Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
This is a pretty stacked ballot with every one of the nine players, along with Marvin Miller, all having a defensible case.
The 10 candidates for Modern Baseball Era consideration for the Class of 2020:
Dwight Evans played 19 seasons with the Red Sox and one with the Orioles, totaling 385 home runs and 1,384 RBI at the plate while winning eight Gold Glove Awards in right field. A three-time All-Star and two-time Silver Slugger Award winner, Evans posted a .370 career on-base percentage and is one of only 34 players all-time with at least 1,300 runs scored, 1,300 RBI and 1,300 walks.
Steve Garvey compiled a .294 career average over 19 major league seasons with the Dodgers and Padres, amassing 2,599 hits, 272 home runs, 1,308 RBI and 10 All-Star Game selections. He hit .338 with 11 home runs and 31 RBI in 11 postseason series, was named the 1978 and 1984 NLCS MVP and won the 1981 Roberto Clemente Award. The 1974 NL Most Valuable Player, Garvey won four Gold Glove Awards and played in an NL record 1,207 straight games at first base.
Tommy John pitched 26 seasons for the Indians, White Sox, Dodgers, Yankees, Angels and A’s, finishing his career after the 1989 season with a record of 288-231 and 3.34 ERA. His 700 career starts rank eighth on the all-time list and his 4,710.1 innings rank 20th all-time. A four-time All-Star Game selection – three of which came following his groundbreaking elbow surgery in 1974 – John won the 1976 Hutch Award and 1981 Lou Gehrig Memorial Award.
Don Mattingly played 14 seasons for the Yankees, batting .307 with 222 home runs and 2,153 hits. A six-time All-Star and nine-time Gold Glove Award winner at first base, Mattingly led the American League in total bases in both 1985 and 1986, won the 1984 AL batting title, captured three Silver Slugger Awards and was named the 1985 AL Most Valuable Player.
Marvin Miller was elected as the head of the Major League Baseball Players Association in 1966 and quickly turned the union into a powerhouse. Within a decade of being named head of the union, Miller had secured free agency for the players. By the time he retired in 1982, the average player salary was approximately 10 times what it was when he took over.
Thurman Munson played for 11 seasons with the Yankees, winning the American League Rookie of the Year Award in 1970 and the American League Most Valuable Player Award in 1976. A seven-time All-Star and three-time Gold Glove Award winner, Munson is one of only two catchers in history with three consecutive seasons with at least a .300 batting average, 180 hits and 100 RBI
Dale Murphy played 18 seasons with the Braves, Phillies and Rockies, winning back-to-back National League Most Valuable Player Awards in 1982 and 1983. A seven-time All-Star, Murphy won five Gold Glove Awards and four Silver Slugger Awards in center field. Murphy finished his career with 398 home runs and 1,266 RBI.
Dave Parker compiled a .290 career average over 19 major league seasons with six teams, including 11 years in Pittsburgh and four years in Cincinnati, and amassed 339 home runs, 1,493 RBI and two batting titles (1977-78). The 1978 NL Most Valuable Player was named to seven All-Star games and won three Gold Glove Awards in right field
Ted Simmons played for 21 seasons, totaling a .285 batting average, 2,472 hits, 483 doubles, 248 home runs and 1,389 RBI primarily as a catcher for the Cardinals, Brewers and Braves. An eight-time All-Star, he garnered MVP votes seven times in his career and finished among his league’s top 10 players in batting average six times
Lou Whitaker played 19 seasons, all with the Tigers, compiling 2,369 hits, 244 home runs and 1,197 walks. A five-time All-Star and four-time Silver Slugger Award winner, Whitaker won three Gold Glove Awards for his play at second base. The 1978 American League Rookie of the Year, Whitaker never played a game in the field at any position other than second base.
The 10 candidates for Modern Baseball Era consideration for the Class of 2020:
Dwight Evans played 19 seasons with the Red Sox and one with the Orioles, totaling 385 home runs and 1,384 RBI at the plate while winning eight Gold Glove Awards in right field. A three-time All-Star and two-time Silver Slugger Award winner, Evans posted a .370 career on-base percentage and is one of only 34 players all-time with at least 1,300 runs scored, 1,300 RBI and 1,300 walks.
