Tomorrow is the date for one of
my favorite debates. Who should be in
the Hall of Fame? Clearly, more guys
from the 90s should be in. It is
criminally under represented now. I want
to fix that.
First, I'm going to go through my
"ballot" (remember, you can only vote for 10). Second, I'm going to give a simple yes or no
for whether each guy on the ballot should be in.
My ballot (alphabetical order):
Jeff Bagwell
This
really should be a no-brainer, and not just because I'm an Astros fan. The only first baseman in history with 400
home runs and 200 stolen bases. The most
pure 5-tool first baseman in history.
The face of a successful franchise for 15 years. The only reason why he's not in yet is
unsubstantiated rumors that he may have taken steroids because...?
Vladimir Guerrero
The
best bad ball hitter I've ever seen (though I hear Yogi Berra was pretty
good). Tons of power, plenty of speed
(though the Montreal turf destroyed his knees), a cannon of an arm. The only knock was he was pretty bad with the
glove, but who cares?
Trevor Hoffman
Those
who say "he wasn't Mariano" are stupid and have a ridiculously high
bar for success. He was the second best
closer of his time, in many ways he's similar to Tim Raines (see below). Plus, there's no beating him entering to
Hells Bells (they basically invented the closer walkup music).
Edgar Martinez
The
greatest designated hitter of all time (sorry Papi), only injuries and a late
start kept him from 3000 hits.
Fred McGriff
The
second greatest casualty (after the Expos) of the 1994 strike, because he fell
7 home runs short of 500. It's crazy he
doesn't get more consideration, especially since people now want to laud clean
power hitters from the 90s. (Of course he should get in just for his Tom Emanski commercial)
Tim Raines
The
second best leadoff hitter of all time, he had the misfortune of playing at the
same time as the best (Rickey Henderson) in a small market and thus he has been
overlooked. As others have pointed out,
he was essentially the same player as Tony Gwynn, just replacing 400 hits with
walks and way more stolen bases. And, of
course, he has the greatest stolen base percentage in history. He has to get in in his last year on the
ballot.
Ivan Rodriguez
Did
he take steroids? He's in the Canseco
book. I know, but I also know that when
I watched him he was the best catcher I have seen. Our generation's Johnny Bench. Perhaps the most feared catcher of all time.
Curt Schilling
Perhaps
the most dominant postseason starter in the modern era, it was also
unquestioned that when he paired with Randy Johnson in Arizona they were the
best 1-2 punch of their time. Anybody
who doesn't vote for him because of his post-career outspokenness is an idiot.
Billy Wagner
Closers
are supposed to be dominant. Nobody,
except maybe Mariano, has been more dominant.
Only his lack of innings is keep his consideration down.
Larry Walker
As
someone else said, if you vote for Vladimir you have to vote for Larry. They were basically the same person, but
Larry was less flashy (and he played in Colorado).
So there's my 10, and it was
tough to leave off 2-3 others. So, of
those who are left, who else should be in?
Casey Blake - no
Barry Bonds - blatant roid user,
no
Pat Burrell - no
Orlando Cabrera - no
Mike Cameron - no
Roger Clemens - same boat as
Bonds
J.D. Drew - no
Carlos Guillen - no
Jeff Kent - Yes - one of the best
offensive second basemen of all time
Derrek Lee - no
Melvin Mora - no
Mike Mussina - Yes - 270 wins and
a 123 career ERA+ pitching entire career in AL East (same as Juan Marichal,
better than Bob Feller, Eddie Plank, Don Drysdale, Warren Spahn, etc.)
Magglio Ordonez - no (he was a
jerk when I asked for his autograph)
Jorge Posada - Maybe, mostly
because catchers are very underrepresented
Manny Ramirez - no - twice tested
positive
Edgar Renteria - no
Arthur Rhodes - no (this guy
pitched forever - proof teams are always looking for a lefty arm)
Freddy Sanchez - no
Gary Sheffield - based on
numbers, yes, but no
Lee Smith - no
Sammy Sosa - no, see Bonds
Matt Stairs - no
Jason Varitek - no
Tim Wakefield - no, but I would
love to give him a vote just because
So who do I think will get in? Bagwell, Raines, Guerrero. Hoffman will get close (around what he got last year - 67%). Rodriguez will debut at about 50%. Bonds and Clemens will probably both take big step ups (~60% from 45%).
Oh, and next year, the ballot adds likely first ballot guy Chipper Jones, plus Jim Thome, Scott Rolen, and Omar Vizquel (though he shouldn't-he was a terrible offensive player and overrated highlight real defensively) will get consideration. It's just getting more crowded.