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#1
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Posted By: T206Collector
Ten players to be considered by Veterans Committee |
#2
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Posted By: Adam Baxter
I'd like to see both Dahlen and White get in. Doesn't Deacon White have the longest career in Professional Baseball history? |
#3
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Posted By: leon
Depending on how you look at it I would think Connie Mack or maybe Casey Stengel had the longest careers... |
#4
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Posted By: Anonymous
The HOF should be kicking people out, not stretching to let more decidedly unworthy players in. |
#5
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Posted By: Adam Baxter
White only played about 15 years, but he did play in three different decades (1870,s, '80's, '90's) |
#6
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Posted By: Paul
I know he won't get in, but I've been collecting Vern Stephens cards for years. I think he is one of the most under-appreciated players ever, but probably does fall below the bar for HOFers. |
#7
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Posted By: barrysloate
Adam- it's Deacon McGuire who played 26 seasons. |
#8
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Posted By: Chris Counts
Few things get me riled up more than the politics of the Hall of Fame. Mickey Vernon? In 20 seasons, he hit .286 with 172 home runs. Sure, he won two battling titles, but so did Pete Runnels. At least Vernon is still alive, unlike the other guys they're considering. If he gets in, at least he gets to appreciate it while he's still breathing, unlike quite a few other guys ... |
#9
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Posted By: JimB
If Magee were elected, I wonder how that would affect the value of his T206 error card. |
#10
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Posted By: barrysloate
The T206 Magie would unquestionably bump up. But he's really a long shot. |
#11
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Posted By: ali_lapoint
i think reynolds has a decent shot at getting in but if he did i think it would hinge on how much they weigh in his post season numbers. 7-2 in the world series with 4 saves on top of that and a 2.79 ERA. if nothing else i think those numbers would be what gets him in if he does get in. compares to lemon and gomez on baseball-reference. but doesn't have the 20 win seasons those guys did. |
#12
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Posted By: Pcelli60
No Frank Selee? |
#13
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
They put Deacon White on the ballot and fail to make any mention of his even more-talented brother, Will. Just another example in the litany of problems that the Hall of Fame has in recognizing the true "borderline" greats. |
#14
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
"No Frank Selee?" |
#15
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
Ed Reulbach is nowhere in sight... sad. |
#16
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Posted By: Anonymous
Don Zimmer might be up there between playing coaching and managing. |
#17
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Posted By: Sean BH
No Cravath? |
#18
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Posted By: Rob D.
If we're suddenly using "games watched" as HOF criteria, you might as well put in Herb Score. After his 8-year career as a pitcher, he spent 30-plus years in the TV and radio booths for the Indians. And given how bad those teams were for about 26 of those years, Score should get credit for double-duty. |
#19
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Posted By: Jay
Deacon White played for 20 years (5 years in National Association), had the first hit in the National Association (the first professional league), was a .312 lifetime hitter, and the best barehand catcher of his era. He deserves to be in the HOF but there are other pre-1900 players who deserve it more (Stovey, Van Haltren, Caruthers, Ryan, Browning, etc) |
#20
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Posted By: Paul
I will never understand why Van Haltren and Caruthers are not in. Of those on the ballot, Carl Mays is probably the most deserving, though a case could be made for Reynolds. |
#21
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Posted By: Jodi Birkholm
Agreed on Vernon. If there was a "Nice Guys HOF" he'd deserve to be in, but there isn't, so he doesn't. Well, we only went a short time before somebody brought up Reulbach. I'm amazed it took that long! Now where are all the Santo-worshippers? Aren't they supposed to be chiming in right about now? |
#22
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Posted By: Chris Counts
I agree that Allie Reynolds was as good as Lefty Gomez ... just check the stats. But then, so was Lon Warnecke, and he not only has practically the same stats as Gomez, but he played during the same years, and nobody even remotely considers him a HOF candidate, which just goes to show how absurb the whole thing is. As for worshipping Ron Santo, I believe he's a HOFer, but I'm one of those guys who want to open the floodgates (or simply keep them open!). More than anybody, though, I want to see Minnie Minoso in Cooperstown ... |
#23
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Posted By: boxingcardman
I thought the failure to include Miller and Cy Rigler (umpire) last time around were ridiculous. Say what you want about Miller; to elect the dunsel [def: a part which serves no useful purpose. The term was used as an insult to Captain James T. Kirk during the war games test of the M-5 Multitronic Unit created by Dr. Richard Daystrom. Commodore Robert Wesley called Kirk Captain Dunsel, to the confusion of Dr. Leonard McCoy. Kirk's First Officer Spock explained the term only after Kirk had left the bridge, stung by the insult]. Kuhn is in but not the guy who kicked his can over and over and changed the structure of the sport far more profoundly than Kuhn ever did? Crappo. Charles "Cy" Rigler (May 16, 1882 - December 21, 1935) worked in the National League from 1906 to 1935. His total of 4,144 games ranked fourth in major league history when he retired, and his 2,468 games as a plate umpire still place him third behind his NL contemporaries Bill Klem (3,543) and Hank O'Day (2,710). Rigler is tied with O'Day for the second most World Series as an umpire (10), credited with instituting the practice of using arm signals when calling balls and strikes. Rigler was promoted to supervisor of the NL staff in December 1935 following the death of Hank O'Day, but died less than two weeks later. |
#24
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Posted By: Anonymous
Had some good raw numbers but my guess is that adjusted for the times, they weren't so special as to deserve the Hall. Surely there is a reason that after 100 years he isn't in. |
#25
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Posted By: DMcD
Good call, Jodi. |
#26
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Posted By: Anonymous
So does this mean Mark Belanger, surely one of the best ever at the key position of SS, should be in the Hall too with his anemic BA? |
#27
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Posted By: J Levine
Magee is a long shot but he was one of the best centerfielders of his era. Please put him...I need another Phillie HOFer (thank god I already own a Magie). |
#28
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Posted By: Anonymous
Puh-leeze. |
#29
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Posted By: Anonymous
Black Ink: Batting - 2 (587) (Average HOFer ¡Ö 27) |
#30
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Posted By: Anthony S.
