Welcome back, JM Catellier…and his “own unique statistical formula”!
Read More...The average 20th century Hall of Fame starting pitcher has 258.3 career wins. That number is dragged down by Sandy Koufax’ 165 victories, but he can’t be omitted from this exercise as I consider him the best starting pitcher to ever throw a baseball.
Former Boston Red Sox ace Pedro Martinez retired following the 2009 season with just 219 wins and only two 20-win seasons. Is it possible that he’s a first ballot Hall of ...
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1. JJ1986 posted on January 04, 2013 at 01:46 PM # hit 0 | hit 0Unlike last year, and the year before that and the year before that...
Nope, first ballot with any guys that could have even potentially taken steroids.
Okay.
Joe Sheehan said it well in today's newsletter:
He then goes on to mention that the electorate needs to change, because the change in media landscape has left too many people voting who are unqualified while too many people left out of the process are qualified.
And no, he didn't cover baseball in addition to his cartooning gig.
EDIT: The collection of his cartoons the year Andre Dawson was elected included a note about his voting for Dawson. It's the only reason I knew he had a vote.
Mosher is the guy who famously turned down Trivial Pursuit shares in the early 1980s. He had drawn posters to advertise the game, and the creators (some of whom he had worked with) offered him shares or $1000. He took the money. That $1000 was worth more than $250,000 a couple of years later...
To be fair with him, I once heard him say he happened to apply to the BBWAA to get a HoF vote and was accepted, for some reasons. That's not enterely his fault... He also happens to love baseball.
He is a very good political cartoonist, btw.
Not that I think there is anything to it but it doesn't take a lot to make the anecdotal evidence work the way you want it too;
Tiger's last Major victory - June 16, 2008
PGA steroid testing begins - July 3, 2008
"Ten bucks is ten bucks" -- Geddy Lee
I also enjoyed BoB Sherwin's repeatedly contradicting himself, and Jim Sweet saying the Hall should be about the elite of the elite, and then he voted for Morris and Smith...
Uggh...that is a horrible way to clean it up. Mind you I hate baseball writers nearly as much as I do lawyers, but you do not want to remove the old guard just because they don't have a current gig. These are the guys who covered the game while the players that they are voting on played, they do have a little bit of inside knowledge on the events of the time. Mind you, I agree that they need to remove the guys who may not be the best candidates, but I think that if you have a vote, and there is one player on the ballot who you covered live, you should continue to have the vote. Sure get rid of them once they don't have an active gig and aren't privy to inside information, but requiring them to be active in the past five years is a little ridiculous.
Doesn't a Denver newspaper have a cartoonist with a vote also? I think he's retired...but still voting.
They aren't voting on one player on the ballot, they are voting on all of them. i don't think it's unreasonable to say that they should have covered all of the players on the ballot live.
This would require a lengthening of the 10-year minimum BBWAA membership qualification, in order to cover players on their 15th ballot (20 years after the player's retirement) and short-tenured players on their 1st ballot.
It's really comical who has votes and who doesn't, and even more comical that the Hall of Fame doesn't seem to care. These guys aren't the only golf guys with votes. Bob Verdi works for the PGA Tour and before that the Chicago Black Hawks and Golf Digest. I'm sure he still has his ballot. I have no way of knowing, but I'll bet he votes for Morris.
I know of another golf writer on the west coast who hasn't covered baseball in more than 10 years who still has a BBWAA vote. He refused to vote for Bagwell last year, but at least he didn't vote for Morris.
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