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Saturday, January 30, 2010

Shaw: Kenny Lofton was exciting, but he will have tough time getting into baseball Hall of Fame

The impact sound of Kenny and the kasual glance…

Unfortunately for Kenny Lofton, there’s no “Most Exciting” category for entry into Cooperstown.

If there were, he might have slid across home plate in Seattle in Game 6 of the 1995 American League Championship Series and right through the door of the Hall of Fame.

Admission to the Hall, as Tim Raines was reminded yet again in the most recent vote when he pulled in 30 percent of the affection, is a far more tedious process for all but an elite few. Seventy-five percent of the vote is needed for induction.

The problem for Lofton isn’t that he was no Rickey Henderson. Nobody was. The pressing issue for Lofton is that as good as he was, he wasn’t Raines.

...A brief comparison: Lofton had 2,428 hits, an on-base percentage of .372 and drove in 781 runs.

Raines had 2,605 hits and an on-base percentage of .385. Raines not only drove in nearly 200 more runs and stole nearly 200 more bases but had nearly 400 more walks. He had 1,330 walks to 966 strikeouts. Lofton finished his career with more strikeouts than walks.

Raines played six more seasons, so that skews the numbers. But the point is if Raines is having trouble moving the Hall of Fame needle, even more difficulty awaits Lofton.

Repoz Posted: January 30, 2010 at 06:35 AM | 7 comment(s) Login to Bookmark
  Tags: hall of fame, history, indians

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   1. Darren Posted: January 30, 2010 at 05:04 PM (#3450562)
Did Lofton decide to retire or could he not find a job? The lack of interest in him as a full time player was pretty remarkable (sorta of like Raines, I guess). Guys half as good as him were getting multi-year deals while he was on a series of 1-year contracts.
   2. Lassus Posted: January 30, 2010 at 05:11 PM (#3450567)
My memory may be completely off (and feel free to correct me), but I feel like I heard all kinds of stories about how Lofton was basically a total dick. Could this have been part of the reason? Am I misremembering?
   3. RJ in TO Posted: January 30, 2010 at 05:13 PM (#3450568)
Did Lofton decide to retire or could he not find a job?


He received an offer, wanted a better offer, couldn't find one, and then found that the original offer was no longer on the table.
   4. depletion Posted: January 30, 2010 at 05:37 PM (#3450592)
To be fair, Lofton played CF and Raines LF except for one year in center. Lassus, I remember one account of a writer being nearly beaned by Lofton during pre-game warmups. Apparently he had his difficulties with at least one writer. Never heard of a teammate complaining, although I don't read the Cleveland papers.
   5. DL from MN Posted: January 30, 2010 at 06:13 PM (#3450611)
Honestly, I'm OK with Lofton taking the long route to the Hall of Fame. He has a marginal case (compare him to Edd Roush and Earl Averill) but a lot of it depends on his defense, which we all know isn't a simple evaluation.
   6. Lassus Posted: January 30, 2010 at 06:34 PM (#3450627)
Lassus, I remember one account of a writer being nearly beaned by Lofton during pre-game warmups.

Yep, that's the story. I can see how that would grow from one event to a general overall impression in someone's mind. If there are no OTHER takes of that nature, I can see how it might not be true. Then again, 13 teams in 17 season, eh.
   7. jwb Posted: January 30, 2010 at 07:39 PM (#3450672)
Chris Truby had a reputation for throwing at writers when he played for the Cubs. Of course, if Jay Mariotti (When and why did he stop attending games? I know Hawk Harrelson threatened to kick his behind at some point.), Phil Rogers, and Skip Bayless (or was this during the Bernie Lincicome era?) were all sitting behind first base during infield practice. . .

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