One of our favorite days here at notinhalloffame.com has come with the Baseball Hall of Fame’s announcement of the Class of 2025.
The Baseball Writers of America have submitted their votes for the Modern Ballot, and this summer Ichiro Suzuki, C.C. Sabathia and Billy Wagner have been elected to Cooperstown.
They will join Dave Parker and Dick Allen, who were elected by the Veterans Committee.
To enter the Baseball Hall, a candidate must obtain 75 percent of the vote.
Ichiro Suzuki, Outfield: SEA 2001-12 & 2018-19, NYY 2012-14 & MIA 2015-17. 99.7% on his 1st ballot. Already cemented his name in Japan, winning three Pacific League MVPs, seven Batting Titles, seven Golden Gloves, seven Best Nine Award and a Japanese Series Title with the Orix BlueWave. Suzuki signed with the Seattle Mariners in 2001, and he became an instant sensation in North America. In his first season in MLB, he won the American Rookie of the Year and MVP in his first season, and would overall go to ten All-Star Games, won ten Gold Gloves, three Silver Sluggers and two Batting Titles. Statistically, he compiled 3,089 Hits with a lifetime .311 Batting Average. He was also inducted into the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame and Seattle Mariners Hall of Fame.
C.C. Sabathia, Pitcher: CLE 2001-08, MIL 2008 & NYY 2009-19. 86.8% on his 1st ballot. Like Suzuki, Sabathia enters on his first ballot. Winning the American League Cy Young Award in 2007 with Cleveland, Sabathia achieved greater fame with the New York Yankees where he had three consecutive top-five Cy Young finishes (2008-10) and helped the Bronx Bombers win it all in 2009. Sabathia went to six All-Star Games, had a record of 251-161 and 2,093 Strikeouts. He is already in the Cleveland Guardians Hall of Fame.
Billy Wagner, Pitcher: HOU 1995-2003, PHI 2004-05, NYM 2006-09. BOS 2009 & ATL 2010. 82.5% on his 9th ballot. Wagner gets in on his ninth ballot, jumping from 73.8% last year. It is a seismic jump for the reliever, who had less than 20% in his first four years, but the momentum has been there the last three years. Wagner, who is already in the Houston Astros Hall of Fame, was a seven-time All-Star and had 422 Saves.
Those that did not make the cut were:
Carlos Beltrán, Outfield: KC 1998-2004, HOU 2004 & 2017, NYM 2005-11, SFG 2011, NYY 2014-16 & TEX 2016. 70.3% on his 3rd ballot. Beltran, who has the statistical requirements to make the Hall, looks to still be punished by some voters for his role in the 2017 Astros cheating scandal. Hr did have a considerable improvement from last year’s 57.1%.
Andruw Jones, Outfield: ATL 1996-2007, LAD 2008, TEX 2009, CHW 2010 & NYY 2011-12. 66.2% on his 8th ballot. The ten-time All-Star grew his tally from 61.6%, and though he only has two years left, he is trending in the right direction.
Chase Utley, Second Base: PHI 2003-15 & LAD 2015-18. 39.8% on his 2nd ballot. Utley’s support grew from 28.9% and looks like he will enter the Hall in a few years time.
Alex Rodriguez, Shortstop and Third Base: SEA 1994-2000, TEX 2001-03 & NYY 2004-14. 37.1% on his 4th ballot. Nobody has a better on-field resume than A-Rod, who is a three-time MVP, but he was suspended twice for PEDs. His vote Toal did rise from last year’s 34.8, but he began the process at 34.3%. Rodriguez is just treading water at this point.
Manny Ramírez, Outfield: CLE 1993-2000, BOS 2001-08, LAD 2008-10, CHW 2010 & TBD 2010. 34.3% on his 9th ballot. Ramirez is in the same boat as Rodriguez as he too was twice suspended for PEDs, and though this is highest tally to date, there is no reason to think that he can the 41.7% needed to enter in 2026.
Andy Pettitte, Pitcher: NYY 1995-2003, 2007-10 & 2012-13 & HOU 2004-06. 27.9% on his 7th ballot. Pettitte’s candidacy looked dead in the water, as he dropped to 13.5% last year, and he more than doubled that in 2025.
Felix Hernandez, Pitcher: SEA 2005-19. 20.6% on his 1st ballot. King Felix makes a solid debut, and though he is behind Pettitte, his first tally is much better than Andys.
Bobby Abreu, Outfield: HOU 1996-97, PHI 1998-2005, NYY 2006-09, LAA 2009-12, LAD 2012 & NYM 2014. 19.5% on his 6th ballot. Abreu jumped from last year’s 19.5% but needs to average double digit increases to get into the Hall.
Jimmy Rollins, Shortstop: PHI 2000-14, LAD 2015 & CHW 2016. 18.0% on his 4th ballot. Rollins continues his growth of support, but has yet to see a 4% jump.
Omar Vizquel, Shortstop: SEA 1989-93, CLE 1994-2004, SFG 2005-08, TEX 2009, CHW 2010-11 & TOR 2012. 17.8% on his 8th ballot. Omar might have 17.8% of the vote but has zero chance to get in. During the 2021 voting process, it was revealed that he was a domestic abuser, and since then he seen his support go from over 50% to less than 20. Nobody has fallen like this before, and there is no reason to think he can regain that support.
Dustin Pedroia, Second Base: BOS 2006-19. 11.9% on his 1st ballot. The former MVP may have barely broke 10 percent, but others have started at the similar spot and entered the Hall. Look at Billy Wagner!
Mark Buehrle, Pitcher: CHW 2000-11, MIA 2012 & TOR 2013-15. 11.4% on his 5th ballot. We have reached the half-way point for Buehrle, and 11.4 is the highest percentage he has received to date, but this is not a number that will cut it.
Francisco Rodríguez, Pitcher: ANA/LAA 2002-08, NYM 2009-11, MIL 2011-13 & 2014-15, BAL 2013 & DET 2016-17. 10.2% on his third ballot. K-Rod’s 10.2 is higher than last year’s 7.8, but is lower than his ballot debut of 10.8.
David Wright, Third Base: NYM 2004-18: 8.1% on his 2nd ballot. Wright saw a small increase from his 6.2% last year.
Torii Hunter, Outfield: MIN 1997-2007 & 2015, LAA 2008-12 & DET 2013-14. 5.1% on his 5th ballot. Hunter is clinging for life as one less vote would have eliminated him permanently. HIs highest total was 9.5%, which was his first year on the ballot.
Those that failed to receive the 5% needed to stay on the ballot:
Ian Kinsler, Second Base. TEX 2006-13, DET 2014-17, LAA 2018, BOS 2018 & SDP 2019. 2.5% on his 1st ballot.
Russell Martin, Catcher. LAD 2006-10 & 2019, NYY 2011-12, PIT 2013-14 & TOR 2016-18. 2.3% on his 1st ballot.
Brian McCann, Catcher. ATL 2005-12 & 2019. NYY 2014-16 & HOU 2017-18. 1.8% on his 1st ballot.
Troy Tulowitzki, Second Base. COL 2006-15, TOR 2015-17 & NYY 2019. 1.0% on his 1st ballot.
Curtis Granderson, Outfield. DET 2004-09, NYY 2010-13, NYM 2014-17, LAD 2017, TOR 2018, MIL 2018 & MIA 2019. 0.8% on his 1st ballot.
Adam Jones, Outfield. SEA 2006-07, BAL 2008-18 & ARI 2019. 0.8% on his 1st ballot.
Carlos González, Outfield. OAK 2008, COL 2009-18, CLE 2019 & CHC 2019. 0.5% on the 1st ballot.
Hanley Ramirez, Shortstop, First Base and Third Base. BOS 2005 & 2015-18, FLA/MI 2006-12, LAD 2012-14 & CLE 2019. 0.0% on the 1st ballot.
Fernando Rodney, Pitcher. DET 2002-09, LAA 2010-11, TBR 2012-13, SEA 2014-15, CHC 2015, SDP 2016, ARI 2016, MIN 2018, OAK 2018-19 & WAS 2019. 0.0% on the 1st ballot.
Ben Zobrist, Second Base, Outfield and Shortstop. TBR 2006-14, OAK 2015, KCR 2015 & CHC 2016-19. 0.0% on his 1st ballot
We will now begin revising the Notinhalloffame Baseball list.
After a decade of "ballot logjam," has voting for the National Baseball Hall of Fame finally returned to normal? We will know when results from the ballots cast by the qualified members of the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA, or "the writers") are announced on January 21, 2025, although based on voting trends over the last decade, the bulk of the results are predictable and, by now, unsurprising.
What does a "return to normal" mean? Of the 14 first-time candidates on the BBWAA 2025 ballot, only two, CC Sabathia and Ichiro Suzuki, stand out as likely Hall of Famers, and neither are a lock for first-ballot induction. Of the 14 returning candidates, none of the "normal" candidates are automatic Hall of Famers, else they would have been elected already. Thus, there is no "ballot logjam," meaning that there are not more than ten sure-fire Hall of Famers who exceed the maximum of ten votes allowed per ballot.
Ah, November.
Let’s first begin with what Notinhalloffame.com is thankful for…
Hall of Fame Season amps up every time this year!
Today, the Baseball Hall of Fame has announced the 2025 Ballot, which will be sent to the Baseball Writers of America. Each committee member will send back their ballot, which can contain up to ten names from a 29-player list. This includes 14 returning names and 15 new candidates.
To enter the Baseball Hall of Fame, a candidate must receive at least 75% of the vote.
Here are the 2025 candidates:
Billy Wagner: 73.8% last year and is now on his tenth and final ballot. It is now or the Senior Ballot for the relief pitcher, who has worked his way up from less than 12% on his first three years of eligibility. Wagner compiled 422 Saves (8th All-Time) and was a seven-time All-Star. He finished in the top ten in Cy Young voting twice and is also a former Rolaids Relief Pitcher of the Year. Ranked #42 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Andruw Jones: 61.6% last year and is now on his eighth ballot. Jones has progressed well, especially considering that he had lower than eight percent in his first two years. The five-time All-Star won ten Gold Gloves, smacked 434 Home Runs, 1,289 RBIs, and was the 2005 NL MVP runner-up. Ranked #29 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Carlos Beltran: 57.1% last year and is now on his third ballot. Have the voters punished Beltran for his role in the 2017 Houston Astros cheating scandal? Probably. Beltran has the stats for the Hall (435 HR, 1,587 RBI) and the accolades (nine All-Stars, two Silver Sluggers, and three Gold Gloves), and it is a matter of time for a player who looked like a fringe first-ballot entry. This could be the year. Ranked #13 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Alex Rodriguez: 34.8% last year and is now on his fourth ballot. No player on the ballot has a better resume than A-Rod, but he has two PED suspensions on a resume with three MVPs, 10 Silver Sluggers, and two Gold Gloves. Boasting 3,115 Hits, 696 Home Runs, and 2,086 RBIs, Rodriguez, Rodriguez can make a claim as one of the ten best players ever, but his 34.8 percent in 2024 is DOWN 0.9 from last year. This is not a Hall of Fame path. Ranked #3 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Manny Ramirez: 32.7% last year and is now on his ninth ballot Ramirez is in the same expensive boat as Rodriguez, as he also has the stats (555 Home Runs, 1,831 RBIs) and the awards (12 All-Stars, nine Silver Sluggers, and two World Series rings) that eclipse many Hall of Famers. However, again, like A-Rod, Ramirez also has two PED suspensions and has treaded water on the ballot since he debuted. Ranked #12 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Chase Utley. 28.8% last year and is now on his second ballot. Utley is a six-time All-Star and four-time Silver Slugger at Second Base who owns a World Series Ring (Philadelphia 2008). He has 259 Home Runs, 1,885 Hits, and a bWAR over 60. Ranked #30 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Omar Vizquel: 17.7% last year and is now on his eighth ballot. Vizquel looked to be headed toward the Baseball Hall of Fame, but the defensively gifted Shortstop was accused of domestic violence, and his support plummeted to his lowest mark last year (17.7) from 52.6% in 2020. 11 Gold Gloves and over 2,800 Hits won’t matter. Ranked #55 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Bobby Abreu: 14.8% last year and is now on his sixth ballot. Abreu remains on the ballot, but his total dropped 0.6% from last year. He is a two-time All-Star with 2,470 Hits, 288 Home Runs, and a bWAR of just over 60. Ranked #75 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Jimmy Rollins: 14.8% last year and is now on his fourth ballot. Rollins’s 14.8% from last year was his best result, and the three-time All-Star needs a significant jump this year. He is a former World Series winner with the Phillies, won four Gold Gloves and one Silver Slugger, and has 231 Home Runs and 2,455 Hits. Ranked #116 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Andy Pettitte: 13.5% last year and is now on his seventh ballot. Pettitte looks like he will miss Cooperstown, and despite the solid metrics (256-153, 2,448 SO & 60.2 bWAR) and five World Series rings, he was also popped for PEDs. That is probably why he has only broke 15% once (17.0% in 2023). Ranked #43 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Mark Buehrle: 8.3% last year and is now on his fifth ballot. Beuhrle is going nowhere on the ballot, having debuted at 11%, a number he has not hit since. Buehrle had a career record of 214-160 with 1,870 Strikeouts and was a five-time All-Star who won a World Series with the Chicago White Sox. Ranked #73 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Francisco Rodriguez: 7.8% last year and is now on his third ballot. Despite Rodriguez having similar numbers to Wagner, he has fallen since his 10.8% debut. K-Rod was a World Series Champion with the Angels, and record 457 Saves with six All-Star Games and two Rolaids Relief Awards. Ranked #127 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Torii Hunter: 7.3% last year and is now on his fifth ballot. Hunter remains in jeopardy of falling off the ballot, having never made double digits in the vote. Hunter collected 2,452 Hits, smacked 353 Home Runs, and went to five All-Stars, winning nine Gold Gloves and two Silver Sluggers. Ranked #107 on Notinhalloffame.com.
David Wright: 6.2% last year and is now on his second ballot. Playing for the New York Mets for his entire career, Wright played at Third Base where he was a seven-time All-Star and won two Silver Sluggers and two Gold Gloves. Ranked #90 on Notinhalloffame.com.
The following are making their debut on the ballot:
Ichiro Suzuki: Suzuki should enter on his first ballot and make history as the first Japanese-born player to enter Cooperstown. He has a resume with 3,089 Hits, an MVP, ten All-Stars, ten Gold Gloves, and two Silver Sluggers, as well as a lifetime Batting Average of .311. Ranked #5 on Notinhalloffame.com.
C.C. Sabathia: A five-time All-Star and former Cy Young winner, Sabathia won a World Series with the Yankees and had a career record of 251-161 with 3,093 Strikeouts. He is arguably now the best Pitcher on the ballot. Ranked #29 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Felix Hernandez: “King Felix” won a Cy Young Award with the Mariners, where he had a lifetime record of 169-136 with 2,524 Strikeouts. He was also a five-time All-Star and twice led the AL in ERA. Ranked #66 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Dustin Pedroia: Pedroia helped the Red Sox win two World Series Championships and individually was an MVP with four Gold Gloves four All-Stars, and a Silver Slugger. He compiled 1,805 Hits. Ranked #89 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Ian Kinsler: A World Series Champion with Boston in 2018, Kinsler had his best years earlier with Texas and Detroit, where he went to four All-Star Games and won two Silver Sluggers. He had 257 Home Runs and 1,999 Hits. Ranked #261 on Notinhalloffame.com
Carlos Gonzalez: Gonzalez was a three-time All-Star who also won three Gold Gloves, two Silver Sluggers, and a Batting Title. He had 234 Home Runs and 1,432 Hits. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Curtis Granderson: Granderson belted 344 Home Runs with 1,800 Hits and was a three-time All-Star. Unranked on Nothinhalloffame.com.
