Cooperstown

Cooperstown

Baseball Hall of Fame Quiz: While the Hall is on my brain, and

recognizing I have asked one of these before.

1) Who were the first five inductees as selected by the Baseball

Writers Assoc. of America in 1936? 2) Of the inductees in the

1970s, which of the following received the highest percentage of

the vote? [Koufax, Clemente, Mantle, Banks, or Mays] 3) What

pitcher, who was inducted in the 80s or 90s, received the highest

vote ever for any player in the history of the Hall? Answers

below.

2002 Hall of Fame Vote.continued

Last time I expressed dismay at Gary Carter not receiving

enough of the vote to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

He fell just 11 votes shy of the 75% requirement, however, his

whining afterwards certainly didn”t endear him to those who will

have to vote on him next year. “It”s confusing. I don”t really

understand it, but there”s no anger.[then]…But 129 voters felt I

didn”t deserve it.” He was crying, his wife was crying…it was a

mess.

Well, I outlined Carter vs. history on Wednesday, but allow me

to throw out some highly random thoughts on the vote

concerning other past stars.

–Luis Tiant received only 18% in his 15th and last year of

eligibility. His only remaining hope is to be selected by the

Veterans Committee, which has finally toughened its standards.

Anyway, it”s interesting to compare Tiant to Jim Bunning, an

undeserving hurler who received the Veterans Committee nod a

number of years ago.

Tiant: 229-172, 3.30 ERA, 49 shutouts

Bunning: 224-184, 3.27 ERA, 40 shutouts

But then you have this big group of pitchers who received

between 20 and 27 percent of the vote this year, which in my

mind means they are really splitting each other”s support.

[Whether they deserve to be selected or not is a different matter.]

Bert Blyleven: 287-250, 3.31 ERA. #4 all-time in strikeouts, #9

all-time in shutouts.

Tommy John: 288-231, 3.34.

Jim Kaat: 283-237, 3.45.

Jack Morris: 254-186, 3.90.

Someday I will complete my exhaustive study to prove that

Blyleven deserves to be in the Hall. [I need a snow day. I also

know the preceding comment will tick a lot of you off.]

And then there is the case of Dave Parker, who received only

14%. Now I”m not saying Parker should be in (I wouldn”t vote

for him), but here”s a guy who hit 339 HR and drove in 1493 to

go along with a .290 batting average and 2712 hits. He was also

a MVP and two-time batting champion. It”s just interesting to

compare this with Hall of Famer Billy Williams, somewhat of a

contemporary. Williams went 426-1475, .290 and 2711 hits. He

had one batting crown. Parker deserves some Veterans

Committee consideration down the road. [Dale Murphy fans,

forget it, even if some of the numbers are similar. But,

obviously, I should also be discussing Jim Rice: 382 HR, 1451

RBI, .298, 2452 hits. It”s a close call with him. I think I”d vote

”yes.”]

And then you have the deal with shortstop Alan Trammell, who

was on the ballot for the first time this year and received only

16%. As Johnny Mac noted, hell, if Ozzie Smith got in,

Trammell at least deserves more consideration. After all, he had

185 HR and 1003 RBI, big numbers for a shortstop in any era

(except the live-ball one of today), a .285 BA, 2365 hits and 236

stolen bases, plus he was no slouch in the field, earning 4 Gold

Gloves. So it will be interesting to see the progression of his

vote the next few years.

And what about relief pitchers? Only two are currently in the

Hall, Hoyt Wilhelm and Rollie Fingers. Serious consideration

should be given both Bruce Sutter and Goose Gossage, yet these

two appear likely to be disappointed for years to come until the

Veterans Committee can rule on them. [Sutter received 50% of

the vote, Gossage only 43%.]

Sutter and Gossage also have their own situations complicated by

the fact that Lee Smith, the all-time saves leader, becomes

eligible next year (he doesn”t deserve to get in), while Dennis

Eckersley (who should be selected) comes up the following year.

Joining Smith on the ballot in 2003 are Eddie Murray and Ryne

Sandberg. Now I never thought of Murray as a great player

(though he was one of the better clutch hitters of his era), but you

can”t keep a guy out who compiled the following:

504 HR 1917 RBI (#7 all-time) and 3255 hits (#11).

As for Sandberg, his case will be interesting. After all, this

perennial Gold Glover at second base hit 282 HR and drove in

1061, huge numbers for his position, along with a .285 BA and

2386 hits. Eventually, he”s in.

—–

Which leads us to Johnny Mac”s thoughts on one Eric Davis.

With the retirement of Mark McGwire, 2007 is shaping up as

quite a summer for Cooperstown. Assuming Rickey Henderson

will actually retire (predicting what Rickey will do is risky

business, though) we should have four first-ballot inductees. I

think we can safely assume Cal Ripken and Tony Gwynn will

make it. Even lesser lights like Paul O”Neill might garner a fair

bit of support. There is one player, however, who will also be in

his first year of eligibility and will most likely not get enough

votes to remain eligible (and rightfully so). Oh, but there was a

time when you wouldn”t have traded this guy even up for any of

the stars mentioned earlier, nor traded his rookie card. I am

talking about Eric Davis.

