The BIG Problem with the Baseball Hall of Fame

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • Stop data brokers from exposing your information. Go to my sponsor aura.com/atbaseball to get a 14-day free trial and see if your personal information has been compromised
    The Baseball Hall of Fame has a BIG problem. One-and-Done players are those who get on to a Hall of Fame ballot, but fall short of the 5% threshold required to stay on the ballot. Some of them, a lot of them, should be in the Hall themselves.
    Chapters:
    0:00 Edgar Martinez
    3:40 Big Papi
    5:48 Lance Berkman
    9:56 Will Clark
    14:22 Jim Edmonds
    17:15 Kenny Lofton
    19:51 David Cone
    22:53 Joe Nathan
    25:50 Lou Whitaker
    31:40 Solutions?
    Music Playlist: • The Baseball Hall of F...
    @ludandschlattsmusicalempor6746
  • Sport

Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @Chicago-ed1ns
    @Chicago-ed1ns Před 4 měsíci +169

    Mariano Rivera being the ONLY unanimous winner tells me all i need to know about this stupid HOF and its voters.

    • @paleo704
      @paleo704 Před 4 měsíci +28

      I believe it was Bill Conlin who refused to vote for Nolan Ryan and said he wasn’t a HOFer

    • @Chicago-ed1ns
      @Chicago-ed1ns Před 4 měsíci +33

      @paleo704 ridiculous, Maddux was one of the best pitchers ever and he did it during the steroid era when everyone was juiced and he still didn't get 100%, stupid.

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 Před 4 měsíci +22

      Right on. Mariano was the greatest reliever ever, and the greatest pitcher inning for inning ever. His 205 career ERA+ is almost 50points higher than the next pitcher, who was Pedro last time I checked But he only pitched 1200 innings lifetime......Ryan, Seaver, Clemens, Neikro, Sutton.....all pitched about 5000 innings or more. You can't compare them! It's like giving a guy a unanimous vote because he was the greatest pinch hitter of all time.

    • @CC-rb1yf
      @CC-rb1yf Před 3 měsíci +5

      Yes you're right. It is such a joke. Do some never vote for first ballot players since none of the originals got unanimous? Which is a whole other issue because who didn't vote Babe Ruth or Walter Johnson to hall of fame? But obvious players like Ted Williams, Aaron, Mays, Musial, etc weren't unanimous?

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@CC-rb1yf The original hall was supposed to have ten players, but for some reason, it was decided to just go with five, then take the next five a year later….Hornsby, Eddie Collin’s, Grover Alexander, Cy Young and someone else.

  • @luishumbertovega3900
    @luishumbertovega3900 Před 4 měsíci +128

    I went from Puerto Rico to Cooperstown for Edgar in July 2019. On Induction Day a family that flew from Seattle placed their seats near me, they wore Edgar jerseys and had signs celebrating his enshrinement. They were having a photo session and when the guy with the camera said Say Cheese I couldn't contain myself and said, "Hey, why not say Eeeeddddgarrrrrr !!!" It was magical !!! They laughed a lot and had a great time taking photos. Afterwards the father of the family came to me, addressed the Team Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 jersey and matching cap I was wearing, shook my hand and in a sort of emotional way said 'Thank You, for him, he saved baseball for us in Seattle'. Needless to say, I was so touched I couldn't utter a word. A moment I will never forget.

  • @soapsatellite
    @soapsatellite Před 4 měsíci +55

    Honestly, the main that rubs me the wrong way about Hall of Fame voting is the way journeymen are treated, even when they have Hall of Fame stats. Like you gotta commit to one or two teams throughout your career or else you won't get in. It's like slut shaming for baseball.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +9

      That’s one way to put it lol

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 3 měsíci

      Such a player gets JUDGED as either being egotistical, a "clubhouse cancer", or an "mercenary", always looking for the better deal. In the olden days of the game, players were routinely "robbed" by other teams, until the respective league presidents put a stop to it. Still, many independent minor league teams were raided by the "bigs". The same "sportswriter" who'd change newspapers or publishers in a "New Yawk minute" for a few extra shekels.

    • @GOATexp
      @GOATexp Před měsícem +11

      “It’s like slut shaming for baseball” LMAO 😂 that’s wild af but accurate

    • @Hoscue
      @Hoscue Před 28 dny +4

      Not only that, but their qualifications seem to change every year. They also vote based on media relationships. Process needs an overhaul.

    • @cococock2418
      @cococock2418 Před 6 dny +1

      Slut shaming occurs because being a slut is objectively negative behavior, as is being a journeyman that no one likes.

  • @Katsos44
    @Katsos44 Před 4 měsíci +321

    When you hear the MF DOOM start up you know it’s about to really get going

    • @ocoop
      @ocoop Před 4 měsíci +14

      don’t forget madlib :3 he made the beat

    • @lukec6d9
      @lukec6d9 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Madvillain

    • @jjay__
      @jjay__ Před 4 měsíci +4

      Rip david dumille

    • @theworddistro9742
      @theworddistro9742 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Came here to say the same thing. Proper with the ALL CAPS too

    • @fbistatmajor5918
      @fbistatmajor5918 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Daniel dumile

  • @jon-eriksuermann9844
    @jon-eriksuermann9844 Před 4 měsíci +43

    I prefer team Hall of Fames over the MLB HoF anyway. Jim Edmonds is in the Cardinals, Will Clark is in the Giants, etc. The fans and teams these players played for can ensure their careers are recognized and appreciated.

    • @dnasty312
      @dnasty312 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Like Paul Konerko with the Sox

    • @jon-eriksuermann9844
      @jon-eriksuermann9844 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@dnasty312 exactly. I take it you’re a fan of him. Let’s say he does get in the hall one day you’ll hear him and the hall ridiculed for being the “hall of very good”. Personally that’s irritating.

    • @Chck314
      @Chck314 Před 3 dny

      right but Edmonds was CLEARLY batter than many who are in the HoF

  • @LoowheezeBreeze
    @LoowheezeBreeze Před 4 měsíci +29

    David Ortiz age 27 - retirement
    1953 games, 8398 plate appearances
    Carlos Delgado age 24 - retirement
    1953 games, 8397 plate appearances
    Their 162 game averages during their prime:
    Ortiz
    100 runs, 43 doubles, 40 HR, 127 RBI, .290 AVG .386 OBP, .956 OPS, 148 OPS+, 4.1 WAR
    Delgado
    101 runs, 40 doubles, 38 HR, 123 RBI, .283 AVG, .380 OBP, .937 OPS, 140 OPS+, 3.5 WAR
    One gets inducted in their first year of eligibility, the other fails to receive the necessary 5% of the vote to stay on the ballot

    • @justinmailloux3799
      @justinmailloux3799 Před 4 měsíci +2

      You can not tell the history of baseball without David Ortiz. His impact on the game and league was huge. He ranks 23rd all-time in RBIs, while Ortiz's .552 slugging percentage currently ranks 26th all-time with his .931 OPS ranking 38th. 541 regular season home runs ranks 17th all time. Ranks 12th all time in doubles. Tied 8th all time with extra base hits. So tell me how is the hall a joke?

    • @LoowheezeBreeze
      @LoowheezeBreeze Před 4 měsíci +9

      @@justinmailloux3799 First off, you missed the entire point of my post...
      Secondly, I never gave an opinion on the legitimacy of the Hall of Fame, I just stated facts...

    • @ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507
      @ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507 Před měsícem +6

      @@justinmailloux3799also failed a ped test and hung out every day with arod and Manny who were twice the player he was and didn't get in. Still a joke.

    • @GOATexp
      @GOATexp Před měsícem +4

      Okay I see your point BUT have you considered that Delgado doesn’t have as cool of a nickname as Big Papi and didn’t play for a super historic franchise? Those are 2 pretty big blemishes on his record /sarcasm

    • @ShellShockTay
      @ShellShockTay Před měsícem

      @@ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507 His pfp says it all.

  • @MC-be5gg
    @MC-be5gg Před 4 měsíci +129

    I think the easiest change would be to get rid of the 10 vote limit. Either the players are good enough or not. It’s an arbitrary number that doesn’t accurately reflect the caliber of players the writers vote for. There shouldn’t be a limit on the hall of fame. Players are either good enough or not.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +22

      I agree, a yes or no on everyone makes sense to me

    • @JohnSmith-zw8vp
      @JohnSmith-zw8vp Před 4 měsíci +2

      But how many of the voters actually USE at or close to their max of ten checkmarks?

    • @shanaeverowe9626
      @shanaeverowe9626 Před 4 měsíci +4

      I think the writers need to be held accountable for their votes. If you vote no, that's it your stuck voting no for him every year because again, the players numbers are not changing. I also think a rotation pool of writers should be used so that people don't do what those guys did to Griffey or Jeter.as for falling off the ballot, there should be a fan vote, pbly requiring a valid email address to prevent spamming, for players below a certain mark to get another year. The HOF is a museum, one for baseball fans. We should have a voice in this process somewhere

    • @JohnSmith-zw8vp
      @JohnSmith-zw8vp Před 4 měsíci

      @@shanaeverowe9626 Actually there isn't any "no" votes as such...you're not checking yes or no for each player. It's more each player gets a checkmark (yes) or no checkmark (not a yes). If that makes sense.