Steve Garvey compiled a .294 career average over 19 major league seasons with the Dodgers and Padres, amassing 2,599 hits, 272 home runs, 1,308 RBI and 10 All-Star Game selections. He hit .338 with 11 home runs and 31 RBI in 11 postseason series, was named the 1978 and 1984 NLCS MVP and won the 1981 Roberto Clemente Award. The 1974 NL Most Valuable Player, Garvey won four Gold Glove Awards and played in an NL record 1,207 straight games at first base.
Tommy John pitched 26 seasons for the Indians, White Sox, Dodgers, Yankees, Angels and A’s, finishing his career after the 1989 season with a record of 288-231 and 3.34 ERA. His 700 career starts rank eighth on the all-time list and his 4,710.1 innings rank 20th all-time. A four-time All-Star Game selection – three of which came following his groundbreaking elbow surgery in 1974 – John won the 1976 Hutch Award and 1981 Lou Gehrig Memorial Award.
Don Mattingly played 14 seasons for the Yankees, batting .307 with 222 home runs and 2,153 hits. A six-time All-Star and nine-time Gold Glove Award winner at first base, Mattingly led the American League in total bases in both 1985 and 1986, won the 1984 AL batting title, captured three Silver Slugger Awards and was named the 1985 AL Most Valuable Player.
Marvin Miller was elected as the head of the Major League Baseball Players Association in 1966 and quickly turned the union into a powerhouse. Within a decade of being named head of the union, Miller had secured free agency for the players. By the time he retired in 1982, the average player salary was approximately 10 times what it was when he took over.
Thurman Munson played for 11 seasons with the Yankees, winning the American League Rookie of the Year Award in 1970 and the American League Most Valuable Player Award in 1976. A seven-time All-Star and three-time Gold Glove Award winner, Munson is one of only two catchers in history with three consecutive seasons with at least a .300 batting average, 180 hits and 100 RBI
Dale Murphy played 18 seasons with the Braves, Phillies and Rockies, winning back-to-back National League Most Valuable Player Awards in 1982 and 1983. A seven-time All-Star, Murphy won five Gold Glove Awards and four Silver Slugger Awards in center field. Murphy finished his career with 398 home runs and 1,266 RBI.
Dave Parker compiled a .290 career average over 19 major league seasons with six teams, including 11 years in Pittsburgh and four years in Cincinnati, and amassed 339 home runs, 1,493 RBI and two batting titles (1977-78). The 1978 NL Most Valuable Player was named to seven All-Star games and won three Gold Glove Awards in right field
Ted Simmons played for 21 seasons, totaling a .285 batting average, 2,472 hits, 483 doubles, 248 home runs and 1,389 RBI primarily as a catcher for the Cardinals, Brewers and Braves. An eight-time All-Star, he garnered MVP votes seven times in his career and finished among his league’s top 10 players in batting average six times
Lou Whitaker played 19 seasons, all with the Tigers, compiling 2,369 hits, 244 home runs and 1,197 walks. A five-time All-Star and four-time Silver Slugger Award winner, Whitaker won three Gold Glove Awards for his play at second base. The 1978 American League Rookie of the Year, Whitaker never played a game in the field at any position other than second base.
Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
I thought Tommy John was a surgeon?
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
93henfan wrote:I thought Tommy John was a surgeon?
Ok, Mr. Smarty Under-Pants.
Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
I guess the thing that strikes me is how long it takes for people to be considered for the baseball HOF. Wow, Munson died when I was 8 I think. And all these guys have been retired for a looooong time. Mattingly and Murphy may be the youngest of the group.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
I think the guy most likely to get the nod is Munson.
New defensive metrics and analytics now exist that now more completely document his overall value as a full-time catcher who was superlative defensively. He is on an upswing with the baseball analysts. On the most reputable Hall of Fame blogs, Munson's candidacy is quickly gaining steam.
