Outta Leftfield wrote:I agree with jit53 that Norm Cash may have been a better player than Hodges. Either way, they were very close.
So why the ongoing drumbeat for Hodges, whereas nobody bothers to make a HOF argument for Cash? It really is the Boys of Summer effect, I think.
Hodges was a very good player on a great team, and Jackie, Pee Wee, Campy and the Duke are all in, so why not their old buddy Gil? But Hodges performance in and of itself does not make a truly compelling HOF argument. I guess it's a question--should being a very good player on a great team qualify you for the Hall of Fame?
Would anyone care to make that argument? Should being a good player on a great team indeed qualify you for special consideration for a place in the HOF?
The argument is that it's a Hall of Fame, not strictly a Hall of Merit, and it's a museum regarding baseball history. Thus, to the extent that a very good - but not quite great -- player played key roles on a dynasty, and/or served as one of the faces of a franchise, they play a more vital role in telling the story of baseball than a well-traveled journeyman. For a contemporary example -- Andy Pettitte's career numbers are not quite as good as Kevin Brown's, but if you're telling the story of baseball in the 1990s/ 2000's, Pettitte plays a more significant role. For purposes of a Hodges contemporary, Rocky Colavito had almost identical WAR, slightly more homers, had 3 top-five MVP finishes, but I think it's reasonable to say that Hodges had more of a historical impact. (Colavito was on the ballot twice, and got 0.5% or less each time).
I'm not a strict adherent to this principle, but I think that's the underlying rationale of some voters who focus more on a "place in history" than straight ranking by Wins Above Replacement or other numeric thresholds.