Showing posts with label Lee Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lee Smith. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Mariano Rivera, Roy Halladay, Edgar Martinez, Mike Mussina elected to Hall of Fame

Mariano Rivera
Here's your fun fact of the day: Edgar Martinez has a .579 career batting average against Mariano Rivera.

With that kind of track record against the greatest closer of all-time, it makes you wonder how in the world it took Martinez 10 years to get elected to Baseball Hall of Fame, doesn't it?

Regardless, Rivera and Martinez both were elected to Cooperstown on Tuesday, along with Roy Halladay and Mike Mussina.

Rivera became the first player in history to earn unanimous election, appearing on all 425 ballots. Previously, Ken Griffey Jr. had the record for highest vote percentage (99.3 percent) after he was named on 437 of 440 ballots in 2016.

Frankly, I'm surprised Rivera got 100 percent of the vote -- not that he isn't deserving. The former Yankees closer has 652 career saves and five World series championships -- and an 8-1 record with a 0.70 ERA and 42 saves in 96 postseason appearances.

I just didn't think a closer would be the first guy to break down the barrier and appear on every ballot. Think about it: Greg Maddux threw more than 5,000 innings in his impeccable career as a starting pitcher, but not even he got 100 percent of the vote. Rivera, however, did, despite only pitching 1,283 innings in his career.

It's an interesting argument, but ultimately it doesn't matter much, since Rivera is no-doubt Hall of Famer regardless of what percent of the vote he received -- as are Maddux, Griffey Jr. and dozens of others.

I've long been an advocate for Martinez as a Hall of Famer, and I'm glad to see him receive 85.4 percent of the vote (75 percent is required for induction). The former Seattle designated hitter is one of only six players who began their career after World War II to retire with a .300 batting average, .400 on-base percentage and .500 slugging percentage. Martinez won two batting titles and retired with a .312 batting average and 309 home runs in 18 seasons.

Halladay is going to the Hall posthumously, after his tragic death in November 2017 when a plane he was piloting crashed into the Gulf of Mexico off the Florida coast. The right-hander totaled 203 wins and a 3.38 ERA in 16 seasons -- 12 with the Toronto Blue Jays and four with the Philadelphia Phillies. He won a Cy Young award in both leagues and finished second on two other occasions. He threw a perfect game and is best-known for the no-hitter he threw for the Phillies in the 2010 NLDS against the Cincinnati Reds. From 2003 to 2011, he threw 61 complete games -- more than twice as many as the next-closest pitcher during those years (CC Sabathia had 30).

As for Mussina, will he go into the Hall as a Baltimore Oriole, or as a Yankee? I hope he goes in as an Oriole, but it will be close. Mussina pitched 18 seasons, 10 in Baltimore, eight in New York. He won 270 games, 147 with the Orioles, 123 with the Yankees. Mussina won seven Gold Gloves and totaled 2,813 strikeouts. He never won the Cy Young award, coming close in 1999, when he finished second to Pedro Martinez.

These four players will join Harold Baines and Lee Smith in the Class of 2019. Baines and Smith were elected in December by a Hall of Fame veterans committee. This year's induction is July 22.

Monday, December 10, 2018

White Sox great Harold Baines elected to National Baseball Hall of Fame

Harold Baines at the plate in 1986
Here's a surprise: Former White Sox outfielder and designated hitter Harold Baines was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday.

Baines received the required 12 out of a possible 16 votes from the Today's Game Era Committee to earn enshrinement. Former Cubs relief pitcher Lee Smith also was voted in by the committee and will join Baines in the 2019 Hall of Fame class.

I have to admit that I wasn't expecting Baines to get elected. He played 22 seasons (1980-2001) in the major leagues, including three stints with the Sox (1980-89, 1996-97 and 2000-01), and he was a good hitter for a long time. However, he played 1,643 games as a designated hitter, and "only" 1,061 games as an outfielder, which I figured would be a huge strike against him for the purists.

Plus, Baines was not a lifetime .300 hitter. He did not hit 500 career home runs, nor did he collect 3,000 career hits. So, he didn't reach any of the "counting statistics" milestones that we normally associate with Hall of Fame-caliber hitters.

Baines was a career .289 hitter, with .356 on-base percentage and a .465 slugging percentage. He totaled 2,866 hits, 384 home runs, 1,628 RBIs, 488 doubles, 49 triples and 1,299 runs scored.

There's nothing wrong with these numbers. That's a helluva career, in fact, but Baines only led the league in a category once in the 22 years he played. He topped the American League in 1984 with a .541 slugging percentage as a member of the Sox. He never won an MVP award, and never finished higher than ninth (1985). He had little or no defensive utility after he hurt his knee, and heck, he never got more than 6.1 percent of the vote on any Hall ballot before this.

Here's the one case I can make for Baines: He probably would have reached that 3,000-hit plateau if work stoppages hadn't cost him games in three seasons of his career -- 1981, 1994 and 1995.

Is that a good case? Ehhh ... probably not. I'm happy for Baines, but really surprised at his election.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Charity event in Schaumburg to feature former White Sox, former Cubs

If I didn't already have plans for the weekend, I might be tempted to attend the Inaugural Larry A. Pogofsky Chicago All-Star Softball Challenge.

The event is scheduled for 4 p.m. Saturday at Boomers Stadium in Schaumburg. Former White Sox players will take on former Cubs players in an softball game to benefit Chicago White Sox Charities, Chicago Cubs Charities and the Special Kids Network.

There are some several good names on the list of scheduled attendees, former All-Stars from both teams, at least one future Hall of Famer and even an former World Series MVP (pictured). Here are the rosters:

White Sox: Frank Thomas, Jermaine Dye, Ozzie Guillen, Carlos Lee, Ray Durham, Ron Kittle, Magglio Ordonez, Cliff Politte, James Baldwin, Tony Phillips, Norberto Martin, Chad Kreuter and Brian Anderson

Cubs: Derrek Lee, Lee Smith, Jacque Jones, Cliff Floyd, Jamie Moyer, Michael Barrett, Bob Dernier, Brian McRae, Bill Madlock, Steve Trout, Scott Eyre, Willie Wilson, Gary Matthews Jr., Manny Trillo and Adam Greenberg.

I did notice they have 15 former Cubs listed and only 13 former Sox. Trout played five years on both sides of town, so maybe they should have him play for the Sox to even out the sides. 

In any case, it sounds like a good time. Tickets start at $15. They're saying this is an inaugural event, which implies they are going to do this again next year. Maybe I'll put it on my calendar for 2014.