    • @shanaeverowe9626
      @shanaeverowe9626 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@JohnSmith-zw8vp yes, I am saying the changes that need to happen. Get rid of the amount of vote per ballot, if they vote for someone to not get in, that's it. That voter can't change their mind because the players stats are not changing. Voters who have had their ballots leaked have voted years for or against a player then changed when they were close to either magic number. Either the 5 or the 75. It's gross and makes the hall feel like a joke. So many players that should be in are not even foot notes in history.

  • @Rorschachqp
    @Rorschachqp Před 4 měsíci +9

    TL;DR - the HOF puts in players that no fan considered “famous” during their play time and at the same time keeps out the players that all fans consider famous.
    This is due to baseball writers voting, who have their own agenda other than how good or famous a player was. The fact that even players don’t vote on this until the very, very end is also counter-intuitive.

  • @userpage9641
    @userpage9641 Před 4 měsíci +103

    Glad someone FINALLY covered Clark.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +15

      Will the Thrill what a great ballplayer

    • @naterosenbaum4830
      @naterosenbaum4830 Před 4 měsíci +3

      One of the all time great Giants

    • @GizmoBeach
      @GizmoBeach Před 4 měsíci +3

      Will Clark destroyed the Cubs in that 1989 Series. He had the best swing until Griffey Jr. came along...tied after that.

    • @userpage9641
      @userpage9641 Před 4 měsíci

      @@AndThatsBaseballhe played the game right, and even during the steroid era, he was still a clutch power hitter while hitting for average. Love that dude. You should check out his podcast with Eric Byrnes. If Ozzie wasn’t on the Veterans Committee I think we would get in.

    • @userpage9641
      @userpage9641 Před 4 měsíci

      @@GizmoBeachtied for sure. Not better not worse, both hit home runs while making it look effortless. A thing of beauty.

  • @cracklecracklebaybay5612
    @cracklecracklebaybay5612 Před 4 měsíci +43

    As a lifelong Mariner fan, and someone who grew up watching Edgar, seeing him get the HoF nod was so satisfying.

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Edgar’s time on the ballot was quite a ride.
      One person in the media who deserves mention for making Edgar’s sabermetric case in those years is MLB Network’s Brian Kenny.
      Say what you want about him, but I don’t recall many media personalities outside of Seattle arguing for Edgar until he did (coincidentally enough around the time his percentages jumped).

    • @J.C...
      @J.C... Před 4 měsíci +1

      Same. But I cried when Jr made it. NGL.

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@J.C...Ken Griffey Jr. made it, and I was proud to watch the induction on TV when he did.
      But everyone knew he was going to get in there on the first ballot without any debate.
      Edgar on the other hand belonged, but it took awhile for those who voted to be convinced since the case was more sabermetric in nature. In a way it did feel more special that Edgar made it too, since he went through the journey on the ballot that he did, and was initially viewed as borderline.

  • @JohnB.6251
    @JohnB.6251 Před 4 měsíci +10

    Yeah, you didn't mention Tony Oliva - Rookie of the year 1962, 3 time batting champion, gold glover, 8 time allstar, got 8 hits in a row in a one day double header, and was the first designated hitter to hit a home run as DH. Slightly shortened career with bad knees, played 14 years until 1976. One of the greatest pure hitters of all time.Took them an eternity until 2022 to vote him in via the Golden Era Committee. Greatfully, Tony still doing well and was able to speak at his induction in his 80s. BTW, he still supports my favorite local charity: Crescent Cove Children's Hospice and Respite Home. A fabulous human being. One of the greatest pure hitters of all time.... - John B.

  • @OmegaTyrant
    @OmegaTyrant Před 4 měsíci +23

    Something you forgot to mention with Will Clark is that he played more than half his career with Chandlestick Park as his home park, one of the most notoriously hitter unfriendly parks in recent history that significantly depressed his traditional stats. Like in his 1989 MVP runnerup year, at home he slashed .325/.394/.516/.910, while on the road he hit .341/.420/.572/.992. Yet while the HOF voters for so long overly penalized Coors hitters (and some still were this past vote in their reasoning for not voting for Helton), they never gave an appropriate counter boost to hitters that predominantly played in pitcher parks. Alongside Clark, I also like to bring up Olerud, another contemporary well-rounded first baseman that was better than McGriff, yet also went one-and-done just because he didn't hit a lot of home runs.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +5

      Olerud is so similar to Clark, if I had more time I would’ve covered him too.

    • @davemartino5997
      @davemartino5997 Před 4 dny

      I always liked will Clark

  • @prgnify
    @prgnify Před 4 měsíci +14

    To me this shit is very simple. Accountability. If you get to vote, you have to explain why you voted for someone, and why you didn't.
    Make people able to vote either for or against - if they want to abstain they better have good reason, and then their vote is not counted in the total for a player to be excluded. "I didn't know enough about his career" is fine, but then that shouldn't be used to decrease a players voting percentage, you shouldn't count.
    But it would make it so much better: "why did you vote for player A to become ineligible in his first year?" and suddenly a lot of voters would start doing that minimum 15mins of research. Otherwise you might as well take their voting power away

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +4

      Agreed

    • @BootyWarrior555
      @BootyWarrior555 Před měsícem +1

      Some voters vote longevity, others care more for big time seasons.
      One of the voters, Rob Parker said he automatically votes a pitcher with 300 wins, batter with 500 hr, and or 3000 hits.

    • @OldSoulNewLife
      @OldSoulNewLife Před 4 dny

      Facts! Because we need an explanation on Barry Bonds .. he is the greatest to ever play. No question, nothing you take will give you hand eye coordination, or the mechanics for a homerun swing.

  • @danieljackett4193
    @danieljackett4193 Před 4 měsíci +9

    On the 2017 Vet's Committee ballot, Alan Trammell and Jack Morris were elected... Whitaker was omitted from that ballot because "a 10 player ballot should not have 3 players from the same franchise", yet Thurman Munson, Don Mattingly and Tommy John from the Yankees were on the same ballot
    In 2019, Whitaker should have been a slam dunk Vet's Committee selection...EXCEPT Rod Carew and George Brett did NOT champion Whitaker like they did Morris and Trammell 2 Decembers earlier

  • @SomeGuyIan
    @SomeGuyIan Před 4 měsíci +74

    I feel like the one and out needs to be changed. Give them three years to fully determine if they belong. That would mean an increase of the percentage to stay on would also happen. Maybe have it at 10 or 15%. With the increase in the ballot names, some players may be off ballots. You mentioned Werth and Weaver getting in last years ballot even though they shouldn't. Those type of players could be one and done or removed from the ballot entirely.
    TLDR; Move the 5%(or more) cutoff to three years. If a player gets no votes in their 1st year, they are one and done.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +16

      Idk if a systemic change is needed as much as a change in how writers vote. Like I say at the end of the vid, they should be actually looking into every player's data and how it stacks up vs other candidates and HoFers, not just voting based on how they remember guys. It's very clear that's how most voters do it.

    • @kingrama2727
      @kingrama2727 Před 4 měsíci +2

      At least 2 years… It’s a crime that Kenny Lofton fell off after 1 year

    • @ZChoate
      @ZChoate Před 4 měsíci +1

      Edmonds too.

  • @bob8776
    @bob8776 Před 4 měsíci +16

    I think the Edmonds/Rolen debate shows that the difference between a great player and a HOF player isn’t a well defined line but rather a hazy gray area that is constantly expanding and contracting depending on how and what stats are valued

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 3 měsíci

      Rolen isn't HoF worthy, PERIOD. Hall of the damned good, but that's all.

    • @bob8776
      @bob8776 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I guess saying period in all caps means the conversation is over and everyone else is wrong 😂

    • @sir.muffiniii7011
      @sir.muffiniii7011 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@selfdohow? He has 70 WAR, and all of his WAR stats are on par with other HOF 3rd baseman, and so is his HOF monitor, not to mention one of the greatest defensive third baseman ever, 7 all stars, won a World Series, 300 homers, 2000 hits, .285 BA, and at his peak he averaged 172 hits, 33 homers, 117 RBI, walked a decent amount, and had an OPS over .900 in his 7 year prime, that’s a HOFer to me

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 2 měsíci

      @@sir.muffiniii7011 Then Jeff Kent ought to have been a first ballot shoo-in. But there's no logic east of the Appalachians anymore.

    • @sir.muffiniii7011
      @sir.muffiniii7011 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@selfdo Jeff Kent should’ve 100% been in the HOF, he has the most home runs out of any 2nd baseman ever

  • @kingoftickets
    @kingoftickets Před 4 měsíci +6

    We don’t know who all the PED players were and weren’t.

  • @andrewsells3420
    @andrewsells3420 Před 4 měsíci +29

    Been an Astros fan my whole life, watching Berkman getting left off genuinely hurt ngl, he was a huge piece of our team for years and I wish he got more recognition.

