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#1
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Here's a fun holiday experiment
There are lots of great players who never reached Hall of Fame Worthiness. They just did their job and pleased the fans, but went unrecognized after their career. Guys like Joe Rudi or Ron Fairly So let's start taking nominations for the HALL OF COMMONS The only qualification is they could never have received more than five votes in any official Hall Of Fame balloting. You'll need to do some research for nominations but it's available on line. When we have enough nominations we'll start a poll and we can vote on the inaugural class for the Hall Of Commons. |
#2
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If those are your requirements, then start with Shoeless Joe Jackson. He received 2 votes in 1936 and 2 votes in 1946. Those were the only two times he received votes for the Hall of Fame.
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#3
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I like the name "Hall of Non-Hall of Famers"
Brian |
#4
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Hal McRae.
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Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ |
#5
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Ken Holtzman.
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#6
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Babe Herman
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Legacy Board Member Since 2009. Hundreds of successful transactions here on Network 54. Buy/Sell/Trade with Confidence. |
#7
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I always liked Brandon Webb. Won the Cy Young and then finished second two years in a row. Threw four innings the next season and then never pitched again.
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#8
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Jose Rijo
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#9
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Eddie Yost. Unless the gatekeeper says he got votes. I couldn't find him on a ballot. The Walking Man.
Sent from my motorola edge 5G UW (2021) using Tapatalk |
#11
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Earl Battey
From Wikipedia: Richard Kendall of the Society for American Baseball Research devised an unscientific study that ranked Battey as the seventh most dominating fielding catcher in major league history. |
#12
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Jon Matlack
Last edited by tod41; 12-01-2024 at 05:34 PM. |
#13
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Jim Sunburg
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Working on the following sets: 1916 and 1917 Zeenut, 1954B, 1955B, 1971T and 1972T |
#14
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Sal Bando
Joe Rudi Greg Luzinski Amos Otis Ken Singleton Jay Buhner |
#16
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Roy Sievers. he had some really good years on bad teams and played In Griffith Stadium with a long left field distance. Won first AL ROY and beat out Mantle and Williams for a HR and RBI title.
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#17
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7 total votes over two years on the ballot (1971 and 1972). If we expanded this to 10 votes or less, Sievers is a first ballot guy! 1957 Home Run Champ!
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Making my way slowly to trying to pull together as much of a Washington Senators collection as I can, one card at a time. Always looking to trade for anything I don't have yet! |
#18
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My all-time favorite Pirate:
Manny Sanguillen. |
#19
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They're technically eliminated because they got 6 votes but I always thought Moises Alou and Alfonso Soriano were great players. WAR does not like them at all.
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#20
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Hope my research was right that he only got three votes but my favorite player as a kid was Bucky Dent. World series hero and solid player.
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#21
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If you're having a bad day or are down on human nature, you only need to watch some clips of Sanguillen play, and all seems good.
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Looking for a 1998 Bryan Braves (non-perforated) Kerry Ligtenberg. |
#22
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Mark Fidrych. For one glorious season, he was the most beloved ballplayer on earth. As for Cecil Travis, it's truly sad that he lived to be nearly 100 and never received the call from Cooperstown. The argument by the Hall of Fame's stingy and utterly clueless gatekeepers is that he didn't play long enough. But he did record the third highest career batting average of any shortstop all-time, and would likely have continued playing, but WWII got in the way, and he lost a couple toes in the Battle of the Bulge. The way I see it, the Hall of Fame was built for guys like Cecil.
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#23
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John Olerud
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Successful B/S/T deals with asoriano, obcbobd, x2dRich2000, eyecollectvintage, RepublicaninMass, Kwikford, Oneofthree67, jfkheat, scottglevy, whitehse, GoldenAge50s, Peter Spaeth, Northviewcats, megalimey, BenitoMcNamara, Edwolf1963, mightyq, sidepocket, darwinbulldog, jasonc, jessejames, sb1, rjackson44, bobbyw8469, quinnsryche, Carter08, philliesfan and ALBB, Buythatcard and JimmyC so far. |
#24
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Keep the names coming. We will do background checks on then and the release the first ballot on Christmas Day. You will have one month to vote on the most deserving for the inaugural Hall of Commons
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#25
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Rick Reuschel, as previously mentioned. Granted, neither he nor his brother really looked like plausible professional athletes (If this were any other website I could easily copy and paste a photo of their 1977 Topps card, but you know what I mean.).
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#26
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Okay, this thread has forced me into creating a list of players with Prewar cards that had at least 2 votes in a single BBWAA election, but also not more than 5. At the end of this list I have included a few notable players that had no more than 1 vote during a single BBWAA election, and some notable players with 5 or less votes on the original 1936 Veteran's Committee vote for 19th century players . I have excluded from consideration any voting from all other committees.
Grouped by the top amount of votes received in any one year, and in no particular order within each grouping: 5 votes Bill Wambganss Joe Bush Fielder Jones Firpo Marberry Moe Berg Max Bishop Heinie Groh Bill Bradley Bill Carrigan 4 votes Art Fletcher Dolph Camilli Cookie Lavagetto Urban Shocker George Uhle Bill Donovan Bob O'Farrell 3 votes Jack Barry Charlie Berry Mort Cooper Tony Cuccinello Bill Doak Lew Fonseca Mike Gonzalez Frankie Gustine Willie Kamm Roger Peckinpaugh Luke Sewell Bill Werber 2 votes Joe Jackson Eddie Foster Eddie Grant Deacon Phillippe Terry Turner George Earnshaw Al Schacht Tommy Thevenow George Selkirk Donie Bush Guy Bush Hughie Critz Jim Tobin Kid Elberfeld Jake Daubert George J. Burns Ossee Schrecongost Larry Doyle Gavvy Cravath Jack Combs Marty Bergen Hans Lobert Sherry Magee Ping Bodie Wally Berger Ossie Bluege Ray Kremer Fred Leach Marty McManus Lee Meadows Van Lingle Mungo Cy Perkins Bill Sherdel Riggs Stephenson Red Kress Bill Hallahan George Case Augie Galan Notable players with maximum of 1 vote Bobby Veach Harry Steinfeldt Sam Leever Frank Schulte Tommy Leach 1936 19th century Veteran's votes Charlie Bennett - 3 Ross Barnes - 3 Fred Dunlap - 3 Jack Glasscock - 2 Ed Williamson - 2 Bobby Lowe - 2 Brian |
#27
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Jimmy Ryan
George Van Haltren |
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