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    Saturday, January 7, 2017

    The 2017 Hall-of-Fame-a-Palooza (featuring over 20 guys up for induction, plus my ballot)



    When we last left off, I was writing about my thoughts on the Veterans Committee election, albeit a little late. It’s a shame, too, because maybe my random article on the internet would have filtered up to someone on the committee, and they could have shared it with the other fifteen voters to spread my wisdom. I should probably write about the BBWAA ballot before the results are announced to avoid a similar tragedy.

    The easiest way is to probably just look at last year’s ballot and look for what I would change. So, without further ado, last year’s ten-person ballot:

    Jeff Bagwell
    Barry Bonds
    Roger Clemens
    Jim Edmonds
    Edgar Martinez
    Mike Mussina
    Mike Piazza
    Tim Raines
    Curt Schilling
    Larry Walker


    Yep, I did the “don’t vote for Ken Griffey, Jr. because he’s a lock so you can spread the votes around”. Clearly, the BBWAA did not find my article last year, as Jim Edmonds couldn’t lock up the requisite votes to stick around another year. That, plus the election of Mike Piazza, freed up two spots for me this year, which is good, because we got four solid candidates in Ivan Rodriguez, Manny Ramirez, Vladimir Guerrero, and Jorge Posada. So, we can just add those names and be done with…

    Nope, never mind, I did that math wrong; four is more than two. I’m gonna have to do some parsing of the names. And I forgot all the holdovers I couldn’t vote for anyway; even with Alan Trammell and Mark McGwire aging off, there are still plenty of interesting names remaining.

    Let’s start with the most simplistic ranking: if we just line up everyone by Wins Above Replacement (WAR, Baseball-Reference edition), what does that top ten look like?

    Bonds-162.4
    Clemens-140.3
    Mussina-83.0
    Schilling-79.9
    Bagwell-79.6
    Walker-72.6
    Ramirez-69.2
    Raines-69.1
    Rodriguez-68.4
    Martinez-68.3

    That’s…not too bad, actually. It’s basically my ballot from last year, with first-timers Pudge and Manny thrown in to fill those open spots. And not only that, but there’s a pretty clear demarcation there-Gary Sheffield is next, a full 8 Wins below Edgar, with the rest of the ballot below 60. If we were trying to draw a line somewhere between those four names between 68 and 70 WAR, that would be one thing, but this is a lot more noticeable break.

    And I do think some positions need some upward adjustments to their WAR totals; notably, catcher and relievers. But Rodriguez made it on his own, while Posada is the lowest non-reliever I think of as “in consideration”, with only 42.7. A 25+ WAR boost is just ridiculous. Posada is right where I would consider the borderline for catchers, so I’m not too bent out of shape by omitting him anyway. With the Hall already missing catchers like Ted Simmons, Thurman Munson, and Bill Freehan, I’m much more comfortable leaving him off my list.

    Then, there are the relievers. We’re basically looking at Lee Smith, Trevor Hoffman, and Billy Wagner. And I can see them all having a case for Cooperstown, but given how crowded the ballot is, I wouldn’t want to vote for more than one. So which one do I go with? Let’s line them up, and include some other stats, excluding their save totals to make who is who less clear:

    A: 29.6 bWAR, 26.6 fWAR, 1289.1 IP, 2.93 FIP, 1251 K, 8.73 K/9, 1.256 WHIP, 82.3 SV%
    B: 28.4 bWAR, 26.1 fWAR, 1089.1 IP, 3.08 FIP, 1133 K, 9.36 K/9, 1.058 WHIP, 88.8% SV%
    C: 28.1 bWAR, 24.1 fWAR, 903.0 IP, 2.73 FIP, 1196 K, 11.92 K/9*, 0.988 WHIP, 85.9 SV%

    *This would be the all-time record, if C had enough innings to qualify.
    So…which one do you pick? Because honestly…they all look too similar to me. I just can’t vote for one of them and feel like it wasn’t made somewhat arbitrarily. And I’m still not convinced that any of them deserves a spot over the other ten.

    (For reference, A was Smith, B was Hoffman, and C was Wagner.)

