|
Post by El Pinguino on Apr 16, 2021 17:45:13 GMT
I took a look at the best 1st year ballot candidates to see who if anyone gets enshrined. Other guys like Uribe and Pagan were left off as there is no chance in hell for enshrinement. Here is my take:
CARL CRAWFORD- No chance in hell. Numbers simply not there. PRINCE FIELDER- Slim to no possibility. Career too short, nothing special RYAN HOWARD-Medium chance. The guy was amazing before injuries. all bat no D. Defiently not a first ballot hall of famer TIM LINCECUM- Dominance was far too short. Good pitcher but his decline really hurt him. Slim to no possibility. JOE NATHAN- Medium possibility. Great closer but not Rivera level. DAVID ORTÍZ-A lock, No doubt he was a roider but he did play in Boston so the media bias is working in his favor. Still, I have no problem with him getting in. JONATHAN PAPELBON-No chance in hell. He burned far too many bridges. JAKE PEAVY-No chance in hell. Sharp decline hurt his chance even though it already was tough sell. A.J. PIERZYNSKI- No chance in hell. Decent player, not HOF worthy. ALEX RODRÍGUEZ-Numbers would get him in. Roids and being the most despised player in the game. JIMMY ROLLINS- I like J Roll and he was on some great Philly teams but the numbers don't support him getting in. MARK TEIXEIRA- Medium chance. I only say that because he played in NY but he should not get in.
With Regards to the holdouts, I hope no one gets in.
|
|
|
Post by Blunashun on Apr 17, 2021 22:16:37 GMT
I'd have to agree with all of that. Have to add though that however unlikely it is, I would love too see Big Papi shut out for backstabbing Manny.
|
|
|
Post by Blunashun on Jul 24, 2023 19:22:04 GMT
LOOK: Fred McGriff, Scott Rolen have Hall of Fame plaques unveiled during Cooperstown enshrinement Two baseball legends took their place in Cooperstown's Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday By Matt Snyder 23 hrs ago • 2 min read The 2023 Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony was held on Sunday in Cooperstown, New York. The two player selections for this year's class were Fred McGriff and Scott Rolen. Both were present to give speeches in front of a nice-sized, live crowd in Cooperstown. Also, for the baseball nuts out there, both plaques were revealed. Most notable here was Rolen going in with a Cardinals logo on his cap. McGriff's cap was blank. Rolen spent seven years with the Phillies, six with the Cardinals, four with the Reds and two with the Blue Jays. He was on two Reds playoff teams and three postseason runs with the Cardinals, including two pennants and a World Series championship. Here's the plaque: The text reads: PAIRED ELITE GLOVEWORK WITH FORMIDABLE BAT TO BECOME A DOMINANT TWO-WAY THREAT AT THIRD BASE, NEVER APPEARING AT ANOTHER POSITION IN HIS BIG LEAGUE CAREER. FOLLOWED UNANIMOUS 1997 N.L. ROOKIE OF THE YEAR SEASON IN PHILADELPHIA WITH FIRST OF HIS EIGHT GOLD GLOVE AWARDS IN 1998. BLASTED THREE HOME RUNS IN N.L.C.S. TO HELP CARDINALS WIN THE 2004 PENNANT AND TWO YEARS LATER LED ST. LOUIS TO THE WORLD SERIES TITLE, BATTING .421 IN THE FIVE-GAME SET. SEVEN-TIME ALL-STAR AND INTELLIGENT BASERUNNER RETIRED AS ONE OF ONLY THREE THIRD BASEMAN WITH 300 HOME RUNS, 500 DOUBLES AND 100 STOLEN BASES. McGriff played for the (Devil) Rays, Braves, Blue Jays, Padres, Cubs and Dodgers with five years each for Tampa Bay, Atlanta and Toronto. As such, the blank cap makes sense. Here's the plaque: And the text reads: CRUSHED THE BALL WITH CONSISTENCY FOR 19 SEASONS, USING SMOOTH LEFT-HANDED SWING TO AMASS 493 HOME RUNS AND 1,550 RBI. HIT 30-OR-MORE HOMERS 10 TIMES, THE FIRST TO DO SO FOR FIVE DIFFERENT TEAMS. FINISHED AMONG HIS LEAGUE'S TOP FIVE IN LONG BALLS AND OPS IN SEVEN STRAIGHT SEASONS, 1988-94, TOPPING THE A.L. IN HOMERS IN 1989 AND THE N.L. IN 1992. DELIVERED HEROICS AS CLEANUP HITTER FOR 1995 WORLD SERIES CHAMPION BRAVES AND HIT .303 IN 50 CAREER POSTSEASON GAMES. THREE-TIME SILVER SLUGGER AT FIRST BASE AND FIVE-TIME ALL-STAR EARNED 1993 ALL-STAR GAME MVP HONORS. Both worthy Hall of Famers, it took McGriff a bit longer to make it. He topped out at 39.8% of the vote in his 10 years on the Baseball Writers' Association of America ballot, but the veterans committee this past December voted him in. He's now 59 years old. Rolen, 48, got 76.3% of the vote this past January in his sixth try on the BBWAA ballot. www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/rolensc01.shtmlwww.baseball-reference.com/players/m/mcgrifr01.shtml
|
|