    • @erickennedy8534
      @erickennedy8534 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Berkman was better than that overrated Biggo.

    • @twostop6895
      @twostop6895 Před 4 měsíci +1

      funny thing is Berkman could not win the World Series with the Astros but won it with the Cardinals in 2011, he even helped us in extra innings of the David Freese comeback in game 6

    • @thareelhelloagain
      @thareelhelloagain Před 4 měsíci +4

      How does it feel to be a fan of the most fraudulent "championship" team of all time?

    • @mediocregameplays6612
      @mediocregameplays6612 Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@erickennedy8534this has to be rage bait right? Right?

    • @Theorpo
      @Theorpo Před 4 měsíci +4

      ​@@mediocregameplays6612it probably is (hopefully) but you would be surprised how many people still are butthurt after 7 years.

  • @KTF0
    @KTF0 Před 3 měsíci +2

    One thing that I notice is having a bad second half of your career without making any of the old thresholds you are not making it. Andruw Jones would've make it if he retired early.

  • @efrenvega8158
    @efrenvega8158 Před 3 měsíci +74

    To me, the biggest hipocrisy is to not vote for some "so-called" steroid guys based on hearsay, suspicion, assumption but no positive test, yet vote in a guy like Ortiz who DID test positive. That he did before it was "illegal" sure, but he CLEARLY cheated too.

    • @Edit.575
      @Edit.575 Před měsícem +9

      I’ve always said this. You’re 100% right. Ever since Ortiz got in I have looked at Baseball HOF differently. It’s the only sport that hates on it’s GOATs

    • @lankyrob6369
      @lankyrob6369 Před měsícem +2

      Thats a baseball and ethics problem...
      You have to punish the 'roiders. Enjoy their success... but in the end you cant get enshrined if you are tainted.

    • @kevinbeazy
      @kevinbeazy Před měsícem

      It makes perfect sense actually

    • @kevinbeazy
      @kevinbeazy Před měsícem +1

      @@lankyrob6369well said

    • @wind_runner6836
      @wind_runner6836 Před měsícem

      All roids people even speculated should be out there is integrity to this game I am sorry some don't have that same integrity. The vast majority of the speculation is legit known and credible. And the ones in shouldnt be.

  • @Tykoon22
    @Tykoon22 Před 4 měsíci +21

    The issue of prestige/premium positions has always bothered me… For example, everyone knows about the 500 home run threshold, that is, if a player hits 500+ home runs in their career, they are a lock for the Hall of Fame. That’s great for a power hitting 1B, but how many 2B are going to hit that number? Almost none because that’s not the kind of player they are, that’s not what they do. 300 wins for a pitcher is an automatic ticket to Cooperstown -- good luck to any and all relievers out there. I know there’s a lot less of that antiquated thinking these days and the Hall of Fame criteria, writers/voters opinions, player eligibility, etc. is all slowly coming around and becoming more modernized in both their thoughts and actions, but there’s still so much more to be done, so many wrongs still yet to be righted and I think this video is a perfect illustration of that.

    • @alexisborden3191
      @alexisborden3191 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I mean, I feel like the induction of Ortiz and struggle for induction of Billy Wagner kind of illustrates that the voters still have these issues. I mean, however you cut it, Wagner is at best the 2nd all time reliever, and at worst the 4th or 5th, yet he's going on his what 8th or 9th year on the ballot? Meanwhile Ortiz is a 1st ballot HOF at 55 bWAR, yet Walker has 72 and sneaks in on his 10th year, Rolen sneaks in with 70, Helton still isn't in with 61. I think the voters respect relievers even less than they used to, I mean say what you will about handing out Cy Youngs and MVPs to Fingers, Eckersley, or Hernandez. At least the best relievers of their eras generally like Eckersley or Fingers or Sutter or Smith, they're in, but a guy like Wagner, who I'd argue is better than all of them, might not get it? What is this nonsense?

    • @zackaryhaselius2226
      @zackaryhaselius2226 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Thats my biggest issue with the HOF is the lack of Relievers and 2nd basemen. Jeff Kent isnt in the HOF for what reason? Hes the best power hitting 2nd baseman of all time! And its not like he hit .220 or something. A career average of .292. He even won an MVP. Just because these guys numbers dont stand up to other HOF power hitters like an Ortiz or Jim Thome etc, doesnt mean they arent good enough. Yeah there shouldnt be alot of them in the HOF, but they should still be represented. Only Jose Altuve has a clear cut HOF case for active 2nd basemen and he has a scandle to deal with. So put the guys in who deserve it.

    • @georgeprchal3924
      @georgeprchal3924 Před 4 měsíci

      Tell that to Gary Sheffield.

    • @alexisborden3191
      @alexisborden3191 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@georgeprchal3924 Gary is a previous generation of player, and he's not in the hall because he's in the mitchell report not because voters are judging him by inflated standards.

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 3 měsíci

      @@alexisborden3191 The Mitchell report is a FRAUD. It's never be admissible as evidence in any legal proceeding. Basing judgement of players based on the opportunism of some corrupt HACK Senator reveals an IGNORANCE not worthy to even explain.

  • @LiNK52500
    @LiNK52500 Před 4 měsíci +14

    As an Astros fan I've been saying for years that Berkman is a HOFer and he got snubbed on the first try.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +9

      His 2011 with STL seals the deal for me. If he didn't do anything after leaving Houston, I think he'd be firmly in Hall of Very Good territory. Having an elite renaissance season then having one of the best postseasons ever en route to a title doesn't get enough credit.

    • @LiNK52500
      @LiNK52500 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@AndThatsBaseball thanks for shining light on these snub cases, love your content, keep up the great work!

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci

      Glad you enjoy!

    • @TheTEN24
      @TheTEN24 Před 4 měsíci

      I didn’t realize he never got a 2nd ballot which is ridiculous. I know as a Mets fan I’m annoyed enough Wright might not make a second ballot.

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci

      The now defunct Hall of Stats lists Berkman as a deserving inductee

  • @luxace2576
    @luxace2576 Před 4 měsíci +14

    Todd Helton should be in the HOF

  • @chemBTW
    @chemBTW Před 4 měsíci +28

    will clark has always been my favorite baseball player of all time. thank you for covering him. 🙏

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +6

      Great player who gets so little mainstream coverage

    • @MrListen2meplez
      @MrListen2meplez Před 4 měsíci +4

      Well said, Will “The Thrill” Clark was arguably the eras most exciting player and didn’t disappoint…an obvious Hall of Famer by any reasonable minded fan and peer…

    • @chemBTW
      @chemBTW Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@MrListen2meplez jon miller put it nicely in a 3 part series about will the thrill on the official giants youtube channel. you can argue the hall was made for guys like will clark. do his stats JUMP off the page? no. but in the bottom of the 9th with the game on the line, YOU WANT #22 at the plate. every single ballplayer that played with or against him will attest to this. if he's on the opposite team, thats the last guy you want to see at bat with the bases loaded or in a critical spot for the game. time and time again he delivered in these situations.

    • @alaskaguyd963
      @alaskaguyd963 Před 4 měsíci

      @@chemBTW Clark's my favorite player of all time but the LAST guy you want to see up with runners on and the game on the line is David Ortiz.

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 2 měsíci

      @@chemBTW Had the pleasure of seeing it happen OFTEN.

  • @flame-sky7148
    @flame-sky7148 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Glad you mentioned Whitaker, if they're gonna put Alan Trammel in, then Whitaker should be in as well, as he had a higher WAR. The best double play duo in the history of the game. But the real problem with the baseball hall of same is not having a player such as Albert Belle not in. I know he was a head case, but his injury took him out of the game like Puckett and Koufax. The guy averaged 40 hrs per 162 games.

  • @zkarekrow83
    @zkarekrow83 Před 4 měsíci +3

    It's really crazy that Andrew Jones is on his way in and Edmonds didn't even get past the 1st ballot.

  • @Lex2real33
    @Lex2real33 Před 4 měsíci +6

    What about José Canseco? First 40/ 40 ,3 consecutive A.L championships , 2 world series titles, rookie of the year, Unanimous A.L M.VP...

    • @MrLatrunks14
      @MrLatrunks14 Před 4 měsíci +2

      The Godfather of the Steroids era?

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@MrLatrunks14 He'd been snubbed ANYWAY. Jose was the sportswriters "whipping boy", and his immature antics didn't help. But the guy was a MONSTER on the field, with a HOWTIZER for a bat, and FAST for such a big galoot.

    • @allhydraulics1202
      @allhydraulics1202 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Canseco should have been a shoe in

    • @gunsntposes7133
      @gunsntposes7133 Před 2 měsíci

      @@selfdoCanseco was terrible defensively and didn’t start performing well until he got on the juice. If we’re not letting steroid users in the hall, he doesn’t deserve to be there either

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 2 měsíci

      @@gunsntposes7133 And when do you suppose that Jose "Can-Stink-O" (don't claim credit for the term) began "juicing"? He was never that good in the outfield, which was sort of baffling, because he had speed (having become a 40-40 man in 1988), and a decent arm (he tried his hand at pitching, THAT didn't go well), but just didn't seem to have the instincts for fielding.
      Canseco performed very well at the plate and was a threat to steal early in his career, so I don't know where you get this notion that he was some mediocre player made a star by steroids. He did confess to using them, which was hardly a surprise.

