Thursday, January 9, 2014

The Hall Of Fame - 2014

The votes are in and first off congratulations to Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine and Frank Thomas.  All 3 players are well deserving of the Hall of Fame and I personally saw all 3 of these guys play and they are no doubt Hall of Famers.

Greg Maddux is possibly the best right handed non-power pitcher I’ve ever seen pitch.  He could paint corners and freeze batters better than anyone I’ve ever seen.  The command of all his pitches was something I’ve never seen before and haven’t seen since.  It’s a shame he wasn’t unanimous choice (97.2%) because if anyone was a sure-thing Hall of Famer, it was him.  He won 355 games and owned a career 3.16 ERA.  There was a stretch in the mid 90’s to early 00’s that he was just unbelievable.  From 1992-2002, a span of 11 years, he posted a 2.47 ERA and won 198 games while striking out 1,903 batters and only walking 420.  That’s a K/BB rate of 4.53 and a BB/9 of 1.5.  Simply amazing.

Tom Glavine won 305 games over 22 seasons and while not as great as Maddux was a crafty lefty that always seemed to escape jams in his career.  He struck out 2,607 batters and had 25 career shut-outs.  He was great in the postseason, posting a 3.30 ERA and 2.16 in the World Series.  A 10 time All Star and 2 time Cy Young Award winner, he was one of the best left handed pitchers I’ve ever seen.

The Big Hurt, Frank Thomas, was a menacing figure.  The guy was 6 foot 5 and weighed 240 pounds.  He was a beast and could hit with the best of them.  I’d say top 5 first baseman of all time.  He was a five-time All Star and banged out 521 career homers and one back to back MVP awards in 1993 and 1994.  The guy also had an incredible eye, walking 1,667 times in his career, topping 100 10 times, 8 times in a row from 1991-1998.  His career slash line of .301/.419/.555/.974 is ridiculous.

Now to my gripes about who didn’t get in and the broken system of voting.

First, how in the hell did Craig Biggio not make it in?  It’s a damn shame that one of the best 2nd baseman of all time fell just 2 votes short of the 75% criteria.  With over 3,000 hits, 668 doubles, 291 homers, 1,844 runs, 1,175 RBI and a career slash line of .281/.363/.433/.796, it’s a crime he wasn’t voted in this year.  Not only that, but the man played catcher, 2nd base and center field, all three of the toughest positions on the diamond.  I really can’t fathom how they left him out of the Hall and hope they get it right next year.

The others that I thought should have been voted in were Bonds, Clemens, Bagwell and Piazza.  All are under that PED suspicion and taint but it’s time to vote those guys in.  Let’s face it, PED’s were part of that era and we can’t ignore it anymore.  Can we just assume everyone was using and vote the best of the best in?  It’s time.  I’m not going to say anymore about it, let’s just move on.  If baseball wasn’t policing it back then, why are policing the players now?

I guess that’s my biggest problem with the Hall of Fame.  Let’s acknowledge what happened and why it happened and move on.  My thing, if everyone was using, these guys were still the best out of all the ones that were using, right?  So don’t they deserve to be in there?  No asterisk or mention of anything, maybe a simple sentence that says, played during the Steroid Era or something like that but we need to get the best players in this museum.

Now to the broken voting system.  While there are no “correct” ballots and everyone is free to vote on whomever they would like, it’s the process needs to be straightened out before the whole thing becomes a laughing stock.

Here are my suggestions to make the process better:

Make the results public.
Every ballot should be put up on the BBWAA web site.  These voters are journalists and these journalists get to ask players, managers and executives all the hard questions.  They expect them to go on record every day so it’s unconscionable for them to conduct a secret ballot.  It simply isn’t fair.  Maybe some public scrutiny will force voters to consider their choices more carefully.

Who is voting?
In order for a writer to vote, the rules state that they must be an active member of the BBWAA for 10 consecutive years.  Once a writer gets a Hall of Fame vote, they are eligible to continue voting even when they are no longer an active member of the BBWAA, provided they become a lifetime honorary member.

So essentially, BBWAA membership is a convenient way to obtain a press pass that works at every stadium.  Media organizations simply elect a list of people, pay their dues and their BBWAA cards arrive in the mail.

You are supposed to be a beat writer, backup beat writer or a columnist of the BBWAA.  However, the guidelines aren’t enforced and there are plenty of BBWAA members who have a card just for the convenience and cover only a handful of games each season.  Others go years without even stepping foot in a ballpark or writing a single sentence about baseball.

The BBWAA should work harder to make sure members are actually covering baseball.

Increase the pool.
It’s not the old days.  Newspapers and magazines aren’t the only ones who talk about baseball.  Luckily the BBWAA has recently granted membership to writers from websites and bloggers but hy stop there?

How about we give voting privileges to broadcasters and baseball historians. Guys like Vin Scully, Bob Costas, Bill James, etc.  I’d mostly like broadcasters to get a vote because they see these guys every day of the season.  Let’s make it happen.

Those simple 3 changes would help dramatically and this year’s outcry over the system seems to be pretty big.  Hopefully the BBWAA will hear the critism and make the much needed changes.

If I had a vote this year, the following would have been my ballot (you get 10 choices):
 
Greg Maddux
Roger Clemens
Barry Bonds
Craig Biggio
Mike Piazza
Frank Thomas
Jeff Bagwell
Tim Raines
Tom Glavine
Edgar Martinez

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