Trammell got 17 votes--not too bad, but still significantly shy of election. Probably a lot of people feel a bit like abnerdoubleday about him (and some others), when he wrote:
[quote:ae8d26ec22] And although I did not put Belle, Gosssage, Mattingly, Parker, Rice or Trammell on my list - I certainly would not oppose their HOF entry. [/quote:ae8d26ec22] Here's my argument for why Trammell really belongs.
Assessing SS for the Hall is difficult, because you're weighing a balance of defense and offense at a defensively demanding position. But the gist of my argument is that Trammell was a significantly better player than [b:ae8d26ec22]more than half[/b:ae8d26ec22] of the shortstops in the Hall. He was on a par with the next five players (all widely acknowledged greats). And only four players presently in the Hall were demonstrably better than him. If you're as good or better than 16 of the 20 players currently in the Hall, and only four are clearly better than you, wouldn't that suggest that you deserve election?
Here's how I count it. Trammell was a significantly better player than these eleven: Hughie Jennings, Joe Tinker, Bobby Wallace, Rabbit Maranville, John Ward, Dave Bancroft, Joe Sewell, Travis Jackson, Luis Aparicio, Phil Rizzutto, and George Davis (this is in order of election.) I'm basing my opinion on the stats at Baseball-Reference.com, which lists Hall of Fame players by position. I'm weighing a balance of hitting, fielding and career length (and I'm not considering Hornsby, who was really a 2B).
Trammell was on a par with five players: Joe Cronin, Luke Appling, Lou Boudreau, Pee Wee Reese and Ozzie Smith. You might list him a little ahead of some of these guys and litte behind some others, but they're basically on a par. Bill James concurs, by the way. When I checked his Historical Abstract I found that he'd placed Trammell well ahead of every one of the eleven in my bottom group and right in the midst of the peer group. Trammell is ranked a little ahead of three of them--Reese, Appling and Boudreau--and a little behind the other two--Ozzie and Cronin. I think you could debate James's order, but it's a very reasonable listing.
The only HOFers that rank significantly ahead of Trammell in my own (and James's) opinion are Honus Wagner, Arky Vaughan, Robin Yount, and Ernie Banks. Cal Ripken will be eligible next year and will promptly join that elite group.
Now, another factor is obviously also present. A-Rod, along with Cal, Jeter, and (coming on strong) Tejada and (falling away fast) Nomar, have sort of raised the bar for SS because of their great offense at what is traditionally a glove-man's position. I think that's working against Trammell right now. But Trammell was also an excellent hitter. And the rise of A-Rod still doesn't change the fact that Trammell meets and exceeds the historical standard: he's better than half the SS already in the Hall. He's as good as a peer group that includes Ozzie, Cronin, Reese, Appling and Boudreau--historically great players, all, and players whose HOF status nobody questions. Only a small handful of superstars are really better than him--but the Hall has never been just a place for the super-elite. He was an excellent hitter and outstanding fielder at baseball's most demanding position for a long time. And not many players can say that.