  • @hailmaryrecordings8255
    @hailmaryrecordings8255 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I was lucky enough to have a girlfriend who worked for the Mariners when I was going to school in Seattle during the early-mid 90’s.
    I saw Edgar hit A LOT at the Kingdome & that whole Mariner team was pretty exiting in 94-96.
    It was a magical-time in that city, for many reasons.

  • @yokaidigital3033
    @yokaidigital3033 Před 4 měsíci +6

    I remember the hill catch in Houston, I was living in Texas at the time and followed both the Astros and Rangers a ton. I think the video hits it on the mark about him not having a position. He was an okay outfielder, an okay first baseman but not great at either. When looking at his former team for majority of career Houston their two legends Craig Biggio and Jeff Bagwell had well defined positions. Craig was a second baseman, and Jeff was their first baseman. They also didn’t move around spending their entire careers as Astros. Edgar was always a Mariner, arguably the best Mariner though there are a few others in discussion such as Ichiro. But point is when you think Seattle you think of Edgar Martinez, David Ortiz while didn’t start at Boston that’s where he broke out and so he is forever remembered as a Red Sox.

  • @MrBentheretwo
    @MrBentheretwo Před 4 měsíci +3

    If your popular on a winning team and played a lot of years your numbers are secondary if not even part of the decision

  • @joesavary6081
    @joesavary6081 Před 4 měsíci +21

    Where is Bernie Williams? As a lifelong Jays fan, he was one of those players I'd rather be on our team. He was clutch, and respected. If needlegaters can go on the ballot, why isn't Bernie there yet?

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Coincidentally enough he also fell off the ballot in 2013, the same year Lofton went one and done.
      He probably wasn’t mentioned because he made it to 5% once.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +3

      He fell off his second ballot

    • @stephenm8725
      @stephenm8725 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Bernie was definately a solid player all around. He got overshadowed by the talent surrounding him on those title winning Yankees teams. Maybe, JUST kinda missing those numbers of HOF level, but I would argue he had a lot of other accolades that should at least merit some HOF consideration

    • @thekendemetrishow
      @thekendemetrishow Před 4 měsíci +1

      Bernie has a stronger case than Posada or even Mattingly but at no point HERE IN NEW YORK did Bernie feel like a hall of fame caliber player. I think that’s at least in part because of his quiet shy demeanor but for the first 3 years they weren’t even sure he was better than Gerald Williams. Plus he wasn’t a traditional power hitter even without the juice heads, if you consider him one at all, playing CF in Yankee Stadium, which definitely hurt his perception. As a fan I was absolutely confused by his entire run hitting cleanup.

    • @KDestroyer9
      @KDestroyer9 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Oh hey, speaking of the Jays, Dave Stieb! 1.4% iirc on his only ballot. Really? Secret Base's 4 videos on him are fantastic looks into how great he was.

  • @joemarshall4226
    @joemarshall4226 Před 4 měsíci +4

    The most important stat is On Base Percentage. A distant second to it is Slugging Percentage. But both stats need to be considered in the context of the time they were made. OPS+ is great because it adds up both stats, then normalizes them based on the time and the park that the player played in. ERA+ is similar for pitchers...normalizing ERA for era and park effects. The problem is that OPS+ is weighted too heavily toward the slugging, rather than the OBP. So look at the OPS+ first, then look at the OBP and SP individually, to see which is the stronger. If you do this, you realize how great Edgar Martinez was. A .418 OBP is just extraordinary, regardless fo the era, and he also had a .500+ slugging. The man was a hit machine with a great eye. And his career batting average was 318!

    • @Chck314
      @Chck314 Před 3 dny +1

      another stat where Edmonds excelled

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 Před dnem

      @@Chck314 Edmonds career OBP was .376...very good. Edgar Martinez'z was .418 FOUR EIGHTEEN for an entire CAREER! Edmonds hit that number once, and only made it over .400 a couple of other times. Only a handful of post WW2 players had an OBP as high as Edgar's: Ted Williams, Mickey Mantle, Barry Bonds, Wade Boggs, Frank Thomas, and FERRIS FAIN...bet you don't even know who he is! A first baseman who played about ten years, and got more walks than hits and had no power, but boy, was he a great leadoff man.,,,,but Edgar had POWER, too, unlike Ferris or Wade.

  • @owenembury5499
    @owenembury5499 Před 4 měsíci +37

    I think John Olerud is right there with Clark as an egregious one and done first baseman

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Absolutely

    • @jeffjacobson59
      @jeffjacobson59 Před 4 měsíci

      Olerud was the most unathletic looking elite athlete ever! He wasn’t the typical 1st baseman and that’s what hurt him.

    • @nrkgalt
      @nrkgalt Před 4 měsíci +1

      Had things gone a bit differently, Olerud could have been Ohtani before Ohtani. He had pitching ability but gave it up before getting to MLB.

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 4 měsíci +1

      As much as I'm a fan of "The Thrill", and very much appreciate his years as a Giant, his numbers simply aren't "HoF worthy". He's a shoo-in for the "Hall of the Damned Good!" Doesn't take away from him being a great guy, a positive in any clubhouse, and a player who, like later Giant Pablo Sandoval, made the game FUN.

    • @nathanrobinson1099
      @nathanrobinson1099 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Carlos Delgado is the most egregious. The guy wasn’t great at D but his bat was absolutely elite.

  • @Versatilty
    @Versatilty Před 4 měsíci +66

    I grew up a Will Clark fan and it's criminal that he was a one and done even if he didn't ultimately get in. (Which I still think he deserves)

    • @85mcarnold
      @85mcarnold Před 4 měsíci +3

      Will was comparable in value to Fred McGriff, and I think McGriff deserves to be in. Will was much better than Mattingly for their career spans.

    • @roadtrip2943
      @roadtrip2943 Před 4 měsíci +2

      2000 hits, 137 ops+ , 300 batting avg when that was deemed important and not a look. Joke writers

    • @forevertj
      @forevertj Před 4 měsíci +2

      Will Clark is a three toed sloth with no arms.

    • @wraynephew6838
      @wraynephew6838 Před 4 měsíci

      Will Clark had outstanding On base percentage even in his last years. He had .426 OBP at the age of 36 with the Cardinals

    • @joel8692
      @joel8692 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@forevertj No arm needed to play 1st Base

  • @schmitty8225
    @schmitty8225 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I've said it for years, Ortiz shouldn't be in the HOF every other roided out guy isn't.

  • @PpP-dr1od
    @PpP-dr1od Před 4 měsíci +46

    I saw a post on Reddit recently that showed Chase Utley's stats next to Whitaker and Grich to argue Utley isn't HOF worthy, and I nearly burst a blood vessel at the thought of someone using one of the most famous HOF snubs as a reason to leave someone else out. HOF debates can get pretty toxic in general, but I always hate people using player comps to tear someone down instead of building the other guy up.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +9

      All three should easily be in. Kent should be in, too, if u ask me. So much scarcity at the position for no reason.

    • @DavidBrown-wm1up
      @DavidBrown-wm1up Před 4 měsíci +1

      One disingenuous thing about posing arguments that way is this: Whitaker and Grich aren't on the ballot right now, and Utley is. He deserves the opportunity he has, even if mistakes were made by the BBWAA voters in the past with Whitaker and Grich. Utley being voted in also would strengthen the cases for Whitaker and Grich, who are among the biggest snubs at any position, along with Graig Nettles and Dick Allen. Their fates are with the upcoming Vets committees.

    • @alexisborden3191
      @alexisborden3191 Před 4 měsíci

      @@DavidBrown-wm1up Yeah I agree with this, I feel like people also make that disengenuous argument about steroids and Selig, Piazza, and Pudge, like, because they shouldn't have been voted in in the past means we can't have standards now? Like, yes if given the option I'd expel every commissioner and Cap Anson and everyone else assosciated with segregating baseball, but I don't think that's up to the voters right now, and none of them seem to care, they should, but having those guys in the hall isn't a reason to let other people in regardless of character.

    • @thareelhelloagain
      @thareelhelloagain Před 4 měsíci

      ​​@@AndThatsBaseball Kent is one of the worst defensive second basemen ever, and a PED user. You really want to reward an out of position first baseman who did dr*gs to achieve his stats and never actually won anything?

    • @c.a.taylor1321
      @c.a.taylor1321 Před 4 měsíci +1

      From a Dodgers fan Chase Utley will always be a HoFer. Of breaking an opposing players leg...(cue the rimshot). No. For real though. Utley deserves it

  • @reidthomas2210
    @reidthomas2210 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I grew up a basketball fan and it is still my number one sport. The basketball Hall of Fame is notorious for pretty much just letting anyone in so for me as a basketball fan, the high ass standards for the MLB Hall of Fame always baffled me.