Adam Jones: A five-time All-Star with a Silver Slugger and 282 Home Runs, Jones was also a five-time Gold Glove winner. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Russell Martin: The Catcher went to four All-Star Games and was a one-time Silver Slugger and Gold Glove winner. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
Brian McCann: A World Series winner with the Astros, McCann was a seven-time All-Star and six-time Silver Slugger at Catcher with 282 Home Runs. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Hanley Ramirez: A former Rookie of the Year, Ramirez had 271 Home Runs with three All-Stars, two Silver Sluggers and a Batting Title. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Fernando Rodney: Rodney won a World Series Ring with the Nationals and had 327 Saves. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
Troy Tulowitzki: Tulo has a pair of Silver Sluggers and Gold Gloves and was a five-time All-Star. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Ben Zobrist: The infielder had 1,566 Hits, was a three-time All-Star and won two World Series rings, one with Kansas Cty and one with the Chicago Cubs. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Clay Bucholz, Francisco Liriano, Ian Desmond, Jason Vargas, Kendrys Morales, Mark Reynolds, Mark Trumbo, Martin Prado and Melky Cabrera all played enough seasons to qualify for the ballot but were left off.
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We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate those who have made the 2025 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot.
The Hall of Fame season is in full swing as the Baseball Hall of Fame vote has been tabulated and we have three new inductees who were voted in by the writers. Adrian Beltre, Todd Helton and Joe Mauer will become enshrined in the most prestigious sports hall of fame this summer, and we are thrilled that we have a large class. They will join Jim Leyland, who was inducted by the Veteran’s Committee.
The inductees:
Adrian Beltre: 95.1% on his first ballot. The Third Baseman was considered by everyone to be a first ballot lock, and today the Dominican made that projection come true. He brings to Cooperstown a resume that had 3,166 Hits, 487 Home Runs, 1,707 RBIs, five Gold Gloves, four Silver Sluggers, five Gold Gloves and two Platinum Gloves. Playing for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Seattle, Boston and Texas, Beltre was never an MVP but finished in the top ten five times. Amazingly, Beltre did not really look like a Hall of Fame possibility until he was past 30, as his second half eclipsed his first.
Todd Helton: 79.7% on his fifth ballot. Helton jumped from 52.0 from last year, and came a long way from the 16.5% from year one. He enjoyed the entirety of his career with the Colorado Rockies, where he smacked 369 Home Runs with 2,519 Hits and 1,405 RBIs. Finishing his career as a member of the lifetime 3/4/5 club (.316/.414/.539), went to five All-Star Games, won three Gold Gloves, four Silver Sluggers and owns a Batting Title. He joins Larry Walker in joining Cooperstown while donning the “CR”.
Joe Mauer: 76.1% on his first ballot. Mauer’s election gives us two first ballot inductees, but unlike Beltre, Mauer’s Cooperstown career was spent with one team, Minnesota. One of the best hitting Catchers of all-time, Mauer won the MVP in 2009 in the season he won his third Batting Title. Mauer was. Six-time All-Star, five-time Silver Slugger and three-time Gold Glove winner. He recorded 2,123 Hits with a lifetime .306 Batting Average. He is a minor surprise to make it as a first ballot entry.
Failing to make the Baseball Hall of Fame were:
Billy Wagner: 73.8% on his eighth ballot. Wagner fell five votes shy of the Hall, but momentum is certainly on his side, even though there are only two years left of eligibility. This is phenomenal progress for a player who was under 20% in his first four years. With 422 career Saves (6th all-time), Wagner was a seven-time All-Star with a lifetime ERA of 2.31 and WHIP of 0.998.
Gary Sheffield: 63.9% on his tenth and final ballot. It is off to the Veteran’s Committee for Sheffield, and while that worked for Fred McGriff, this might not be the case for Sheffield who was suspected of PED use. Sheffield’s numbers are overall better than McGriff, with 509 Home Runs, 1,676 RBIs, 253 Stolen Bases and a Slash Line of .292/.393/.514. Chalk “Shef” as a member of the all Non-Cooperstown team.
Andruw Jones: 61.6% on his seventh ballot. Jones has a unique resume with 434 Home Runs and 19 Gold Gloves, and when you throw in five All-Stars and a Major League Player of the Year Award, this is a player who feels like he should be in already. He only moved up 3.5% from last year, but Jones has come a long way from his first two years where he was just hanging on with over 7%.
Carlos Beltran: 57.1% on his second ballot. Had it not been for the sign-stealing scandal in his final, and World Series winning year, Beltran would have probably been a first ballot inductee. He has the stats for it with 2,625 Hits, 435 Home Runs, 1,578 RBIs and 312 Stolen Bases, and the accoladed (nine All-Stars, two Silver Sluggers and three Gold Gloves, but this is a message by the voting body. He moved up 10.5% from last year, and he will get in eventually.
Alex Rodriguez: 34.8% on his third ballot. Nobody had a better resume on this ballot than A-Rod. Three MVPs, 10 Silver Sluggers, 696 Home Runs, 3,115 Hits, 2,021 Runs and 2,086 RBIs dwarves what many Cooperstown inductee have, but so does one other stat: two PED suspensions. You would think that Rodriguez’s work on Fox might show that he is forgiven, but clearly, he isn’t. His total went down from 35.7 in 2023, and why should we think anything will change for him moving forward?
Manny Ramirez: 32.5% on his eighth ballot. Like Rodriguez, Ramirez should be in the Hall. Owning a lifetime Slash Line of .312/.411/.585, 555 Home Runs, 1,831 RBIs, 12 All-Stars and nine Silver Sluggers, Ramirez was the catalyst of Boston’s two World Series Championships in the 2000s. However, again like A-Rod, Man-Ram was also popped for PEDs twice. He also dropped from last year, descending .7%.
Chase Utley: 28.8 on his first ballot. A six-time All-Star and four-time Silver Slugger, Utley’s strength lies on his sabermetrics (64.5 bWAR) and a 28.8 debut is a lot better than what Helton got. This is not a bat start.
Omar Vizquel: 17.7% on his seventh ballot. Ob boy. Vizquel was on track for the Hall. Voters loved his defense (11 Gold Gloves), and though he was a light hitter, he stayed around so long that he accumulated 2,877 Hits. He had 37.0 percent on his first ballot, and reached 52.6 in year three. However, he dropped to 49.1, as while votes were submitted, domestic allegations emerged. As they were credible, he plummeted to 23.9 in 2022, and has trended downward with 19.5 in 2023 and his now new low of 17.7. Here is another number. 0.0. Those are his Hall of Fame chances.
Jimmy Rollins: 14.8% on his third ballot. Inching up from 12.9 %, Rollins is a former MVP and World Series winner with Philadelphia and had 2,455 Hits with 231 Home Runs. The Shortstop also went to three All-Star Games and won four Gold Gloves.
Bobby Abreu: 14.8% on his fifth ballot. Abreu reminds surprisingly low as his 60.2 bWAR puts him in line with others in the Hall. Throw in 2,460 Hits, 288 HR, and a lifetime OBP of .395, he has the credentials, but he was only an All-Star twice and never sought attention. Abreu fell 0.6% from last year.
Andy Pettitte: 13.5% on his sixth ballot. Pettitte had a career record of 256 and 153 with 2,448 Strikeouts, three All-Stars and five World Series rings. The latter credential, and his performance in them should put him much higher, but Pettitte is an admitted PED user. That is probably enough for a lot of voters to pass on him.
Mark Buehrle: 8.3% on his fourth ballot. The five-time All-Star and World Series Champion with the Chicago White Sox had 214 Wins but only had one year where he received Cy Young votes. The Pitcher dropped from 10.8%, and is treading water at this point.
Francisco Rodriguez: 7.8% on his second ballot. Rodriguez has 437 Saves, five All-Stars and is best known for exploding out of the gate leading the Angels to their first World Series Championship. He had a disappointing drop from 10.8 on year two.
Torii Hunter: 7.3% on his fourth ballot. Hunter hangs on for life, but has never broke double-digits, and is down from year one’s number of 9.5%. He was a five-time All-Star, nine-time Gold Glove winner and two-time Silver Slugger with a 50.7 bWAR, 353 Home Runs and 1,391 RBIs.
David Wright: 6.2% on his 1st ballot. Wright loves to fight another day, but it won’t get easier going forward. The career Met went to seven All-Star Games and won two Gold Gloves and two Silver Sluggers, but faces a tall order to enter the Hall. We do think he should be honored by New York as soon as possible.
Falling off of the ballot:
Jose Bautista: 1.6% on his first, only and last ballot. Bautista entered the Blue Jays Ring of Excellence last year, but this Hall will elude the former slugger. He blasted 344 Home Runs, won three Silver Sluggers and went to five All-Star Games.
Victor Martinez: 1.6% on his first, only and last ballot. Martinez exits on his first try after a five All-Stars, two Silver Sluggers and 295 Home Runs.
Bartolo Colon: 1.3% on his first, only and last ballot. The big man had a disappointing showing considering he won 247 Games and a Cy Young, but as popular as he was, he was suspended for PEDs. That still seems weird, doesn’t it?
Matt Holliday: 1.0% on his first, only and last ballot. The Outfielder won a World Series with St. Louis in 2011, and was a seven-time All-Star. He also won a Batting Title, NLCS MVP and four Silver Sluggers.
Adrian Gonzalez: 0.8% on his first, only and last ballot. Gonzalez had a good career with five All-Stars, four Gold Gloves, two Silver Sluggers and 317 Home Runs.
Brandon Phillips: 0.3% on his first, only and last ballot. Phillips received a single vote after a nice career that saw him belt 211 Home Runs with 2,029 Hits.
Jose Reyes: 0.0% on his first, only and last ballot. Reyes had a good career, but it had its share of controversies that likely cost him from receiving a vote. When we get around to the dream team of players who were shutout does Reyes belong on it? 2,138 Hits, a Batting Title and 517 SB tells us he might.
James Shields: 0.0% on his first, only and last ballot. While he received no votes, he belonged on the ballot with a respectable 145 Wins and 2,234 Strikeouts.
We will now begin work on revising the Notinhallofame.com Baseball List of those to consider for the Baseball Hall of Fame. Look for that later next month.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate the impending members of the Baseball Hall of Fame.
The clock begins!
The National Baseball Hall of Fame has unveiled the official Modern Hall of Fame ballot for the 2024 Class, and it features 26 men, 14 of whom are returning names.
Alphabetically, they are:
Bobby Abreu: 5th Year, 15.4 percent last year. Abreu was one of the game’s most patient hitters, having drawn 1,476 career Walks, while batting over .300 six times. A two-time All-Star, Abreu won one Silver Slugger, one Gold Glove and scored 100 Runs over eight times.
Jose Batista: 1st Year on the ballot. Batista is best known for his bat flip and time as a Toronto Blue Jay where he won back-to-back Home Run Titles and Hank Aaron Awards. He went to six All-Star Games and won three Silver Sluggers.
Carlos Beltran: 2nd Year, 46.5% percent last year. Beltran is one of four players (along with Barry Bonds, Willie Mays & Alex Rodriguez) who has at least 1,500 Runs, 2,700 Hits, 400 Home Runs and 300 Stolen Bases. He went to nine All-Star Games, won three Gold Gloves and two Silver Sluggers. He is a former Rookie of the Year and won the World Series in his final season.
Adrian Beltre: 1st Year on the ballot. Beltre played most of his career at Third Base and is one of the few players in MLB history to have at least 3,000 Hits and 450 Home Runs. He is a four-time All-Star, four-time Silver Slugger and won five Gold Gloves. He also batted over .300 seven times.
Mark Buehrle: 4th Year, 10.7 percent last year. Buehrle went to five All-Star Games and recorded a record 14 200-inning years in the American League. He won four Gold Gloves and threw a no-hitter. Buehrle also won at least 13 Games twelve times.
Bartolo Colon: 1st Year on the ballot. Colon won the 2005 AL Cy Young and was an All-Star four times. He led the league in Wins once, and topped 15 in that statistic nine times with 247 in total. Colon also is 36th all-time in Strikeouts with 2,535.
Adrian Gonzalez: 1st Year on the ballot. Gonzalez went to five All-Star Games, won five Gold Gloves and two Silver Sluggers. He had 317 Home Runs over his career.
Todd Helton: 6th Year, 72.2 percent last year. Helton was a five-time All-Star who played all 17 of seasons with the Colorado Rockies. The First Baseman had three Gold Gloves, four Silver Sluggers and smacked 30 Home Runs in six different seasons. He also batted .300 12 times, and won one Batting Title.
Matt Holliday: 1st Year on the ballot. Holliday went to seven All-Star Games and won four Silver Sluggers playing at Leftfield. He won the World Series with St. Louis in 2011.
Torii Hunter: 4th Year, 6.9 percent last year. Hunter won nine Gold Gloves, two Silver Slugger and was chosen for five All-Star Games. He was one of the most exciting players of his day.
Andruw Jones: 7th Year, 58.1 percent last year. Jones was a five-time All-Star, a ten-time Gold Glove recipient and won the 2005 NL Home Run Title. He is in the top fifty all-time in Home Runs with 434.
Victor Martinez: 1st Year on the Ballot. Martinez won two Silver Sluggers, was a five-time All-Star, and he had eight .300 seasons. He is one of four Catchers (along with Carlton Fisk, Ivan Rodriguez and Ted Simmons) with at least 2,000 Hits, 400 Doubles and 200 Home Runs.
Joe Mauer: 1st Year on the Ballot: Mauer played all fifteen of his seasons with the Twins where he won the 2009 MVP. He is the only Catcher to win three Batting Titles, and he went to Six All-Star Games, and won five Silver Sluggers and three Gold Gloves.
Andy Pettitte: 6th Year, 17.0 percent last year. Pettitte won five World Series Rings with the New York Yankees, and had eight 15-Win years. He went to three All-Star Games and exceeded 200 Innings ten times.
Brandon Phillips: 1st Year on the Ballot. Phillips was a three-time All-Star and four-time Gold Glove winner at Second Base.
Manny Ramirez: 8th Year, 33.2 percent last year. Twice suspended for PEDs, Ramirez has the stats for the Hall with twelve All-Stars, nine Silver Sluggers and two Hank Aaron Awards. Ramirez batted over .300 eleven times, won three OBP Titles, three Slugging Titles and one Home Run Title. He is 12th all-time in Slugging (.585), 15th in Home Runs (555) and 20th in RBIs (1,831). Ramirez also won two World Series Rings with the Red Sox, winning the MVP in the first one.
Jose Reyes: 1st Year on the ballot. Reyes went to four All-Stars and won one Silver Slugger and Batting Title.
Alex Rodriguez: 3rd Year, 35.7 percent last year. Like Ramirez, A-Rod has the stats for the Hall, but was popped twice for PEDs. He won three MVPs, ten Silver Sluggers, two Gold Gloves and went to 14 All-Star Games. Rodriguez belted 30 Home Runs in fifteen different seasons, and won five Home Run Titles. He is fourth all-time in RBIs (2,086), fifth in Home Runs (696) and 23rd in Hits (3,115).
Francisco Rodriguez: 2nd Year, 10.8 percent last year. Rodriguez went to six All-Star Games, won two Rolaids Relief Awards, and led the league in Saves three times. He won the World Series in 2002 with the Angels and is fourth all-time in Saves (434).
