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2023 Baseball Hall of Fame Class

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by Della9250, Jul 19, 2022.

  1. cyclingwriter2

    cyclingwriter2 Well-Known Member

    My post, and I think the idea behind the graphic’s creation, was to show that Rolen isn’t a borderline candidate as well as Mauer by showing who else is in their group.
     
    qtlaw likes this.
  2. Bubbler

    Bubbler Well-Known Member

    Here's the list of non-Hall of Famers most similar to Hall of Famers (per Baseball-Reference's top 10) who played from 1978 onward, my first year of following baseball. Pre-'78 comps to post-'78 HOFers are included, but not active players because ...

    [​IMG]

    Check your nostalgia and pre-conceived notions at the door and make your cases dorks:

    Johnny Damon (9)
    Carlos Beltran (8)
    Gary Sheffield (8) - Oh fuck off dickhead, nothing to see here, move on to the next one. (Fingers in ears, singing), "Come see what's Brewing, come see what the good times are. Come see what the Brewers are doing, come on and cheer a superstar. Be a believer in Brewer fever!" I CAN'T HEAR YOU AND YOUR INCONVENIENT FACTS!
    Tommy John (7)
    Lou Whitaker (7)
    Rafael Palmeiro (6)
    Carlos Delgado (6)
    Miguel Tejada (6)
    Dave Parker (6)
    Manny Ramirez (5)
    Jeff Reardon (5)
    Roger Clemens (5)
    Adrian Beltre (5)
    Paul Konerko (4)
    Jason Giambi (4)
    Jimmy Rollins (4)
    Rusty Staub (4)
    Luis Gonzalez (4)
    Torii Hunter (4)
    John Franco (4)
    Andres Galarraga (4)
    Sammy Sosa (4)
    Ichiro Suzuki (4)
    Matt Holliday (3)
    Aramis Ramirez (3)
    Ellis Burks (3)
    Jamie Moyer (3) - WTF?
    Dwight Evans (3)
    Andy Pettitte (3)
    C.C. Sabathia (3)
    Curt Schilling (3)
    Tim Hudson (3)
    Francisco Rodriguez (3)
    Joe Nathan (3)
    Roberto Hernandez (3)
    Doug Jones (3)
    Luis Tiant (3)
    Michael Young (3)
    Ray Durham (3)
    Jimmy Ryan (3)
    Julio Franco (3)
    Jorge Posada (3)
    Steve Finley (3)
    Vada Pinson (3)
    Paul O'Neill (2)
    Ken Boyer (2)
    Moises Alou (2)
    Adam Wainwright (2)
    Magglio Ordonez (2)
    Bartolo Colon (2)
    Billy Wagner (2)
    Todd Helton (2)
    Dennis Martinez (2)
    Edgar Renteria (2)
    Jay Bell (2)
    Kenny Lofton (2)
    Willie Davis (2)
    Jeff Kent (2)
    Lance Parrish (2)
    Kevin Brown (2)
    Orel Hershiser (2)
    Bob Welch (2)
    Jim Perry (2)
    Billy Pierce (2)
    Tony Mullane (2)
    Lindy McDaniel (2)
    Stu Miller (2)
    Gene Garber (2)
    Kent Tekulve (2)
    Sparky Lyle (2)
    Mike Marshall (RP) (2)
    Jose Canseco (2)
    Shawn Green
    Bobby Bonilla
    Reggie Smith
    Fred Lynn
    Frank Tanana
    Jim Edmonds
    Lance Berkman
    Ryan Braun
    Dwight Gooden
    Jon Lester
    Ron Guidry
    Jimmy Key
    Roy Oswalt
    Bret Saberhagen
    Will Clark
    John Olerud
    Bob Johnson
    Bernie Williams
    Adrian Gonzalez
    David Wells
    Todd Jones
    Chuck Finley
    Tony Fernandez
    B.J. Surhoff
    Jose Cruz
    Juan Gonzalez
    Bob Caruthers
    Carlos Lee
    Tug McGraw
    Roy Face
    Tom Henke
    Jeff Montgomery
    Robb Nen
    John Wetteland
    Todd Worrell
    Dave Smith
    Jason Isringhausen
    Ian Kinsler
    Chase Utley
    Ron Reed
    Tom Gordon
    Ron Kline
    Firpo Marberry
    Jose Mesa
    Gary Bell
    Al Oliver
    Ron Cey
    Brian McCann
    Bert Campaneris
    Dave Concepcion
    Tommy Corcoran
    Omar Vizquel
    Willie Randolph
    Larry Bowa
    Cecil Cooper - fuck yeah!
    Carl Furillo
    Cedar Cedeno
    Felipe Alou
    Cy Williams
    Gary Gaetti
    Bill Dahlen
    Matt Williams
    Milt Pappas
    Dale Murphy
    Don Mattingly

