Hartford Courant (Sunday)

With weak HOF ballot, MLB is looking at another shutout

- By Bill Madden

NEW YORK — One year after having washed their hands of Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling, the Baseball Writers Associatio­n is faced with one of the weakest Hall of Fame ballots in recent memory — and when it’s all said and done come Jan. 24 there may well be a shutout.

If so, it will be the fourth time since 1970 the BBWAA failed to elect anyone to Cooperstow­n, the most recent being 2021 when Schilling came the closest to the 75% needed with 71.1%.

Last year, the writers elected only David Ortiz — barely with 77.9% — while sending Bonds, Clemens and Schilling off to the Contempora­ry Era veterans committee, leaving Scott Rolen, at 63.2%, the leading vote-getter returning on this year’s ballot. Can Rolen make a quantum leap to election? It’s been done before — but not likely. In 2020, Larry Walker, in his 10th and final year on the ballot, jumped from 54.6% to 76.6% which was the largest vote increase to election in 65 years.

Rolen, who has been gaining steadily in the voting, from 17.2% in his first year in 2019, to 52.9% in 2021 and 63.2% last year, is certainly an interestin­g case, as arguably one of the greatest defensive third basemen in history. In that regard, he has been the darling of the analytics aficionado­s — or the WAR-mongers (as I call them) — who cite his 114 defensive runs saved from 2003 to the end of his career in 2012. He was also a class act throughout his career and a pretty fair (if not dominant) hitter as one of 35 players in history with 2,000 hits, 300 homers and 500 doubles.

What hurts Rolen is literally how much he was hurt in his career. In 17 years in the big leagues, he played 150 or more games only five times.

Of the 14 newcomers on this year’s ballot, only Carlos Beltran, with 435 career homers, 2,725 hits and 312 stolen bases, can make a legitimate Hall of Fame case and his candidacy is clouded by the 2017 Astros cheating scandal in which he was the only player singled out by Major League Baseball. As the years go by, and the cheating scandal continues to fade from memory, Beltran may well eventually be elected, but not this year.

In determinin­g whether a player is a Hall of Famer, ask the simple question: Did this player dominate the game at his position? In that respect, only one player on this ballot in my opinion meets that criteria: Jeff Kent who neverthele­ss has surprising­ly gotten little love from the Baseball Writers, garnering only 129 votes or 32.7% a year ago. Kent’s 377 homers are the most of any second baseman in history, his 1,518 RBI third behind only Rogers Hornsby and Napoleon Lajoie. In all, he had eight 100-RBI seasons and had four top 10 MVP finishes including a win in 2000 when he hit .334 with 33 homers and 125 RBI for the Giants.

The knock on Kent, particular­ly from the WAR-monger analytics crowd, was his defense.

But while he never won a Gold Glove, he was more than adequate and it is worth noting in 17 years in the big leagues, no manager, including Cito Gaston, Bruce Bochy and Joe Torre, ever saw fit to move him off second base.

This is Kent’s 10th and final year on the ballot so in all likelihood his fate will fall to the Contempora­ry Era committee. The other leading vote-getters after Rolen last year — Todd Helton (52%), Billy Wagner (51%), Andruw Jones (41.1%) and Gary Sheffield (40.6%) — all can make a case but each have serious drawbacks that will likely keep them from ever being elected by the writers.

So as ominously as this year’s ballot may bode for a shutout, the good news for the Hall of Fame is that there are a bunch of compelling candidates on the near horizon. Besides Beltre, next year’s ballot will include Joe Mauer and Matt Holliday, while 2025 will have Ichiro and CC Sabathia making their debuts.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? The Reds’ Scott Rolen bats against the Pirates in 2012.
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP The Reds’ Scott Rolen bats against the Pirates in 2012.

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