durantjerry wrote:Nicely said. That is the point I was trying to make. The game(and the rules) changes, the HOF standards have to change with the game. Eagles NFL HOF'er Chuck Bednaric thought anybody that did not play both ways was a pussy and did not belong in the NFL HOF. His point is just as valid as Stether's desire to exclude the DH from the HOF for not playing in the field. The game has changed and old standards used to judge performance must change as the game changes. The best of the best of the DH's should get into the HOF, and Ortiz is one of the best of the best.
I already showed above why Bombers argument was neither nicely said nor logical.
As to the Bednaric comparison, it's another of your specious, inapt football comparisons. Firstly, as I said before, baseball and football are entirely different games. There are hardly any parallels between them, as there are between Rugby and Australian Rules Football. So, there is no true football equivalent to the DH who could justify a full-time DH's inclusion in the HOF
Secondly, there is no recent parallel to the shift on two-way players in baseball as there has been recently in football. In football, most players play only offense or only defense; only the rare few play both. In baseball, almost all non-pitching/hitting players still play both offense and defense. So, the DH still stands out as a part time player--as opposed to a NFL player who only plays offense or defense--who doesn't play an important part of the non-pitching player's game, spends most of his time on the dugout while other non-pitching players play defense, and--as many BB writers agree--doesn't merit a place in the HOF.
So, the game hasn't changed as much as you claim, most non-pitching players--unlike NFL players--play offense and defense, so the HOF non-pitching player should be one who played both as well. So, no, the best of the best full-time DH's shouldn't make the HOF, and Ortiz shouldn't as well.