Jimmy Rollins: 3rd Year, 12.9 percent last year. Rollins’ best years were in Philadelphia where he won the 2007 MVP and the 2008 World Series. He also won four Gold Gloves, was a three-time All-Star, and led the NL in Triples four times.
Gary Sheffield: 10th Year, 55.0 percent last year. A 22-year veteran, Sheffield went to nine All-Star Games, won a World Series with the Marlins and also owns five Silver Sluggers. The Outfielder also has a Batting Title, and is 27th all-time in Home Runs (509).
James Shields: 1st Year on the ballot. Shields played 13 years and was an All-Star once. He posted at least 10 Wins nine years in a row, and was part of two American League Championship Teams.
Chase Utley: 1st Year on the ballot. Utley played most of his career with Philadelphia where he won the 2008 World Series, appeared in six All-Star Games, and captured four Silver Sluggers as a Second Baseman.
Omar Vizquel: 7th Year,19.5 percent last year. Vizquel’s Hall of Fame momentum was derailed by domestic violence allegations which could prevent the 11-time Gold Glove and three-time All-Star from enshrinement. He is also 44th all-time in Hits (2,877).
Billy Wagner: 9th Year, 68.1 percent last year. Wagner is sixth all-time in Saves (422), and second among southpaws. He won one Rolaids Relief Award and went to seven All-Star Games.
David Wright: 1st Year on the Ballot. The Third Baseman went to seven All-Star Games and won two Silver Sluggers and two Gold Gloves.
We will be paying attention in the upcoming weeks as the votes trickle in.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate those who have made it this far.
Last month, the Baseball Hall of Fame elected Scott Rolen into their midst; a month after the Veteran’s Committee unanimously chose Fred McGriff for the Class of 2023.
This means that for us at Notinhalloffame.com, it is time to revise one of our most important lists, the top 300 Baseball players who we feel are deserving for a look at enshrinement in Cooperstown.
Our list looks at the following criteria:
We take all of these factors into consideration (especially your input), but as years go by, it becomes more difficult to rank players, especially since many of those eligible are tainted with activity that has kept them out. Regardless of how Baseball may have decreased in popularity over the past decades, this is still the pre-eminent sports Hall of Fame in North America, and the standard by which all others are judged.
Specifically for the 2023 list, adjustments were made by removing Rolen and McGriff, factoring in your collective input, and adding former players who are eligible for the 2024 vote.
Our entire list of 300 can be found here, but below, we are pleased to present the Notinhalloffame.com Baseball top 20.
Remaining at #1 is Barry Bonds, the all-time leader in Home Runs (762) and is a seven-time MVP. Controversy overshadows the power hitter, who is universally believed to have taken PEDs, though never tested positive. Bonds concluded his ten years on the modern era ballot with 66%, and had there been 15 years like there were previously, he might have made it. He was on the recent Veteran’s Committee ballot that included McGriff, though Bonds failed to gain the minimum votes needed to even have his number made public. Bluntly, this means that Bonds is further than ever for Hall of Fame induction, as his peers do not view him as worthy. We suspect that Bonds will forever be the most potent hitter to never see a plaque in the Hall, and could remain #1 here for decades (unless, your votes and comments plumet him from the top spot.
Roger Clemens also remains fixed at #2, and most of what we said about Bonds, applies to Clemens, only that he is a Pitcher. A seven-time Cy Young winner, the “Rocket” never was suspended for PEDs, but the clouds around him are ominous, and he also did not win over a lot of friends in the media. Just like Bonds, Clemens had his highest total on his last year of modern eligibility, and did not gain enough votes on his first Veteran Ballot for his tally to be known.
Remaining at #3 is Alex Rodriguez, who was arguably the top player of the 2000s, and he will enter his third year of Modern eligibility. There was nobody (Bonds and Clemens included) whose first year on the ballot intrigued us the most. Unlike Bonds and Clemens, A-ROD DID test positive and served the longest suspension in MLB history. At one time, he was the most hated man in all of sports, yet here we are in 2023 where he has a job with Fox Sports, and was in a high-profile relationship with Jennifer Lopez. His marginal improvement in the 2023 vote does not forecast a Hall of Fame for Rodriguez.
With Pete Rose staying at #4, we have another player who looks to be forever to remain on the outside-looking-in. Baseball’s all-time hit king was banned from Baseball for gambling on the sport, though he has recently made some appearances. The Baseball Hall of Fame has followed the edict of MLB (although they don’t actually have to) and never added him to a ballot of any kind. Even if he is reinstated, he would still have to appear on a Veteran’s Committee ballot, and that group would have to choose him.
With “Shoeless” Joe Jackson at #5, we have a top five (our only) where it is likely that none will ever receive the call. Banned in 1920 for allegedly conspiring to throw the World Series from the year before, Jackson maintained his innocence, and there many suspect that the Outfielder, who may have known about it, did not participate, which reflects his 1919 postseason statistics.
This takes us to #6, Adrian Beltre, who enters his first year on the ballot, and is a bona fide threat to enter on his first attempt. He brings a resume of 3,166 Hits, 477 Home Runs, four All-Stars, four Silver Sluggers and five Silver Sluggers.
Falling one spot to #7 is he former career-Tiger, Lou Whitaker. The Second Baseman and World Series Champion was a one-and-done on his only year on the ballot and is one of the most egregious omissions from the multi-ballot club.
Bill Dahlen, a previous Veterans Committee nominee, is at #8. We expect that he will be on the next one for his respective era.
Dropping one to #9 is Curt Schilling, whose war with the media (and possibly his right-wing politics) resulted in his perpetual snub. At the end of his run on the Modern Era ballot, the Pitcher asked the voters not to select him, and many acquiesced. Schilling was on the same Veteran’s Committee ballot that Bonds and Schilling was on, and though he also was denied induction, he fared much better, gaining 6 votes.
Rounding out the top ten is Manny Ramirez, who though is still on the ballot is running out of time. If Alex Rodriguez is unlikely to get elected, Ramirez has no shot, as he too was suspended, and has weaker (though Hall of Fame worthy) stats than A-Rod.
Todd Helton stays at #11. The “Toddfather” missed out on Cooperstown this year with 72.2 of the vote, but next year on 2024 looks promising for Helton, who enters year number six on the ballot.
Boston’s most wanted for the Hall of Fame, Dwight Evans, holds firm at #12.
Pre-1900 Pitcher, Jim McCormick, advances two spots to #13.
Carlos Beltran had a bit of tumble from #10 to #14. Like others above, Beltran has the stats, but is paying a penance for his prominent role in the 2017 Houston Astros cheating scandal. He received only…. 1st And we suspect that many voters wanted to make him wait a year. Beltran will likely jump significantly on his second vote.
Tommy John, whose career-saving surgery named after him is recognized by the Hall, fell one spot to #15.
The final five of the top twenty all hold the same positions as last year, respectively being; Roger Maris (#16), Dick Allen (#17), Mark McGwire, (#18), Dave Parker (#19) and Rafael Palmeiro (#20).
There are other new entries on our list. They are:
Chase Utley (#28), Joe Mauer (#37), Bartolo Colon (#77), David Wright (#89), Jose Bautista (#220) and Jose Reyes (#271)
We are now going to begin work on revising or Notinhalloffame.com Football 300, where we rank those to consider for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
As always, we thank you for your support, and ask you to continue with your votes and comments.
If you are a Baseball fan, today is the day in “Hall of Fame Season” that is the pinnacle: the annual announcement of the Baseball Hall of Fame Class.
Rolen enters the ballot on his 6th year on the ballot. Increasing his total from 63.2% to squeaking in with 76.3%, Rolen was a seven-time All-Star, a World Series Champion in 2006 with St. Louis and he also won eight Gold Gloves at Third Base and one Silver Slugger. He enters Cooperstown with 2,077 Hits, 316 Home Runs, a bWAR of 70.1 and a decision as to which hat he will wear on his plaque (it has to be St. Louis, right?). Ranked #15 on Notinhalloffame.com.
The players who did not make the Hall were:
Todd Helton, 72.2%, 5th Year on the Ballot. Helton looks like he will wait one more year, but he is getting in, showing a 20.2% rise from the year before. The “Toddfather” blasted 369 Home Runs with 2,519 Hits with a lifetime Batting Average of .316, and the five-time All-Star had four Silver Sluggers and three Gold Gloves. Helton is ranked #11 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Billy Wagner, 68.1%, 8th Year on the Ballot: Wagner keeps getting closer, showing a sizable increase from his 51% from last year. The former seven-time All-Star and owner of 422 Saves looks to be the next Relief Pitcher to be inducted. Wagner is ranked #41 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Andruw Jones, 58.1%, 6th Year on the Ballot: We were stunned when in both 2018 and 2019, that Jones had less then 10% of the votes, and how could we not be! The native of Curacao has 434 Home Runs, a bWAR over 60, a Silver Slugger and ten Gold Gloves. Last year, Jones had 41.4%, and his voting rise tells us that he will enter this decade. Jones is ranked #38 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Gary Sheffield, 55.0%, 9th Year on the Ballot: Sheffield is a member of the 500 Home Run club, but the nine-time All-Star played for eight different teams, and his appearance on the Mitchell Report does him no favors. He climbed substantially from 40.6%, but he only has one more shot. He won’t get there. Sheffield is ranked #22 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Carlos Beltran, 46.5%, 1st Year on the Ballot. Betran has the Hall of Fame resume (2,725 Hits, 435 HR, 1,587 RBI, 312 SB & 70.1 bWAR) but we suspect that many voters wanted Beltran to pay penance for his lead role in the Astros 2017 sign-stealing cheating scandal. Beltran is ranked #10 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Jeff Kent, 46.5%, 10th Year on the Ballot. It is the end of the road for Kent, who was a former MVP. His tally this year is his highest on the Modern Era ballot, and he now moves into the Senior Pool. Kent is ranked #50 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Alex Rodriguez, 35.7%, 2nd Year on the Ballot. A-Rod has the best resume on the ballot. He is a three-time MVP, 14-time All-Star, ten-time Silver Slugger and three-time Gold Glove winner. His bWAR is over 115. He is a World Series Champion. That will not be enough to overturn his multiple positive PED tests, and no relationship with J-Lo or anyone of her ilk will overcome this. He did improve from last year’s 34.3, but not by much. Rodriguez is ranked #3 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Manny Ramirez, 33.2%, 7th Year on the Ballot. Manny Ramirez is one of the most important players in Red Sox history, but like A-Rod, he was caught taking PEDs after the MLBPA agreed to that players would be suspended if caught. Ramirez will continue to tread water until he is ushered off the ballot in three years. He is Ranked #9 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Omar Vizquel 19.5%, 6th Year on the ballot PEDs have derailed many potential Hall of Famers on this list, but for Vizquel it is domestic violence. When that scandal came out, the 11-time Gold Glove recipient, who was once at 52.0% of the voting, dropped to 23.9% and is now even lower at 19.5%. He has no chance. Vizquel is ranked #49 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Andy Pettitte, 17.0%, 5th Year on the Ballot. Pettitte won 256 Games over his career, won five World Series Rings, but also has a positive PED test, which is costing him a plethora of votes. He is ranked #39 o Notinhalloffame.com.
Bobby Abreu, 15.4%, 4th Year on the Ballot. Abreu amassed 2,425 Hits, was a two-time All-Star and he breaks double-digits in voting for the first time. It is still a tough task for Abreu, but based on his plate-patience, he can wait! He is ranked #77 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Jimmy Rollins, 12.9%, 2nd Year on the Ballot. The former World Series Champion and MVP remains on the ballot with excellent power numbers, but lousy advanced metrics. He is Ranked #110 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Mark Buehrle, 10.8%, 3rd Year on the Ballot. Buehrle continues to cling to the ballot, but is yo-yoing, going from 11.0% to 5.8% and now back up to. Ranked #79 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Francisco Rodriguez 10.8% 1st Year on the ballot. K-Rod survives the first ballot, and he has similar numbers as Wagner; 437 Saves, but owns a World Series Ring. Ranked #172 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Torii Hunter 6.9%, 3rd Year on the Ballot. Hunter continues to hang on for life on the ballot and at this point that might be the best you can hope for. Ranked #194 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Any candidate who received less that 5.0% of the votes are now removed from the modern era ballot.
This means that those who received 0.3% (Bronson Arroyo, R.A. Dickey, John Lackey, Mike Napoli and Huston Street) and 0.0% (Matt Cain, Jacoby Ellsbury, Andre Ethier, J.J. Hardy, Jhonny Peralta, Jared Weaver and Jayson Werth) are eliminated.
We will now remove Fred McGriff and Scott Rolen from our Notinhalloffame Baseball List and add those who are now eligible. The list will also be revised based on your votes, comments, and social media interactions.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate the newest members of the Baseball Hall of Fame, and we will see you this summer at Cooperstown!
Days from the January 24, 2023, announcement by the National Baseball Hall of Fame of candidates who may have been elected by the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA), the burning question is not who those candidates, if any, will be. Instead, the burning question is: What morality are BBWAA voters going to legislate for the Hall of Saints this year?
For more than a decade, the controversy over performance-enhancing drugs (PED) has consumed discussion about who should or should not be elected to the Hall, capped by the late Hall of Famer Joe Morgan's now-infamous 2017 missive to voters about keeping the PED Penitents out of Cooperstown. But although the PED predicament remains—among the returning candidates on the 2023 BBWAA ballot are Manny Ramirez and Álex Rodriguez—voters are now finding other performance flaws in candidates to deny them entrance to the Hallowed Hall.
Is it that time again!
One of our core lists on Notinhalloffame.com, our Baseball list of those to consider for the Baseball Hall of Fame has been revised.
The steps in our revisions are basic:
-Remove all of those who were inducted. This included David Ortiz (#8), Gil Hodges (#11), Minnie Miniso (#14), Jim Kaat (#20) and Tony Oliva (#27).
-Input those we think worthy who are now eligible.
-Adjust rankings based on your votes and comments.
Before we announce our top ten, note that we did one major change. We used to have three number ones, with Pete Rose and “Shoeless” Joe Jackson appearing as 1A and 1B since our inception, as both were deemed ineligible. We have altered this with no multiples at the top, and although Rose and Jackson are still not welcome into Cooperstown, we disagree, and will keep them ranked.
The entire list can be found here, but here is our new top ten:
#1. Barry Bonds. Bonds’ ten years of eligibility may have ended a few months ago, but the all-time leader in Home Runs leader won seven MVPs, despite there being a cloud of PED suspicion around him. His chances now lie with the Veteran’s Committee. Bonds was ranked at 1C last year.
#2. Roger Clemens. Clemens is like Bonds, in that he too ended his regular stay on the ballot, and was likely excluded due to the belief that he might have used PEDs. Clemens won the Cy Young seven times, and remains at #2.
#3. Alex Rodriguez. Unlike Bonds and Clemens, Rodriguez DID test positive for PEDs, which happened after the 2004 agreement between the players and MLB that outlawed the enhancers. A-Rod was on his first year of eligibility, drawing only 34.3% of the vote, despite being a three-time MVP. He holds the same rank as last year.
#4. Pete Rose. Rose is the all-time leader in Hits, but he has been from baseball for gambling on the sport. Ranked at #1A last year, Rose drops considerable on this list, but despite the issues of the players of above him, Rose actually has a significantly lower bWAR than Bonds, Clemens and Rodriguez.
#5. “Shoeless” Joe Jackson. Ranked #1B last year, Jackson is ineligible for the Hall due to his possible participation in the throwing of the 1919 World Series. That being said, there are many, including us, who feel that he belongs.