Averaged WAR/162 of 5.25! And he did that pretty much exclusively as a catcher. He is literally one of the most valuable catchers of all-time.
For comparison:
Simmons WAR/162: 3.31
Fisk WAR/162: 4.44
Bench WAR/162: 5.64
Carter WAR/162: 4.94
Piazza WAR/162: 5.05
On top of this, Munson had 46 hits in post-season 30 games, which works out to a staggering 248 hits over 162 games. There can't be many players with 30+ postseason games who performed that well.
New defensive metrics and analytics now exist that now more completely document his overall value as a full-time catcher who was superlative defensively. He is on an upswing with the baseball analysts. On the most reputable Hall of Fame blogs, Munson's candidacy is quickly gaining steam.
Averaged WAR/162 of 5.25! And he did that pretty much exclusively as a catcher. He is literally one of the most valuable catchers of all-time.
For comparison:
Simmons WAR/162: 3.31
Fisk WAR/162: 4.44
Bench WAR/162: 5.64
Carter WAR/162: 4.94
Piazza WAR/162: 5.05
On top of this, Munson had 46 hits in post-season 30 games, which works out to a staggering 248 hits over 162 games. There can't be many players with 30+ postseason games who performed that well.
Last edited by JoltinJoe on Mon Nov 04, 2019 1:52 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
This isn't what you are thinking. This is the revised "Veterans Committee" vote. This isn't the most recent eligible players.93henfan wrote:I guess the thing that strikes me is how long it takes for people to be considered for the baseball HOF. Wow, Munson died when I was 8 I think. And all these guys have been retired for a looooong time. Mattingly and Murphy may be the youngest of the group.
https://sports.yahoo.com/lou-whitaker-l ... 54220.htmlWell, they don’t call it the “Veterans Committee” anymore, but it basically is. For the past several years they’ve gone with an era-system which rotates every year, and this year’s era is the “Modern Baseball” era, covering candidates who made their mark between 1970-1987. Or, at the very least, the biggest part of their mark given that there will always be some overlap. People still call it the “Veterans Committee” though.
Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
So this is the second chance list for guys who weren't super. I nominate John Kruk.CAA Flagship wrote:This isn't what you are thinking. This is the revised "Veterans Committee" vote. This isn't the most recent eligible players.93henfan wrote:I guess the thing that strikes me is how long it takes for people to be considered for the baseball HOF. Wow, Munson died when I was 8 I think. And all these guys have been retired for a looooong time. Mattingly and Murphy may be the youngest of the group.
https://sports.yahoo.com/lou-whitaker-l ... 54220.htmlWell, they don’t call it the “Veterans Committee” anymore, but it basically is. For the past several years they’ve gone with an era-system which rotates every year, and this year’s era is the “Modern Baseball” era, covering candidates who made their mark between 1970-1987. Or, at the very least, the biggest part of their mark given that there will always be some overlap. People still call it the “Veterans Committee” though.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Dale Murphy is a tough one. He was great for a decent stretch. But after age 31 he was blah. Overall, he was a .265 hitter. But for a stretch of 6 years he was damn good. When you think of HOF'ers, you expect them to have great years 10 years apart. He didn't.
Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
[quote="JoltinJoe"]I think the guy most likely to get the nod is Munson.
New defensive metrics and analytics now exist that now more completely document his overall value as a full-time catcher who was superlative defensively. He is on an upswing with the baseball analysts. On the most reputable Hall of Fame blogs, Munson's candidacy is quickly gaining steam.
Averaged WAR/162 of 5.25! And he did that pretty much exclusively as a catcher. He is literally one of the most valuable catchers of all-time.
For comparison:
Simmons WAR/162: 3.31
Fisk WAR/162: 4.44
Bench WAR/162: 5.64
Carter WAR/162: 4.94
Piazza WAR/162: 5.05
On top of this, Munson had 46 hits in post-season 30 games, which works out to a staggering 248 hits over 162 games. There can't be many players with 30+ postseason games who performed that well.[/And for Gil:
Mauer WAR/162: 4.79
New defensive metrics and analytics now exist that now more completely document his overall value as a full-time catcher who was superlative defensively. He is on an upswing with the baseball analysts. On the most reputable Hall of Fame blogs, Munson's candidacy is quickly gaining steam.
