collapse

Resources

Recent Posts

Recruiting as of 5/15/25 by Jay Bee
[Today at 09:40:51 AM]


2025 Coaching Carousel by Uncle Rico
[Today at 09:18:50 AM]


NM by Mutaman
[May 27, 2025, 05:45:03 PM]


Congrats to Royce by Uncle Rico
[May 27, 2025, 03:16:38 PM]


NIL Money by MU82
[May 26, 2025, 02:10:16 AM]

Please Register - It's FREE!

The absolute only thing required for this FREE registration is a valid e-mail address. We keep all your information confidential and will NEVER give or sell it to anyone else.
Login to get rid of this box (and ads) , or signup NOW!


ChitownSpaceForRent

First I want to say congrats to Glavine, Thomas and Maddux for making the hall. Growing up Frank Thomas was far and away my favorite player and probably the reason im a Sox fan despite growing up on the north side of the city. That being said I hate the way MLB voters work. There is no reason Maddux should not have been a unanimous vote. Also I may be in the minority but I think Bonds should undoubtedly be in the hall. Even if he did take steroids it is damn near impossible to see a 90 mph fastball let alone hit one. Plus there were way more pitchers juiced up then hitters. I just feel like guys like Rose and Bonds should be in the Hall because even before Bonds ballooned he was still one of the best baseball players of his time.

keefe

Quote from: esard2011 on January 09, 2014, 04:13:56 PM
There is no reason Maddux should not have been a unanimous vote.

Maddux is friends with Tom Crean. There are consequences in life for bad headwork.


Death on call

tower912

Acknowledging my Tiger bias, but Jack Morris and Alan Trammel should be in. 
Luke 6:45   ...A good man produces goodness from the good in his heart; an evil man produces evil out of his store of evil.   Each man speaks from his heart's abundance...

It is better to be fearless and cheerful than cheerless and fearful.

keefe

Quote from: tower912 on January 09, 2014, 04:52:07 PM
Acknowledging my Tiger bias, but Jack Morris and Alan Trammel should be in. 

No question. The AL East back then was fearsome and the Tigers were a major factor. And Ernie Harwell (and Bob Ufer) could call a game.


Death on call

WI inferiority Complexes

Quote from: esard2011 on January 09, 2014, 04:13:56 PM
There is no reason Maddux should not have been a unanimous vote.

This could be a problem with the system.  Voters are only able to choose 10 inductees.  It's possible that some voters, (knowing Maddux was in, regardless), didn't bother voting for Maddux and instead used their votes on borderline players like Trammell, Raines, Jack Morris, etc.

Lennys Tap

Quote from: tower912 on January 09, 2014, 04:52:07 PM
Acknowledging my Tiger bias, but Jack Morris and Alan Trammel should be in. 

Morris was as great pitcher, the bigger the stage the better. He gets my vote, no question. Not as sure about Trammel.

keefe

Quote from: Lennys Tap on January 09, 2014, 06:31:57 PM
Morris was as great pitcher, the bigger the stage the better. He gets my vote, no question. Not as sure about Trammel.

Trammel and Whitaker were awesome together. The NL East had strength up the middle back then:


NYY:  Munson, Randolph, BFD, Rivers

Mil: Simba, Molitor, Yount, Thomas

Det: Parrish, Whitaker, Trammel, Leflore

Bal: Dempsey, Dauer, Belanger, Bumbry

Bos: Pudge, Remy, Burleson, Lynn


Death on call

MerrittsMustache

Quote from: tower912 on January 09, 2014, 04:52:07 PM
Acknowledging my Tiger bias, but Jack Morris and Alan Trammel should be in.  

The baseball HOF has become a joke. Gary Carter? Jim Rice? Bert Blyleven? Those guys are on the same level as Yogi Berra, Hank Aaron and Warren Spahn? Really?! Andre Dawson is my all-time favorite baseball player but even I can admit that he wasn't a HOFer.

I liked Morris and Trammel a lot but they'd have no business being in the HOF. They were very good players but let's not kid ourselves. Morris' career was most statistically significant to Dennis Martinez and El Presidente isn't going into the HOF any time soon. Trammell played 20 years and made 6 All-Star teams, which means for 70% of his career, he wasn't one of the 2-3 best players at his position in his league, yet he should be considered an all-time great? Not a chance.

🏀

The HOF needs to be blown up and started from scratch. There's so much bad in there it's ridiculous.

tower912

Interestingly, the same guys who say that Trout is better than Cabrera say that Trammel was the third best shortstop of his era, behind Ripken and the Wizard.   Better hitter than the Wizard, better glove than Ripken.   His WAR is off the charts.   And now, I officially feel unclean, because sabermetrics that I loathe make my point.
Luke 6:45   ...A good man produces goodness from the good in his heart; an evil man produces evil out of his store of evil.   Each man speaks from his heart's abundance...

It is better to be fearless and cheerful than cheerless and fearful.

brandx

Quote from: PTM on January 10, 2014, 01:08:31 PM
The HOF needs to be blown up and started from scratch. There's so much bad in there it's ridiculous.

It's kind of become the 'Hall of Very-good'

WI inferiority Complexes

Quote from: PTM on January 10, 2014, 01:08:31 PM
The HOF needs to be blown up and started from scratch. There's so much bad in there it's ridiculous.

There are only 211 members in the HOF elected as players.  Even if you disagree with recent picks--given that less than 1.1% of players are in-- I'm not sure the Hall has reached "ridiculous" yet.

