all times. Throwing games is the worst thing a ballplayer can do (on the field, of course). |
I always wondered how Doyle, captain of the Giants when the Giants were the Yankees, never made it. He was the offensive leader of the perennially dangerous Giants lineups all through the 1910's.
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http://www.thefreedictionary.com/fame |
Great renown
Great renown is not the same thing as being great. It just means widely known.
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Hof
**OK, sorry - now I go back and read the title - Dahlen or Doyle most likely. If it were expanded to other players, pre or post-war, I'd vote for Allie Reynolds. That (..strings on who should be in), I realize opens up another can that has been opened often and endlessly in the past.
Curious if there's been a string on someone in the HOF who they felt should not be (for whatever reason)? |
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