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Is he the first Jays HOFer? Assuming McGriff doesn't make it.
It's a good call. He won two championships with the Jays.
/Mets fan who's still carrying a grudge
Then again, he may be saved by his shiny 0.300 batting average.
EDIT: for the record, I think Alomar definitely deserves to be elected to the HOF, I just don't think he will be.
That is a bet I would take.
10 2B gold gloves
12 All Star appearances
.300 Batting Average
200 HR and 500 Doubles (i.e., not just a singles hitter)
2 Rings, with an ALCS MVP
474 Stolen Bases
1,500 Runs
10,000+ PA
So he could field, hit for average, hit for a little power, run, he was a champion, and his career has more than sufficient heft.
These are the notable guys in the election class of 2010, per the Cooperstown web site:
Roberto Alomar, Kevin Appier, Andy Ashby, Ellis Burks, Dave Burba, Andres Galarraga, Pat Hentgen, Mike Jackson, Eric Karros, Ray Lankford, Barry Larkin, Edgar Martinez, Fred McGriff, Mark McLemore, Shane Reynolds, David Segui, Robin Ventura, Fernando Vina, Todd Zeile
The ones with any semblance of a legitimate argument come down to:
Roberto Alomar, Barry Larkin, Edgar Martinez and Fred McGriff. No sure fire superstars there to overpower him.
At most, they may make him wait a year or two, but he is going in.
I also think he's going in, but he'll wait at least a year or two. The above credentials you list are similar to those of Ryne Sandberg. Alomar had more career value, but Ryno won an MVP early on and maintained all-star caliber play. Alomar never had a season as widely well-regarded as Sandberg's '84 and thus never had quite the profile.
Plus bouncing around from team-to-team might hurt - he's no one's hometown favorite.
Anyhow, I hope you guys are right, he definitely is qualified.
How about Chipper Jones, Scott Rolen, Matt Williams, etc.?
Well, Chipper debuted in 1995 and Rolen in 1997 (first full season in both cases), so Ventura probably had more value for the decade of the 1990s. But, of course, that's just a fluke of timing and a love of round numbers. Ventura's good enough that he warrants a look, but, having just looked at him, the only way he really gets close to actually deserving a vote is if you think his defense was historically elite. On the other hand, he's probably got a better Hall-of-Fame case than Willie McGee and he made 5% his first time on the ballot.
I'm looking forward to Alomar v. Larkin. They're both easily deserving Hall-of-Famers who, I think conventional wisdom says will have trouble getting in. I think most people around here think Alomar's going to get more support, pointing to the 12 All-Star games, 10 Gold Gloves, and .300 career batting average. Larkin's also got 12 All-Star games, but only 3 Gold Gloves and a .295 batting average. On the other hand, Larkin actually won an MVP award. I've said before that I think Larkin will do better than Alomar in part because the BBWAA doesn't like second basemen (compare Sandberg to Ozzie Smith, for example, or Trammell to Whitaker). But I'm really curious to see how they do in a head-to-head competition.
If you'r'e nice, Shaun Marcum might let you touch his monkey. When he gets one, that is. In a sure sign that spring training is almost over, Marcum and some of his teammates are interested in purchasing a monkey - likely, a marmoset
Unfortunately, director of security Ron Sendelli informed Marcum that federal regulations have prohibited the importation of said species - at least, this is what Sendelli says - since 2006. Marcum's response? "Maybe we can buy one when we get to Canada."
Marcum is apparently serious. It would be, he says, "cool" to have a monkey and as a pet and it's tough to argue that. It has become a cause celebre among his teammates, with no less an authority than the Big Hurt asking general manager J.P. Ricciardi if it would be - and I quote - "okay to have a clubhouse monkey."
Alomar is a HOFer, but I will always think of him as an Indian. I guess that's because I'm a Sox fan. I was surprised to be reminded how little he actually played for the Tribe.
If Trammell couldn't make it in for his great work pre-HR explosion, neither Larkin nor Alomar (Whether slightly better or worse) should be all that confident.
Not a good comp, I think. Alomar won more GGs, had more Silver Sluggers, more MVP top tens, and destroys Tram on the gray ink test.
He hit for average, ran well, got on base, and played great defense. It's easy to create a narrative for him - Alomar is the prototypical great second baseman. Sandberg and Trammell have to deal with the fact that they created value through power hitting, and that their power hitting, while great for an up-the-middle defender, wasn't among the best in baseball. The narrative there, it requires math. Sandberg at least had the MVP, steals, and gold gloves.
I think there's reason to think that Larkin has more in common with Sandberg than with Trammell, but he worries me. Larkin seems pretty likely to join Ron Santo among the best players not in the Hall of Fame.
Instead, the Hall of Fame exercises a great role in deciding the hugely symbolic hat.
this link indicates that MANY players have "non-identifiable" hats on their HOF plaques
including Johnny Mize, Catfish, Frisch, and Yogi (!!!)
YOGI!!
so I wonder if the Hall still does that
I think the Hall started interfering after Wade Boggs said he'd go in as a Devil Ray. I think the Rays were even going to pay him for it. The Hall stepped in, and made sure he went in as a Red Sock. There was some issue with Gary Carter wanting to go in as a Met I think, but he ended up going in as an Expo.
It was Winfield that did it - he basically sold his cap to the highest bidder (the Padres). The HOF said after that they'd take control. But I'd be surprised if they wouldn't listen to a player who made a case for one team over the other. They just want to prevent situations like Winfield and Boggs.
Modern metrics may indicate that the gushing was inappropriate, but the people who saw him and did the gushing are the people who are going to be doing the voting.
Well, kind of like Srul said, it's not the public doing the voting. It's the guys who've seen thousands of games and thought they were seeing a great player.
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