    • @drwalka10
      @drwalka10 Před 4 měsíci +2

      It should be high ass standards to make it in any sports hall of fame

    • @ShrimShim
      @ShrimShim Před 4 měsíci

      Are you telling me Bill Bradley isn't a worthy Hall of Famer!? 😂

  • @jimmypop4539
    @jimmypop4539 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Thank you.. Someone finally gave Berkman some love.. He is and was so underrated.

  • @TJGriggs25
    @TJGriggs25 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I’m a lifelong baseball fan and player and I would never set foot in the MLB HoF. Everything about it is a joke.

  • @madethecut
    @madethecut Před 4 měsíci +2

    Another great vid from one of my favorite baseball essay channels. Keep up the great work!

  • @sethadamson2395
    @sethadamson2395 Před 4 měsíci +3

    With guys like Berkman, they almost get devalued due to not staying with one team. He reminds me a lot of Nelson Cruz in the fact that they're power hitters with overall stellar bats, but became mercenaries at some point, and that's something I don't think the BBWAA writers like that much. It's almost like if you stay with one club, your resume can be somewhat lacking, but if you're gonna go play for a bunch of different teams, well then you better make it worth something or else you get looked at as "just another guy".

  • @thelonelyphish
    @thelonelyphish Před 4 měsíci +6

    Snuck in the Futurama theme music, nice

  • @robg8203
    @robg8203 Před 2 měsíci +1

    First video I've watched from you and I loved it brother. Definitely liked and subbed, keep it up!

  • @moonlittear218
    @moonlittear218 Před 4 měsíci +1

    This is my first video I've watched of you. You got me on the Ortiz-Not Ortiz segment. I thought we were gonna be besties, but you are trickster. Seriously though, well done video. I look forward to going backward (makes sense, going with it) and finding other gems. #Subbed

  • @naterosenbaum4830
    @naterosenbaum4830 Před 4 měsíci +4

    The Thrill got his flowers in SF though. There's a reason #22 is retired in SF

    • @MikeNolan
      @MikeNolan Před 4 měsíci +1

      Will Clark said that was his Hall of Fame.

  • @jackstaunton1457
    @jackstaunton1457 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Excellent video kid!! Not the biggest fan of the game myself anymore, but Copperstown is a helluva place of legends! You really covered it from all angles, and totally hit the nail on the head at the end...writers' jobs are to put your level of diligence into their votes. Sad that you have to call them out on it, though props for doing it!!

  • @g-mancollections5264
    @g-mancollections5264 Před 4 měsíci +2

    A few things...
    1. I'm a huge Astros fan. Berkman was absolutely deserving of the hall. He is an Astro. That is his identity. At least for us.
    2. His stats were fantastic. But stats don't make you a hall of famer. The player you see with your eyes matters.
    3. Comparing Lance Berkman to big papi, while flattering to Berkman, is not really a fair comparison. What papi did for the Sox is something of legend. Berkman had some big time postseason moments, but he didn't will his team to a ws victory after being down 3-0 to the Yankees. Moments like that gives him a huge edge amongst voters as it should.

  • @YouCanPlayGUITAR2
    @YouCanPlayGUITAR2 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Ryan Sandberg and Alen Trammell look so much like Steve Garvey! lol...great video man. A lot of work was put into this

  • @CCDaDon15
    @CCDaDon15 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Dick Allen should be on here too

  • @derrickhewitt6171
    @derrickhewitt6171 Před 4 měsíci +13

    Say it louder for the people in the back: It's unfair to leave out the PED players, but don't acknowledge the clean players.

    • @ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507
      @ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507 Před měsícem +6

      And also unfair to judge steroid guys then let all the amphetamine guys from the 70s and 80s in since they ACTUALLY improve reaction times

    • @gcj8925
      @gcj8925 Před měsícem +1

      You can just stop at "unfair to leave out PED players"

  • @CokeZorro
    @CokeZorro Před 3 dny

    It's adorable when young fans start to figure out things like stats don't matter as much as hype personality and corruption within the league. Keep it up little CZcamsr man

  • @MT-cm5ne
    @MT-cm5ne Před měsícem +1

    Great video. There is a good group of guys who were 2 and through as well. Orel Hershiser, Nomar, Juan Gonzales, Albert Belle just to name a few.

  • @ronaldlopez1594
    @ronaldlopez1594 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Another one and done that did not deserve so was Carlos Delgado

  • @DavyBoy007
    @DavyBoy007 Před 4 měsíci +6

    One who is rarely mentioned is Dennis Martinez who had regular season stats similar to those of Jack Morris though Jack's postseason performances were far superior (which might be the difference maker).

    • @sabiebright4554
      @sabiebright4554 Před 4 měsíci

      Jack made it to 250 wins, which is arbitrary, and being a playoff ace got him elected by the veterans committee. To me Morris isn't a hall of famer, he was a great player, and had legendary playoff performances, but didn't show the dominance in individual seasons for my own standards. Then again I don't vote for the hall of fame.

    • @kenw2225
      @kenw2225 Před 4 měsíci

      Ws moments help alot. Morris is important for telling the history of the game in my opinion. Like kirk Gibson, Joe Carter. Baumgartner

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci

      ⁠@@sabiebright4554Players like Jack Morris who made the Hall of Fame but don’t belong by the numbers should be considered Hall of Very Good in my opinion.
      Along with those who stayed on the ballot to the end of their eligibility, those who I think deserved further consideration than they got, and as the best handful of peaks at each position among those not covered by the first three.

    • @bmac4
      @bmac4 Před 4 měsíci

      ​​@@sabiebright4554And Jack only got to 250 wins because he was an absolute volume innings eater. Good pitcher, his 1991 World Series alone should have an exhibit in Cooperstown given he pitched a full 10 innings of shutout ball in game 7, but when you go out there to get a decision every time even when your team is more likely to suffer a loss as a result of you coming out for the 3rd or 4th time through the line up (and thus accruing more personal Ls as well), naturally you're gonna get a few more Ws to pad the stat column here and there.

    • @sabiebright4554
      @sabiebright4554 Před 4 měsíci

      @@bmac4 I really think Lonnie Smith could've rounded 3rd and made it home if he hadn't lost the ball in game 7.

  • @dqr89
    @dqr89 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I was shocked berkman didn’t get more consideration ! As a lifelong cubs fan he terrorized us with both the stros and cards

  • @bsovvy07
    @bsovvy07 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Thank you for covering Lou!

  • @baseballguy0125
    @baseballguy0125 Před 4 měsíci +13

    HOF needs a few things:
    1. New Voters (aka former MLB Players, Scouts, and Analysts) none of this writer bull
    2. Rule Changes-
    • Voters should be able to vote for as many players as they want
    • Change the removal from the ballot to 10% after 3 years, or >2% after 1 year
    • Voters must give reasons as to why they do or do not vote for players
    • All Ballots must be public (can opt to be anonymous but all must be revealed with their reasons for the voting)
    • There needs to be a better way to look at HOF snubs than the veterans comitee, too many people unacounted for, maybe there could be a write in for all voters for one player who was previously on a ballot before the new rules. (Cannot vote for yourself if a player)
    • Make people be on the ballot for 15 years rather than 10
    3. Relievers need to have a lower standard in order to get into the HOF
    4. PEDs users should not be penalized for finding cracks in a flawed MLB, however cheating scandals should be looked at and adjusted
    5. Catchers should also have their standards lowered due to the wear and tear it does to the body

    • @earlhuff7847
      @earlhuff7847 Před 4 měsíci +1

      This is another reason baseball is the greatest sport. We can argue and debate over things and who was better or who was worse. With that said the HOF is a private organization and alot of people forget that or think it is part of MLB. Not saying you don't just making a point of clarification. I disagree with new voters. MLB players are going to be biased on players they played with and may not have ever seen another player other than occasional All Star game or in the minors. The rule changes you propose are silly for lack of another term. Making voters say why they did or did not vote for someone, if you cast a vote anywhere in the USA there is no requirement like that. People won't vote then for fear of retaliation. Suggesting we lower standards are also not smart. HOF is an exclusive club and should be, we should not be lowering standards. Relievers have a tough role and I will say they are skipped over alot of times but in my opinion there are currently none that have been snubbed, at least not yet. Catchers are given credit for durability. I have heard several voting members comment that when look at catchers they don't hold them to the same offensive level as other players. I will admit that defense is overlooked and it is hard to quantify. And finally, PED users should be taken on a case by case basis. I don't agree with just letting them in if they have the numbers or career. FOr example Gery Sheffield admitted to using it once. Look at his career and he is consistent, body type consistent, and his explanation is believable. Roger Clemens no way he gets in. Bonds, McGwoire, etc no way. Loophole or not, it was morally wrong and they cheated.

