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#51
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Posted By: barrysloate
Paul- please don't kick out McCarthy until my auction ends. Thank you |
#52
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Posted By: Bob
Johnny Evers out??? Unbelievable. The Human Crab was a helluva player and one of the best minds in the game in the early 1900's. Never mind that he helped drive the Cubs to their world championships, he was the force behind the Miracle Braves WS year in 1914. A great fielder, very good hitter and even though by all accounts he was a pain in the ass to be around, a deserving HOFer. He and Cocky Collins and Nap Lajoie were arguably the best 3 second sackers of the first 25 years of the 20th century. |
#53
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Posted By: peter chao
Chris, Guys, |
#54
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Posted By: Paul
I don't think the new committee has overreacted. What has happened is that the entire structure of the committee has changed. The old committee was a group of 12 guys who met together. They could decide AS A GROUP what to do. If they thought three guys should get in one year and zero guys the next, they could do that. More importantly, if one persuasive member of the committee felt that George Kelly belonged, he could persuade his colleagues in person, and perhaps even offer to support Rube Marquard in exchange. |
#55
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Posted By: MikeW
I felt the need to interject that Addie Joss had exceptional numbers for ANY era. Sandy Koufax did as well - but 60's baseball was deadball too. I think both Joss and Koufax deserve to be there because, despite them pitching in deadball eras... they were one of the best pitchers in it. Just because a player has big offensive stats in a juiced era or great pitching stats in a dead era doesn't mean they aren't great. Now, if they had crappy stats - it probably means they are crappy players. |
#56
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Posted By: peter chao
Paul, |
#57
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Posted By: warshawlaw
The disquiet I have with the current veterans committee, which I think many share, is that many of the voters are ignorant when it comes to the history of the game. I've met a number of HOFers. Some are, shall we say, less than striking in the brains dept. I'd venture to say that most of us know more about baseball history than most of the HOFers who vote on the nominees. The old system was cronyist, but it had the advantage of including people who cared about the result and were interested enough to learn and participate. The new system doesn't ensure that outcome at all. |
#58
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Posted By: Mike
1.Babe Ruth |
#59
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Posted By: peter chao
Mike, |
#60
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Posted By: barrysloate
I think if you were rating players purely on the basis of numbers, Hank could arguably be #1 all-time. So no, Hank stays. He's in the pantheon. Williams too! |
#61
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Posted By: jay behrens
Cobb - because he was a racists and suspected murderer |
#62
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Posted By: Anonymous
Here are the most questionable ones to me: |
#63
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Posted By: Mark Lutz
Misunderestimated, |
#64
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Posted By: Anonymous
I guess I'm not all that keen on putting players in the HOF for what their teams accomplished. All the players you mentioned were certainly good but if you check their stats its difficult to justify them in the HOF. The Giants are grossly over-represented because the Fordam Flash basically ruling the Vet. Committe and put it lots of guys he played with. ALos I think Groh was probably better than some of the ones who did get in (at least career wise). I'm probably a bit hard on Pennock. But he pitched for some of the best hitting teams ever I don't think he made that big a difference. If you examine his pitching numbers next to the rest of the HOF pitchers they are inadequate. He wasn't ever that dominant winning 20 games only twice and his lifetime numbers don't make it up his lifetime ERA was barely better than the league average. He was voted into the HOF in 1948 -- soon after his untimely death. Now that I think of it I guess Chief Bender doesn't really belong either. |
#65
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Posted By: peter chao
Guys, |
#66
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Posted By: Frank Wakefield
Easy for me to name 3. |
#67
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Posted By: Sean Coe
Three that should never have been voted in imo: Hafey, Ferell, Marquard. |
#68
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Posted By: jay behrens
I didn't know Puckett and Carter played before WW2. Guess I need to add them to my list players I need for my player set. |
#69
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Posted By: howard
Johnny Evers was a fine player but to make a HOF case for him you have to give him too much credit for intagibles such as being smart or fiery or a team leader. Was he THE driving force behind the Miracle Braves in 1914? I don't think so. I doubt he was responsible for Dick Rudolph and Bill James having seasons way beyond their career norms. They also had Rabbit Maranville at SS who also has been credited with being the driving force behind the team. Yes, Evers won the MVP (with Maranville a close second and Ruldoph and James not far behind) but there are plenty of players who won the award that either did not deserve them or were not HOF caliber players or both (O'Farrell and Peckinpaugh come to mind). |
#70
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Posted By: Mark L
