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What's Your Opinion on the MLB HOF's Vet Committee changes?
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. – Baseball’s Hall of Fame has again revamped its veterans’ committees to increase consideration for more contemporary players, managers, umpires and executives.
Under the change announced Saturday by the Hall’s board of directors, there will be separate committees for Today’s Game (1988-2016), Modern Baseball (1970-87), Golden Days (1950-69) and Early Baseball (1871-1949). Today’s Game and Modern Baseball will vote twice every five years, Golden Days once every five years and Early Baseball once every 10 years. “There are twice as many players in the Hall of Fame who debuted before 1950 as compared to afterward, and yet there are nearly double the eligible candidates after 1950 than prior,” Hall chair Jane Forbes Clark said in a statement. “Those who served the game long ago and have been evaluated many times on past ballots will now be reviewed less frequently.” Today’s Game will vote in 2016, ’18, ’21 and ‘23; and Modern Baseball in 2017, ’19, ’21 and ’23. Golden Days will vote in 2020 and ’25, and Early Baseball in 2020 and ’30. The Hall’s Historic Overview Committee will decide which committee will consider those players who span eras, based on the time or place of their most indelible impression. Since 2010, the Hall had established three veterans committees: Pre-Integration Era (1871-1946), Golden Era (1947-72) and Expansion Era (1973-2016). No one was elected by the Pre-Integration Era committee in December. In Addition, the Hall eliminated the one-year waiting period between a player’s last appearance on the Baseball Writers’ Association of America ballot and his veterans committee debut for consideration. The Hall also said active executives 70 or older may be given consideration, up from 65. Committees will remain at 16 people, with a vote of at least 75 percent needed for election. The ballot size will be 10 for each committee, it had been 12 for Expansion Era and 10 for the others. |
Rip bill dahlen n Ed reulbach.
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...and Minnie Minoso & Luis Tiant Now, that's a shame! ...and EARLY Baseball extended thru 1949 -Are they trying to make us ALL feel older, or what? |
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MORE committees - MORE voters - MORE compartmentalization ???
if it ain't broke... JMO |
Jesus Christ. Major League Baseball just can't get out of its own way. It's a superior sport to football, basketball and hockey, yet the league is run by chickens running around with their heads cut off. They don't know how to market the game. And World Series games later in the evening, when kids can't watch, is a mistake that they never seem to rectify. Ratings and money are fine, but if you keep cutting off the younger generation, there won't be anybody to give MLB money, or watch the game.
And, yes, more committees is what the Vet Committee needed. More compartmentalization. Uh huh. Joy. :rolleyes: |
Today's Game Committee AKA the Bonds and Clemens second chance committee.
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Why would today's game need a special vote when it is already voted on every year?
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Grouping the 1871-1949 period into one committee is ludicrous and having this committee meet only once every 10 years is doubly ludicrous. The Baseball HOF has made a bad process even worse. The HOF is becoming more and more like a bad politician trying to appease powerful lobbyists than an organization trying to do what is best for the selection process.
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I hate it. The Veterans' Committee upsets me and I am irritated by the likes of Jane Forbes Clark and Joe Morgan.
Bill Dahlen, Sherry Magee, Gavvy Cravath and Larry Doyle all belong in the HOF. Wake up! |
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