Albuquerque Journal

HEADED TO THE HALL OF FAME

Piniella falls one vote short in Today’s Game Era Committee vote on Sunday

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Closer Lee Smith and smoothswin­ging Harold Baines were elected to the baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday.

LAS VEGAS — Harold Baines was given a save as big as any Lee Smith ever posted.

In a vote sure to spark renewed cries of cronyism at Cooperstow­n, Baines surprising­ly was picked for the baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday after never coming close in any previous election.

“Very shocked,” the career .289 hitter said on a conference call.

Smith, who held the major league record for saves when he retired, was an easy pick when the Today’s Game Era Committee met at the winter meetings.

It took 12 votes for election by the 16-member panel — Smith was unanimous, Baines got 12 and former outfielder and manager Lou Piniella fell just short with 11.

Smith and Baines both debuted in Chicago during the 1980 season. Smith began with the Cubs and went on to record 478 saves while Baines started out with the White Sox and had 2,866 hits.

Baines had 384 home runs and 1,628 RBIs in a 22-year career — good numbers, but not stacking up against the greats of his day. He never drew more than 6.1 percent in five elections by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America, far from the 75 percent required.

“I wasn’t expecting this day to come,” the six-time All-Star said.

The Hall board-appointed panel included longtime White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf. Reinsdorf praised his former player in a statement. Baines currently serves as a team ambassador in the community relations department of the White Sox.

“So happy for Harold. He’s a great player and a great human being,” Reinsdorf said. “I am so honored that I was a member of the committee. He deserved to be in long ago. I am just so excited.”

Tony La Russa, Baines’ first big league manager, also was on the panel that elected him.

In the past, Phil Rizzuto and Bill Mazeroski were among the players who benefited from friendly faces on Veterans Committees. That panel has been revamped over the years, and the Today’s Game Era group was created as part of changes in 2014.

“The era committees were establishe­d as a sort of a court of appeals for an opportunit­y in the event that over time it was felt that maybe somebody slipped through the cracks,” Hall President Jeff Idelson said. “And in the case of someone who received 6 percent of the vote in the BBWAA election, the reason that may have happened could be for many, many reasons.”

Baines, now 59, had a smooth, consistent, left-handed stroke. But he never finished higher than ninth in an MVP vote, and never was among the top five AL hitters in the yearly batting race.

Smith’s fastball helped him become a seven-time All-Star in an 18-year-old career. Known for his slow trudges from the bullpen to the mound, he owned the saves record when he retired during the 1997 season while with Montreal. Trevor Hoffman and then Mariano Rivera reset the mark.

Smith never reached 51 percent in 15 BBWAA elections. Still, he kept believing his day would come.

“I’m pretty patient, though, and I think I waited long enough. But it’s sweeter,” he said on a conference call. “You look at those things, well, OK, who’s on the ballot this year? Who’s on the ballot next year? But I’d never, never, never give up hope.

“And then when they started with the secondchan­ce ballot, I thought my chances got a little better. This probably today was probably the (most) nervous I’ve been with this Hall of Fame voting thing,” he said.

Smith became the seventh pitcher who primarily was a reliever to make the Hall, joining Hoffman, Dennis Eckersley, Rollie Fingers, Goose Gossage, Bruce Sutter and Hoyt Wilhelm. The 61-year-old has long worked for the San Francisco Giants as a minor league pitching coach and instructor.

Induction ceremonies are scheduled for July 21 at Cooperstow­n, New York.

SUNDAY CHANGE: ESPN plans to announce it will move up the starting time of the nationally televised game by one hour, to shortly after 5 p.m. MDT.

The network intends to make the announceme­nt today at the winter meetings in Las Vegas. Philadelph­ia hosts Atlanta in the first Sunday night game next season on March 31, the second game of a television doublehead­er that begins with Texas playing the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field.

MLB also is nearing an announceme­nt on broadcast coverage for its first games in Britain, between the champion Red Sox and New York Yankees on June 29 and 30.

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