Averaged WAR/162 of 5.25! And he did that pretty much exclusively as a catcher. He is literally one of the most valuable catchers of all-time.
For comparison:
Simmons WAR/162: 3.31
Fisk WAR/162: 4.44
Bench WAR/162: 5.64
Carter WAR/162: 4.94
Piazza WAR/162: 5.05
On top of this, Munson had 46 hits in post-season 30 games, which works out to a staggering 248 hits over 162 games. There can't be many players with 30+ postseason games who performed that well.[/And for Gil:
Mauer WAR/162: 4.79
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
I'm no baseball guy, but how does that resume not get in?JoltinJoe wrote:Steve Garvey compiled a .294 career average over 19 major league seasons with the Dodgers and Padres, amassing 2,599 hits, 272 home runs, 1,308 RBI and 10 All-Star Game selections. He hit .338 with 11 home runs and 31 RBI in 11 postseason series, was named the 1978 and 1984 NLCS MVP and won the 1981 Roberto Clemente Award. The 1974 NL Most Valuable Player, Garvey won four Gold Glove Awards and played in an NL record 1,207 straight games at first base.

Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Garvey got some bad press after his playing days with his divorce situation. Don’t remember the specifics but his personal rep took a beating. I think that hurt him in his initial voting years and then he never re-gained support after that.89Hen wrote:I'm no baseball guy, but how does that resume not get in?JoltinJoe wrote:Steve Garvey compiled a .294 career average over 19 major league seasons with the Dodgers and Padres, amassing 2,599 hits, 272 home runs, 1,308 RBI and 10 All-Star Game selections. He hit .338 with 11 home runs and 31 RBI in 11 postseason series, was named the 1978 and 1984 NLCS MVP and won the 1981 Roberto Clemente Award. The 1974 NL Most Valuable Player, Garvey won four Gold Glove Awards and played in an NL record 1,207 straight games at first base.
I think these committees are supposed to rectify errors like this one. He’s got my support for what it’s worth.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
I went Munson, Miller, Garvey, and Evans. I forgot Evans didn't make it in the first time, he was a stud of an OF'er back in the day.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
And for Gil:JoltinJoe wrote:JoltinJoe wrote:I think the guy most likely to get the nod is Munson.
New defensive metrics and analytics now exist that now more completely document his overall value as a full-time catcher who was superlative defensively. He is on an upswing with the baseball analysts. On the most reputable Hall of Fame blogs, Munson's candidacy is quickly gaining steam.
Averaged WAR/162 of 5.25! And he did that pretty much exclusively as a catcher. He is literally one of the most valuable catchers of all-time.
For comparison:
Simmons WAR/162: 3.31
Fisk WAR/162: 4.44
Bench WAR/162: 5.64
Carter WAR/162: 4.94
Piazza WAR/162: 5.05
On top of this, Munson had 46 hits in post-season 30 games, which works out to a staggering 248 hits over 162 games. There can't be many players with 30+ postseason games who performed that well.
Mauer WAR/162: 4.79
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
I like them all. The all had great careers, not good, not very good, but great careers.

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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
I think Mattingly and Munson get in on their numbers alone. I also picked Simmons, who was overshadowed by Johnny Bench but had a higher career batting average.
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Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Also, can anyone explain the hate for Maury Wills, he brought back the stolen base.
No on Tommy John, he was good not great, his numbers were accrued solely by longevity.
Dale Murphy no, had 3-5 good years, rest not so much.
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No on Tommy John, he was good not great, his numbers were accrued solely by longevity.