    For the record? Barry Bonds' comps are: Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, Frank Robinson, Alex Rodriguez, Albert Pujols, Ken Griffey Jr., Mel Ott, Rafael Palmeiro and Ted Williams. Bonds did not appear as one of Griffey Jr.'s comps, so he is not on the list, which means he's unique on a grand scale and undoubtedly deserving of induction.
     
    Last edited: Jan 31, 2023
  3. Della9250

    Della9250 Well-Known Member

    Going to get in via writers

    Carlos Beltran (8)

    Adrian Beltre (5)

    Ichiro Suzuki (4)

    C.C. Sabathia (3)

    Billy Wagner (2)

    Todd Helton (2)


    Going to get in via committee

    Gary Sheffield

    Tommy John (7)

    Lou Whitaker (7)

    Dave Parker (6)

    Dwight Evans (3)

    Curt Schilling (3)

    Jeff Kent (2)

    Francisco Rodriguez (3)

    Luis Tiant (3)

    Ken Boyer (2)

    Billy Pierce (2)

    Tony Mullane (2)

    Bill Dahlen

    Dale Murphy

    Don Mattingly


    Probably going to get in via committee

    Johnny Damon (9)

    Jimmy Rollins (4)

    Torii Hunter (4)

    Andy Pettitte (3)

    Tim Hudson (3)

    Jorge Posada (3)

    Vada Pinson (3)

    Kenny Lofton (2)

    Frank Tanana

    Bob Johnson

    Bob Caruthers

    Chase Utley

    Gary Bell

    Al Oliver

    Dave Concepcion

    Omar Vizquel


    Would be in if not for steroids

    Rafael Palmeiro (6)

    Manny Ramirez (5)

    Roger Clemens (5)

    Sammy Sosa (4)
     
  4. BartonK

    BartonK Active Member

    It's worth noting Johnny Damon's closest comps, per Baseball-Reference, are Vada Pinson (could get in someday) and Steve Finley (probably never getting in). I remember some chatter after Damon was released in 2012 that he was pretty desperate to latch on with one more team because he knew he had to make a compiler's case for the Hall, and he didn't have enough hits yet - he finished with 2769. He also wasn't liked in Kansas City after he left and, as I recall, wasn't liked in Boston after he defected to the Yankees.
     
    sgreenwell likes this.
  5. sgreenwell

    sgreenwell Well-Known Member

    Damon is a weird case in that he was good for about 15 years, with an OPS+ between 88 and 118 that whole time. Usually, a guy who's that good for that long will have one year where he smacks 30+ HR instead of 20, and elevates himself into the MVP discussion, but it never happened for Damon. Instead, he was a clearly valuable and rosterable player for a very, very long period of time, which is rarer than people think. It's probably why his similarity to most of that list of HoF is around .850 - he's like 15 percent "off" from being a slam dunk All-Star most of his career. As is, he only made the All-Star teams twice.
     
  6. BYH 2: Electric Boogaloo

    BYH 2: Electric Boogaloo Well-Known Member

    Damon was definitely desperate to get to 3,000 hits.

    He's an interesting intangible case. Were there five baseball players more famous than Damon in 2004? He also helped teams win, and win immediately, and win bigly. The '01 A's won 102 games in his lone year and then of course he helped end the drought in Boston and won a World Series with the Yankees (a Series highlighted by his double steal). Having seen so much of his popgun arm over the second half of his career, I also didn't realize he had such a high WAR. He definitely suffered from when he reached the ballot...eight HOFers elected by the writers, plus McGriff in his penultimate year on the BBWAA ballot, plus all the steroid guys and Schilling. If he's on the ballot for the first time this year, he's probably well above 10% and would have a longshot-ish path to induction.