    Let’s look at things a different way, though; how does our list look when we use Wins Above Average? For reference, WAA is basically WAR, with the baseline set at 2 rather than 0 (that is to say, to calculate a player’s WAA for a season, subtract 2 from their WAR). This gives us a better sense of dominance, how much better the players were than just some random starter. For that, we’ve got:

    Bonds-124.5
    Clemens-94.5
    Schilling-54.1
    Bagwell-51.8
    Mussina-48.6
    Walker-48.2
    Martinez-38.4
    Ramirez-35.6
    Raines-35.0
    Rodriguez-33.1
    Guerrero-29.4
    Sammy Sosa-28.0
    Jeff Kent-26.3
    Sheffield-25.7
    J.D. Drew-25.0
    Mike Cameron-20.8
    Fred McGriff-19.6
    Posada-17.3
    Wagner-16.5
    Hoffman-13.7
    Smith-13.7

    First things first: not a great look for those last five, falling below Drew and Cameron (at the same time though, good on those two; they had great but underrated careers, even if they fell a little short overall). And this further cements my belief that I can scratch off all three closers.

    Once again, the same ten names are at the top, albeit in a shuffled order. And once again, there’s a decently-sized gap between ten and eleven. I feel like I can say that the top six are locks, because of how far ahead of the rest they are. There’s just no question that they’re the cream of this crop.

    Plus, Rodriguez made the top ten in both cases despite all of the lack-of-playing-time penalties that double-count against catchers. I think it’s safe to say he’s easily the best catcher not in Cooperstown too, so he’s in. And this is Raines’s final year on the ballot before he ages off, and he’s right on the cusp, so I feel obligated to throw him a vote. So that gives me eight names.

    So, those last two spots seem like they come down to Edgar, Manny, Vlad, Sammy, and Sheff, with those first two the favorites. This is a good group to look at too, as it’s four corner-outfielders who were got most or all of their value from their bat alone, plus a designated hitter.

    If you want to compare them, here’s a custom Fangraphs leaderboard. To be honest…I’m kind of inclined to stick it out with Manny and Edgar. They were far and away the best hitters, with Sheffield the next closest. Vlad probably has the best “intangible” arguments, given how notable he was and the steroid ties for Ramirez, Sosa, and Sheffield. But at the same time, he’s far and away the weakest candidate, to the point where he’d be noticeably among the weaker outfielders in the Hall.

    So that’s the final ballot: Bagwell, Bonds, Clemens, Martinez, Mussina, Raines, Ramirez, Rodriguez, Schilling, and Walker. If I were feeling clever, I would probably drop Manny and Walker in favor of Hoffman and Guerrero; based on the early returns, those two are riding the knife’s edge, currently at 75.0% and 73.3% on 175 ballots as I type. Meanwhile, the rest of my ballot is over 50% and needs help building momentum, while Ramirez and Walker are just sorta languishing in the low-20s. The more people we get in this year, the more cleared out the ballot is next year, meaning we can work to getting even more people inducted.

    And we’re gonna need those spots next year. Because outside of Bagwell, Raines, Hoffman, Rodriguez, and Guerrero, everyone else I mulled over is basically a lock to return next year, plus we’ll be adding Chipper Jones, Jim Thome, Scott Rolen, Andruw Jones, and Johan Santana, all of whom I have strong opinions about (plus Omar Vizquel, who I personally don’t but many other people will). A five person induction class would reduce so many headaches going forward (and it would match the largest Hall class ever, which would be cool). So godspeed, five guys getting over 70% of the vote; let’s hope we all see you in Cooperstown this summer.

    2 comments:

    1. Pudge may have been the best defensive catcher ever and he batted .296 over 21 years. He's my only pick for the Hall this year. WAR doesn't begin to properly evaluate catchers. Why are players who cheated by using PEDs listed for consideration?

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      Replies
      1. I've written on this before, so I didn't want to retread too much old ground, but the long short of it is:

        -For most of these players, they played before steroids were against the rules.

        (-For the one officially caught by testing (Manny), I think his performance was good enough to suffer any penalties attached and still clear the bar for induction, and since the rules don't say he can't be voted for from positive tests, he's still eligible.)

        -In fact, in pre-testing days, steroids were if anything tacitly encouraged by the power structures in place. Even if I didn't think this was hypocritical before, the induction of Bud Selig highlights this issue; if the person most responsible is rewarded, why shouldn't the actual players be?

        -Cheating has never before been cause to keep anyone out of Cooperstown. Even players taking drugs in the past. If we're arguing to keep them out on a morality stance, what makes steroid-users any different? Is it just the effectiveness of the drug? Becuase that seems to be shaky grounds. Were past cheaters more "morally pure" because their available means of cheating were less effective?

        -(Not to mention that we don't really even know how effective steroids were in the first place, for a variety of reasons. In any case, I think it's very safe to say they weren't the magic beans that some people believe them to be.)

        And even if you do want to punish steroid users, I think you could almost fill up a ballot with "clean" players, between at least Bagwell, Raines, Schilling, and Mussina, plus Martinez and Walker.

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