by PotKettleBlack » Thu Dec 15, 2011 11:09 am
Okay, let's look at this like a hall of fame voter, which is, wanting to be interesting by finding minute flaws and seeing myself as a guardian of a meaningless tradition (the sanctity of the first ballot being strictly for the immortals died around 1990).
I'm not voting for Rivera on the first ballot because he's a short inning guy. How many complete games did he pitch? If he was so great, why didn't he start? Where are the wins?
Pujols: I would have voted for him on the first ballot, except that he left St. Louis for more money. I am the holdout baseball writer, so I can hold that against him.
Griffey Jr: He wore his hat backwards and his shirt untucked. No respect for the history of the game. Never hit for average, lost a ton of time to injury, pitched for Pepsi. Oh, and the way he engineered his way out of Seattle, and the way that Seattle got instantly better... then the way he got himself out of Cincy, and they got better.
Maddux: Well, this one's hard, but stick with me. Can't keep him out on wins. Or Cy Youngs. Or Gold Gloves. I know, not enough strikeouts. Not nearly dominant enough. I can't put a guy with an 88 MPH fastball on the first ballot, no matter how fine his control. Oh, and he wears glasses and probably weighs 150 lbs soaking wet.
Collectively, I think the select BBWA hall of fame outlier voters lost their minds a bit when they put Seaver in with that high a number. It's like they collectively failed to be as picky and a-hole-ish as they are for everyone else.
For my money, Mo, Maddux and Pujols (depending on what happens next) would go in with 100% on the first ballot, but that would be exceedingly weird when Musial (93.2%), Ted Williams (93.4), Mays (94.7%), Aaron (97.8%), Bench (96.4%), Yaz (94.6%) Schmidt (96.5%) Brett (98.2%) etc did not get that.
It is also weird for Seaver and Nolan Ryan to be tied with 98.8%. Or for Ripken to have the position player record for 98.5%.