    Alas, he's sort of finished going off the reservation in retirement, growing his hair back out (even though there's not much left on top--you're not Michael Bolton, dude), getting busted for hardcore DUI and parading around with his reality TV wife. Not sure that's going to help him emerge even as a candidate to be placed on such small ballots.
     
  7. Bubbler

    Bubbler Well-Known Member

    I think the most surprising name on the list, to me, was Miguel Tejada's repeated inclusion. I suppose it shouldn't be, he hit for power and average, but a lot of his comps were the HOF catchers, which is weird to me.

    Also, Jeff Kent being a little bitch is right on-brand. He was good. He is far from lock HOF good.

    The least surprising thing on the list was Dale Murphy and Don Mattingly having one comp each. Both great in their prime, but neither of their primes lasted very long.

    Nostalgia for the 80s is cool, but it colors objectivity. Dave Parker is probably the only everyday player left from my youth I'd advocate for*, and even I can see the case against him. He fell off badly (coke is a helluva drug) in the early 80s before recreating himself as a slugger with the Reds, but the Reds Dave Parker and peak Pirates multi-tool Dave Parker are totally different players. It's a weird resume.

    Edit: Also, Lou Whitaker, who was and remains criminally underrated. He was better, year-to-year, than Alan Trammell ever was (Trammell had higher peaks and most remember peaks over year-to-year consistency), who is very borderline HOF in my opinion.

    Fun fact: The only 1980s World Series champs that had more HOFers than the team they beat were the 1980 Phillies, 1989 A's, and bizarrely, the 1987 Twins, thought to be one of the worst all-time WS champs. Neither Dodgers team had a HOFer.

    * BESIDES CECIL COOPER! HE'S GOT ONE HOF COMP! SUCK ON ALL OF IT, HATERS!
     
    Last edited: Jan 31, 2023
    maumann likes this.
  8. Starman

    Starman Well-Known Member

    There are 23 shortstops in the HOF.

    https://www.baseball-reference.com/leaders/jaws_SS.shtml

    By the Baseball-Reference JAWS list (lifetime WAR) Trammell ranks 10th (all above him are In except for ARod -- who probably should classify as a 3B) and above 14 HOFers, so he isn't really "borderline."

    Whitaker's placement among second basemen is similar -- right near the middle of previously inducted HOFers.
     
    maumann likes this.
  9. jr/shotglass

    jr/shotglass Well-Known Member

    There are some names on that list which I'd never consider Hall material, but I'm about over those debates. Somebody is going to find stats that fit their argument, I'll find stats that fit mine, and we'll never reach agreement.

    Anyway, I'm a strong proponent of an exclusive sort of HofF, which disqualifies more players simply out of hand. OK ... Gary Bell will never speak "Hall of Fame" to me. That's one.

    If you turned on Curt and Tony on Saturday afternoon and Gary Bell was one of the starters, you were probably watching roller derby within minutes.
     
  10. Bubbler

    Bubbler Well-Known Member

    Problem is? Shortstop is a bizarro position in that some are in exclusively for glove work and some are in because they hit historically better than a historically weak-hitting position. There's probably no other position that has such wide extremes between the two.

    It doesn't surprise me that Trammell falls in the middle because while he could hit for a little bit of power (he only topped 20 HR twice, and one of them was in 1987, when HRs were cheap) and he had a very good, though not historically great, glove, he's a tweener. Good enough to make the conversation, but probably not the top 5 best glove or top 5 best power-hitting SS either.

    I made my first Comerica Park visit this summer. It shocked me how little they paid tribute to Whitaker. They have a fucking Tom Brookens exhibit in their tribute to each of their decades for crissakes.
     
  11. Della9250

    Della9250 Well-Known Member

    12 of the 23 shortstops were Veterans Committee picks.

    The writers put in Aparicio, Appling, Banks, Boudreau, Cronin, Jeter, Larkin, Maranville, Ripken, Ozzie, Wagner, Yount
     
  12. Starman

    Starman Well-Known Member

    Well, if you're middle-of-the-pack in a field of HOF players, I'd say that indicates you're pretty good.
     
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