The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Five others join Jones in Hall honors

Guerrero, Hoffman, Morris, Trammell and Thome also enshrined.

- By John Kekis

COOPERSTOW­N, N.Y. — A crowd estimated at about 50,000 gathered on a sun-splashed day to honor six players who were inducted Sunday into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Along with former Braves star Chipper Jones, also enshrined were Jim Thome, Vladimir Guerrero, Trevor Hoffman and former Detroit Tigers teammates Jack Morris and Alan Trammell.

Emotional during a Hall of Fame visit in February to tour the museum to prepare for this day, Thome held it together despite having to wipe away tears after his daughter Lila sang the national anthem.

“I’m so honored to be part of something so special,” Thome said. “Baseball is beautiful and I am forever in its service.”

The lefty-swinging Thome hit 612 home runs, eighth all-time, and had an MLB record 13 walkoff homers, mostly for the Cleveland Indians. He also had 1,699 RBIs, scored 1,583 runs and drew 1,747 walks.

Among the many he thanked, Thome praised former Cleveland manager Charlie Manuel, who served as the Indians’ hitting coach in the late 1980s and 1990s. Manuel was in the audience. “He told me I could hit as many home runs as I wanted to,” Thome said. “I knew this was someone I could connect with.”

Greeted by hundreds of fans waving Dominican Republic flags, Guerrero spoke in his native Spanish in a speech that was translated and lasted just five minutes. He thanked his father and mother, and the fans and the people in his hometown of Don Gregorio. His son Vladimir Jr., the top prospect in the minor leagues with the Blue Jays, was in attendance.

The nine-time All-Star outfielder batted .318 with 449 homers and 1,496 RBIs and is the first player inducted wearing the cap of the Angels, the team where he enjoyed his greatest success.

Just as he did in his unflappabl­e role in the bullpen during his career as an ace reliever, Hoffman was flawless in delivering his speech, closing it by thanking his wife. “You shared with me this amazing journey of ups and downs from the beginning, always never letting me get too high or get too low,” Hoffman said. Hoffman, chosen in his third year on the ballot, played the bulk of his career with the San Diego Padres before finishing with the Milwaukee Brewers. He recorded 601 saves over 18 seasons, second all-time to former Yankees star Mariano Rivera’s 652.

Morris, now 63, pitched 18 seasons for the Tigers, Twins, Blue Jays and Indians, and played on four World Series champions. In the 1980s, he led all pitchers with 2,444⅔ innings pitched and 162 wins and topped all AL pitchers in strikeouts with 1,629. Among those he thanked were his late parents and the late Sparky Anderson, who managed the Tigers to the 1984 World Series championsh­ip.

The crowning achievemen­t of Morris’ career was his 1-0 complete-game victory in Game 7 of the 1991 World Series while pitching for his hometown Twins against the Braves. Minnesota manager Tom Kelly wanted to take him out after nine innings and the 36-year-old Morris convinced him not to. Morris also thanked Kelly for that decision.

Trammell and Morris were selected together in December by a veterans committee, which made the day extra special for them.

Trammell played shortstop for 20 seasons — all for the Tigers — and earned six All-Star Game selections, four Gold Glove Awards and three Silver Slugger Awards. His .977 fielding percentage ranks sixth among shortstops with at least 2,000 games played.

Trammell also thanked Anderson, who took over as manager of the Tigers in 1979 after leading the Cincinnati Reds to great success.

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