Dale Murphy no, had 3-5 good years, rest not so much.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
His longevity actually HURTS his overall numbers. He went 55-70 AFTER age 40... He was a 3-time 20 game winner. He had FORTY SIX shutouts and 162 compete games. ONE HUNDRED and SIXTY TWO!! There are entire teams that don’t have that many in 20 years. NINE years with an ERA under 3.00. Never had an ERA over 4.00 before age 40...only one year UNDER 4.00 after age 40.css75 wrote:Also, can anyone explain the hate for Maury Wills, he brought back the stolen base.
No on Tommy John, he was good not great, his numbers were accrued solely by longevity.
Dale Murphy no, had 3-5 good years, rest not so much.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
AZGrizFan wrote:His longevity actually HURTS his overall numbers. He went 55-70 AFTER age 40... He was a 3-time 20 game winner. He had FORTY SIX shutouts and 162 compete games. ONE HUNDRED and SIXTY TWO!! There are entire teams that don’t have that many in 20 years. NINE years with an ERA under 3.00. Never had an ERA over 4.00 before age 40...only one year UNDER 4.00 after age 40.css75 wrote:Also, can anyone explain the hate for Maury Wills, he brought back the stolen base.
No on Tommy John, he was good not great, his numbers were accrued solely by longevity.
Dale Murphy no, had 3-5 good years, rest not so much.
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And yet all I know him for is the surgery named after him.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
No. As JoltinJoe said, he’s the Internet underwear manufacturer. The brother of JimmyJohn the sandwich guy.SDHornet wrote:AZGrizFan wrote:
His longevity actually HURTS his overall numbers. He went 55-70 AFTER age 40... He was a 3-time 20 game winner. He had FORTY SIX shutouts and 162 compete games. ONE HUNDRED and SIXTY TWO!! There are entire teams that don’t have that many in 20 years. NINE years with an ERA under 3.00. Never had an ERA over 4.00 before age 40...only one year UNDER 4.00 after age 40.![]()
And yet all I know him for is the surgery named after him.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Brother Elton can hum a few bars.Ivytalk wrote:No. As JoltinJoe said, he’s the Internet underwear manufacturer. The brother of JimmyJohn the sandwich guy.

Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Ivytalk wrote:I think Mattingly and Munson get in on their numbers alone. I also picked Simmons, who was overshadowed by Johnny Bench but had a higher career batting average.
As for Munson/Simmons.
No stat metric is perfect. WAR itself significantly shortchanges catchers, i.e., it fails to measure many of the things a good catcher must do (things at which Munson generally excelled). However, when measuring catcher v. catcher, WAR/162 is a highly legitimate and highly relevant metric, to account for the facts: (I) that catchers usually player fewer of the 162 games in a season than other field players do; and (ii) catchers tend to have shorter careers. Re: WAR/162, I'm not saying it's the only stat that matters, but how can you ignore the all-time list?
WAR/162 (Catchers, 1,000 games caught): (1) Cochrane HOF. 5.69, (2) Bench HOF. 5.65 (3) Munson. 5.25, (4) Dickey HOF. 5.05, (5) Piazza HOF. 5.05, (6) Carter HOF. 4.95, (7) Campanella HOF. (8) Berra HOF. 4.54. (9) Fisk HOF. 4.44, (10) Rodriguez HOF. 4.38, (11) Hartnett HOF. 4.35).
I mean that's an amazing group of catchers there. Munson is 3rd all-time, and he's the only guy not in the Hall on that list. Yes, a tragically short career, but one that was historically brilliant while it lasted. When I look at this ballot, I see nine players who have a legitimate case for the Hall. However, Munson's case is the only one which stands out as compelling in historical context, when measured against the truly all-time greats at their respective positions. There is no player on this ballot who nestles in more comfortably with the truly all-time greats at their respective positions than Munson does. In my judgment, that makes his case the best one on this ballot.
