Twilightkid Wrote:
http://joeposnanski.si.com/2011/01/06/the-willie-mays-hall-of-fame/
this is what i kind of mean, about the HOF now being a joke....albeit, this is a bit more extreme.....my dad agrees with this 100% though...
I honestly don't see how you can say it's not exclusive enough. Only 1% of major league baseball players will make the baseball hall of fame. And, statistically, it has never been harder to get in then it is right now. If you played in the 80's, well, it sucks for you because they almost have no shot. Only 8% of every day players from the 80's will make the hall. Tim Raines, a guy many believe to be the 2nd greatest lead-off hitter of all time, doesn't look like has much of a shot. It sucks he played at the same time as the greatest lead-off hitter of all time.
Every year HOF voters can vote for 10 players. They average voting for 5. Basically, they use only 50% of their ballot. Are there some players who are heads and shoulders above everyone else? Of course. But just because Joe Montana is in the NFL hall of fame, doesn't mean that Drew Brees shouldn't be some day. The likelihood of another Mays is very unlikely. Why does that mean no outfielder should ever make the hall again?
And this quote by the same author you linked is very telling:
Quote:
If Alan Trammell had played shortstop in the big leagues in the 1920s and 1930s, he would have gone into the Hall of Fame first-ballot, almost unanimously, and would have been ranked just behind Honus Wagner as the greatest shortstop who ever lived. He could do it all. He hit. He fielded. He could run. He hit with some power. He played smart. He led.
But because he played in the 1980s and 1990s, and he didn’t field quite as well as Ozzie, didn’t hit with quite as much power as Ripken, didn’t run quite as well as Larkin, he has garnered stunningly little Hall of Fame support. He was, in my mind, a better player than more than half of the 19 shortstops in the Hall of Fame, but it seems he is destined to play out his 15 years on the ballot and then land on that list of players that the veterans committee annually turns down.
But think about that for a second. How many people have played shortstop in MLB ever? Thousands? Only 19 are currently enshrined. That's crazy exclusive by any standard.
It's almost like you think because baseball's golden age is behind it, we should just lock the doors to HOF.