Anyways, there are 34 names on this year's ballot...and the rules say that writers can vote for up to 10. I would go through all 34 one at a time, but, as it turns out, I like my family and sleep, so thats not going to happen. So I will just hit the highlights on some of the misses and then hit the 10 I would vote for had I the chance. One note, I am a proponent of a big Hall - the more the merrier - so I feel that if someone can vote for 10, they should vote for 10 (as long as there are 10 worthy candidates).
First timers, AKA Not so near misses who wont be on the ballot again-
Tom "Flash" Gordon - Gordon won 138 games, saved 158 more, called Fenway, Wrigley and Yankee Stadium home at different times in his career and fathered 2 MLB caliber sons. He certainly isnt Hall of Fame worthy, but he sure has lived a pretty good life.
Brian Giles - Somehow Giles has no nickname listed on BR...which is like, borderline impossible. While he didnt have the longevity that marks even a Hall of Very Good career, he was legitimately one of the most feared hitters in the NL from 1999 through 2003. For his career, he finished with 287 HRs, 1087 RBIs, an even .400 OBP over 15 seasons and walked 348 more times than he struck out.
Nomar Garciaparra - Mr. Mia Hamm was on the Hall path until 2003, then fell off and hit every brick on the way down. Something tells me that he will get over this snub with a little tenderness from his wife. For those of you who are too young to remember Mia Hamm, she was pretty much Alex Morgan before Alex Morgan could walk.
Others: Tony Clark, Aaron Frickin Boone, Troy Percival, Rich Aurilla, Jermaine Dye, Cliff Floyd, Jason Schmidt, Darin Erstad, Carlos Del-got it
First Timers who will eventually get in
John Smoltz - Smoltzy should stay on the ballot, and may well get in at some point, but not with a ballot this crowded with superstars. He won 213 games and saved 154, but his stats arent very much different from Mussina or Schilling's...and (spoiler alert) neither of them should be punching their ticket this year either.
Repeaters, but not-gonna-get-it-yet
Craig Biggio - If you play until you are 297 years old, it shouldnt matter that you got to 3000 hits. Biggio was a great player (and part of the awesomely named Killer Bs with Bagwell, Berkman and Derek Bell...for a year or two), but he wasnt in the same class as contemporary Robbie Alomar. If you can only pick 10, hes out...he isnt one of the best 10 players on the ballot this year.
Edgar Martinez - This one pains me as he is one of the greatest hitters that I ever watched play baseball and he should have gone into the Hall with Frank Thomas in a hitter's extrordinaire pairing. He gets left off now because he didnt bring a glove to games for the majority of his career and the other guys did (even if it was a bad one). He absolutely should be included at some point.
Others: Donny Baseball, The Crime Dog, Jeff Kent, Mussina, Alan Trammell, Lee Smith, Tim "Aldo" Raines
The 10-
1 - Mark McGwire
2 - Sammy Sosa
Enough already. Who cares that McGwire "didnt want to talk about the past" or that Sosa likely used more juice than Snapple? Put them in and make sure that they are marked as admitted (Big Mac) or suspected (and bat corker - Sosa) Roiders. Not only did these guys single-handedly (dual-handedly?) bring baseball back into the national consciousness with their 1998 Home Run Derby Regular Season, but they are 8th (Sosa with 609) and 10th (McGwire with 583) on the career HR list. Beyond that, for a 4 or 5 year run, when McGwire or Sosa were at bat, you stopped what you were doing and watched the game because, if you didnt, you were going to miss something truely awe-inspiring.
3 - Roger Clemens
So Roger Clemens had stuff shot into his butt cheek on a regular basis (allegedly)...no one thought it was a problem that a man in his age 41 and 42 year old seasons threw a combined 425 innings, striking out 403 batters using mostly mid 90s fastballs while putting up some of the best ERA/WHIP numbers of his long and storied career? It is insane that the media continues to villify players after the fact when it is fairly clear that the evidence was readily available while the player was still playing and those same writers were doing articles commending them for their workout regimine and drive. So what if Clemens is a smug ass hole who is more concerned about his own image than about the game? Turns out...so are 90% of the other players in baseball and in the Hall.
Speaking of smug ass holes.... The MLB career leader in Home Runs has to be in the Hall of Fame...even if his head grew 7 sizes during his MLB career and he earned the nickname Big Head Barry. Wait...the MLB career hit leader isnt in the Hall of Fame either? Dumbness. Anyways...Bonds was the prototype for the power-speed OFer when he came into the league winning 3 MVPs before he (supposedly) saw Big Mac and Sammy stealing the thunder with their HRs and decided he wanted in on that action. He had 10 season where he was 20HR-20SB or better, including a 40-40 season and finished his career with 514 stolen bases. He led MLB in OBP 10 times, including a 4 season stretch where his season OBP lines went .515, .582, .529 and .609. For 4 years (2443 plate appearances), he was on base roughly 55% of the time he batted. He even won 8 Gold Gloves (some of them were even deserved!) A Hall of Fame without him cannot be a baseball history museum.
5 - Gary Sheffield
Sheff didnt have the massive peak that defines some Hallf of Famers nor did he win any MVP awards, but he did have a 22 year career that finished with a 292/393/514 slash line, 509 HRs, and 253 SBs. In reality, he wont get in, and would be a lower teir Hall member, but, as I said earlier, I think more is better.
6 - Mike Piazza
Before his age 35 season, Bagwell was at least 35% better than the league average in OPS every year of his career, topping out with an insane OPS+ of 213 with 1994s 368/451/750 slash in the strike year. He had 9 30 HR seasons and 10 double digit SB seasons. He even had a pair of 40 HR-30SB seasons. He was a monster hitter for over a decade, played solid defense and was key member of a solid run of Astros teams.
8 - Larry Walker
9 - Pedro Martinez
10- Randy Johnson
The jheri c
url and the mullet. If you dont know why these guys should be first ballot, no brainer Hall of Famers, you probably dont watch baseball.
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