Circa 1986/87, Eric was the next big thing. After spending way

too much time in the minors because of a propensity for striking

out (quaint notion in today”s game), Davis burst upon the scene

with a combination of speed and power that took your breath

away. Whippet-thin (29″ waist) but with powerful arms, he

could hit it 500 feet, chase down deep fly balls with arrogant ease

and steal a base at will. In his first full year, 1986, he hit 27

homers, scored 97, drove in 71 and stole 80, all in just 415 at-

bats, equivalent to 40 dingers and 120 steals if he had played a

full season. Unheard of stuff. Forget 40/40.this guy was gonna

hit 50 and steal 100, all while playing centerfield like Willie

Mays.

And in 1987 he came out of the gate like gangbusters. In his first

93 at-bats, he had 12 homers, 27 RBI, 28 runs scored and 13

steals, all while hitting .409 (you do the math for 600 plate

appearances). Davis was the absolute talk of baseball at the time.

Then the one recurring constant that would bedevil his entire

career hit. injuries. Davis finished up with good numbers,

having what would be his best season (474 at-bats, 120 runs, 100

ribbies, 37 homers, 50 steals in 56 attempts, with a .400 on-base

percentage). He made the all-star team and won the first of three

consecutive Gold Gloves.

The 474 plate appearances would represent his career high, as an

assortment of injuries and illness would rob him of the career we

all hoped he would have. He battled cancer and a lacerated

kidney, along with a more pedestrian collection of knee, shoulder

and ankle problems, which combined to limit his playing time

considerably; 1991 – 89 games, 1992 – 76 games, 1994 – 37

games, 1995 – sat out the entire season, 1997 – 42 games.

To his credit, at age 36 in 1998, after beating colon cancer, Davis

put up some fine numbers for Baltimore: .327 average, 28 HR,

89 RBI, and 81 runs scored in 452 at-bats. It would be a final

reminder of the ability that once seemed to come so easy to him.

Eric hung them up after this past year, posting relatively modest

career numbers, but for those of us who saw him back in his

early days, we can mourn the quiet demise of greatness

unfulfilled. [Man, was that poetic or what?!]

Stuff

–J Mac also points out the following: Richest women in

America – Oprah, Martha Stewart, Mrs. Michael Jordan.

–Great white sharks: Hey, did you see this? It was once thought

that great whites migrated only a couple hundred miles from

their breeding grounds. But scientists tagged a few of them over

the past few years and found one, in particular, that swam all the

way from the California coast to Hawaii…2,300 miles.where it

remained until spring (had to catch the PGA tour stops) and then

swam all the way back, traveling about 43 miles a day. Which

means one thing. Don”t swim in Hawaii.

–Oops, forgot one baseball tidbit that I have to bring up each

time I discuss the Hall of Fame. My father still feels “Indian

Bob” Johnson should be in Cooperstown. Toiling for the

Philadelphia Athletics for most of his career (1930s and 40s),

Johnson was a hero of my father growing up. And when you

look at his career numbers, 288 dingers and 1283 RBI, to go

along with a .296 average, he may have something, especially

considering that he didn”t play in the majors until age 26. [Paid

for by the Indian Bob Johnson Fan Club.]

–The deer population in New Jersey was 75,000 in 1950. Today

it”s 200,000. Hunters are welcome. I”ll supply the hot cocoa.

–The Grammy Awards are being held February 27. In case you

didn”t see the nominations:

Album of the Year

“Love and Theft” Bob Dylan…didn”t buy it.

“Acoustic Soul” India…Arie.didn”t buy it. What”s with the dot?

“Stankonia” OutKast…didn”t buy it.

“All That You Can”t Leave Behind” U2…playing it now.

“O Brother, Where Art Thou?” Soundtrack…didn”t buy it, but

told it”s great.

R&B Album

“Aaliyah” Aaliyah…didn”t buy it.

“No More Drama” Mary J. Blige…didn”t buy it.

“Survivor” Destiny”s Child…didn”t buy it.

“Acoustic Soul” see above. What”s with the dot?

“Songs In A Minor” Alicia Keys…didn”t buy it.

Country Album

“One More Day” Diamond Rio…didn”t buy it.

“Set This Circus Down” Tim McGraw…didn”t buy it.

“Rainbow Connection” Willie Nelson…didn”t buy it.

“Timeless – Hank Williams Tribute” Various…didn”t buy it.

Bought real Hank Williams instead.

“Inside Out” Trisha Yearwood.didn”t buy it.

What else did I buy? “Best of the Zombies” and Jack Jones”s

“Greatest Hits.”

Top 3 songs for the week of 1/13/68: #1 “Hello Goodbye” (The

Beatles) #2 “Judy In Disguise” (John Fred & His Playboy Band)

#3 “Day Dream Believer” (The Monkees)

Baseball Hall of Fame Quiz Answers: 1) 1936 original

inductees: Walter Johnson (83.6% of the vote), Christy

Mathewson (90.7%), Babe Ruth (95.1%), Honus Wagner

(95.1%) and Ty Cobb (98.2%). There were 226 ballots that year,

meaning 11 didn”t vote for Ruth, let alone the 37 who didn”t

deem Johnson worthy. Nuts. 2) Willie Mays received the

highest percentage in the 70s, 94.68% (and that year 23 didn”t

vote for him.bastards); Koufax (86.7%), Clemente (92.7%),

Mantle (88.2%), Banks (83.8%). 3) The highest vote ever was

the 98.84% Tom Seaver received in 1992. 5 of 430 still said

“No.” #2 is Nolan Ryan with 98.79%, #3 – Ty Cobb.

Next Bar Chat, Monday.