    • @baseballguy0125
      @baseballguy0125 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@earlhuff7847 calling me silly for wanting to change a system where the greatest player of all time and leader in home runs, the all time hit king, and the greatest SS/3B and top five all time in Home Runs are not in the HOF is insane, relieves absolute should have their standards changed, they usually throw around 100+ innings less than 30 game starters. Over a 10+ year career that adds up quickly and it obviously does affect them. Also your telling me that writers, most of which have never played baseball or studied to the degree analysts and scouts do should have a vote over them? Even though they have a much worse understanding of the game then these people. I will agree with the former players being biased for teammates and against those who they hate but analysts and scouts more than likely wouldnt have a significant biased towards any certain players. However even sports writers have a bias for their teams. Multiple players have just missed 100% or even just miss at joining the hall because the people who didnt vote for them write for opposing teams. Anywhere you look there will be bias, you just have to deal with it. Also I believe that voters should explain who they do and don't vote for due to the fact of many times its just because they dont like the guy and when a player obviously deserves to make the hall and someone votes against them for an ignorant reason outside of statistics then they can be called out, doing so can help eliminate the bias that writers have for players. Not having a good reason and just voting for and against someone is unacceptable when talking about something as big as a 100+ year old sport with thousands over players in its history

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@earlhuff7847I could see the argument for a stricter, more selective mindset.
      That said, the players mentioned in this video did not deserve to go one and done in my opinion.

    • @twostop6895
      @twostop6895 Před 4 měsíci

      not gonna happen

    • @ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507
      @ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507 Před měsícem

      @@earlhuff7847so did Willie Mays, guess we need to keep him out

  • @kingrama2727
    @kingrama2727 Před 4 měsíci +3

    It amazes me a guy like Edgar Martinez is in but Kenny Lofton and Marquis Grissom fell off after 1 year… Kenny Lofton is definitely a HoF and Marquis is borderline but deserves a look

    • @michaelduterte6239
      @michaelduterte6239 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Marquis Grissom isn’t even close to a borderline HOFer

    • @kingrama2727
      @kingrama2727 Před 4 měsíci

      @@michaelduterte6239 you obviously need to look at his stats again. He’s got better numbers than some on there now. If you’re just looking at WAR then you’re doing it wrong

  • @Oz1976
    @Oz1976 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Will the Thrill and Donnie Baseball were my favorite players as a kid. I think they both should be in the Hall, but 1989 Will was blessed with a better team. Don't say he had "a better year than any of Don Mattingly's", that's not fair to Don who was saddled with shitty pitching staffs until it was too late. Mattingly was by far the best player in baseball from 1984 through 1987. Each year was statistically better than Will's best. Mattingly also won 9 Gold Gloves to WIll's 1 and Mattingly lead the league in more categories more times than WIll. We don't need to shit on Donnie to make a case for WIll.

  • @JeanValljeann
    @JeanValljeann Před 4 měsíci

    Great video! Excellent work

  • @huez2238
    @huez2238 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Freddie Freeman is a future Hof

  • @DavidBaruffi
    @DavidBaruffi Před 4 měsíci +7

    David Cone, is one of my big ones in terms of not getting in. He was always one of my favorite pitchers to watch, and one of the few pitchers who threw the ball and different pitch angles back then. He through all his pitches at like, three different angles, so even if you knew what was coming, you didn't know how it was coming. And he has every other stat needed. He was a winner, his ERA was always low, he has a Cy Young, he has a perfect game, he won multiple championships, he was good in both leagues. In an era where everybody was juiced and people about the fastball, the pitchers who had a low fastball, but knew how to paint the ball around the plate and were a little were quirky and still got outs, they were much scarier and possibly more annoying to play, and David Cone is right up there for me. I thought once he got the perfect game, he'd be an automatic, and not even 5% is mind-boggling to me.

    • @VinegarAutofill
      @VinegarAutofill Před 4 měsíci

      I was looking for a Cone comment

    • @MrGageHarrison
      @MrGageHarrison Před 4 měsíci

      Fucking Buehrle is still on the ballot and Cone was better than him.

  • @EatsUsedTP
    @EatsUsedTP Před 4 měsíci +2

    I am a cardinals fan and I forgot Lance Berkman was on the cardinals until you said he won the world series in 2011

  • @chriscascio3355
    @chriscascio3355 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Hey man, love your stuff. Now, during your segment on Lou Whitaker, I could help but think about Marcus Semien. As both have second base men with legendary shortstops next to them. So my question is do you see Semien having the same faith as Whitaker after he retire?

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +1

      It's hard to say. Semien needs to stay at this level for at least another 3-4 years and have a couple more solid years at the tail end of his career to be on that level. If that happens, there is a decent chance that he's overshadowed by Seager and ends up overlooked, but I'd think the younger voters have a better understanding of what he brought to the table.

  • @LeftCross_
    @LeftCross_ Před 4 měsíci +3

    Good video. I think what I’d like to see since how easy it is now, is voters to make a video saying why they’re voting for or not for people. It’d give us a voting pattern, show us who takes it seriously and would scare off the one vote voters. Plus they’re sports writers and fans, arguing about opinions is a majority of what fans do.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +3

      Logically, they should all be writing articles about their picks (being writers and all), but some guys use it as a chance to clickbait a “I voted for nobody… here’s why” article so idk if that’s the solution

    • @LeftCross_
      @LeftCross_ Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@AndThatsBaseball Its definitely not a perfect solution but if making a video became a requirement for a vote, I think they’ll be less likely to turn in empty ballots since they’ll have to make a video regardless. I think with a video you open up the chance of coming off as a complete buffoon and will get you more heat with fans for empty ballots. Plus with shareable clips you create an avenue for more people talking about the sport in the off-season which is almost always good for growth. NFL and NBA are good about generating talk during the off-season, mainly because draft picks come make a difference instantly in many cases and their draft happens in the off-season. Baseball needs more.

  • @skorpiontamer
    @skorpiontamer Před 4 měsíci +3

    10:00 let's not also forget Dale Murphy as a legit snub

  • @DrAnarchy69
    @DrAnarchy69 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Loving the Jon Bois inspired graphics. More please!

  • @SystemsAlliance
    @SystemsAlliance Před 4 měsíci +2

    I mean, 1B WAR is garbage as we all know and doesn't factor in positioning or much else. So throw that out the window for DH and 1B. And when we do that, and just look at like.... literally every other stat... how is Carlos Delgado not in the HOF? He has counting stats better than many in the HOF, from long ago and even recently. His slash line is considerably better than many of those in the HOF. And he has the backing of an entire city in Toronto. So what's the deal? If he played one more half season and cracked 500 homers does he go from less than 5% to over 75%? He may just have done that. And that's the problem. He should be in.

  • @Flare180
    @Flare180 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Let’s go nother vid from the goat

  • @CapAnson12345
    @CapAnson12345 Před 4 měsíci +6

    1:35 This to me is the real problem with HOF voting.. the least common denominator syndrome. There's always going to be the "best" guy that's not in. According to whatever stat you're judging. It has to be someone that draws the line. Maybe not Edgar Martinez. So let's look at the top ten in OPS, since you used that stat with him. Here are the top ten players with 1800 games ranked by OPS not in the hall of fame (that aren't PED associated - as far as I could find, or active players):
    1. Todd Helton .9531 (23rd all time)
    2. Lance Berkman .9429 (31st)
    3. Carlos Delgado .9293 (43rd)
    4. Jim Edmonds .9030 (68th)
    5. Bob Johnson .8987 (74th)
    6. Matt Holliday .8889 (82nd)
    7. Moises Alou .8850 (93rd)
    8. Will Clark .8801 (102nd)
    9. Bobby Abreu .8697 (125th)
    10. Mark Texiera .8694 (127th)
    Note all time ranks include players with less than 1800 games.
    It feels more or less reasonable that the line should be somewhere in this bunch. Around Texiera you have Hofers like Bill Dickey, Jim BottomIy and Joe Medwick. You probably wouldn't want to dip any lower.. at least as far as this stat. Now I think Todd Helton got WAY too much of a boost from Coors and his stats are mainly a lie. Berkman should be in.. probably Delgado.. then it starts to get hazy until you get to Will Clark. More on him in a bit. But let's say you just went by the stats and said Todd Helton needs to be in.. he is THE best player not in the hall of fame. I mean just LOOK at his batting stats! So they vote him in.. then, well we just gotta elect Lance Berkman. He's THE absolute, obviously best player not in. And then Delgado.. then Edmonds.. then Bob Johnson.. well not Bob Johnson.. he's the outlier in the list. Anyway you end with a whole bunch of relative nobodies with sketchy stats in the hall after a while. You have to look at the whole career and kind of make a subjective judgement. Edgar Martinez was a DH. That's a negative. Not a very good fielder when he DID play. but.. he was an absolute monster of a hitter. If you forced Martinez to play the field his whole career he could have done it.. but would have had pretty bad fielding stats.. and probably still would get in.. so therefore he should be in regardless. But my point with all this is I don't think you can just conjure up a statistical standard to judge a player's worthiness on because you can do that with anyone.. and the standards constantly change usually to the downside. I think there's been WAY too many borderline players in the last 20-30 years getting in because of this. Harold Baines being example number one. NOBODY thought he was a hall of famer when he played.. nobody.. the topic just never came up. top ten MVP twice. Meh.. awful fielder.. probably worse than Edgar Martinez. If he doesn't play those last two or three years and have that suprisingly good 1999 (ahem) season 25 hr/103rbis/.312BA he's not in the hall today.
    Which reminds me another interesting thing about the list is every single one of those players except Bob Johnson played a good portion in the steroid era, and a few had rumors, but nothing I could DQ them for. PEDs really were a black mark on the game.
    Anyway my personal line is Will Clark. Either put him in and never elect anyone else that you can't argue was better.. or leave him out and do the same.

