Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

RICK LEE’S selections for today’s races at Oaklawn.

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Derek Jeter, Larry Walker and the rest of this year’s Baseball Hall of Fame class will have to wait another year for their big moment at Cooperstow­n.

The Hall of Fame announced Wednesday that it has canceled the July 26 induction ceremony because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Instead, the class will be included at next year’s induction festivitie­s — along with any additional new choices — on July 25, 2021.

A record crowd of over 70,000 had been expected this summer in an outdoor field at the small town in upstate New

York to honor Jeter, the former New

York Yankees captain who came within one vote of unanimous election by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America in January.

Jeter and Walker were to be inducted with catcher Ted Simmons and the late Marvin Miller, the pioneering players’ union head who negotiated free agency and transforme­d the sport.

“Being inducted into the Hall of Fame will be an incredible honor, but the health and safety of everyone involved are paramount,” Jeter said in a statement released by the Hall. “I respect and support the decision to postpone this year’s enshrineme­nt and am looking forward to joining current Hall of Famers, fans, staff and my family and friends in Cooperstow­n in 2021.”

This will be the first year without an induction ceremony since 1960.

“It was a very difficult decision, but with so many unknowns facing the world, the board felt strongly that this was the right decision,” said Hall member Joe Morgan, vice chairman of the shrine’s board.

Record attendance for an induction ceremony was set in 2007, exceeding 70,000 when Cal Ripken Jr. and the late Tony Gwynn were enshrined. Cooperstow­n is within easy driving distance of the New York metro area, and loads of Yankees fans had already made their plans to see Jeter on the Hall stage.

Jeter, now the CEO of the Miami Marlins, and Walker were elected by member of the BBWAA. Simmons and Miller were chosen in December by the Hall’s Modern Era Committee.

“I fully understand and agree with the board’s decision,” Walker said in a statement from the Hall. “It is most important to do the right thing for everybody involved, and that means not putting any participan­ts in jeopardy.” Simmons echoed that view. “I commend the board for making this decision under these difficult circumstan­ces, particular­ly in New York, a state severely hit by the pandemic. This was the wisest and smartest thing to do, given the existing environmen­t and the danger that this pandemic presents,” he said.

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Simmons
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Jeter
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Walker

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