Jim Rice, terrific player of the 80's, with 47.5 career warp. In (and not deserving).
Yes, one of the most dominant offensive players of the late 70's/early 80's doesn't belong in the HOF because his WAR isn't pretty. That just shows how incomplete an evaluator WAR is.
Tim Raines, terrific player of the 80's, with 69 career warp (and immensely deserving). Out, and in danger of washing off ballot in 2 years unless he picks up 20% points.
Tim Raines rocks and he should be in. We agree here.
Lesson: The voters are largely elderly baseball writers who haven't read a lick of Bill James or any serious analytical books/studies articles over the last 35-40 years. RBI, a team dependent stat, is the be all end of all of individual performance. On base percentage, an individual stat, and the most telling single measure of merit, is like an appetizer salad.
Are they mostly elderly? I think you should show evidence to support that dubious supposition. Also what do you consider elderly. I'm an old man to my students at 46, but I'm not sizing up rocking chairs yet. And Rbis and (even more-so) on-base percentage do matter. Baseball people still value them greatly. I have no idea what an "appetizer salad" analogy means, but i bet it doesn't apply to OBP.
Corrolary 2: If you happen to play with a comparable contemporary even better than you (Rickey) you suffer by comparison and risk being denied entry vs. lesser players who lack such contemporary.
We completely agree here. I said the exact same thing earlier in the thread.