MerrittsMustache

Quote from: tower912 on January 10, 2014, 01:41:07 PM
Interestingly, the same guys who say that Trout is better than Cabrera say that Trammel was the third best shortstop of his era, behind Ripken and the Wizard.   Better hitter than the Wizard, better glove than Ripken.   His WAR is off the charts.   And now, I officially feel unclean, because sabermetrics that I loathe make my point.

He probably was the third-best of his era. However, who were the other SS of that era? Barry Larkin (another guy who shouldn't be in the HOF), Shawon Dunston, Gary Templeton, Tony Fernandez. Not exactly a who's who of all-time greats at the position...though it was fun for me to rack my brain for 80s shortstops  ;)

Is career WAR calculated by adding up yearly WAR? I thought I heard that but, if that's true, it can be a very misleading statistic considering it would basically reward quantity over quality (i.e. 20 solid years > 12 great years).

WI inferiority Complexes

Quote from: MerrittsMustache on January 10, 2014, 02:07:13 PM
He probably was the third-best of his era. However, who were the other SS of that era? Barry Larkin (another guy who shouldn't be in the HOF), Shawon Dunston, Gary Templeton, Tony Fernandez. Not exactly a who's who of all-time greats at the position...though it was fun for me to rack my brain for 80s shortstops  ;)

Robin Yount was a very good SS for the first half of the 80's.

brandx

Quote from: WI_inferiority_complexes on January 10, 2014, 02:17:59 PM
Robin Yount was a very good SS for the first half of the 80's.

Downplaying it a bit, huh? He was better than very good as one of his MVPs was as a SS.

ZiggysFryBoy

how bout the Miami writer who lost his vote b/c he let deadspin fans choose his ballot?

🏀

Quote from: WI_inferiority_complexes on January 10, 2014, 01:57:11 PM
There are only 211 members in the HOF elected as players.  Even if you disagree with recent picks--given that less than 1.1% of players are in-- I'm not sure the Hall has reached "ridiculous" yet.

Okay, only the veterans and old timers committees entries suck.


WI inferiority Complexes

Quote from: brandx on January 10, 2014, 04:13:39 PM
Downplaying it a bit, huh? He was better than very good as one of his MVPs was as a SS.

Sorry. I meant he was orgasmic as a shortstop in the early 80's.  Better?

keefe

Quote from: brandx on January 10, 2014, 04:13:39 PM
Downplaying it a bit, huh? He was better than very good as one of his MVPs was as a SS.

Someone argued that Yount was only good but got into the Hall because of longevity. Frankly, I think there is nothing wrong with being good for a long time but at the end of the day 3,000 hits gets you in. The beauty of baseball is the metrics. Ask how many career rushing yards does Emmitt Smith have and you get a blank look. But baseball numbers stick and fuel the imagination.

714, 56, 60/61*, 2130, 2362, 660, 262, 755, 130, 536, 511, 7, 363/63...


Death on call

WI inferiority Complexes

Quote from: keefe on January 10, 2014, 06:44:20 PM
at the end of the day 3,000 hits gets you in.

Craig Biggio is the only player with 3,000 that I would argue against.  (excluding Palmerio).

keefe

Quote from: WI_inferiority_complexes on January 10, 2014, 07:07:40 PM
Craig Biggio is the only player with 3,000 that I would argue against.  (excluding Palmerio).

You don't think Biggio did candy, do you? I have always heard he was clean.


Death on call

ChitownSpaceForRent

Quote from: ZiggysFryBoy on January 10, 2014, 04:22:41 PM
how bout the Miami writer who lost his vote b/c he let deadspin fans choose his ballot?

Dan Le Batard. (has a really funny show on espn you should check out) People were giving him a lot of grief but his reasoning behind it made a lot of sense. He was also exposing the system, hopefully that will be a jump start to restructure it.

MerrittsMustache

Quote from: keefe on January 11, 2014, 01:48:24 AM
You don't think Biggio did candy, do you? I have always heard he was clean.

He doesn't belong in because he was never among the best of the best in the game of baseball. He was a solid player for a long time, but that doesn't make him a HOFer.

If you want to get into the PED issue...he looked about finished but then set a career high in HR at age 37 and then again at age 38. Take that however you see fit.

mu03eng

Quote from: esard2011 on January 12, 2014, 11:15:01 PM
Dan Le Batard. (has a really funny show on espn you should check out) People were giving him a lot of grief but his reasoning behind it made a lot of sense. He was also exposing the system, hopefully that will be a jump start to restructure it.

I think Le Batard is a blow hard antagonist...but in a good way, unlike Skip Bayless who just sucks at life.  I don't care for Le Batard's schtick but I do think he is general very correct in his opinions.  I thought he absolutely pointed out the hypocrisy that is HOF voting.

The biggest issue in the voting is the old boy network "making a stand" against PEDs.  Since baseball didn't bother to test until 2007 (NFL started in 1984 I think) there is no way to define the era's timeline.  I'm willing to bet there are a number of players that did PEDs in the Hall already, maybe not steroids but certain uppers or HGH or something.  If they feel strongly about this, then put something in the hall about the PED era and shut up about it.
"A Plan? Oh man, I hate plans. That means were gonna have to do stuff. Can't we just have a strategy......or a mission statement."

🏀

Quote from: MerrittsMustache on January 13, 2014, 09:11:06 AM
He doesn't belong in because he was never among the best of the best in the game of baseball. He was a solid player for a long time, but that doesn't make him a HOFer.

If you want to get into the PED issue...he looked about finished but then set a career high in HR at age 37 and then again at age 38. Take that however you see fit.


Couldn't agree more with Biggio.

And he played with these freaks:








Previous topic - Next topic