Peter, |
#31
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Posted By: Anonymous
Black-Ink Test |
#32
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Posted By: Steve
No Joe Wood neither |
#33
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Posted By: paulstratton
Always so negative Peter. |
#34
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Posted By: Steve Dawson
No Deacon Phillipe or Ed Reulbach either! |
#35
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Posted By: Anonymous
Coulda woulda shoulda. |
#36
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Posted By: paulstratton
Yes coulda-shoulda-woulda, but if you average his prior years and add them to this totals it would be pretty darn close. He played in horrible right handed hitters parks yet still slugged .466(5th at the time) and retired second on the career home run list for second basemen, behind only Hornsby. |
#37
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Posted By: Paul
Peter, just to clarify, I said that Vern Stephens was very underappreciated and that I collect his cards. But I also said I agreed he probably didn't belong in the Hall. |
#38
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Posted By: ali_lapoint
slightly off topic but speaking of joe wood and how hard he could throw, did you guys see the article floating on yahoo now about the 9 year old kid who throws so hard that his little league wants to ban him from pitching? put him in now. |
#39
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Posted By: paulstratton
Sandy Koufax only won 168 games and never came back as an outfielder. Maybe if Wood had gotten shot up before every start(performance enhancer) like Koufax did he could have kept pitching. |
#40
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
I don't have any major problems with the grouping other than there are probably more deserving people (O'Doul, Mullane, Browning, Caruthers, etc.), but this is how I see them... |
#41
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
Don't be too hard on ole' Joe. He was basically Sandy Koufax without Sandy's "crappy years" attached to his statistics. Sandy was an incrediblly dominant pitcher for 4 years, a pretty good pitcher for 2, and a pretty crappy pitcher for 6. Of course I listed them in reverse order of when they happened. His first 6 years he had a 36-40 record. You take away those years and you have something close to Woods' career numbers. Woods was also a good hitter and lengthened his career playing in the field. |
#42
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Posted By: ali_lapoint
smokey joe was a great pitcher, no doubt. but i don't think its overstating to say that koufax's great years blew away wood's single great year in which he won 34 games. aside from that year his next highest total was 23. look at the differences between koufax's ERAs his final 6 seasons when compared to the league average. it's just incredible. not to mention koufax finished his career by going 27-9 with a 1.73 ERA and a Cy Young award. i just don't see any comparison at all between their careers. even though wood had a few good seasons, so did a lot of pitchers during his playing days. in the year he won 34, johnson won 33 and ed walsh won 27 and there were 8 other pitchers who won at least 20 games. i just don't think there is much of a comparison. |
#43
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Posted By: Anonymous
Joe Wood had one phenomenal year and a couple of pretty good years and that was it. Koufax had 5 phenomenal years and another very good one. |
#44
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
We have had the Koufax fight too many times to count here on the board. In my (and several other people's) opinion he is consistently given too much credit. He had some amazing years (4 to be exact) and some pretty lousy years. Yet, his name is consistently brought up in the "best pitchers of all time" converstions, which is almost as irritating as Nolan Ryan's name being in the same conversation. I admit Joe Wood isn't quite the pitcher Sandy was but he deserves more credit than people here give him. |
#45
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Posted By: ali_lapoint
i just don't see how a guy who put up the numbers koufax did can be given too much credit. |
#46
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
Peter, I have to beg to differ that Sandy had 5 great years, he had 4. His 14-7 year he had in 1962 with a 2.54 era would hardly be considered "great." Also, in regard to Wood, his career era is a 2.03, pretty tough to beat that. |
#47
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Posted By: paulstratton
Dodger stadium and the raised mound are two important factors that played favorably into Koufax's numbers. |
#48
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Posted By: ali_lapoint
even in koufax's 14-7 year he struck out 216 batters in only 184 innings. and in his lousy years his ERA was below league average in 4 of the 6. not to mention the no hitters and his 0.95 ERA in the world series. |
#49
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Posted By: paulstratton
double rubble |
#50
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
1. I think there are several folks in the Hall who should not be in. |
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