Houston Chronicle Sunday

Entry to Hall deserving end for 2017 class

- By John Kekis

COOPERSTOW­N, N.Y. — Tim Rain es played in the major leagues for more than two decades, and yet one at-bat still sticks in his mind.

Nervous about making the Montreal Expos’ roster after two brief call-ups that didn’t work out so well (one hit in 20 at-bats), his performanc­e in the 1981 season opener in Pittsburgh erased any doubt. Raines led off the game with a walk, stole second on the first pitch to the next batter and scored after the errant throw to second eluded the outfielder­s. A star was born. “I think that was the beginning of the type of player Tim Raines could be,” Raines said. “It kind of got me going. I think if I would have struck out and not do anything offensivel­y that game, I’m not sure what would have happened to my career. I hadn’t really proven to anyone what type of player that I was. It kind of just took off from there.”

His baseball journey ends Sunday in Cooperstow­n, when the 57-year-old Raines will be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Joining him are Jeff Bagwell and Ivan Rodriguez, along with former Commission­er Bud Selig and retired Kansas City and Atlanta executive John Schuerholz, both elected by a veterans committee.

Running away with history

Raines received 86 percent of the vote by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America to easily top the 75 percent threshold needed. That tally came on his final year on the ballot, an oversight that’s difficult to fathom in retrospect.

The switch-hitting Raines batted .294 and had a .385 on-base percentage in his 23-year career, finishing with 2,605 hits ,1,571 runs and 808 stolen bases. His stolenbase total is the fifth-highest total in major league history and includes 70 or more steals in each season from 1981-86, a streak that stands alone in baseball history. Take a closer look at his accomplish­ments on the basepaths, and they are quite remarkable — his 84.7 percent success rate tops the list among players with at least 400 steal attempts.

Raines credits his fortune to the increasing popularity of sabermetri­cs, advanced statistics that give greater insight into a player’s worth.

“I think they kind of looked at the numbers on the baseball cards,” said Raines, who overcame a recreation­al drug addiction that hampered his production early in his career. “There’s more to the game than just those numbers. Guys can be just as important to a team and an organizati­on in a lot of different ways.”

Dedicated to his craft

Rodriguez, who holds major league records for games caught (2,427) and putouts by a catcher (12,376), hit 311 homers and batted .296 in his career. No surprise that he’s only the second catcher elected on the first ballot, following in the footsteps of his childhood idol, former Cincinnati Reds star Johnny Bench.

In 21 seasons, spent mostly with the Texas Rangers, Rodriguez was a 14-time All-Star, won a record 13 Gold Gloves and took home seven Silver Slugger awards.

“I think I just prepared myself,” said the 45-year-old Rodriguez, affectiona­tely known as “Pudge.” “I’m talking about blocking thousands of balls, making thousands of throws to second base, trying to throw the ball to the right side of the base.

“You can have ability, but if you don’t have discipline, if you don’t work on things you have to do, it’s going to be hard for you to do it in your career.”

Schuerholz, who played second base at Towson University and became a junior high school teacher in the Baltimore suburbs in the mid-1960s, always wanted to be a major leaguer and couldn’t get baseball off his mind. So he sent a letter to Jerry Hoffberger, owner of the hometown Orioles.

The team gave him a spot in its minor league system. In 1969, Schuerholz joined the expansion Kansas City Royals and became general manager 12 years later. After the Royals won the 1985 World Series, he moved on to even greater success with the Braves. With Schuerholz calling the front-office shots, Atlanta won a remarkable 14 straight division championsh­ips.

In 26 years as a GM, Schuerholz’s teams won 16 division titles, six pennants and two World Series. He was the first general manager in history to win a World Series in each league.

“I feel awed,” said Schuerholz, whose only regret is that the Braves turned those division titles into only one World Series championsh­ip (1995). “I feel as thankful and appreciati­ve of all the people who have helped me in my career and in my life to get to this point where a group decided that this guy qualifies for the Hall of Fame, this guy ought to be in the Hall of Fame.”

Ushered in a new age

Selig never realized his childhood dream of replacing Joe DiMaggio in center field for the New York Yankees — he couldn’t hit a curve ball — but he left a large imprint during more than 22 years as the leader of the game. He was instrument­al in the approval of interleagu­e play, the expansion of the playoffs, splitting each league into three divisions with wild cards, institutin­g video review and revenue-sharing in an era that saw the constructi­on of 20 new ballparks.

Fans haven’t forgotten that his tenure also included the Steroids Era and the cancellati­on of the 1994 World Series amid a players’ strike.

Still, Selig left baseball in excellent shape economical­ly — without labor strife and with a strict drug-testing policy that has helped clean up the game.

“When I think of where we were in 1992 when I started and where we were when I left and where we are today, it’s remarkable,” he said.

 ?? Karen Warren photos / Houston Chronicle ?? Ivan “Pudge” Rodriguez, left, and Tim Raines earned acclaim for mastering their game, Rodriguez as the most tenured catcher in MLB history and Raines as a top-five all-time base stealer.
Karen Warren photos / Houston Chronicle Ivan “Pudge” Rodriguez, left, and Tim Raines earned acclaim for mastering their game, Rodriguez as the most tenured catcher in MLB history and Raines as a top-five all-time base stealer.
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