  • @clammer23
    @clammer23 Před 2 měsíci

    I gave you a thumbs up because I was just happy to see Luis Sojo show up in this video, even if it was just a cut of him asking Cone why he doesn't have a dance named after him in a commercial.
    Oh, it was also a great video. But yeah, Sojo FTW! LOL

    • @clammer23
      @clammer23 Před 2 měsíci

      Oh, and I agree. Posada should be in the HoF. He was extremely clutch, especially in the Post Season, had pop in his bat as a switch hitting catcher, and he was a leader in the clubhouse.

    • @ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507
      @ghostofmoredishesmorebitch1507 Před měsícem

      @@clammer23i could see posada considering the position. Bernie etc absolutely not

  • @truthoverfacts9254
    @truthoverfacts9254 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I want you to know that I see and appreciate the extensive effort you put into this video. Great job!

  • @Jason-hq1mk
    @Jason-hq1mk Před 4 měsíci +8

    Great video! Lance Berkman has been one of my favorite ball players ever since he came up. Such a fun guy to watch hit, and a genuinely good dude with a great personality. Will Clark was another guy I loved to watch play, and he is really cool to watch these days when he talks about the game. He is a hilarious guy. I learned to love Jim Edmonds later on, but I couldn't bring myself to like him for a while because he always seemed to be an Astro killer. Could be my memory is fooling me but I seem to remember him really playing out of his mind against them.

  • @TheGuyWithTheSniper
    @TheGuyWithTheSniper Před 4 měsíci +6

    There definitely needs to be accountability for the writers. The ones who leave empty ballots or vote for one player just for the publicity and rage clicks should lose the privilege. This isn't to say, necessarily, that there are ALWAYS ten explicitly HoF-worthy candidates on the ballot each and every year, and writers who feel that PED's are a dealbreaker should remain free to choose not to vote for guys like Bonds and McGwire. But while writers shouldn't be *forced* to vote for candidates they don't want in the Hall, the ones who very obviously submit empty/one-vote ballots for the sake of outrage bait need to be shown the door. I think the 5% threshold should be re-examined. I think failing to reach that threshold maybe THREE years in a row would be a fair way to give the less obvious choices a fair chance before cleaning up the ballot without letting it get bloated from every single player getting ten automatic years of eligibility.

  • @unprofound
    @unprofound Před 4 měsíci +2

    Will Clark: 11:31 Seriously, the most beautiful swing ever. Any disagreements?

  • @stephangentry8901
    @stephangentry8901 Před 4 měsíci

    Incredible video. Thank you

  • @radhamesmfeliz4016
    @radhamesmfeliz4016 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I would like to hea about Carlos Delgado.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +1

      I had a brief segment about him in the original vid. Someone I would’ve loved to cover, but didn’t because of time constraints

  • @STICKGUYMB
    @STICKGUYMB Před 4 měsíci +5

    A huge issue I see with voters is that they HATE voting in guys who didn't play at an all-star level through their mid 30s. And guys who retired when they were like 36/37

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Voters have historically valued longevity over peak performance.
      In part because until more recently, it wasn’t as easy to compare peaks.

  • @FamousMortimer
    @FamousMortimer Před 4 měsíci +2

    I know that it's an old school stat, but hits are probably what kept Berkman out. The last year an inductee with fewer hits than Berkman played was 1959 (Larry Doby, a committee selection). I don't know how to filter for that, but I'd guess the last time a player with fewer than 2000 hits was inducted by the full BBWAA ballot is a very long time ago, probably more than 50 years ago.

    • @alexisborden3191
      @alexisborden3191 Před 4 měsíci

      I think hits are fine, the problem is context, it can't just be 3000 hits or nothing. To be fair think there's maybe only one or two crank voters who think like that, most of that crowd is youtube commenters. But hits can illustrate volume of production, and the difference between parks is pretty negligible, a hit is roughly a hit anywhere and everywhere, unlike home runs. I think voters are just going to have to be comfortable with more Koufax/Santana esque players, who are light on volume and high on peak production. I think Clayton Kershaw's as of 23-24 offseason 2944 strikeouts undersells just how dominant he was and just how sneaky good he's been since those days.

    • @alexisborden3191
      @alexisborden3191 Před 4 měsíci

      Also, Larry Doby has reasonable extenuating circumstances being that he integrated the AL and was somewhat delayed by segregation (granted probably only a few years or so)

  • @chriskeck3689
    @chriskeck3689 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thanks for adding Sweet Lou! I've been arguing for him for years. If Trammell is in, he has to be too

  • @justinpridham7919
    @justinpridham7919 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Just leave Garvey pic for all comparisons lol

    • @crowjb1976
      @crowjb1976 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I was hoping someone else noticed, lol

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +2

      Man I edited the last 10 mins in one day didn’t even notice, bad mistake by me

    • @justinpridham7919
      @justinpridham7919 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@AndThatsBaseball I loved the upload!

  • @Nightshiftzombie
    @Nightshiftzombie Před 4 měsíci +3

    Martinez shouldn't have been voted in. It would suck if Cooperstown went down the same road as the Hockey Hall of Fame. Once they make a mistake, they just lower the bar and let in a whole new batch of guys who shouldn't be there.

  • @TheRoundTheLeaguePodcast
    @TheRoundTheLeaguePodcast Před 4 měsíci +1

    I never understood hall of fame voting I don’t understand how a player can go from getting 30% on the vote to getting in easily without playing a single game

  • @joemarshall4226
    @joemarshall4226 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The most embarrassing thing with the hall is keeping Dick Allen out. The man had a 156+ OPS+! Higher than Willie Mays, if I remember correctly. How can they keep him out. His teammates all say he was a great guy, and very smart, baseball-wise.

  • @danieltravis5082
    @danieltravis5082 Před 4 měsíci +4

    The fact that edgar didn't get in until his 10th year of eligibility is criminal.
    He was like the Koufax of DH's, and a literal legend with a street named after him in Seattle.
    The fact that his counting stats are as good as they are, when he didn't play regularly until age 27, is incredible.

    • @TheBatugan77
      @TheBatugan77 Před 4 měsíci

      Psssh. Get to a World Series one of these years. I mean, centuries!
      #GoYankees

    • @danieltravis5082
      @danieltravis5082 Před 4 měsíci

      Do yankees fans ever shut the fuck up?
      What does his comment possibly have to do with mine?

  • @robwasilewski9273
    @robwasilewski9273 Před 4 měsíci +4

    The problem is they let so many players in fromthe early years but now players with better numbers dont get the nod

    • @drewskij2175
      @drewskij2175 Před 4 měsíci +2

      You mean the players from the era of the game that built it into what it is today?

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +1

      In particular those inducted through the Veterans Committees of the 70’s include a couple worse players statistically than you are likely to see today go one and done without debate.
      One thing I will say though to be fair to them: Sabermetric stats were not mainstream until more recently, and as such voters in earlier generations wouldn’t have gotten the opportunity to look into the data we have nowadays.

  • @forgetaboutit1069
    @forgetaboutit1069 Před 4 měsíci +1

    How Kenny Lofton isn’t in the HOF but Todd Helton made it is a shame. Lofton has a higher career WAR, more All-Star games, and Gold Gloves while Helton hit in hitter friendly Colorado. Could you imagine Albert Belle playing full seasons in Colorado? Plus Lofton is one of the best base stealers ever considering he played in the modern era. Lofton never took steroids and his brand of baseball was different than every juiced player hitting homers while Bud Selig looked away for TV numbers. Lofton was snubbed and this needs rectified.

  • @bordomsdeadly
    @bordomsdeadly Před 3 měsíci +1

    I see Berkman in the thumbnail and I have said MANY times that any metric that covers a players value has Berkman practically equal with Ortiz

  • @AmericanWorker1127
    @AmericanWorker1127 Před 4 měsíci +4

    It's hall of FAME. If people don't even know the guys name or remember him, or he didn't generate excitement, notoriety, set meaningful records, or have an epic, long lasting effect on the game, they're not Hall of Fame worthy. Hall of Fame is not a hall of really good stats (although that obvious is often correlated with Fame)

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Před 3 měsíci

      More like Hall of POPULARITY.

