The Arizona Republic

Baseball Hall of Fame revamps veterans committees structure

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COOPERSTOW­N, N.Y. – Baseball’s Hall of Fame is restructur­ing its veterans committees for the third time in 12 years.

The Hall said Friday it is revamping the panels into the Contempora­ry Baseball Era from 1980 on and Classic Baseball Era for before 1980. The Contempora­ry Baseball Era will hold a separate ballot for players and another for managers, executives and umpires.

Each ballot will include eight candidates to be considered by 16 voters, down from 10 candidates previously. A vote of at least 75% remains necessary for election. Starting next January, the player ballot will include candidates who have been retired for 16 seasons – one year after exhausting eligibilit­y for the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America ballot.

Each committee will meet every three years, starting with Contempora­ry Baseball/Players this December, Contempora­ry Baseball/ManagersUm­pires-Executives in December 2023 and Classic Baseball in December 2024.

In 2010 the Hall establishe­d three committees: Pre-Integratio­n (18711946), Golden (1947-72) and Expansion (starting in 1973). That was changed in 2016 to four committees: Golden Days (1950-69), Modern Baseball (1970-87), Today’s Game (1988-2016) and Early Baseball (1871-1949).

The Ford C. Frick Award for a preeminent baseball broadcaste­r will have 10 candidates, up from eight, with at least one required to be a foreign language broadcaste­r. Local and national broadcaste­rs will be considered in four consecutiv­e years, from the 2023-26 awards, followed by a pre-wild card era (1994) ballot in 2027, with the cycle to repeat.

Since 2016, the Frick Award ballot had rotated among Major League Markets (team-specific announcers); National Voices (broadcaste­rs whose contributi­ons were realized on a national level); and Broadcasti­ng Beginnings (early team voices and pioneers of baseball broadcasti­ng).

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