I know the knock on WAR/162 is that it is a "rate stat" that can decline due to later, less productive seasons, and that Munson had no such decline. But even if you extend Munson's 11 year career, and add 135 games per year (a lot of games for a catcher in his mid-30s) for another four seasons; while adding only a mere 2 WAR per season; he is, at 4.45, still ahead of Fisk and all others behind Fisk on that list. And still WAY ahead of Ted Simmons, his head-to-head competitor on this ballot. Heck, don't even add the additional 8 WAR total for the additional four seasons. Add four zero seasons of 135 games, and Munson comes in at 3.80, still nearly .5 ahead of Simmons (3.31). And don't get me wrong. I think Simmons has a legitimate case for the Hall.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Munson only caught over 130 games 3 times in his career. He was on the verge of playing more outfield, DH etc. It's not negative, it's just a fact about catchers. Tough to catch that many games in a season. Yogi Berra only did it 7 times, he was the left fielder watching Mazeroski's Home Run in the 1960 World Series. Johnny Bench 7 times.JoltinJoe wrote:Ivytalk wrote:I think Mattingly and Munson get in on their numbers alone. I also picked Simmons, who was overshadowed by Johnny Bench but had a higher career batting average.![]()
As for Munson/Simmons.
No stat metric is perfect. WAR itself significantly shortchanges catchers, i.e., it fails to measure many of the things a good catcher must do (things at which Munson generally excelled). However, when measuring catcher v. catcher, WAR/162 is a highly legitimate and highly relevant metric, to account for the facts: (I) that catchers usually player fewer of the 162 games in a season than other field players do; and (ii) catchers tend to have shorter careers. Re: WAR/162, I'm not saying it's the only stat that matters, but how can you ignore the all-time list?
WAR/162 (Catchers, 1,000 games caught): (1) Cochrane HOF. 5.69, (2) Bench HOF. 5.65 (3) Munson. 5.25, (4) Dickey HOF. 5.05, (5) Piazza HOF. 5.05, (6) Carter HOF. 4.95, (7) Campanella HOF. (8) Berra HOF. 4.54. (9) Fisk HOF. 4.44, (10) Rodriguez HOF. 4.38, (11) Hartnett HOF. 4.35).
I mean that's an amazing group of catchers there. Munson is 3rd all-time, and he's the only guy not in the Hall on that list. Yes, a tragically short career, but one that was historically brilliant while it lasted. When I look at this ballot, I see nine players who have a legitimate case for the Hall. However, Munson's case is the only one which stands out as compelling in historical context, when measured against the truly all-time greats at their respective positions. There is no player on this ballot who nestles in more comfortably with the truly all-time greats at their respective positions than Munson does. In my judgment, that makes his case the best one on this ballot.
I know the knock on WAR/162 is that it is a "rate stat" that can decline due to later, less productive seasons, and that Munson had no such decline. But even if you extend Munson's 11 year career, and add 135 games per year (a lot of games for a catcher in his mid-30s) for another four seasons; while adding only a mere 2 WAR per season; he is, at 4.45, still ahead of Fisk and all others behind Fisk on that list. And still WAY ahead of Ted Simmons, his head-to-head competitor on this ballot. Heck, don't even add the additional 8 WAR total for the additional four seasons. Add four zero seasons of 135 games, and Munson comes in at 3.80, still nearly .5 ahead of Simmons (3.31). And don't get me wrong. I think Simmons has a legitimate case for the Hall.

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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Wills is more deserving than Phil Rizzuto and Pee Wee Reese.css75 wrote:Also, can anyone explain the hate for Maury Wills, he brought back the stolen base.
No on Tommy John, he was good not great, his numbers were accrued solely by longevity.
Dale Murphy no, had 3-5 good years, rest not so much.
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Dale Murphy had 6 seasons over 30 HR's, 12 over 20, would have been 13 straight had it not been for the 1981 baseball strike, 2 x MVP. Had over 100 RBI's 5 times, Mickey Mantle only had 4 years over 100 RBI. 398 total home runs, 36 home runs 30 stolen bases in 1983. 7 x All Star, 5 x Gold Glove, 4 x Silver Slugger.

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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Ivytalk wrote:No. As JoltinJoe said, he’s the Internet underwear manufacturer. The brother of JimmyJohn the sandwich guy.
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Re: Hot Stove League: Modern Baseball HOF Ballot 2020
Gil Dobie wrote: Wills is more deserving than Phil Rizzuto


