Cowtipper Old-Timey Member Posted January 23, 2025 Posted January 23, 2025 Well, by that logic, if every player is a Hall of Famer or he isn't, then every player that earns election should earn 100% support. That's right.I get it when a player doesn't get 100% of the vote because a voter isn't sure if that player is a HOFer. And some voters come around. They believe, initially, that the player isn't HOF worthy but are persuaded over time that he is. But what's the logic for not voting for Warren Spahn? Or Rickey Henderson? Or Hank Aaron? Or Ted Williams? In the entire history of baseball, Mariano Rivera was the only player who deserved to go in unanimously on his first ballot?No one is deserving of anything.If I had a hunch that someone might push 100%, I'd probably not vote for him, just to be the counterpoint.Groupthink and conformity are terribly dangerous.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted January 23, 2025 Posted January 23, 2025 If I had a hunch that someone might push 100%, I'd probably not vote for him, just to be the counterpoint.Groupthink and conformity are terribly dangerous. Sure. Especially if everyone were to think that Hank Aaron deserved to be inducted into baseball's Hall of Fame. How dangerous!That's your rationale? That it's dangerous for every HOF voter to believe that Hank Aaron or Stan Musial or Willie Mays belongs in the HOF? That makes no sense whatsoever. Is it also dangerous for everybody to believe that two plus three equals five? Or that the Earth isn't flat?
Marshmallowmilkshake Old-Timey Member Posted January 24, 2025 Posted January 24, 2025 The whole focus on a unanimous vote is about the writers making this about the writers. Used to be making it on the first ballot was the biggest thing. Someone was "a first-ballot Hall-of-Famer." Now it must be unanimous, or the player is slighted. As long as you are above 75 percent, it doesn't matter. It's not like there is a difference between Ralph Kiner's 75 percent and Ichiro's 99.7. They're both Hall of Famers. Should everyone vote for the obvious players? Of course they should. Does it really matter? Not as long as they reach 75 percent.Buster Olney's podcast this week was all about the voting and there was much venting about seeking out the one holdout and doing Lord knows what to him or her. When we start demanding unanimous collective thought, that's a problem. "We need to all think the exact same way and outliers will be ostracized" is a bad way to go. Celebrate the 99.7 percent who got it right. Olney also went off on a rant about making all the ballots public and how sports journalists should demand transparancy. Sure. Sports journalists are by far the largest group that won't name sources - "a person familiar with the Mets' thinking..." -- so there's no way they'll want transparency. I did notice that ARod, Manny and the other juicers are going nowhere in the voting.Wonder if at some point the Hall will convene a committee and look at that era and figure out what to do with Bonds, Sosa, McGwire, Clemens, Arod and the like.
Buck4Prez Verified Member Posted January 24, 2025 Posted January 24, 2025 Buster Olney's podcast this week was all about the voting and there was much venting about seeking out the one holdout and doing Lord knows what to him or her. When we start demanding unanimous collective thought, that's a problem. "We need to all think the exact same way and outliers will be ostracized" is a bad way to go. Celebrate the 99.7 percent who got it right. Olney also went off on a rant about making all the ballots public and how sports journalists should demand transparancy. Sure. Sports journalists are by far the largest group that won't name sources - "a person familiar with the Mets' thinking..." -- so there's no way they'll want transparency. Nobody's demanding unanimous thought, but we've had a spat of bad-faith detractors over the last few decades that use that same argument to justify a lot of attention and time to batshit crazy things. We demand unanimous collective thought in plenty of places, deciding on where to do for dinner, juries, we should all drive between the lines and stop at stop lights, etc. But taken even the hall, they kept Piazza out for years because one batshit crazy blogger mouthed off about bacne and enough people gave that attention. Sometimes the .3% is the guy that decides the stop sign is optional, and we shouldn't applaud his not falling into groupthink or whatever.Also the BBWAA voted to make ballots public, it's the Hall itself that's the holdup.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted January 24, 2025 Posted January 24, 2025 When we start demanding unanimous collective thought, that's a problem. "We need to all think the exact same way and outliers will be ostracized" is a bad way to go. So it's OK for many people to think that the way to stave off Covid is to shoot bleach up your ass and to take horse medicine. Because their President, your President, told them so. It's also OK for some people to think that one plus one equals three and that the Earth is flat. Let's let those people build our bridges and highways.There's no rational argument or justification for withholding a HOF vote from baseball's very-most elite players --- players who punched their ticket into the HOF five, six, seven, maybe even ten years before they retired. Any voter who doesn't think that Hank Aaron deserves a HOF vote doesn't deserve to have a vote in the first place. It's a litmus test --- as it should be. Just like if you wanna pass your college math test, you have to provide the proper, precise, exact answers to the questions asked. If you think that two plus two equals five, then yes, you are an outlier and you will be ostracized -- you will receive a failing grade.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted January 24, 2025 Posted January 24, 2025 Chasing down that last holdout will always, always be done in frustration. There will always be holdouts, if only to draw attention to themselves as contrarians, and putting energy into chasing them down only raises their profiles and amplifies their positions, while having no effect on the outcome.
