by Outta Leftfield » Mon Dec 19, 2011 4:18 pm
[quote:89df6a7746="Stormcrow2012"]Doing something simply because it is tradition is mindless.[/quote:89df6a7746]
I wasn't praising or justifying traditional voting patterns--simply presenting them.
[quote:89df6a7746]Ripken's longevity may have ended up hurting his team in many ways. Sure he was durable but we are talking baseball not football here.... Ripken was way overrated.[/quote:89df6a7746]
Ripken is viewed as an outstanding player by various statistical measures, including the WAR (Wins Above Replacement) system. His total of 89.9 makes him 26th of all time among position players, using this measure. WAR sees him as excellent both offensively (72.3) and defensively (17.6).
In my opinion, Hall of Fame voters are looking at four major categories when they vote: Dominance, Excellence over time, Career Totals, and Unique Accomplishments.
Not everyone has all four of these--for example, Roger Maris was dominant for a few years, and he had a unique achievement (the single season home run record), but he didn't have excellence over time or high career totals, so he's not in the Hall of Fame. The players who have all four categories aced (as Cal does) tend today to get quick admittance to the Hall.
Cal's record suggests that he was dominant (2 MVPs), excellent over time (a 21 year career, with a stretch from 1982-1996 when he was a really good player), had strong career totals (3000+ hits, 1695 RBI, 1647 Runs, etc.), and obviously had the unique accomplishment of 2632 consecutive games played.
Cal Jr's high voting percentage no doubt in part reflects his unique achievement, the record for consecutive games played, which broke Gehrig's record by more than 500 games. Unlike Lou, Cal not only played every game but almost every inning of his consecutive games. This is an accomplishment that just about anyone can relate to--most of us have missed work or classes due to illness, personal problems, fatigue, etc. Cal didn't miss a day of work for more than 16 years, and performed at a very high level the whole time. That gave him a bit of mystique, which he earned. Gehrig had a similar mystique--which Lou also earned. Babe Ruth complained (after they quarrelled) that Lou hurt the team by playing every game, but I think it was just that Babe was jealous of Lou's pristine image.
Ripken wasn't as great a player as Willie Mays or Henry Aaron (or Gehrig), but IMHO Cal deserved every Hall of Fame vote he got. If Willie and Hank received fewer votes than Cal (in part because they played in an earlier era when voting patterns were different), that's not necessarily a reason to take it out on Cal.