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#1
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That HOF voting is such a joke. Seems like they do whatever it takes to put someone in every year so they can have a induction ceromony. These guys that go in after 10-14 years on the ballot and now all of a sudden they are HOF material. I agree Blylevven should be in there but what makes him go in now and not 14 years ago when first eligible. Same with Rice last year, on the ballot 14 years and last year HOF material. To me if you don't make it in after say 3 years your not HOF worthy. Your stats don't change. They are already set in stone the day you retire. Nothing about you changes. So 6 guys go in the HOF one year what's the problem with that as long as they are HOFers. It just ticks me off when I see guys go in after at least 10 years on the ballot. Get rid of the writers and do it a different way. The only good thing they did this year was to keep McGuire and Palmerio out.
Last edited by keithsky; 01-05-2011 at 02:18 PM. |
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#2
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That's cool, now I have another HOF autograph in my collection. I got Robbie Alomar's autograph back in the early 90s down in Florida during Spring Training.
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#3
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My two picks exactly
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#4
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Both are deserving.. It's about time for Bert, it was disgrace that he waited this long...
Anyways, someone earlier mentioned something about the voters making sure that at least on person gets in each year...Perfect evidence is that if you look at the old voting history, you'll notice that if no one was elected on the main BWAA ballot that they would do a "runoff vote" of the top 20 players from the initial ballot, with the highest vote-getter being elected. The last instance of this was in '67 when both Red Ruffing and Joe Medwick fell short with 72.6%, and then in the "runoff", Ruffing had 86.9% and Medwick 81%...But again, only the top vote-getter got elected in Ruffing. |
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#5
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Quote:
I may be wrong, but I believe in the case of Blyleven it was simply a matter of the HOF classes being strong in many of the years that he was eligible. He almost made it last year and he didn't face much tough competition in 2011. IMHO 287 wins, 60 or 61 shutouts, 3701 K's (which placed him at 3rd overall in the major leagues for a career when he retired) and his postseason play get him there. The times that he did play in the postseason he was a winner and prevailed. In the last 40 years not many pitchers ever possessed the devastating "yellow hammer" that Blyleven had in his arsenal. Although his win-loss record was not terrific (slightly better than .500), I wonder if it wasn't really more a function of the teams that he played on not scoring a lot of runs for him (ala Nolan Ryan)? The dude could pitch! Last edited by Scott Garner; 01-05-2011 at 03:00 PM. |
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#6
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Quote:
Basically last years MLB season help improve Bert's case alot, as far as forcing people to look at that inevitable truth....Who was the better starting pitcher last season. Phil Hughes: 18-8, 4.19 ERA. Felix Hernandez: 13-12, 2.27 ERA. or in '05 for the Indians... Was if fair that Kevin Millwood led the league in ERA with 2.86 and had a record of 9-11, while Cliff Lee was 18-5 with a 3.79 for the same team? Hell, Rodrigo Lopez had 15 wins for the O's that year with a 4.90 ERA. |
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#7
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Scott your right I agree Bert should be in the Hall. Even if the Voting was strong some years more than others to me should make no difference on getting in. It's based on YOUR stats not how great the others are your going in with. Say for example the year Ryan, Yount, Brett went in if Blyleven was on the ballot then, not sure if he was, his stats are the same then as today what makes him any better today than then. Not sure if I'm making any sense. Just my opinion. I think they just like to keep the guys going in to 2-4 whether your worthy or not. I just think it's a flawed system or a popularity contest.
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#8
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the vote is left to a bunch of wannabee's. All you need to know about a sportswriter is to watch them all now on TV. They are not the gods they think they are.
Cy Young did not get elected on the first try, DiMaggio, sorry Joe we thing you may have to wait a couple of years. Give me a break. The HOF has about 100 players now who do not belong. Add in the other so called HOF catogories and it is a joke |
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#9
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the vote is left to a bunch of wannabee's. All you need to know about a sportswriter is to watch them all now on TV. They are not the gods they think they are.
Cy Young did not get elected on the first try, DiMaggio, sorry Joe we thing you may have to wait a couple of years. Give me a break. The HOF has about 100 players now who do not belong. Add in the other so called HOF catogories and it is a joke |
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#10
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Blyleven, in my opinion, was a no-brainer. Career strike out totals truly are a solid indicator of a pitcher's greatness, and you only need to look at the all-time list to see this is the case. Blyleven had 3,701--you need to go down to Mickey Lolich at 2,832 before you hit a pitcher who isn't in the Hall of Fame (who has been retired long enough to be eligible). Blyleven is number five on the list, of all time!
Somebody commented on the proper exclusion of McGwire and Palmeiro though, and a few years back I would have agreed, but I have considered it often over time. The fact is, "cheating" has been a part of baseball since the beginning. There's a famous Rogers Hornsby quote: "I've cheated, or someone on my team has cheated, in almost every single game I've been in." There have been spitballers. Players have tripped baserunners. The 1951 Giants stole signs with a telescope. The old Orioles buried a cinder block (or did something similar) in front of the plate for the famous "Baltimore Chop." And, of course, there were the famous "greenies" not too long ago. My point is that you can't call the old times players nobler because they didn't do something that didn't exist. They cheated how they could too. I think steroids are terrible for the game and I'm glad there is a more concerted effort to stop their use. I think a single, a stolen base and a close play at the plate on another single to drive in the runner is a far more exciting way to score a run than a homer and a slow jog around the bases. But if Rafael Palmeiro had played ball in the 1950's he would be in the Hall of Fame, am I right? Not quite as confident on McGwire, though he was still crushing the ball back in his rookie days when he was lanky. Or, let's put it another way--who here thinks that, if steroids/HGH were available to ballplayers in the 1950's and 1960's, Mickey Mantle would not have taken them? With all those injuries to rehab? Anybody?
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Thank you, Jonathan Scheier Cataloger - Consignment Director Heritage Auctions (www.HA.com) JonathanS@HA.com 1-800-872-6467 X1314 Consign to auction at http://sports.ha.com/consign Connect with Heritage at http://sports.HA.com/Connect |
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#11
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don't forget the George Brett Pine Tar incident
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Collecting these Pre War/Post War Yankees/Highlanders Cards and Memorabilia 1960 Topps Baseball set Any other cool sports cards and memorabilia |
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#12
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I still think that they knew it was cheating and more importantly cheating the game or they would cop to it. What are they so ashamed of if there has always been cheating? If we already have cheaters in the HOF, is more cheaters a better thing? I'm on the fence.
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Check out my aging Sell/Trade Album on my Profile page HOF Type Collector + Philly A's, E/M/W cards, M101-6, Exhibits, Postcards, 30's Premiums & HOF Photos "Assembling an unfocused collection for nearly 50 years." |
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#13
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I think I'm gonna have to side with Jonathan on this one.
Now let's put this into perspective for anyone that thinks Bert doesn't deserve to be in. Tell me, nowadays if someone were to tell you that there's a pitching prospect that's gonna give you a 3.31 era, 3701 K's, 242 complete games and 60 shutouts over the next 22 years, what would you say? |
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