Bob Alpacadaca Verified Member Posted January 24, 2025 Posted January 24, 2025 You guys proved his point.
Bob Alpacadaca Verified Member Posted January 24, 2025 Posted January 24, 2025 ¿Quién demostró qué punto? The two posts ahead of yours.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted January 24, 2025 Posted January 24, 2025 I guess I'm still not sure what has been proven, but yeah, Mike Piazza didn't fail to gain election in 2013, 2014, and 2015 because one guy didn't vote for him, but because 42.2%, 37.8%, and 30.1% of the electorate failed to vote for him in those respective years. And if we can't respect those outcomes, I don't think there is any process we are going to accept.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted January 25, 2025 Posted January 25, 2025 Buster Olney's podcast this week was all about the voting and there was much venting about seeking out the one holdout and doing Lord knows what to him or her. When we start demanding unanimous collective thought, that's a problem. "We need to all think the exact same way and outliers will be ostracized" is a bad way to go. Celebrate the 99.7 percent who got it right. Olney also went off on a rant about making all the ballots public and how sports journalists should demand transparancy. Sure. Sports journalists are by far the largest group that won't name sources - "a person familiar with the Mets' thinking..." -- so there's no way they'll want transparency. Nobody's demanding unanimous thought, but we've had a spat of bad-faith detractors over the last few decades that use that same argument to justify a lot of attention and time to batshit crazy things. Exactly. It's not about forcing unanimous thought. The guy's equating absurd, irrational ideas with legitimate debate and disagreement. Some things are just not up for debate.
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted January 26, 2025 Posted January 26, 2025 Happy for Wagner , goes in as an Astro? Or no team cap ? I suspect an Astro. I was hoping that Sabathia would go in with Cleveland's logos, but he actually spent more time in the Bronx and I'm not sure he never wore a Cleveland cap with the C.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted January 26, 2025 Posted January 26, 2025 Happy for Wagner , goes in as an Astro? Or no team cap ? I suspect an Astro. I don't see how this is even an issue. I don't see how the HOF even lets Wagner have a a say in the matter. Nine years with the Astros. Two with the Phillies. A little more than three with the Mets. What am I missing?
Centerfield Old-Timey Member Posted January 26, 2025 Posted January 26, 2025 Ichiro is a Hall of Famer. Anyone who doesn’t recognize that doesn’t deserve to vote. I disagree with so much of the HOF process/voting that I try not to lose any sleep over it. But some things are just dumb.I remember a few years ago some idiot writer tried defending his non vote. I think it was Rickey? The stupid logic applied made me regret giving him the attention.
roger_that Old-Timey Member Posted January 26, 2025 Posted January 26, 2025 Well, isn't it true that each voter can vote for no more than ten players? If someone is a big-Hall advocate (I'm not), isn't it perfectly legitimate to assume that certain players will get their 75%, so why not neglect those players in order to include another player who you think is deserving of an HoF vote, if only to keep him on the ballot for another year? This is a justification for gaming the system (another thing I'm not a big fan of) but it's certainly an arguable way to approach a flawed system.
Cowtipper Old-Timey Member Posted January 26, 2025 Posted January 26, 2025 It only ever seems to be a flawed system when the guy someone wants in doesn't get in or the outcome someone wants doesn't happen.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted January 26, 2025 Posted January 26, 2025 It only ever seems to be a flawed system when the guy someone wants in doesn't get in or the outcome someone wants doesn't happen. Not really. If there are 11 Hank Aarons on the ballot, eleven candidates who clearly belong in the HOF, then it's understandable that one of those eleven might not get inducted, given that each voter may only vote for 10 candidates.Here's the 1982 HOF vote tallies:https://www.baseball-reference.com/awards/hof_1982.shtmlNine voters omitted Aaron from their ballots. 45 voters couldn't bring themselves to vote for Frank Robinson. I wonder why.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted January 27, 2025 Posted January 27, 2025 There was a very different electorate in 1982. The group has since been pared down considerably. Fewer 98 year olds who haven't written in 25 years.There were also writers back then who only covered baseball for a short part of their career, but whose BBWAA membership somehow stayed active, even though most of their career might have been on a boxing beat, or restaurants, or dance.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted January 27, 2025 Posted January 27, 2025 There was a very different electorate in 1982. The group has since been pared down considerably. Fewer 98 year olds who haven't written in 25 years.There were also writers back then who only covered baseball for a short part of their career, but whose BBWAA membership somehow stayed active, even though most of their career might have been on a boxing beat, or restaurants, or dance. So what? That doesn't justify excluding Aaron and Robinson from the HOF ballot.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted January 27, 2025 Posted January 27, 2025 I didn't exclude them. Nor did I justify excluding them.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted July 26, 2025 Posted July 26, 2025 The road to Cooperstown always has a few bumps. [TWEET] [/TWEET]
Elian Pena St. Lucie Mets - A SS In St. Lucie's Wednesday doubleheader, the 18-year-old shortstop went 3-for-7 with a walk and his 7th and 8th doubles. He's hitting .346/.460/.481 (.941). Also 8 steals in 9 attempts. Explore Elian Pena News >
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