Hall of Fame Voting: A Closer Look
January 8, 2008 by Geoff Young
Filed under Hall of Fame
Okay, here’s the full vote. My thoughts below the table…
2008 Hall of Fame Vote
Player
Votes
Pct
Courtesy MLB.com.
Rich Gossage
466
85.8%
Jim Rice
392
72.2%
Andre Dawson
358
65.9%
Bert Blyleven
336
61.9%
Lee Smith
235
43.3%
Jack Morris
233
42.9%
Tommy John
158
29.1%
Tim Raines
132
24.3%
Mark McGwire
128
23.6%
Alan Trammell
99
18.2%
Dave Concepcion
88
16.2%
Don Mattingly
86
15.8%
Dave Parker
82
15.1%
Dale Murphy
75
13.8%
Harold Baines
28
5.2%
Rod Beck
2
0.4%
Travis Fryman
2
0.4%
Robb Nen
2
0.4%
Shawon Dunston
1
0.2%
Chuck Finley
1
0.2%
David Justice
1
0.2%
Chuck Knoblauch
1
0.2%
Todd Stottlemyre
1
0.2%
Jose Rijo
0
0%
Brady Anderson
0
0%
As promised, my take:
The voters finally stopped screwing Goose Gossage. This business about Bruce Sutter paving the way for him is absolute garbage. Gossage came first and was a better pitcher.
They completely dropped the ball on Tim Raines. There is no way in Hades that Jim Rice was a better player than Raines. Why folks in charge of this sort of …read more
Hall of Fame: Who Do You Like in ‘08?
December 26, 2007 by Geoff Young
Filed under Hall of Fame
I’ve been meaning to say something about the Hall of Fame for a while. To help us out, Sean Forman has created nice little reports for batters and pitchers eligible in the current balloting.
{democracy:31}
Of the new guys, Tim Raines absolutely belongs. Not sure? Several respected analysts have developed a web site that presents a compelling case for Raines. His biggest misfortune, of course, was playing opposite Rickey Henderson for most of his career. That and being buried in Montreal.
Of the holdovers, Bert Blyleven and Goose Gossage deserve enshrinement (and both are long overdue, IMHO). My guess is that one will …read more
Not Your Father’s Shortstops
May 22, 2007 by Geoff Young
Filed under Personalities, Stats and Analysis
Have you noticed the National League shortstops this season? These are not the players I remember watching as a kid — Bill Russell, Davy Concepcion, Rafael Ramirez, Rafael Santana, Larry Bowa, Tim Foli, et al. Sure, Adam Everett is around, but most of the other guys manning the position now wield a potent bat.
Cal Ripken created a big stir when he first came into the big leagues. Redefined the position, they said. Alan Trammell. Robin Yount. And later, of course, the big three of Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, and Nomar Garciaparra.
Those guys all called the American League home. What did …read more