#6. Lou Whitaker. The former Tigers Second Baseman might not have lasted more than one year on the Hall of Fame ballot, but he was once on the Veteran’s Ballot, and is considered one of the more egregious snubs by sabremetricians. He was ranked #4 last year.
#7. Bill Dahlen. Dahlen was a previous Veteran’s Committee Nominee, and that is still the route in which he needs to gain entry to Cooperstown. The Shortstop was a two-time leader in Defensive bWAR and won a World Series Ring with the Giants in 1905. He was ranked #5 last year.
8. Curt Schilling. Schilling asked to be removed off of the ballot, and that didn’t happen, and many of the voters acquiesced to his later request to be removed from consideration. On his last year on the ballot, Schilling dropped from 71.1 to 58.6, and despite his resume, it is conceivable that he will never see a Veteran’s Committee ballot.
9. Manny Ramirez. Ramirez entered the ballot in 2017, and offensively he statistically had a better resume than Ivan Rodriguez and Vladimir Guerrero, both of which are now in Cooperstown. He is in the same vein as A-Rod, as he was popped for PEDs as a player. Ramirez will enter his seventh year on the ballot, but has yet to crack 30%.
10. Carlos Beltran. Beltran is the only new entry in his first year of eligibility, and the nine-time All-Star has the stats for the Hall, but his recent scandal involving the Astros World Series win, could cost him some votes.
There were other new entries, including closer, Francisco Rodriguez, who debuts at #172. To close off the list, a new #300 had to come in, which was Derrek Lee.
Thank you all for your support, and we encourage you to cast your votes and offer your opinions.
On a ballot packed with qualified candidates for the National Baseball Hall of Fame, is it possible that none of them will be elected this year?
If that happens, as it did last year, it would be the third time in the last decade that the qualified voters of the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) have thrown a shutout at the Hall of Fame. This is an odd paradox considering that after the Big Zilch of 2013, the BBWAA in subsequent years went on to elect 22 players across the next seven ballots, with the various guises of the veterans committee voting in another five players (and six non-players) during that seven-year span. (In 2013, the veterans committee did elect three candidates to the Hall.)
Last year, Curt Schilling, who had garnered 70 percent of the vote on the previous ballot, seemed to be a lock for election. Instead, he stalled with a negligible increase in support, then threw a social-media Trumper tantrum declaring that he wanted to be removed from this year's ballot. The Hall of Fame quickly responded that it would not do so.
It’s on!
The 2022 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot is officially out with seventeen returning players and thirteen new first year eligible names.
To return on the ballot, a player must be within their ten years of eligibility and received at least 5% of the vote.
The returning former players are: (with their year of eligibility and last year’s result)
Curt Schilling: 10th Year, 71.1%
Barry Bonds: 10th Year, 61.8%
Roger Clemens: 10th Year, 61.6%
Scott Rolen: 5th Year, 52.9%
Omar Vizquel, 5th Year, 49.1%
Billy Wagner, 7th Year, 46.4%
Todd Helton,4th Year, 44.9%
Gary Sheffield, 8th Year, 40.6 %
Andruw Jones, 5th Year, 33.9%
Jeff Kent, 9th Year, 32.4%
Manny Ramirez, 6th Year, 28.2%
Sammy Sosa, 10th Year, 17.0%
Andy Pettitte, 4th Year, 13.7%
Mark Buehrle, 2nd Year, 11.0%
Torii Hunter, 2nd Year, 9.5%
Bobby Abreu, 3rd Year, 8.7%
Tim Hudson, 2nd Year, 5.2%
The new former players are:
Carl Crawford
Prince Fielder
Ryan Howard
Tim Lincecum
Justin Morneau
Joe Nathan
David Ortiz
Jonathan Papelbon
Jake Peavy
A.J. Pierzynski
Alex Rodriguez
Jimmy Rollins
Mark Teixeira
Notably Coco Crisp, Marlon Byrd, Michael Bourn, Kyle Lohse, Angel Pagan, Omar Infante, Matt Thornton, Billy Butler, Colby Lewis, Jeff Francoer, Javier Lopez and Ryan Vogelsong were eligible this year, but were not included on the ballot.
The results will be announced on January 25, 2022.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com thought it would be fun to take a look at the major awards in North American team sports and see how it translates into Hall of Fame potential.
Needless to say, different awards in different sports yield hall of fame potential. In basketball, the team sport with the least number of players on a roster, the dividend for greatness much higher. In baseball, it is not as much as a great individual season does not have the same impact.
Last time, we looked at the ALCS or NLCS MVPs. We have one major baseball award left, the Hank Aaron Award, which is given annually to the best hitter in each league. It is named after Aaron, who was one of the most prolific hitters of all-time.
The trophy first came into existence in 1999, with one awarded in each league.
So how many Hank Aaron Award winners have made the Baseball Hall of Fame?
Let’s find out!
The following are the past players who have won the Hank Aaron Award who are eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame and have been enshrined.
2006 AL: Derek Jeter, New York Yankees, Third Base, 14 HR, 97 RBI, .343/.417/.483
Derek Jeter is one of the most popular players in Yankees history, which is incredible considering how many legends wore the pinstripes. In 2006, Jeter had already won the World Series four times, and he went to his seventh All-Star Game, while earning his first Silver Slugger. Jeter was the runner-up for the MVP this year.
Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2020.
2009 AL: Derek Jeter, New York Yankees, Third Base, 18 HR, 66 RBI, .334/.406/.465 (2)
Jeter finished third in MVP voting this year, and he collected his fourth consecutive Silver Slugger. He would lead New York to another World Series win, his fifth, and he played until 2014, collecting 3,465 Hits with a .310 lifetime Batting Average. Jeter was overall a 14-time All-Star, five-time Silver Slugger, five-time Gold Glove winner, who also smacked 260 Home Runs with 1,311 RBIs.
Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2020.
The following are the players who have won the Hank Aaron Award who are eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame and have not been selected:
1999 AL: Manny Ramirez, Cleveland Indians, Outfield, 44 HR, 165 RBI, .333/.442/.633.
Ramirez had already proven himself as a star, but this season, he led the American League in RBIs with 165, which would be a career-high. An All-Star for the third time, Ramirez also led the league in Slugging Percentage, OPS (1.105) and was third in MVP voting. He also won the Silver Slugger.
Eligible Since 2017. Ramirez has been on the ballot for five years, finishing as high as 28.2% in both 2019 and 2020. Ranked #7 on Notinhalloffame.com
1999 NL: Sammy Sosa, Chicago Cubs, Outfield, 63 HR, 141 RBI, .288/.367/.635, 1999, NL
Sosa was the 1998 National League MVP, and was ninth this year in voting. He was also a Silver Slugger winner, winning it for the third of six times. While Sosa is a seven-time All-Star with 609 career Home Runs, PED suspicion has kept him out of Cooperstown.
Eligible Since 2013. Sosa has been on the ballot for nine years, finishing as high as 17.0% in 2020. Ranked #31 on Notinhalloffame.com
2000 AL: Carlos Delgado, Toronto Blue Jays, First Base, 41 HR, 137 RBI, .344/.470/.664, 2000, AL
Delgado was an All-Star for the first time, and he led the AL in Doubles (57) and was fourth in MVP voting. The First Baseman earned the second of his third Silver Sluggers this year, and he would later play for Florida and New York (NL), retiring on 2009. Delgado had 473 Home Runs with 1,512 RBIs over his career.
Eligible Since 2015. Delgado was on the ballot for one year in 2015 and received 3.6% of the vote. Ranked #82 on Notinhalloffame.com
2000 NL: Todd Helton, Colorado Rockies, First Base, 42 HR, 147 RBI, .372/.463/.698, 2000, NL
2000 was arguably Helton’s best year in baseball as he led the NL in Hits (216), Doubles (59), RBIs, and all three Slash Line components. This began a five-year streak of All-Star Game appearances, and a four-year run of Silver Sluggers. Helton, who was fifth in MVP voting this year, played his entire career with the Rockies, and had 2,519 Hits, 369 Home Runs, 1,406 RBIs with a Slash Line of .316/.414/539.
Eligible Since 2018. Helton has been on the ballot for three years, finishing as high as 44.9% in 2021. Ranked #9 on Notinhalloffame.com
2001 AL: Alex Rodriguez, Texas Rangers, Shortstop, 52 HR, 135 RBI, .318/.399/.622, 2001, AL
After establishing himself as a superstar in Seattle, Rodriguez signed what was then the biggest contract in baseball with the Texas Rangers. Rodriguez delivered with his best year to date, though he was only sixth in MVP voting. He led the AL in Home Runs (52), Runs Scored (133), and was a Silver Slugger for the fifth time.
Eligible Since 2022. Rodriguez is on the ballot for the first time this year. Ranked #3 on Notinhalloffame.com
2001 NL: Barry Bonds, San Francisco Giants, Outfield, 73 HR, 137 RBI, .328/.515/.863, 2001, NL
This was the year that Bonds set the single season record in Home Runs, and Slugging Percentage, and while he was wildly unpopular outside of San Francisco, he was the runaway winner for the MVP, his fourth and first since 1993 when he was a Pirate. Bonds also led the NL in OBP, OPS, and won his ninth Silver Slugger this year.
Eligible Since 2013. Bonds has been on the ballot for nine years and finished as high as 61.8% in 2021. Ranked #1C on Notinhalloffame.com
2002 AL: Alex Rodriguez, Texas Rangers, Shortstop, 57 HR, 142 RBI, .300/.392/.623, 2001, AL (2)
A-Rod was incredible this year, leading the AL in Home Runs for the second straight year, and winning his first RBI Title. Rodriguez finished second for the MVP, won his sixth Silver Slugger, and defensively won the Gold Glove for the first time.
Eligible Since 2022. Rodriguez is on the ballot for the first time this year. Ranked #3 on Notinhalloffame.com
2002 NL: Barry Bonds, San Francisco Giants, Outfield, 46 HR, 110 RBI, .370/.582/.799, 2002, NL (2)
Bonds was again putting up PlayStation like numbers, and while his Home Runs were “only” 46, his OBP rocketed up to .582. Basically, nobody wanted to pitch to him unless they had to. Bonds repeated as MVP, winning his fifth overall, and also was a Silver Slugger for the tenth time.
Eligible Since 2013. Bonds has been on the ballot for nine years and finished as high as 61.8% in 2021. Ranked #1C on Notinhalloffame.com
2003 AL: Alex Rodriguez, Texas Rangers, Shortstop, 47 HR, 118 RBI, .298/.396/.600 (3)
While arguably this was his weakest of his three years in Texas, Rodriguez captured his first MVP. A-Rod led the AL in Home Runs for the third straight season (47), and he won his first Slugging Title (.600). Silver Slugger number seven came to Rodriguez as did his second Gold Glove.
Eligible Since 2022. Rodriguez is on the ballot for the first time this year. Ranked #3 on Notinhalloffame.com
2004 AL: Manny Ramirez, Boston Red Sox, Outfield, 43 HR, 130 RBI, .308/.397/.613 (2)
Ramirez joined the Red Sox in 2001, and in 2004, he won his first Home Run Title. This season, he won his third Slugging Title, third OPS Title, and was third for the AL MVP. Again winning the Silver Slugger, Ramirez and the Red Sox broke the curse this year, by winning their first World Series since 2019. Ramirez played until 2012, blasting 555 Home Runs, 1.831 RBIs, with a lifetime Slash Line of .312/.411/.585.
Eligible Since 2017. Ramirez has been on the ballot for five years, finishing as high as 28.2% in both 2019 and 2020. Ranked #7 on Notinhalloffame.com
2004 NL: Barry Bonds, San Francisco Giants, Outfield, 45 HR, 101 RBI, .362/.609/.812 (3)
Bonds did not win the Hank Aaron Award in 2003, but he won the MVP that year, his third in a row. He reclaimed the Hank Aaron Award in 2004, along with his fourth straight MVP, where he set a MLB record with a 1.422 OPS season. Injuries and age caught up with Bonds, and despite being an All-Star in 2007 with a National League leading OBP of .480, he was not signed by any other team afterward. He finished his career with 762 Home Runs, and 2,558 Walks, both of which are all-time records. He retired with a lifetime OPS of 1.051.
Eligible Since 2013. Bonds has been on the ballot for nine years and finished as high as 61.8% in 2021. Ranked #1C on Notinhalloffame.com
2005 AL: David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox, Designated Hitter, 47 HR, 148 RBI, .300/.397/.604.
Ortiz became the first primary Designated Hitter to win the Hank Aaron Award, and the popular player won the RBI Title for the first of what would be three times. This was his second year in Boston, his second All-Star season, and he also won his second Silver Slugger. Ortiz was the runner-up for the MVP.
Eligible Since 2022. Ortiz is on the ballot for the first time this year. Ranked #8 on Notinhalloffame.com
2005 NL: Andruw Jones, Atlanta Braves, Outfield, 51 HR, 128 RBI, .263/.347/.575.
This was the best season of Jones’ career, and he won the Home Run (51) and RBI (128) Titles for the only time this year. Jones also captured his only Silver Slugger this year, and he was the runner-up for the National League MVP. Jones stayed with Atlanta until 2007, after which he played with the Dodgers, Rangers, White Sox and Yankees, and retired with 434 Home Runs.
Eligible Since 2017. Jones has been on the ballot for four years and finished as high as 33.9% in 2021. Ranked #40 on Notinhalloffame.com
2006 NL: Ryan Howard, Philadelphia Phillies, First Base, 58 HR, 149 RBI, .313/.425/.659.
In what was his third Major League season, Ryan Howard was spectacular, and produced his best year in Baseball. Howard was first in Home Runs (58), Runs Batted In (149), and his Slash Line of .313/.425/.659 were career highs. Justifiably, Howard won the MVP and the Silver Slugger, and over the next three seasons, he blasted at least 45 Home Runs and 136 RBIs. Howard slumped after that, losing facets of his game, which considering he couldn’t field or run fast, took him out of any Hall of Fame consideration. He played his entire career with the Phillies, accumulating 1,475 Hits, 382 Home Runs and 1,194 RBIs.
Eligible Since 2022. Howard is on the ballot for the first time this year. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
2007 AL: Alex Rodriguez, New York Yankees, Shortstop, 47 HR, 118 RBI, .298/.396/.600. (4)
Rodriguez joined the Yankees in 2004, and to say it was a tumultuous period would be an understatement. This did not mean that he did not produce colossal numbers in the Bronx, as he did. He won his second MVP in 2005, and his third this year, winning his fifth Home Run Title (54), second RBI Title (156), third Slugging Title (.645) and second OPS Title (1.067). A-Rod also won the ninth of what would be ten Silver Sluggers. Rodriguez drama began after this season, but he did win a World Series Ring in 2009. He finished his career with 3,115 Hits, 696 Home Runs, 2,086 RBIs, 329 Stolen Bases and a lifetime Batting Average of .295.
Eligible Since 2022. Rodriguez is on the ballot for the first time this year. Ranked #3 on Notinhalloffame.com
2007 NL: Prince Fielder, Milwaukee Brewers, First Base, 50 HR, 119 RBI, .288/.395/.618.
Prince Fielder followed in the footsteps of his father, Cecil, as he became a stocky power-hitting First Baseman, and this was his breakout year. Fielder led the American League in Home Runs (50), was third in MVP voting, and won the Silver Slugger. He had five more 30 Home Run seasons, would become a six-time All-Star and collected three Silver Sluggers. His career ended abruptly at age 32 due to injuries, and he retired with 319 Home Runs.