    • @HoshizakiYoshimasa
      @HoshizakiYoshimasa Před 2 měsíci

      Talk about being hung up on the name. Change the name then

    • @badbeck4
      @badbeck4 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The problem with that outlook, is that there are plenty of guys in the hall that didn’t do any of those things you just mentioned and no one knows their names

  • @fortynights1513
    @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +10

    Three things:
    1. Thank you for uploading.
    2. What you will probably find in general is that most voters from older generations looked at things in terms of longevity when they voted (ergo: What career totals and accolade counts did a player accumulate). As well as memorable moments and highlights (ex: the Double, Ortiz’s 2013 ALCS).
    They typically didn’t look at peaks because until sabermetrics became more mainstream in the 2010’s or thereabouts, nobody could really agree on how to measure those.
    And of course, players whose best arguments were sabermetric, and who didn’t have counting stats that stood out like Lou Whitaker would have been overlooked by older voters who wouldn’t be familiar with that way of looking at things.
    Sabermetric stats aren’t everything, but that mindset wasn’t likely understood by Hall of Fame voters at that time.
    And 3. One Hall of Fame ballot that deserves a retrospective breakdown is 2013 because there were a handful of players who have made it in, Bonds and Clemens made it on the ballot for the first time, and there were so many candidates that Kenny Lofton went one and done, and nobody was elected.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +2

      I don't like that older voters heavily consider accolades when they're the same ones who made mistakes while voting for the awards

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@AndThatsBaseballVery fair to argue that accolades were overused.
      Case in point: Secret Base’s documentary on Dave Stieb showed that he probably deserved a Cy Young or two, but he didn’t get any of those, or many votes for it.
      Stieb went one and done of course.

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci

      @@AndThatsBaseballOne other thing (after having seen the Joe Nathan argument).
      Could the following be better than saves:
      The number of times a reliever did all of the following:
      A: Faced three batters or more
      B: Allowed no runs, earned or unearned.
      And C: Allowed no more than one baserunner.
      And in particular that total as a percentage of relief appearances of three batters faced.
      You could call it quality relief appearance percentage.

  • @lukerichardson2375
    @lukerichardson2375 Před 4 měsíci +2

    The funny thing is that Palmeiro played on that Mississippi State team with Will Clark. And so did Bobby Thigpen and Jeff Brantley… Mississippi State made college baseball big.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci

      I read somewhere that Clark and Palmeiro didn’t like each other. Idk how true that was, but it’s funny how Clark replaced Palmeiro in Texas and Baltimore during their mlb careers.

  • @veritasinvicta2996
    @veritasinvicta2996 Před 2 měsíci +1

    That Cone/El Duque commercial was hilarious at the time and it's aged very well.

  • @cmd0928
    @cmd0928 Před 4 měsíci +7

    It’s just crazy Barry bonds still not in

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +6

      Either put Bonds in or put the borderline clean players in, can't just leave out everyone from that era

    • @Warum.2439
      @Warum.2439 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@AndThatsBaseballborderline clean isn’t clean. You’re either clean or you aren’t. That being said they should be in

    • @MbgFire2067
      @MbgFire2067 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Sorry, but if you cheated, you don’t get in. I don’t care who you are. If it’s found out you cheated and are already in, you should get removed. The Hall is turning into the Hall of Very Good anymore. You should be an elite player for your entire career to get in and there should be certain benchmarks. Too many people are comparing players stats to other players in the HOF who weren’t elite to justify why said player should be in. Coulda, woulda and shoulda shouldn’t qualify you for the HOF.

    • @JohnSmith-zw8vp
      @JohnSmith-zw8vp Před 4 měsíci

      Cheaters NEVER win. Winners NEVER cheat. And Winners Don't Use Drugs.

    • @cmd0928
      @cmd0928 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@JohnSmith-zw8vp I don’t condone the use of steroids, I don’t think anyone does. But you cannot deny the talent he had

  • @chrisjuliano3964
    @chrisjuliano3964 Před 4 měsíci +8

    Ortiz did steroids

    • @johnletuli7074
      @johnletuli7074 Před měsícem +1

      But the media loves him so he gets the pass haha

    • @cesaromercedes8737
      @cesaromercedes8737 Před měsícem

      So did pudge Rodriguez and he's in.

    • @craigwheeler4760
      @craigwheeler4760 Před měsícem

      ​@@cesaromercedes8737 Pudge Rodriguez was a Hall of famer regardless of steroids, the same way that Rodger Clemens and Barry bonds should be in there.
      Pudge Rodriguez made it in on his defense alone. Steroids don't throw out 60% of Base stealers. He had a season where he did that by the way.
      Steroids don't give you a 3.0 defensive war in a season. He did that several times.
      He did steroids to recover from catching so many games, so you can see his offensive numbers were inflated by that.

  • @TeamHolleyLineDancing
    @TeamHolleyLineDancing Před 4 měsíci

    I loved this break down. Well done.
    Just an FYI, during the Whitaker segment, you accidently left Garvey's image up for both Sandberg and Trammell. 🤪
    And on the topic of 2Bs I'd love to hear your thoughts on Utley and his HOF chances/worthiness. Thanks.

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Utley is essentially a peak player without a ton of longevity.
      He probably has a better chance now than he would have 15 years ago I’ll say that.

  • @jonathonedwardmiller
    @jonathonedwardmiller Před 2 měsíci +1

    My thoughts on the hall of fame... fans should get a say. I mean we're voting on whether players belong in a museum that tells the story of the game from the 1870s to today. Shouldn't we get a say on who's in and who isn't? Me personally that's my criteria. I don't like arbitrary stats like 400 HR and 1000 RBI and 200 W and 3000 H/K and 70 WAR and 450 SV. First, we don't even follow that. A player that got snubbed from your list is Carlos Delgado. Carlos Delgado hit 473 HRs and was a huge part of those early Mets and 90s Blue Jays teams. His SECOND most similar career was Willie Stargell and his first, a player you mentioned, Jason Giambi. My criteria, and I think the criteria EVERYONE should have, is when we look back on this player's career, what would leaving his story and his career out of the overall story of baseball mean? Stories have unsung heroes and characters we all love later, main characters and, yes, villains. Get rid of the 10 person vote and the arbitrary 5% rule. Make it 50% to get in and put it back at 15 years. This isn't the hall of good people. This isn't the hall of amazing unreal players. This is the BASEBALL HALL OF FAME!

  • @mizer9510
    @mizer9510 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Berkman is not a hall of famer. Neither is Rolen in my opinion. The HOF is supposed to be for elite players only. Not really good players. It's a joke because they put players in that shouldn't be and keep others out for stupid reasons like Pete Rose. It's watered down now with players that were good but not great.

  • @girlwithaguitar24
    @girlwithaguitar24 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I get that it's not the point of this video, but as a queer person, I've got absolutely no problem keeping Lance Berkman out of the hall. He's spent the majority of his post-baseballs advocating for laws that make it harder to live openly as a gay or trans individual under the guise. of"religious freedoms" and similar to Curt Schilling, despite his stats speaking for themselves, I hope they fade into irrelevance.

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball  Před 4 měsíci +1

      I had no idea about Berkman’s politics, and I think that’s where he’s different from Schilling. Berkman’s conservative anti gay stances are probably shared by a good chunk of MLB players, but from what I’ve seen, Schilling is much, much more vocal and a lot nastier.
      It’s obvious completely fair to root against him, but the last articles I can find about his bigotry are from 2017, so I hope he’s been better informed on LGBT issues since then

    • @girlwithaguitar24
      @girlwithaguitar24 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@AndThatsBaseball It's less that he holds those beliefs and that he takes conscious actions to make life more difficult. I'm a Twins fan and despite Torii Hunter making similarly homophobic remarks, he's not working with political groups, he's just speaking off the cuff, hence I take little issue with him as an athlete (and argue he's a Hall of Fame borderline case).

    • @JohnSmith-zw8vp
      @JohnSmith-zw8vp Před 4 měsíci +1

      So? This is the BASEBALL Hall of Fame not the Politically Correct Hall of Fame for Pete's sake...

    • @girlwithaguitar24
      @girlwithaguitar24 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@JohnSmith-zw8vp Being a hall of famer is a privilege, not a right. Along with that includes being a good steward of the game, and openly working to ruin the lives of queer people or to overturn the election would reflect poorly in turn on the Hall of Fame and its members.

    • @JohnSmith-zw8vp
      @JohnSmith-zw8vp Před 4 měsíci

      @@girlwithaguitar24 Oh yes I do indeed remember the attempt to overturn the election...
      czcams.com/video/INygK8pVDlY/video.html
      Seriously though this is the BASEBALL Hall of Fame...I don't care if a player is a card carrying member of Communist Party USA or the John Birch Society or anything in between these two extremes...I don't care if a player owns every Jack Chick tract or has the world's biggest Che Guevara memorabilia collection or anything in between. Curt Schilling is very VERY much the Mr. October of pitching (and he didn't get that just from one magical night like a certain other guy who got a candy bar) and him getting anything less than first or I supposed 2nd/3rd ballot induction is a travesty. Even more a travesty than that guy several decades ago who tried to backwards steal from second to first base on 2-3 separate occasions before MLB outlawed it

  • @Official_Joe_Tomberlin
    @Official_Joe_Tomberlin Před 4 měsíci +1

    Been talking for years about David Cone man, thank you

  • @tazdewey55
    @tazdewey55 Před 3 měsíci

    Love this video, I completely agree. One thing I do hate is voter only voting for one person. I think they need to rethink on some of these players that get missed. How to re-add them back to consideration especially since some yrs are stack of good player and other that aren't.