Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Character concerns and Hall of Fame vote

- By Noah Trister

Like many baseball writers, C. Trent Rosecrans viewed the Hall of Fame vote as a labor of love. The ballot would arrive around the end of November, and it would keep him occupied for much of December. He’d write down his research on players in a notebook and feel butterflie­s when putting his ballot in the mail.

Then it was time for his most recent vote, and the whole process felt quite different.

“That ballot sat out unopened until after Christmas, because I knew what was in it,” Rosecrans said. “And it wasn’t something I enjoyed.”

The results of the 2021 vote will be announced Tuesday, and Rosecrans wasn’t alone in finding the task particular­ly agonizing this time around. With Curt Schilling’s candidacy now front and center — and Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens still on the ballot as well — voters have had to consider how much a player’s off-field behavior should affect his Hall of Fame chances.

For years, suspicions of

performanc­e-enhancing drug use have played a significan­t role in the voting. Now, some writers are reassessin­g other concerns about some of the game’s biggest stars — from Schilling’s incendiary social media presence to domestic violence allegation­s against Bonds and others.

Ken Rosenthal, Rosecrans’ colleague with The Athletic, began a recent column this way: “I hate my Hall of Fame ballot. It might be my last.”

The top returning votegetter on this year’s ballot is Schilling, who a year ago came within 20 votes of being elected by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America. His support now seems to have stalled.

As of early Saturday, Schilling had received 75.3% approval on ballots tallied at Ryan Thibodaux’s tracker, but that pace probably isn’t good enough. A player needs 75% for induction — and in the past, Schilling has fared far worse on private, unreleased ballots that aren’t part of Thibodaux’s tracker.

Schilling has turned off voters with his post-career behavior. ESPN suspended him from the Little League World Series a few years ago over a tweet in which he compared Muslim extremists to Nazi-era Germans. He was later fired by the network for Facebook comments about transgende­r people.

On Jan. 6, the day of the attack on the U.S. Capitol, he said the following in a message on his Twitter account:

“You cowards sat on your hands, did nothing while liberal trash looted rioted and burned for air Jordan’s and big screens, sit back .... and watch folks start a confrontat­ion for (expletive) that matters like rights, democracy and the end of govt corruption.”

That tweet was a few days after Hall of Fame ballots were due, but Rosecrans had already decided not to support Schilling — even though he’d voted for him in the past.

“It would have been much easier for me to stick where I was and to check that box, like I have every other time I’ve voted, but I just don’t know if I would have been true to myself,” said Rosecrans, the BBWAA’s president. “Had I done that, I may have felt better where I put it on that day. I don’t know if I would have felt better on January 6th.”

Bonds and Clemens are polling just behind Schilling on Thibodaux’s tracker, but their candidacie­s now face scrutiny that goes beyond longstandi­ng suspicion of PED use. Multiple players on this year’s ballot have been accused of domestic violence, and Bonds is one of them. In 1995, his ex-wife testified during divorce proceeding­s that he beat and kicked her. Bonds said he never physically abused her but once kicked her after she kicked him.

In 2008, the New York Daily News reported that Clemens had a decadelong relationsh­ip with country singer Mindy McCready that began when she was 15 and he was a star for the Boston Red Sox. Clemens apologized for unspecifie­d mistakes in his personal life and denied having an affair with a 15-year-old. McCready later told “Inside Edition” she met Clemens when she was 16 and that the relationsh­ip didn’t turn sexual until several years later.

Rosenthal acknowledg­ed the domestic abuse allegation­s that have been made against Bonds, Andruw Jones and Omar Vizquel, as well as the questions about Clemens and McCready. He ended up voting for those four players along with Schilling, and his 10-man ballot also included Todd Helton, who in recent years pleaded guilty to driving under the influence and served 48 hours in jail.

Rosenthal called it his “sick-to-my-stomach ballot.”

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 ?? DINO VOURNAS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The San Francisco Giants’
Barry Bonds watches as a ball goes over the wall in front of a sign that bears the photos of, from left, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, and Willie Mays, on May 14, 2006,
DINO VOURNAS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The San Francisco Giants’ Barry Bonds watches as a ball goes over the wall in front of a sign that bears the photos of, from left, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, and Willie Mays, on May 14, 2006,

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