Eligible Since 2022. Fielder is on the ballot for the first time this year. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
2008 AL: Kevin Youkilis, Boston Red Sox, First Base, 29 HR, 115 RBI, .312/.390/.569.
This was the best year of Youkilis’ career, where he had career-bests in Home Runs (29), RBIs (115) and Batting Average (.312), and was an All-Star for the first time. Youkilis was third in MVP voting, and he helped the BoSox win two previous World Series. He went to two more All-Star Games, and played with Boston until 2012, finishing his career with brief stops in Chicago (AL) and New York (AL) before retiring in 213. He had 1,053 career Hits.
Eligible Since 2019. Youkilis was on the ballot for one year in 2019, but did not receive any votes. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
2008 NL: Aramis Ramirez, Chicago Cubs, Third Base, 27 HR, 112 RBI, .289/.380/.518.
Ramirez was an All-Star in 2005, and in 2008, his 11th Season, He was an All-Star for the second and final time. This year, he was tenth in MVP voting, equalling his finish in 2004. Ramirez later played for Milwaukee, going to a third All-Star Game in 2014, and was a Silver Slugger (while still a Cub) in 2011. He retired in 2015, finishing with 2,303 Hits, 386 Home Runs and 1,417 RBIs.
Eligible Since 2021. Ramirez was on the ballot for one year in 2021, and received 1.0% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
2016 AL: David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox, Designated Hitter, 38 HR, 127 RBI, .315/.401/.620, AL (2)
Ortiz had one of the best farewell seasons ever, and fittingly it resulted in his second Hank Aaron Award, 11 years after his first. For the only time in his career, he led the AL in Doubles (48), and his 127 RBI gave him his third RBI title. Ortiz also led the AL in Slugging Percentage (.620) and OPS (1.021), and he won the Silver Slugger for the seventh time. Over his career, Ortiz had 2,473 Hits, 541 Home Runs, 1,768 RBIs with a lifetime OPS of .931. He was also instrumental in the Red Sox winning three World Series.
Eligible Since 2022. Ortiz is on the ballot for the first time this year. Ranked #8 on Notinhalloffame.com
Let’s update our tally, shall we?
Award in Question |
Percentage of recipients who have entered the HOF |
Percentage of recipients by year who have entered the HOF. |
NBA MVP |
100% |
100% |
NHL Art Ross |
100% |
100% |
NHL Hart Trophy |
93.6% |
96.3% |
NBA Finals MVP |
91.3% |
94.9% |
NHL Norris |
90.5% |
96.4% |
NHL Ted Lindsay Award |
90.0% |
|
NBA All-Star Game MVP |
89.5% |
91.7% |
NHL Conn Smythe |
74.2% |
85.4% |
NFL Bert Bell Award |
73.7% |
71.4% |
NFL AP Offensive Player of the Year |
73.1% |
79.4% |
NFL AP MVP |
68.3% |
74.0% |
NFL Walter Payton Man of the Year |
66.7% |
66.7% |
NHL Lady Byng |
63.8% |
76.0% |
NFL Defensive Player of the Year |
60.8% |
71.1% |
NFL Super Bowl MVP |
60.6% |
64.9% |
NHL Mark Messier Leadership Award |
60.0% |
60.0% |
NBA Defensive Player of the Year |
58.3% |
56.5% |
NHL Vezina |
57.1% |
66.3% |
NBA Rookie of the Year |
56.5% |
56.5% |
MLB MVP |
55.0% |
60.2% |
NFL Pro Bowl MVP |
52.3% |
54.8% |
MLB Lou Gehrig Award |
51.9% |
51.9% |
MLB Roberto Clemente Award |
47.4% |
47.4% |
NHL Calder Trophy |
46.5% |
46.5% |
NBA J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award |
46.0% |
46.0% |
MLB/NL/AL Cy Young Award |
44.4% |
55.4% |
MLB Babe Ruth Award |
37.0% |
39.3% |
NHL King Clancy Award |
36.8% |
36.8% |
NHL Frank J. Selke Trophy |
33.3% |
36.7% |
MLB World Series MVP |
33.3% |
36.8% |
MLB Hutch Award |
33.1% |
33.1% |
NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year |
28.6% |
28.6% |
NHL Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy |
27.9% |
27.9% |
MLB Edgar Martinez Award |
26.7% |
17.2% |
MLB Delivery Man of the Year |
25.0% |
50.0% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Designated Hitter) |
25.0% |
30.8% |
MLB Comeback Player of the Year |
25.0% |
25.0% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Shortstop) |
23.5% |
52.6% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove |
21.7% |
36.8% |
NHL William M. Jennings Trophy |
20.7% |
40.4% |
NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year |
20.6% |
20.6% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Catcher) |
20.0% |
22.5% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Second Base) |
18.8% |
39.8% |
MLB Rolaids Reliever of the Year |
18.6% |
33.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Shortstop) |
18.2% |
35.1% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Pitcher) |
18.2% |
20.1% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Second Base) |
16.7% |
32.7% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Outfield) |
16.7% |
30.1% |
MLB NLCS/ALCS MVP |
16.1% |
15.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Outfield) |
15.7% |
25.2% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Third Base) |
14.3% |
14.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Third Base) |
13.6% |
14.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (First Base) |
13.6% |
13.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Rookie of the Year |
13.3% |
13.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Catcher) |
10.3% |
15.2% |
MLB Hank Aaron Award |
9.1% |
14.3% |
NBA Most Improved Player of the Year |
5.3% |
3.2% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (First Base) |
3.8% |
3.2% |
NFL AP Comeback Player of the Year |
0.0% |
0.0% |
So, who is up next?
The following are the players who have won the Hank Aaron Award in MLB who have retired but have not met the mandatory years out of the game to qualify for the Baseball Hall of Fame:
2010 AL: Jose Bautista, Toronto Blue Jays, Outfield, 54 HR, 124 RBI, .260/.378/.617
Jose Bautista seemingly came out of nowhere to become an offensive star, as at age 29, he went from 13 to 54 Home Runs. Bautista led the AL in Home Runs this year, and earned his first Silver Slugger. He was also fourth in MVP voting, and began a six-year run of All-Stars.
Eligible In 2024.
2011 AL: Jose Bautista, Toronto Blue Jays, Outfield, 43 HR, 103 RBI, .302/.447/.608 (2)
As great as Bautista’s power numbers were in 2011, they were down from what he did in 2010. Nevertheless, Bautista became a more complete hitter, leading the AL in Walks (132), had his first (and only) .300 season, and he led the league in Slugging (.608) and OPS (1.056). Bautista was third in MVP voting, and won his second Silver Slugger. He won a third Silver Slugger in 2014, and had 344 Home Runs over his career, most of which happened after he turned 29.
Eligible In 2024.
2011 NL: Matt Kemp, Los Angeles Dodgers, Outfield, 39 HR, 126 RBI, .324/.399/.586
This was by far the nest season of Matt Kemp’s career, where he led the National League in Runs Scored (115), Home Runs (39) and RBIs, all of which were career-highs. Kemp was the runner-up for the MVP, and this was his second and final Silver Slugger year. The three-time All-Star would later play for San Diego, Atlanta, Cincinnati and Colorado, and he had 287 Home Runs.
Eligible In 2026.
The following are the past players who have won the Hank Aaron Award who are eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame and are still active.
2004 NL: Albert Pujols, St. Louis Cardinals, First Base, 2004, 43 HR, 124 RBI, .359/.439/.667.
Pujols was in his third season, and the second of which where he finished second in MVP voting behind Barry Bonds. This year, Pujols, who won his second Silver Slugger, led the NL in Hits (212), Doubles (51) and Batting Average (.359).
41 Years Old, Playing for the Los Angeles Angels.
2009 NL: Albert Pujols, St. Louis Cardinals, First Base, 2009, 47 HR, 135 RBI, .327/.443/.658 (2)
After winning his first Hank Aaron Award in 2003, Pujols won the National League MVP in 2005 and 2008, and 2009 saw the slugger win his third. Pujols won the Home Run title for the first time this year, and he also captured his first OBP crown. This was also his third time winning the Slugging and OPS Title. Silver Slugger number five happened this year for Pujols.
41 Years Old, Playing for the Los Angeles Angels.
2010 NL: Joey Votto, Cincinnati Reds, First Base, 37 HR, 113 RBI, .324/.424/.600
This was Votto’s fourth year in the Majors, and it was his breakout campaign. Not only did Votto win the Hank Aaron award, the First Baseman won the MVP. Votto was an All-Star for the first time this year, and he would win his first of seven OBP Titles, and the first of two OPS Titles.
37 Years Old, Playing for the Cincinnati Reds.
2012 AL: Miguel Cabrera, Detroit Tigers, First Base, 44 HR, 139 RBI, .330/.393/.606
Cabrera was a World Series Champion with Florida in 2007, and like all of their stars, he was traded, in his case to Detroit. Cabrera got better in Motown, and this year he went to his seventh All-Star Game, won his second Home Run Title, his second Batting Title, and he won his first MVP.
38 Years Old, Playing for the Detroit Tigers.
2012 NL: Buster Posey, San Francisco Giants, Catcher, 24 HR, 103 RBI, .336/.408/.549
This year, Posey became the first Catcher to win the Hank Aaron Award, which he did in a campaign that earned him the MVP. Posey, who two years before won the Rookie of the Year, captured the Batting Title this year and he also won the Silver Slugger.
34 Years Old, Playing for the San Francisco Giants.
2013 AL: Miguel Cabrera, Detroit Tigers, First Base, 44 HR, 137 RBI, .348/.442/.636
Cabrera went back-to-back for Hank Aaron Awards, and did the same for MVPs. He was first in the AL in all aspects of the Slash Line, and was first in OPS (1.078), which was a career-high. Cabrera won his fifth Silver Slugger this year, and would win two more. Still playing, Cabrera became a member of the 500 Home Run club in 2021.
38 Years Old, Playing for the Detroit Tigers.
2013 NL: Paul Goldschmidt, Arizona Diamondbacks, First Base, 36 HR, 125 RBI, .302/.401/.651
Goldschmidt broke out this year, leading the National League in Home Runs (36), RBIs (125), Slugging Percentage (.551) and Slugging Percentage (.952). He was the runner-up for the MVP, and also won his first Gold Glove and Silver Slugger, while also beginning a six-year streak of All-Stars.
33 Years Old, Playing for the St. Louis Cardinals.
2014 AL: Mike Trout, Los Angeles Angels, Outfield, 36 HR, 111 RBI, .287/.377/.561
Two years after winning the Rookie of the Year, Mike Trout was the proven best player in baseball. Trout was second in MVP voting in his first and second full year, and this season, he did not only win the Hank Aaron but his first MVP. This year, Trout led the AL in Runs (115), RBIs (111) and won his third straight Silver Slugger.
30 Years Old, Playing for the Los Angeles Angels.
2014 NL: Giancarlo Stanton, Miami Marlins, Outfield, 37 HR, 105 RBI, .288/.395/.555
This is Stanton’s fifth season, and he led the National League in Home Runs for the first time (37), and won his second Slugging Title (.555). Stanton was second in MVP voting and he won his first Silver Slugger this year.
31 Years Old, Playing for the New York Yankees.
2015 AL: Josh Donaldson, Toronto Blue Jays, Third Base, 41 HR, 123 RBI, .297/.371/.568
Donaldson broke out the year before, going to his first All-Star Game, but it would be his last year in Oakland, as he was traded to Toronto. In his first year as a Blue Jay, Donaldson had his best year in Baseball, leading the American League in Runs (122), RBIs (123), and he won the MVP and his first Silver Slugger.
35 Years Old, Playing for the Minnesota Twins.
2015 NL: Bryce Harper, Washington Nationals, Outfield, 42 HR, 99 RBI, .330/.460/.649
Harper won the National League Rookie of the Year in 2012, and this year he had his monster campaign, leading the NL in Runs Scored (118), Home Runs (42), OBP (.460), Slugging Percentage (.649) and OPS (1.109). He also won his first Silver Slugger this year.
28 Years Old, Playing for the Philadelphia Phillies.
2016 NL: Kris Bryant, Chicago Cubs, Outfield, 39 HR, 102 RBI, .292/.385/.554
This was Bryant’s second season, and he also won the MVP. Bryant also led the NL in Runs Scored (121), Offensive bWAR (6.4), was fourth in OPS, OPS+ (146) and third in Home Runs. More importantly, Bryant led the Cubs to their first World Series win in over 100 years.
29 Years Old, Playing for the San Francisco Giants.
2017 AL: Jose Altuve, Houston Astros, Second Base, 24 HR, 81 RBI, .346/.410/.547
For the fourth year in a row, Altuve led the National League in Hits (204), and won his third Batting Title. Altuve also won the Silver Slugger and MVP, and the Astros won the World Series, their first.
31 Years Old, Playing for the Houston Astros.
2017 NL: Giancarlo Stanton, Miami Marlins, Outfield, 59 HR, 132 RBI, .281/.376/.631
In between his first and second Hank Aaron Award, Stanton remained a competent power hitter, but this year he was outstanding, finishing first in Home Runs (59), RBIs (132), Slugging Percentage (.631). Stanton won the MVP this year and earned his second Silver Slugger. Stanton signed with the Yankees after this year.
31 Years Old, Playing for the New York Yankees.
2018 AL: J.D. Martinez, Boston Red Sox, Outfield, 43 HR, 130 RBI, .330/.402/.629
In his first year with the Red Sox, Martinez was fourth in MVP voting, and was also the league-leader in RBIs. An All-Star for the second time this year, Martinez won the Silver Slugger both as an Outfielder and Designated Hitter. Martinez was also second in Batting Average, Slugging Percentage and third in OPS.
33 Years Old, Playing for the Boston Red Sox.
2018 NL: Christian Yelich, Milwaukee Brewers, Outfield, 36 HR, 110 RBI, .326/.402/.598
The acquisition of Christian Yelich paid instant dividends for the Brewers, with the Outfielder winning the Batting Title, Slugging Title and OPS Title in his first year there. Yelich also won the Silver Slugger and won the MVP.
29 Years Old, Playing for the Milwaukee Brewers.
2019 AL: Mike Trout, Los Angeles Angels, Outfield, 45 HR, 104 RBI, .291/.438/.645 (2)
In between Trout’s first and second Hank Aaron Award, won his second MVP, three more Silver Sluggers, three OBP Titles, one Slugging Title and two OPS Titles. This year, Trout led the American League in OBP (.439), Slugging Percentage (.645) and OPS (1.083). Trout won his third MVP this year and captured his seventh Silver Slugger.
30 Years Old, Playing for the Los Angeles Angels.
2019 NL: Christian Yelich, Milwaukee Brewers, Outfield, 44 HR, 97 RBI, .329/.429/.671 (2)
Yelich almost won the MVP again, as his late-season injury that cost him significant games kept him from it. Regardless, he swept the Slash Line, and won his second Silver Slugger.
29 Years Old, Playing for the Milwaukee Brewers.
2020 AL: Jose Abreu, Chicago White Sox, First Base, 19 HR, 60 RBI, .317/.370/.617.
This was the second straight year that Abreu led the American League in RBIs, and he also topped the league in Hits (76), Slugging Percentage and Total Bases (148). Abreu won the MVP this year, his first.
35 Years Old, Playing for the Chicago White Sox.
2021 NL: Freddie Freeman, Atlanta Braves, First Base, 13 HR, 53 RBI, .341/.462/.640.
Freeman earned his second Silver Slugger this year, and after four previous top ten finishes in MVP voting, he won it this year. He was the league-leader in Runs Scored (51) and Doubles (23), and was second in OPS (1.102).