If I had to expel 3 I suppose I'd pick Ferrell, Hafey and Lindstrom. From what I've read, contemporary witnesses agreed that Evers was the veteran leader of the Miracle Braves. When both he and James were sidelined for part of the season in 1915, there were no more miracles. As for the poem, it may have been the driving force at the time but I still think that a solid case could be made for both Evers and Chance. But poetry can't be the only cause of their celebrity. Yeats and Auden could have written volumes about other Cub double play combinations, say, Charlie Hollocher, Zeb Terry, and Fred Merkle, and it wouldn't put them any of them any closer to Cooperstown. |
#71
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Posted By: howard
It's not remarkable that Evers was considered the veteran leader of the team as he was their oldest player. But that is not the same thing as driving a team to the pennant. The value of veteran leadership is debatable. Joe Girardi and Darren Erstad are credited by some as being veteran leaders of championship teams. In my opinion this does not make them great it makes them overrated. |
#72
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Posted By: Peter Thomas
To excluded Joss because he died before his 10th year would be cruel. When Williams was shot down in Korea, if he had been killed or disabled, would he be excluded because he had played only 9-1/2 years? 39,40,41,42,46,47,48,49, 1/2 of 50 & 51. Joss is an upper tier HOF member. There are however many marginal members who had long somewhat above average careers and piled up lots of stats against somewhat diluted tallent, who really do not belong in the HOF. I think that there should be a review process, 30 to 50 years after election, to confirm membership in the Hall of Fame or movement to a "Hall of Achievement". |
#73
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Fred)
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#74
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Posted By: barrysloate
What on earth does "Ruthlessly pricking our gonfalon bubble" mean? |
#75
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
Addie's numbers were exceptional. As someone mentioned, it is unfair to say he wasn't elected to the Hall until 68 years after his career was over. Not only did the Hall not exist for a good chunk of that time, but when it was created, the rules required 10 years of service to be eligible---that is, until the rules were changed in late 1977. Addie went in the next year, his first year of eligibility. |
#76
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Posted By: barrysloate
Clemente was another player who got special consideration, not having to wait the required five years to get in. |
#77
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Posted By: warshawlaw
look at the hair on the T206; you can't kick out Batman. |
#78
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Fred)
Barry, |
#79
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Posted By: peter chao
Pete, Todd |
#80
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Posted By: peter chao
Pete, Todd |
#81
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Posted By: howard
Good one, Judge! |
#82
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Posted By: barrysloate
Thanks Fred. I looked up "gonfalon" in my Webster's and it wasn't listed. It's as antiquated as "whilst". |
#83
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Posted By: Anonymous
Joss belongs -- or if he doesn't about 15 other pitchers have to go too. |
#84
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Posted By: Anonymous
For the statheads. Note that Joss has the top W+H/IP all-time (Walks plus Hits allowed per-inning) -- one of the stats currently in vogue. |
#85
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Posted By: NickM
Dave Bancroft, Rick Ferrell, Chick Hafey, Waite Hoyt, Travis Jackson, Rube Marquard, Herb Pennock, and Joe Tinker all go. |
#86
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Posted By: Hal
I looked this up in Wikipedia. A gonfalon is a type of pennant. The Wikipedia article explains that the phrase means that the Cubs continually spoiled the Giants' chances (burst their bubble) for the pennant. |
#87
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Posted By: peter chao
Guys, |
#88
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Posted By: peter chao
Guys, |
#89
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Posted By: Jason L
the 8 umpires that are in the HOF. |
#90
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Posted By: peter chao
Guys, |
#91
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Posted By: Chris Counts
Peter, |
#92
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Fred)
Peter, |
#93
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Posted By: peter chao
Fred, |
#94
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Posted By: George Dreher
Someone in this thread suggested that Joe Sewell doesn't belong in the Hall. My only question is: |
#95
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Posted By: John Kalafarski
Maybe I'm the only one with this take: there seems to be something very mean spirited about trying to figure out who should be thrown out of the Hall of Fame. I'd rather consider the question of who could be added. By the way, I think Dizzy Dean is in partly because of his work doing his radio show and baseball play-by-play: a loveable ambassador of the game. |
#96
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Posted By: howard
The movie version of Dean's life, "The spirit of St. Louis", was released in 1952 and the following year he was elected to the Hall of Fame. Perhaps if "The Addie Joss Story" had been made ten or twenty years after his death Joss would have had an easier time with the voters. |
#97
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Posted By: howard
Is Wilbert Robinson in as a player or manager? Either way I think his case is pretty weak. |
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