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2010 HOF Ballot

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  • 2010 HOF Ballot

    Newcomers to the ballot include Roberto Alomar, an all-around threat in a 17-season career that included World Series championship years with the Toronto Blue Jays in 1992 and ’93. Alomar won 10 Gold Glove Awards for fielding and was a career .300 hitter with 2,724 hits, combining power (210 home runs) and speed (474 stolen bases). Alomar, part of a major-league family (father Sandy and brother Sandy Jr.), was the MVP of the American League Championship Series in 1992 and the All-Star Game in 1998.

    Shortstop Barry Larkin, the National League MVP in 1995, spent his 19-season career with the Cincinnati Reds and won a World Series ring in 1990. A .295 hitter with 2,340 hits, including 198 home runs, Larkin won three Gold Gloves and was named to 12 All-Star teams.

    Pitcher Pat Hentgen won 131 games over 14 seasons and was the AL Cy Young Award winner in 1996 with the Blue Jays. First baseman Eric Karros was the NL Rookie of the Year in 1992 with the Los Angeles Dodgers and went on to a 14-year career that included five seasons of more than 30 home runs and 100 RBI.

    First baseman Fred McGriff led the AL in home runs in 1989 for Toronto and the NL in 1992 for San Diego and finished with a career total of 493, tied with Lou Gehrig for 26th place all-time. McGriff, a .284 career hitter with 2,490 hits and 1,550 RBI, was the All-Star Game MVP in 1994 and batted .303 with 37 RBI in 50 post-season games winning a ring with the Atlanta Braves in 1995.

    Edgar Martinez, for whom the AL Designated Hitter Award is now named, won batting titles in 1992 and 1995 with the Seattle Mariners, his only club over 18 seasons. Martinez compiled a career .312 average with 2,247 hits, 309 home runs among them. He drove in 1,261 runs and scored 1,219.

    First baseman Andres Galarraga, a .288 hitter with 399 home runs and 1,425 RBI over 19 seasons, led the NL in batting in 1993, in home runs in 1996 and in RBI in 1996 and ‘97. The five-time All-Star and two-time Gold Glove winner was named Comeback Player of the Year twice, in 1993 and 2000 (the latter after recovering from non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma).

    Also on the ballot for the first time are pitchers Kevin Appier, Mike Jackson and Shane Reynolds; catcher-infielder Todd Zeile; first baseman David Segui; third baseman Robin Ventura and outfielders Ellis Burks and Ray Lankford.
    http://bizofbaseball.com/index.php?o...news&Itemid=42

  • #2
    give me larkin and alomar
    Record when He pitches: 3-2

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    • #3
      I like Alomar and McGriff.

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      • #4
        Any news on Roberto Alomar's health?

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        • #5
          Looking back on Larkin's career, I find it amusing that he won an MVP in a year he hit .319/.394/.492/.886 and played GG defense in 131 games, but he finished 12th in the MVP voting the next year, when he played in 151 games, hit .298/.410/.567/.977 and also won a GG.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by wanks1212 View Post
            Looking back on Larkin's career, I find it amusing that he won an MVP in a year he hit .319/.394/.492/.886 and played GG defense in 131 games, but he finished 12th in the MVP voting the next year, when he played in 151 games, hit .298/.410/.567/.977 and also won a GG.
            I thought the same exact thing

            Edgar's gotta get in :\

            Also Ray Lankford's pretty damn good. He was gone before the whole "moneyball" deal, and had just a .272 AVG while striking out a ton. But .272/.364/.477/.840 line from CF. Certainly hard to say "hof worthy", but I brought this up before but I think he's a damn good comp for Maybin's upside, if Maybin can hit 25 HRs.

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            • #7
              Of the newcomers I'd vote for Larkin, Alomar, and Martinez.

              I have to think almost all of the new guys get booted on the first ballot, but I'm sure that's not really going out on a limb.
              God would be expecting a first pitch breaking ball in the dirt because humans love to disappoint him.
              - Daft

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              • #8
                mcgriff I think gets in his numbers now look better considering so many in the league with the monsterous stats are contaminated

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                • #9
                  I don't vote people who spit on umpires.

                  (I bet none of you youngins remember that.)

                  (I would really vote for him though)

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Fishfan79 View Post
                    mcgriff I think gets in his numbers now look better considering so many in the league with the monsterous stats are contaminated
                    Who's to say McGriff wasn't one of those putting up contaminated stats?

                    Since it is impossible to tell the clean from the dirty, my stance is to allow the best of the generation in (Bonds, Clemens, etc.) and let baseball history judge them.

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                    • #11
                      It may take a while but Edgar's gotta be in there

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Flum View Post
                        I don't vote people who spit on umpires.

                        (I bet none of you youngins remember that.)

                        (I would really vote for him though)
                        Oh! Pick me! I remember!
                        God would be expecting a first pitch breaking ball in the dirt because humans love to disappoint him.
                        - Daft

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                        • #13
                          The thing about Alomar is that from 2002 through the end of his career he was putrid.

                          He played 2B, and 2B is a notoriously hard position to play and end up in bronze, and for a solid 6 years (Baltimore - Cleveland) he was the best 2B in baseball, all things considered. Still though, the number of teams he played for, the number of times he was traded, and the fact that his biggest failure came on the biggest stage of his career (with the Mets coming off a career year in Cleveland) makes me wonder if he might have to wait a while to get in. To say nothing of the fact that personality will without question come in here, it has to, Hirschbeck already has come out and said he deserves to get in so you know that's going to come into play.

                          I think his candidacy in many ways will mirror Sheff's. Both were rogues. For a solid stretch they were among the best in the game at what they were asked to do and they played for too many teams to really have a group of writers feel comfortable going to bat for them and their candidacy.

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                          • #14
                            I watched Larkin in person growing up. He is for me (and the HOF).

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                            • #15
                              There was that incident in the SkyDome Hotel with Alomar...

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