32 Years Old, Playing for the Atlanta Braves.
The PED situation has lowered the bar significantly for Hank Aaron Award winners to enter Cooperstown, but this average will rise in time.
So, what is up next?
We have another look in Baseball, with the MLB All-Star Game MVP.
As always, we thank you for your support, and look for that soon.
We are a month removed from the Baseball Hall of Fame 2021 vote, and that means it is time to release our new list of those to consider for Cooperstown in 2022. With nobody elected in 2021, there are no removals from the list, but there are four new entries. We currently have 108 on this list, and by Spring, we will be expanding it to an even 300, which will be our fixed number moving forward.
As per our first year, there are three number ones, with the rational showing one eligible, and two ineligibles (Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson) due to gambling.
Remaining at #1A is Pete Rose, the man who collected an all-time record 4,256 Hits. Rose was banned from the game over 30 years ago for betting on baseball.
Also, staying at #1B, is “Shoeless” Joe Jackson. Jackson was suspended for his alleged participation in the Chicago White Sox throwing of the 1919 World Series.
Barry Bonds is at #1C. Bonds is the all-time leading Home Run leader with 762, and he is also first in Walks (2,558), Win Probability Added (127.7) and Power-Speed # (613.9). While never caught, the seven-time MVP was widely suspected of PED use, and the Baseball Hall of Fame voters have kept him out. He only has one year left of eligibility.
Roger Clemens is just behind Bonds at #2. Like Bonds, Clemens has been kept out of Cooperstown due to PED suspicion, and he is also entering his tenth and final year on the ballot. Clemens is a seven-time Cy Young Award winner and is third all-time in Strikeouts (4,672).
The highest debut is Alex Rodriguez, who appears at #3. Unlike Bonds and Clemens, Rodriguez was twice suspended for PED use, but also, unlike Bonds and Clemens, he seems to be welcomed back as shown by his gig at Fox. Rodriguez is fourth all-time in Home Runs (696).
Former Detroit Tiger Second Baseman, Lou Whitaker, is at #4. Whitaker was a member of Detroit’s 1984 World Series Championship team, and is considered one of the best infielders not in the Baseball Hall.
Bill Dahlen, a former star in the 1900s is in at #5. Dahlen won a World Series with the New York Giants in 1905, and is still in the top-fifty in bWAR for Position Players.
Curt Schilling is at #6. The former two-time World Series champion has one year left and has asked to be removed from the ballot after failing to enter the Hall. He has feuded with media in the past, and his current right-wing politics have alienated many others.
At #7 is Manny Ramirez. Like Rodriguez, Ramirez has also been suspended for PEDs twice, and it has hampered his pursuit for a Hall of Fame plaque.
Our second top-ten debut is at #8, David Ortiz, Ramirez’s former teammate in Boston. With the Red Sox, Ortiz became the best Designated Hitter that baseball has ever seen, and would win three World Series rings.
Todd Heltonremains in the top ten at #9. The career Colorado Rockie is trending towards induction in roughly three years.
Tommy Johnrounds out the top ten. Ironically, the surgery that bears his name, is recognized by the Hall. His only path for induction is with the Veteran’s Committee.
There are two other new entries, Mark Teixeira at #93 and Jimmy Rollins at #102.
Thank you all for your support, and look for our revised Football list next month.
Is this the year Curt Schilling makes it into the National Baseball Hall of Fame? Will Schilling be the only player elected to the Hall this year? After all the tumultuous voting activity of the 2010s, has voting for the Hall returned to "normal"?
Only a crystal ball, or the patience to wait until voting results for the 2021 Baseball Hall of Fame are announced on January 26, 2021, can give us the definitive answers, but of course that doesn't stop us from prognosticating before we learn the results.
For now, the short answers are:
1. Maybe.
2. Possibly.
3. Likely.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we here at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the 50 of each major North American sports team. We have a new one to unveil today, that of the Cleveland Indians.
The origin of the Cleveland Indians begins in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1894, where they played in the Western League. The franchise relocated in 1900, becoming the Cleveland Lake Shores, and eventually were an inaugural team of the American League, going through multiple name changes (Bluebirds, Broncos, Naps) before becoming the Indians for over a decade.
Cleveland would become a great sports town, but the baseball team has not given them very much to cheer for over the years. The Indians have only won the World Series twice (1920 and 1948), with three other appearances.
The team has announced that they will soon drop the Indians nickname, though as of this writing, it is not sure what they will change it to and when precisely it will take place.
Our Top 50 lists in baseball look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the American League.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles not reflected in a stat sheet.
Remember, this is ONLY based on what a player does on that particular team and not what he accomplished elsewhere and also note that we have placed an increased importance on the first two categories.
This list is updated up until the end of the 2019 Season.
The complete list can be found here, but as always, we announce our top five in this article. They are:
1. Bob Feller
2. Nap Lajoie
3. Tris Speaker
4. Lou Boudreau
We will continue our adjustments on our existing lists and will continue developing our new lists.
Look for our more material coming soon!
As always, we thank you for your support.
“Manny being Manny” might have gained steam and recognition in Boston, but it was in Cleveland where it all began.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we here at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the 50 of each major North American sports team. We have a new one to unveil today, that of the Boston Red Sox.
The Red Sox were a charter member of the American League in 1901, first called the Boston Americans until they changed their name to the Red Sox in 1908. Boston was the first team to win the modern World Series in 1903, and they were the dominant team of the 1910s, winning four titles in the decade. It was all sunshine and lollipops for the Red Sox, but the “Curse of the Bambino” struck when the Red Sox stupidly sold the contract of Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees, shifting the balance of power in the American League.
The Red Sox would be abysmal for years after, and they not win the World Series for the rest of the century. They did have four shots at it, with three American League Pennants (1946, 1967, 1975 and 1986) but they fell short every time. It would not be until 2004, where they won their sixth World Series, and they won three more after (2007, 2013 & 2018).
As for all of our top 50 players in baseball we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the American League.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles not reflected in a stat sheet.
Remember, this is ONLY based on what a player does on that particular team and not what he accomplished elsewhere and also note that we have placed an increased importance on the first two categories.
This list is updated up until the end of the 2019 Season.
The complete list can be found here, but as always we announce our top five in this article. They are:
1. Ted Williams
4. Wade Boggs
5. Cy Young
We will continue our adjustments on our existing lists and will continue developing our new lists.
Look for our All-Time Top 50 Chicago White Sox coming next!
As always we thank you for your support.
Manny being Manny.
That happened long before he signed with the Red Sox, after being a four-time All-Star with the Cleveland Indians, but it was at Fenway where the baseball world really began to see him on a national stage.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com thought it would be fun to take a look at the major awards in North American team sports and see how it translates into Hall of Fame potential.
Needless to say, different awards in different sports yield hall of fame potential. In basketball, the team sport with the least number of players on a roster, the dividend for greatness much higher. In baseball, it is not as much as a great individual season does not have the same impact.
Last time, we looked at the Bert Bell Award. This time we went back to baseball, and the World Series MVP.
The World Series was first played in 1903, but they did not award an MVP of the Fall Classic until 1955. It goes without saying only a great team can win a World Series, but in a seven-game series any player can get on a hot streak.
So how many World Series MVPs have made the Baseball Hall of Fame?
Let’s find out!
The following are the past players who have won the World Series MVP who are eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame and have been enshrined.
Whitey Ford, New York Yankees, Pitcher (1961)
Based on who won the World Series MVP from 1955 to 1960, we think it safe to day that Whitey Ford will forever be the first chronological World Series MVP to enter the Baseball Hall of Fame. Ford was a career-Yankee who would help the Bronx Bombers win six World Series Titles. In 1961, Ford won the Cy Young Award with a 25-4 record, and in the World Series he won both starts. Ford pitched 14 Innings without allowing a single run, and the Yankees would defeat the Cincinnati Reds in five games. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1974.
Sandy Koufax, Los Angeles Dodgers, Pitcher (1963)
Sandy Koufax was on year two of his second-half of brilliance, and in the regular season he would win the first of five consecutive ERA Titles. In the World Series, his Dodgers were paired against the New York Yankees, and Koufax won both starts. He would throw for 18 Innings with a 1.50 ERA. Los Angeles would sweep New York. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1972.
Bob Gibson, St. Louis Cardinals, Pitcher (1964)
Bob Gibson would do well in 1964 with a 19-12 record, but he was still not yet a superstar. The World Series would change that. He led the St. Louis Cardinals to a win over the New York Yankees where he went 2-1 with 27 Innings and 31 Strikeouts. Gibson would go to the All-Star Game annually from 1965 to 1970 but had plenty left to offer. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1981.
Sandy Koufax, Los Angeles Dodgers, Pitcher (2)(1965)
Koufax became the first player to repeat as the World Series MVP, and doesn’t it seem appropriate? In between his World Series MVPs, Koufax won the Cy Young and MVP. This year, Los Angeles faced the Minnesota Twins and Koufax went 2-1 with a 0.38 ERA. He played two more seasons, winning the Cy Young in both of them. Koufax retired after that with a record of 165-87 and 2,396 Strikeouts. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1972.
Frank Robinson, Baltimore Orioles, Outfield (1966)
The Cincinnati Reds made a colossal error when they traded Frank Robinson to the Baltimore Orioles after 1965 season. Robinson proceeded to have the best year of his life, becoming the first player to win the MVP in both leagues. It got even better, as Robinson led the Orioles to their first World Series, and he would have two Home Runs with a 1.217 OPS in Baltimore’s sweep of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1982.
Bob Gibson, St. Louis Cardinals, Pitcher (2) (1967)
Gibson’s star rose since 1964, and in 1967, he had an even better World Series performance than his first. Gibson pitched three complete games, winning them all, and only allowed three earned runs. His 1.00 ERA was matched with an equally spectacular WHIP of 0.704. Gibson would have a phenomenal 1968 in the “Year of the Pitcher” where he led the National League with a 1.12 ERA and a 0.853 WHIP. He won the Cy Young and MVP that season, and he would play until 1975, ending a career spent entirely with the St. Louis Cardinals. Gibson had a record of 251-174 with 3,117 Strikeouts. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1981.
Brooks Robinson, Baltimore Orioles, Third Base(1970)
Brooks Robinson was already a superstar by this point, as he was already a World Series champion (1966), an MVP (1964), and he was on year 11 of 15 straight All-Star Games. The 16-time Gold Glove winner batted .429 with two Home Runs in the Orioles five-game victory over the Reds. Robinson played his entire career with Baltimore and would accumulate 2,848 Hits, 268 Home Runs and 1,357 Runs Batted In. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1983.
Roberto Clemente, Pittsburgh Pirates, Outfield(1971)
A legend with 3,000 career Hits, Clemente was already a World Series Champion (1960), and an MVP (1966). In 1971, the 15-time All-Star batted .414 with two Home Runs in the Pirates seven-game win over Baltimore. Clemente only played one more season and died shortly after in a plane crash. He was delivering aid to earthquake victims in Nicaragua. He was fast-tracked to the Baseball Hall of Fame the year after. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1973.
Reggie Jackson, Oakland Athletics, Outfield (1973)
Reggie Jackson won the American League MVP this year, and would win the first of what would be four Home Run Titles. In the seven-game win over the New York Mets, Jackson batted .315 with a Home Run, in what was Oakland’s second of three straight World Series Championships. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1993.
Rollie Fingers, Oakland Athletics, Pitcher (1974)
This was the last of three straight Oakland World Series titles, and the future Hall of Fame closer was in the beginning of his turn as an elite closer. In this World Series, Fingers appeared in four Games, won one of them, had two Saves with an ERA of 1.93. Fingers would later win the Cy Young and MVP in 1983 when he was with the Milwaukee Brewers. He would play until 1985 and accumulate 341 Saves over his 17-year career. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1992.
Johnny Bench, Cincinnati Reds, Catcher (1976)
The Catcher of the “Big Red Machine”, was a two-time MVP by this point and had already won two Home Run Titles. In this year’s World Series, Bench batted .533, a 1.667 OPS with two Home Runs and six Runs Batted In. The 14-time All-Star played his entire career with Cincinnati and would collect 2,048 Hits, 389 Home Runs and 1,376 RBIs. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1989.
Reggie Jackson, New York Yankees, Outfield (2)(1977)
This was the first of two straight World Series Championships for the New York Yankees, and it was this year where Reggie Jackson became “Mr. October”. In Game Six of the 1977 World Series, Jackson belted three Home Runs on three first pitches against Dodger hurlers, and that was the clinching game. He would bat .450 with an OPS of 1.792 with five taters. Jackson played until 1987, and would retire with 2,584 Hits, 563 Home Runs, 1,702 RBIs. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1993.
Willie Stargell, Pittsburgh Pirates, First Base (1979)
Winning the MVP this year (though he probably should not have), Willie Stargell did earn both NLCS and World Series MVP. The career-Pirate helped his team defeat Baltimore in seven games with a .400 Batting Average with three Home Runs and seven RBIs. He played 21 seasons and retired in 1982 with 2,232 Hits, 475 Home Runs and 1,540 RBIs. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1988.
Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia Phillies, Third Base (1980)
This season, Mike Schmidt won the first of what would be three MVPs and it was also the year he set career-highs (also league-leading) in Home Runs (48) and Runs Batted In (121). Schmidt also finished first in Slugging Percentage (.624) and OPS (1.004). The Phillies would win his first World Series this year as Schmidt batted .381 with a two Home Runs and seven RBIs. Philadelphia would beat Kansas City in six games. Schmidt played his entire career with the Phils and would retire in 1989. Overall, he would appear in twelve All-Star Games, win six Silver Sluggers, ten Gold Gloves and had 2,234 Hits with 548 Home Runs and 1,595 RBIs. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1995.
Alan Trammell, Detroit Tigers, Shortstop (1984)
This year, Alan Trammell was on his second of what would be six All-Star Games and the Detroit Tigers were an unstoppable team in 1984. In this World Series, Detroit took out the San Diego Padres in five games with Trammell batting .450 with two Home Runs, six RBIs and a 1.300 OPS. He would play his entire career with the Tigers, retiring in 1996 with 2,365 Hits, 185 Home Runs, four Silver Sluggers and three Gold Gloves. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2018.
Jack Morris, Minnesota Twins, Pitcher (1991)
Jack Morris already won a World Series title in 1984 with the Detroit Tigers, but this title was especially sweet. In the 1991 World Series, Morris pitched in three games, winning two games with a 1.17 ERA. In Game 7, Morris pitched a ten-inning shutout to win the Fall Classic for the Twins. Morris went on to win two more World Series Rings with the Toronto Blue Jays. He retired in 1994 with a record of 254 Wins against 186 Losses with 2,478 Strikeouts. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2018.
Paul Molitor, Toronto Blue Jays, Third Base and Designated Hitter (1993)
Paul Molitor was with the Milwaukee Brewers for 15 years before joining the Toronto Blue Jays in 1993, who were the defending World Series Champions. That year, Molitor would go to his fifth All-Star Game, and led the American League in Hits (211) and would bat .332. The Blue Jays returned to the World Series, and in their successful title defense, Molitor batted .500 with two Home Runs, eight RBIs and a 1.571 OPS. Moltor played until 1998, and retired with 3,319 Hits, 234 Home Runs, 1,307 RBIs with a Batting Average of .303. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2004.
