The Daily Press

Adrián Beltré, Joe Mauer and Todd Helton on track for Hall of Fame election; Billy Wagner close

- By Ronald Blum AP Baseball Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Adrián Beltré, Joe Mauer and Todd Helton appeared on track to gain entry to baseball’s Hall of Fame when results are announced Tuesday, while Billy Wagner was likely to be right around the needed 75% threshold and Gary Sheffield was projected to fall short.

Just 270 players are in the Hall, 1.3% of the approximat­ely 20,500 who have appeared in the major leagues, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. There are another 40 executives/pioneers, 23 managers and 10 umpires enshrined, raising the membership total to 343.

“These votes are literally life-changing,” said The Athletic’s Jayson Stark, who has cast ballots for three decades. “I try never to forget that. That’s why it’s a huge responsibi­lity.”

Big Hall or small? Baseball’s most divisive debate is whether a player warrants inclusion in Cooperstow­n.

Stark used all 10 of his available slots on this year’s Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America ballot. Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaughness­y checked just two, for Beltré and Mauer.

“I’m looking for someone who’s dominant at the position they played in the era in which they played,” said Shaughness­y, like Stark a winner of the Hall’s BBWAA Career Excellence Award.

Beltré was the leading vote-getter at 99% in his first try, according to Ryan Thibodaux’s Hall of Fame Ballot Tracker.

Mauer, also on the his initial ballot, was second at 83%, and Helton was next at 82.5% in his sixth appearance.

Wagner, on for the ninth time, was at 78.4% and Sheffield, making his 10th and final appearance, was at 74.7%, followed by Andruw Jones at 70.6%. A player’s percentage usually declines among the final total of the approximat­ely 400 ballots; the tracker’s figures includes voters who have revealed their choices, about half those eligible to mail in ballots.

Helton was at 79.8% on the tracker ahead of last year’s announceme­nt and fell 11 votes short at 72.2%. Scott Rolen was the only player elected.

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