Nice discussion on ESPN Radio this morning about this. I would say he does not set foot in Cooperstown until BERT BLYLEVEN gets in.
Your thoughts...
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quote:Originally posted by 1st&3rd:
He should go into the Hall with a 270 - 153 record which is 117 games over .500 and a 3.68 career ERA. 17 seasons with double digit wins. 11 seasons with 15 or more wins. Also, 5 time all star and 7 gold gloves.
BTW, Blylevin was 287 - 250 with 3.31 career ERA. Also had 17 seasons with double digit wins and 10 seasons where he won 15 or more games. Impressive with 242 complete games and 60 shutouts.
quote:Simply being good and lasting is not HOF criteria IMHO.
quote:Originally posted by CPLZ:
I agree with JBB on Mussina over Clemens, but I'd vote my neighbors cat in over Clemens, and I'm dog guy.
Mussina, no. Simply being good and lasting is not HOF criteria IMHO. Jack Morris, No. Wells, Schilling, Brown, Glavine...No.
Blylevin, yes.
quote:"I'm very happy for Mike and his family," said longtime Stanford head coach Mark Marquess, who was at the helm for Mussina's three-year career on The Farm. "He is certainly one of the greatest pitchers in Stanford history, and he enjoyed an outstanding Major League career. I know that his family is very important to him, and now he'll have more time to spend with them. He is a class act on and off the field, and hopefully he will be elected to the Hall of Fame."
quote:Originally posted by Dad04:
He may not have been a #1, but he had a sweet career ERA way under 4.
quote:Does a pitcher who almost no one thought was the best and was considered over the course of his carrer by Cy Young voters to be around the 10th best pitcher of his era, deserve HOF?
quote:Originally posted by ClevelandDad:
I have considered the dilution arguments and they do not carry much weight imho.
quote:what then is the HOF for?
quote:If we were to use subjective criteria (which they do, i.e. argument of best of his era), like your Gold Glove example (which is probably the worst award for actual achievement)...
quote:Originally posted by Quincy:
Would a pitcher who only won 236 over 16 years be a good bet for the Hall ?
http://www.baseball-reference.com/f/fordwh01.shtml
quote:Originally posted by coach2709:quote:If we were to use subjective criteria (which they do, i.e. argument of best of his era), like your Gold Glove example (which is probably the worst award for actual achievement)...
CPLZ is it safe to assume you are talking about pitchers and gold gloves? If not could you explain a bit more.
Here is what is great about the baseball HOF - it creates debate. While I think they do leave a few people out that should be in I don't want just everyone to be let in.
So that creates the question - do HOF players have to be the studs of their era or does steady, consistent play at a higher than average long period of time get you in?
There have to be standards but what are they? If you say all HOF pitchers have to have 300 wins or 325 saves then you are going to leave out a John Smoltz who did both and was a stud at both. He just didn't get enough numbers at one. He did what his team needed him to do.
You can't go strictly by numbers because you got major problems. Going with the 325 saves you leave out a John Smoltz (154) and let in Roberto Hernandez (326).
quote:Originally posted by coach2709:
CPLZ is it safe to assume you are talking about pitchers and gold gloves? If not could you explain a bit more.