Tom Glavine, Atlanta Braves, Pitcher (1995)
The Atlanta Braves were one of the most loaded teams of the 1990s, but it only translated into one World Series win. That was in 1995, and the World Series MVP went to one of the big three, Tom Glavine. He would win the 1991 Cy Young, and later the 1998 Cy Young, and this season was a nice 16-7 year, a 3.08 ERA, and a third place finish in the Cy Young vote. In the World Series, Glavine won both starts and had an ERA of 1.29, a WHIP of 0.714 and 11 Strikeouts. He retired in 2008 with a 305-203 record and 2,607 Strikeouts. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2014.
Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees, Pitcher (1999)
Considered to be the greatest Relief Pitcher of all-time, Mariano Rivera would win five World Series Rings, and was a 13-time All-Star. In the 1999 World Series, Rivera appeared in three games, winning one, saving two, and he did not allow a run. Rivera’s overall post-season record was 8-1, 42 Saves, 0.70 ERA, 0.759 WHIP over 141 Innings. Let that sink in! When Rivera retired, he was the all-time leader in Saves (652), Games Finished (952) and a career WHIP of 1.000. Rivera became the first player to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame with a unanimous vote. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2019.
Derek Jeter, New York Yankees, Shortstop (2000)
Playing his entire career with the New York Yankees, Derek Jeter was not only the leader of the team, but was the most popular player and recognizable player of his day. In the 2000 World Series, he batted .409 with two Home Runs, two RBIs and an OPS of 1.344. Jeter would overall go to 14 All-Star Games, and was a five-time Silver Slugger and five-time Gold Glove winner. He retired in 2014 with 3,465 Hits, 260 Home Runs, 1,311 RBIs and a Batting Average of .310. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2020.
Randy Johnson, Arizona Diamondbacks, Pitcher (co-winner) (2001)
Sharing the World Series MVP with Curt Schilling, Randy Johnson was on the third of four straight Cy Young Awards, one of the most incredible runs of any pitcher in the history of the game. With the Arizona Diamondbacks, Johnson took the team that was still under ten years old to the World Series, and he won three World Series Games with a 1.04 ERA against the Yankees. He also had a WHIP of 0.692 with 19 Strikeouts. Johnson played until 2009, and retired with a record of 202-166 with 4,875 Strikeouts. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2015.
The following are the players who have won the World Series MVP who are eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame and have not been selected:
Johnny Podres, Brooklyn Dodgers, Pitcher (1955)
The winner of the first World Series MVP, coincided with the only championship that the Dodgers would win in Brooklyn. This was Podres third year in baseball, and he had been an average starter at best. He would win both his starts, including a shutout in Game 7. Over 18 Innings, he had a 1.00 ERA with 10 Strikeouts. Podres would play until 1969, mostly with the Dodgers and he retired with a record of 141-116 with 1,435 Strikeouts. He won two more World Series Rings with the Dodgers after they relocated to Los Angeles. Eligible Since 1975. Podres was on the ballot for three years and finished as high as 0.8% in both 1975 and 1978. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
Don Larsen, New York Yankees, Pitcher (1956)
After only lasting 1.2 Innings in Game 2 (though all four runs were unearned due to errors), Larsen came back to throw a perfect game, the only time that this happened in the history of the World Series. The Yankees beat the Dodgers in seven games, and Larsen’s Game 5 meant you could not possibly give the World Series MVP to anyone else. Aside from the most spectacular pitching performance ever, Larsen was an average pitcher at best. The 11 regular season Wins that he had in this regular season, was the most he had, and Larsen would only post 81 Wins against 91 Losses. Eligible Since 1973. Larsen was on the ballot for fifteen years and finished as high as 12.3% in 1979. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
Lew Burdette, Milwaukee Braves, Pitcher (1957)
This was the only World Series that the Braves would win while competing in Milwaukee. Burdette, who was an All-Star this year, had a 17-9 regular season record, would win all three of his World Series starts, throwing for 27 Innings with a 0.67 ERA. Burdette would go to a second All-Star Game two years later and would retire in 1967 with a 203-144 record. 179 of those wins were with the Braves. Eligible Since 1973. Burdette was on the ballot for fifteen years and finished as high as 24.1% in 1984. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com
Bob Turley, New York Yankees, Pitcher (1958)
This was the best season of Bob Turley’s career as he was an All-Star for the third (and final) time, and he would have a career-high 21 Wins. For the regular season, he won the Cy Young, and was the runner-up for the MVP. In the World Series, he lost his first start, but won the next two, aiding the Yankees in their seven-game win over the Milwaukee Braves. In the process, the Yanks became the second team to overcome a 3-1 deficit to win the World Series. It was all downhill for Turley, as he never had another 10 Win season again, and he retired with 101 Wins against 85 Losses. Eligible Since 1969. Although he was eligible, he was not on the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Larry Sherry, Los Angeles Dodgers, Pitcher (1959)
1959 was Sherry’s second year of an 11-year journeyman career. In the six-game series win over the Chicago White Sox, he appeared in four games, pitched in 12.2 Innings and had a 2-0 record with 2 Saves. He had a 0.71 ERA and a 0.789 WHIP over the Fall Classic. Sherry would have a record of 53-44 with 82 Saves. Eligible Since 1974. Although he was eligible, he was not on the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Bobby Richardson, New York Yankees, Second Base (1960)
The sixth World Series MVP finally went to a position player, and while it is not a Hall of Famer, it is of course a New York Yankee! Bobby Richardson was already a two-time All-Star, and he would go to five more over his career. Historically speaking, this was also the first, and to date, only player to win the World Series as the member of the losing team. Richardson would bat .367 with 11 Hits in the Series. While the Yanks lost this one, Richardson would win three rings with the team. He retired in 1966 with 1,432 career Hits. Eligible Since 1972. Richardson was on the ballot for three years and finished as high as 2.0% in 1972. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Ralph Terry, New York Yankees, Pitcher (1962)
Ralph Terry would only go to one All-Star Game in his career, which would be 1962. That season, he led the American League in Wins (23) and Innings Pitched (298.2) and was 14thin MVP voting. Terry was on the World Series Title the year before with New York, and in this championship, he went 2-1 with an ERA of 1.80 and WHIP of 0.766. This was the best year he had, and he played until 1967, retiring with a record of 78-59. Eligible Since 1973. Although he was eligible, he was not on the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Mickey Lolich, Detroit Tigers, Pitcher (1968)
Mickey Lolich had an up and down 1968, and was overshadowed by Denny McClain, who was a 30-Game winner that year. However, in the 1968 World Series, it was Lolich who was the star, winning all three starts with a 1.67 ERA. He would later go to three All-Star Games, and finished his career with a 217-191 record and 2,832 Strikeouts. Eligible Since 1985. Lolich was on the ballot for fifteen years and finished as high as 25.5% in 1988. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Donn Clendenon, New York Mets, First Base (1969)
A very unlikely winner of the World Series MVP, Donn Clendenon was traded midway through the 1969 season from the Montreal Expos and he would platoon at First Base with Ed Kranepool. Clendendon did not even play on the NLCS, but played in four of the five World Series Games where he batted .367 with three Home Runs and four RBIs. He played until 197 and had 1,273 Hits with 159 Home Runs. Eligible Since 1978. Although he was eligible, he was not on the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Gene Tenace, Oakland Athletics, Catcher (1972)
It was in the 1972 post-season where Gene Tenace finally won the starting Catcher’s job, and in what was the first of three straight World Series wins by Oakland, Tenace was on fire. He would bat .348 with four Home Runs and nine RBIs. He would play until 1983, winning a fourth World Series win with the Cardinals in 1982. Eligible Since 1989. Tenace was on the ballot for one year and finished with 0.2% of the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Pete Rose, Cincinnati Reds, Third Base (1975)
Pete Rose was at the heart of Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine, and he was already an MVP. In this World Series, Rose and the Reds beat Boston and had a .370 Batting Average with 10 hits with five Walks. Rose would help the Reds win another World Series in 1976, and the first for Philadelphia in 1980. He played until 1986 and would retire as the all-time leader in Hits with 4,256. Eligible Since 1992. Rose was declared ineligible by the Baseball Hall of Fame due to gambling on baseball. Ranked #1A on Notinhalloffame.com.
Bucky Dent, New York Yankees, Shortstop (1978)
Bucky Dent was never known for his hitting, but the three-time All-Star came to life in the 1978 World Series. Prior to that, he hit the Home Run tin the tie-breaker where the Yankees beat the Red Sox to win the AL East. He batted .417 with seven RBIs in the World Series, earning him his second ring, as he was with the Yanks the year before. Dent played until 1984 and retired with 1,114 Hits. Eligible Since 1990. Dent was on the ballot for one year and finished with 0.7% of the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Ron Cey, Los Angeles Dodgers, Third Base (co-winner) (1981)
For the first and only time in World Series MVP history, there were three co-winners. Prior to this win, Ron Cey was a six-time All-Star, and had already appeared in three World Series for the Dodgers, albeit in losing efforts. This year, he batted .350 with a Home Run and six RBIs. He played until 1987, and had 1,868 Hits and 316 Home Runs when he retired. Eligible Since 1993. Cey was on the ballot for one year and finished with 1.9% of the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Pedro Guerrero, Los Angeles Dodgers, First Base (co-winner) (1981)
For the first and only time in World Series MVP history, there were three co-winners. This season would see the first of five All-Star years for Pedro Guerrero, and in the World Series, he batted .333 with two Home Runs, seven RBIs and an OPS of 1.179. Eligible Since 1998. Guerrero was on the ballot for one year and finished with 1.3% of the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Steve Yeager, Los Angeles Dodgers, Catcher (co-winner) (1981)
For the first and only time in World Series MVP history, there were three co-winners. A light hitting Catcher but well-respected handler of pitchers, Steve Yeager had two key Home Runs with a ,286 Batting Average in the World Series. Eligible Since 1998. Yeager was on the ballot for one year and finished with 0.5% of the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Darrell Porter, St. Louis Cardinals, Catcher (1982)
Darrell Porter had been a four-time All-Star prior to this World Series, and in this season’s Fall Classic, the Catcher batted .286 with one Home Run and five RBIs. Notable, he batted .556 in the NLCS, and won the NLCS MVP that season. He played until 1987, and retired with 1,369 Hits and 188 Home Runs. Eligible Since 1993. Porter was on the ballot for one year but did not receive any votes. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Rick Dempsey, Baltimore Orioles, Catcher (1983)
For the third year in a row, a Catcher won the World Series MVP. Dempsey, who was never known for being a great hitter delivered on this stage with a .385 Batting Average and a Home Run in Baltimore’s five-game Series win over Philadelphia. Dempsey would later win a second World Series Ring with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1988. He played until 1992. Eligible Since 1998. Dempsey was on the ballot for one year and finished with 0.2% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Bret Saberhagen, Kansas City Royals, Pitcher (1985)
In his second year in the Majors, Bret Saberhagen won the Cy Young with a 20-6 record and a league-leading 1.056 WHIP. In the World Series win over the Cardinals, he would win both starts and have a stellar 0.50 ERA and 0.667 WHIP. Saberhagen would win his second Cy Young in 1989. The hurler would play until 2001 and retire with a record of 167-117 and 1,715 Strikeouts. Eligible Since 2007. Saberhagen was on the ballot for one year and finished with 1.3% of the vote. Ranked #65 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Ray Knight, New York Mets, Third Base (1986)
While it could be joked that the World Series MVP was really Bill Buckner, Ray Knight had an incredible World Series. He would bat .391 with an OPS of 1.005 with one Home Run and five RBIs. Knight was an All-Star twice and he played until 1988 with 1,311 Hits. Eligible Since 1994. Knight was on the ballot for one year and finished with 0.2% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Frank Viola, Minnesota Twins, Pitcher (1987)
Finishing sixth in Cy Young voting this year, Frank Viola ascended to the ace of the Twins pitching staff. In the seven-game World Series win over the St. Louis Cardinals, Viola started three of them and went 2-1 over 19.1 Innings with an ERA of 3.72 and 16 Strikeouts. Viola would win the Cy Young the following season, and he played until 1996, retiring with a record of 176-150. Eligible Since 2002. Viola was on the ballot for one year and finished with 0.4% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Orel Hershiser, Los Angeles Dodgers, Pitcher (1988)
Before 1988, Orel Hershiser was already the ace of the Dodgers pitching staff, but he was about to embark on the best season of his career. This year, Hershiser won the Cy Young while leading the National League in Wins (23) and posting an ERA of 2.26 with 178 Strikeouts. Hershiser would win the NLCS MVP, appearing in four games, winning one, and earning an ERA of 1.09. In that World Series, he won both starts against the Oakland A’s winning both games with an ERA of 1.00 and a WHIP of 0.722. Hershiser played until 2000 and would have a record of 204-150 with 2,014 Strikeouts. Eligible Since 2006. Hershiser was on the ballot for two years and finished as high as 11.2% in 2006. Ranked #71 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Dave Stewart, Oakland Athletics, Pitcher (1989)
From 1987 to 1990, Dave Stewart finished in the top four in Cy Young voting, and was the ace of the Oakland staff that went to three straight World Series (1988-90). 1989 was the only one of the three that the A’s would win, and in this year, he would win both starts against the San Francisco Giants with a 1.69 ERA and 14 Strikeouts. Stewart played until 1995, retiring with a 168-129 record and 1,741 Strikeouts. Eligible Since 2002. Stewart was on the ballot for two years and finished as high as 7.4% in 2001. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Jose Rijo, Cincinnati Reds, Pitcher (1990)
Jose Rijo and the Cincinnati Reds would shock Oakland in a four-game sweep in the World Series, and Rijo won both starts, with a phenomenal 0.59 ERA and 14 Strikeouts. The Puerto Rican played until 1995, and after a five-year layoff due to injury, he returned for two years before retiring for good in 2002. He would have a record of 116-91. Eligible Since 2008. Rijo was on the 2001 ballot and received 0.2% of the ballot, and appeared again in 2008, but had no votes that year. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Pat Borders, Toronto Blue Jays, Catcher (1992)
An unlikely World Series MVP, Pat Borders never had a season where he hat over 125 Hits and only had two 100 Hit plus years. Regardless, his bat was on fire in the 1992 World Series where he batted .450 with nine Hits, one Home Run and three RBIs. This would be the first World Series win for the Toronto Blue Jays, and he would help them win it again in 1993. He played until 2006. Eligible Since 2011. Although Borders was Hall of Fame eligible, he was never on the ballot. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
John Wetteland, New York Yankees, Pitcher (1996)
John Wetteland played two seasons with the New York Yankees, and this was the second of them. For the first and only time, the closer would lead the league in Saves (43), and he was an All-Star for what would be the first of three times. Wetteland appeared in five games in the ’96 World Series against the Braves, and he would net four Saves with a 2.08 ERA and six Strikeouts. He played until 2000, retiring with 330 Saves. Eligible Since 2006. Wetteland was on the ballot for one year and received 0.8% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Livan Hernandez, Miami Marlins, Pitcher (1997)
In Florida’s shocking World Series win, Livan Hernandez was a rookie, who was the runner-up for the Rookie of the Year Award. Hernandez was incredible in the post-season, winning the NLCS MVP (2-0), and he won both his starts in the ’97 World Series against the Cleveland Indians, albeit with a 5.27 ERA. Hernandez played until 2012, and was a two-time All-Star. He finished his career one game over .500, with a record of 178-177. Eligible Since 2018. Hernandez was on the ballot for one year and received 0.2% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Scott Brosius, New York Yankees, Third Base (1998)
Scott Brosius became very popular when he arrived in 1998 to New York. This would be his only All-Star year, and in the World Series he batted .471 with two Home Runs and six RBIs. Brosius played for three more years, and retired with two more World Series Rings and 1,001 Hits. Eligible Since 2007. Brosius was on the ballot for one year and but did not receive any votes. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Curt Schilling, Arizona Diamondbacks, Pitcher (co-winner) (2001)
In the regular season, Curt Schilling finished second in Cy Young voting to his teammate, Randy Johnson, which would be the same hurler who he shared the World Series MVP with. In this World Series, Schilling pitched in three games, winning one with an ERA of 1,69 with 26 Strikeouts. He would win two more World Series rings with the Boston Red Sox, and he retired in 2007 with a record of 216-146 with 3,116 Strikeouts. Eligible Since 2013. Schilling has been on the ballot for eight years and has finished as high as 70.0% in 2020. Ranked #5 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Troy Glaus, Anaheim Angels, Third Base (2002)
Troy Glaus was a four-time All-Star, two of which happened before 2002, and two after. In the Angels first World Series win, Glaus batted .385 with an OPS of 1.313. and three Home Runs and eight RBIs. He would play until 2010 and retired with 320 Home Runs. Eligible Since 2016. Glaus was on the ballot for one year and but did not receive any votes. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Josh Beckett, Florida Marlins, Pitcher (2003)
We think it can be safely stated that the Marlins are the most unlikely two-time World Series Champions, but that is sports for you! Their second World Series MVP was Josh Beckett, who was in his third year in the Majors. In this World Series, he would pitch in two Games, going 1-1 with a 1.10 ERA and 19 Strikeouts. A future three-time All-Star, Beckett would later help the Red Sox win the 2007 World Series, and he played until 2014, retiring with a 138-106 record. Eligible Since 2020. Beckett was on the ballot for one year and but did not receive any votes. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Manny Ramirez, Boston Red Sox, Outfield (2004)
One of the huge reasons that the “Curse of the Bambino” was finally eradicated in 2004 was because of Manny Ramirez, who was on year seven of eleven straight All-Star Game appearances. In the four-game sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals, Ramirez batted .412 with a Home Run and four RBIs. His controversial career came to an end in 2011, and would have 2,574 Hits, 555 Home Runs and 1,831 RBIs. Eligible Since 2017. Ramirez has been on the ballot for four years and has finished as high as 28.2% in 2020. Ranked #6 on Notinhalloffame.com.
Jermaine Dye, Chicago White Sox, Outfield (2005)
An All-Star in 2000, and later in 2006, Jermaine Dye would win his first and only World Series ring in 2005 with the Chi-Sox. In the White Sox sweep of the Astros, Dye had a Home Run, three Runs Batted In, and a .438 Batting Average. He played until 2009, and would have 1,779 Hits with 325 Home Runs. Eligible Since 2015. Dye was on the ballot for one year and but did not receive any votes. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
David Eckstein, St. Louis Cardinals, Shortstop(2006)
This was the first of two straight All-Star Game years for David Eckstein, and he had already won a World Series Championship with the Anaheim Angels in 2002. Eckstein batted .364 with four RBIs in this World Series, and he played until 2010. Eligible Since 2016. Eckstein was on the ballot for one year and received 0.5% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Mike Lowell, Boston Red Sox, Third Base (2007)
Mike Lowell finished fifth in MVP voting this year, which would be the highest he would ever finish. A four-time All-Star, Lowell already had a World Series Ring with the Marlins, and in this World Series sweep over the Colorado Rockies, he would bat .400 with a Home Run with four RBIs. Lowell played until 2010, and he retired with 1,619 Hits and 223 Home Runs. Eligible Since 2016. Lowell was on the ballot for one year and but did not receive any votes. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Hideko Matsui, New York Yankees, Outfield (2009)
Hideki Matsui was already a two-time All-Star, and with his MVP in the 2009 World Series, he became the first Japanese to win the award. In the six-game win over the Philadelphia Phillies, “Godzilla” blasted three Home Runs, had eight RBIs, and had a disgusting Slash Line of .615/.643/1.385, meaning he had an OPS over 2.000. He played in the Majors until 2012. Eligible Since 2018. Matsui was on the ballot for one year and received 0.8% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Edgar Renteria, San Francisco Giants, Shortstop (2010)
This was the penultimate season of Edgar Renteria, who was a five-time All-Star, who had previously won a World Series Ring in 1997 as a Florida Marlin. In the 2010 World Series, the Venezuelan Shortstop had two Home Runs, six RBIs and batted .412. Retiring in 2011, Reneteria had 2,327 Hits with 140 Home Runs. He was also a three-time Silver Slugger and twice a Gold Glove winner. Eligible Since 2018. Matsui was on the ballot for one year and received 0.8% of the vote. Unranked on Notinhalloffame.com.
Let’s update our tally, shall we?
Award in Question |
Percentage of recipients who have entered the HOF |
Percentage of recipients by year who have entered the HOF. |
NBA MVP |
100% |
100% |
NHL Norris |
90.5% |
96.4% |
NBA All Star Game MVP |
89.5% |
91.7% |
NHL Conn Smythe |
74.2% |
85.4% |
NFL Bert Bell Award |
73.7% |
71.4% |
NFL AP Offensive Player of the Year |
73.1% |
79.4% |
NFL AP MVP |
68.3% |
74.0% |
NHL Lady Byng |
63.8% |
76.0% |
NFL Defensive Player of the Year |
60.8% |
71.1% |
NFL Super Bowl MVP |
60.6% |
64.9% |
NBA Defensive Player of the Year |
58.3% |
56.5% |
NHL Vezina |
57.1% |
66.3% |
NBA Rookie of the Year |
56.5% |
56.5% |
MLB MVP |
55.0% |
60.2% |
NFL Pro Bowl MVP |
52.3% |
54.8% |
MLB Lou Gehrig Award |
51.9% |
51.9% |
MLB Roberto Clemente Award |
47.4% |
47.4% |
MLB/NL/AL Cy Young Award |
44.4% |
55.4% |
MLB Babe Ruth Award |
37.0% |
39.3% |
NHL Frank J. Selke Trophy |
33.3% |
36.7% |
MLB World Series MVP |
33.3% |
36.8% |
MLB Hutch Award |
33.1% |
33.1% |
NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year |
28.6% |
28.6% |
NHL Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy |
27.9% |
27.9% |
MLB Edgar Martinez Award |
26.7% |
17.2% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Designated Hitter) |
25.0% |
30.8% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Shortstop) |
23.5% |
52.6% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove |
21.7% |
36.8% |
NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year |
20.6% |
20.6% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Catcher) |
20.0% |
22.5% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Second Base) |
18.8% |
39.8% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Shortstop) |
18.2% |
35.1% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Pitcher) |
18.2% |
20.1% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Second Base) |
16.7% |
32.7% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Outfield) |
16.7% |
30.1% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Outfield) |
15.7% |
25.2% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Third Base) |
14.3% |
14.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (Third Base) |
13.6% |
14.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Silver Slugger (First Base) |
13.6% |
13.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Rookie of the Year |
13.3% |
13.3% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (Catcher) |
10.3% |
15.2% |
NBA Most Improved Player of the Year |
5.3% |
3.2% |
MLB (NL/AL) Gold Glove (First Base) |
3.8% |
3.2% |
NFL AP Comeback Player of the Year |
0.0% |
0.0% |
So, who is up next?
The following are the players who have won the World Series MVP in the NFL who have retired but have not met the mandatory years out of the game to qualify for the Baseball Hall of Fame:
David Freese, St. Louis Cardinals, Third Base (2011)
David Freese will mostly be remembered over his career for his 2011 playoffs, where he won both the NLCS MVP and World Series MVP. In Game 6 of the World Series, Freese tied the game to send it into extra innings. In the 11thinning, he homered to win it, and force a Game 7, which the Redbirds won. Overall, in the World Series, he had seven RBIs, the aforementioned Home Run, and a .348 Batting Average. He played until 2019, and had 1,041 Hits. Eligible in 2025.
David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox, Designated Hitter and First Base (2013)
This season would be the ninth of ten of All-Star seasons, for David Ortiz, which would also see him earn his third and final World Series Ring. In the 2013 World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals, Ortiz had the following Slash Line: .688/.760/1.188. Incredible right? He played until 2016, and would end his career with 2,472 Hits, 541 Home Runs, and 1,768 RBIs. Eligible in 2022.
Ben Zobrist, Chicago Cubs, Second Base (2016)
In what Ben Zobrist’s first of four years in Chicago, the Cubs finally broke their curse and won their first World Series in well over a century. In the regular season, Zobrist was an All-Star for the third and final time, and he would win the World Series for the second straight year, as he was with the Royals in 2015. In this World Series, he batted .357 with 10 Hits and two RBIs. He played until 2019 and retired with 1,566 Hits and 167 Home Runs. Eligible in 2025.
Steve Pearce, Boston Red Sox, Outfield (2018)
This was the penultimate year for Steve Pearce, who over 13 years would never have a 100 Hit season. In the 2018 World Series, his bat was on fire with a three Home Run, eight RBI performance with a .333 Batting Average. He would only have 572 Hits over his career. Eligible in 2025.
The following are the players who have won the World Series MVP who are still active.
Cole Hamels, Philadelphia Phillies, Pitcher (2008)
Cole Hamels led the National League in WHIP this year and in the World Series, he pitched two games, going 1-0 with an ERA of 2.77. Hamels also won the NLCS MVP. 35 Years Old, Playing for the Atlanta Braves.
Pablo Sandoval, San Francisco Giants, First Base (2012)
Exceptionally popular, Pablo Sandoval would bat .500 in the four-game sweep over the Detroit Tigers and the “Panda” would have three Home Runs and four RBIs. 33 Years Old, Playing for the San Francisco Giants.
Madison Bumgarner, San Francisco Giants, Pitcher(2014)
Bumgarner was on year two of a four-year run of All-Star Game years, and he would finish fourth in Cy Young voting. In the 2014 playoffs, Bumgarner was on fire winning both the NLCS MVP and the World Series MVP. In the latter, he went 2-0 with a 0.43 ERA, and earned a save in the deciding Game 7 over the Kansas City Royals. 30 Years Old, Playing for the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Salvador Perez, Kansas City Royals, Catcher (2015)
An All-Star for the third straight year, Salvador Perez batted .364 in Kansas City’s five-game World Series win over the New York Mets. He would also have two Doubles and two RBIs. 30 Years Old, Playing for the Kansas City Royals.
George Springer, Houston Astros, Outfield (2017)
This was the breakout year for George Springer, and the breakout for the Houston Astros, who won their first World Series this year. In the seven-game series over the Los Angeles Dodgers, Springer blasted five Home Runs, with seven RBIs, with a .379 Batting Average and an even 1.000 OPS. 30 Years Old, Playing for the Houston Astros.
Stephen Strasburg, Washington Nationals, Pitcher(2018)
In the regular season, Stephen Strasburg led the National League in Wins (18), and was fifth in Cy Young voting. In the World Series, he pitched twice, winning both games with 14 Strikeouts and a 2.51 ERA. 31 Years Old, Playing for the Washington Nationals.
You can’t win the World Series MVP, without making the World Series, and winning teams have stars, average players, and those who seize the moment. The World Series MVP reflects all of those players.
So, what is up next?
We are going to return to the ice, and look at the Art Ross Trophy, which is awarded annually to the player who has the most Points in a season.
As always, we thank you for your support, and look for that soon.
A few weeks ago, the Baseball Hall of Fame announced their 2020 Baseball Hall of Fame Class. The result was that Derek Jeter (on his first ballot), and Larry Walker (on his tenth and final) were chosen to enter Cooperstown. The two will join former Catcher, Ted Simmons, who was elected by the Veteran’s Committee. All three of those former players were ranked in the top ten, and have been removed from the list.
For the first time since we began this list in 2010, there is no new entry in our top 15. Actually, there is no new entry in the top 50. This should assist in clearing any existing backlog.
The new top ten is:
1A. Pete Rose. Following the bombshell that was the Astros sign-stealing scandal, Rose again lobbied for reinstatement in the Majors. His reasoning was that since no Astros player was punished, that logic should transfer to his own situation. That likely won’t happen, but he did remain in the news as President Trump also said he should be in the Hall of Fame. Since he is ineligible, he has the “1A” designation.
1B. “Shoeless” Joe Jackson. Like Rose, Jackson was banned from baseball, which is now 100 years old. Jackson was banned for his (alleged) participation in the 1919 Black Sox scandal where players were paid by gamblers to throw games in the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds. Jackson was a Hall of Fame worthy player, but as such his estate has to settle for his “1B” rank.
1C. Roger Clemens. Unlike Rose and Jackson, Clemens is Hall of Fame eligible, but the PED stain has kept him out thus far. He has two more years left and a big mountain to climb, but what looked impossible a few years ago, could be attainable.
2. Barry Bonds. Ditto for Bonds, and the only reason he is behind the “Rocket”, is because he has a slightly lower vote total than anyone than Clemens. The all-time Home Run king is in the same boat as Clemens, as they both are in the low 60s in voting with two years left of eligibility.
3. Lou Whitaker. Playing his entire career with the Detroit Tigers, Lou Whitaker was only on the Hall of Fame ballot for one year, but has appeared on the Veteran’s Committee Ballot. There is still a good chance that he could enter via that route and join his double play partner, Alan Trammell, who also had to wait for a Veteran’s Committee admission to Cooperstown.
4. Bill Dahlen. “Bad” Bill Dahlen has been a Veteran’s Committee Nominee before, and could be again. The surly Shortstop was a defensive gem, a World Series Champion with the Giants in 1905, and is still in the top 50 in bWAR for Position Players.
5. Curt Schilling. Had it not been for the mouth, political views and Twitter account of Curt Schilling, he would likely already have been inducted by now. As it stands, he is close with a recent tally of 70% on his eight ballot. Schilling has been on his best behavior in the last year, and with the weakest ballot in memory, he will enter Cooperstown in 2021 if he keeps his nose clean.
6. Manny Ramirez. Unlike Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens, Manny Ramirez WAS caught using PEDs and did so when the Baseball Player’s Union had an agreement with Major League Baseball. Ramirez has approached 30% in the last ballot, and statistically he belongs, but induction is unlikely as of this writing.
7. Todd Helton. Helton could follow Larry Walker into the Baseball Hall of Fame, and his Hall of Fame support approached nearly 30% on his second year on the ballot. Helton is definitely on the right trajectory.
8. Gil Hodges. This might surprise you, but one of the most debated players on our baseball list is Hodges. This is the player who has the most accumulated votes that never got inducted, and his name is synonymous with Dodgers lore.
9. Tommy John. Tommy John Surgery is actually represented in the Baseball Hall of Fame, but John himself is not. He has 288 Wins and 2,245 Strikeouts and he will definitely appear in a future Veteran’s Committee ballot.
10. Scott Rolen. Rolen jumped from 17.2% to 35.3% on his third year of eligibility, and while he was not a Colorado Rockie like Todd Helton, he is the one called the “New Larry Walker” based on belief that he will methodically work his way into Cooperstown. We agree with that assessment.
As you can see, there are no new entries in the top ten. There are actually, nobody new in the top fifty. The only two new entries are Mark Buehrle at #74, and Tim Hudson at #101.
This brings a unique opportunity for those who are on the 2021 ballot as the returning nominees will not be looking to be “slotted” below anyone new.
We are in the preliminary process of expanding our list to 300.
You know what we want you to do!
Take a look, and if you haven’t done so already, cast your vote and offer your opinion!