The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Jones filled with goose bumps on Hall visit

- By John Kekis

COOPERSTOW­N, N.Y. » Chipper Jones quickly developed a case of goose bumps that lingered. With baseball history staring at him at every turn, it was understand­able.

The former Atlanta Braves slugger toured the Baseball Hall of Fame on Tuesday to prepare for his induction this summer, and he was awestruck by a moment he’ll never forget.

“Walking through these doors, it’s really awe-inspiring,” Jones said, sitting a few feet from where his Hall of Fame plaque will hang. “When I sat down on the bench in front of (a photo of) Babe Ruth and all those guys, I got misty. To be in the presence of greatness, it’s kind of like walking down the tunnel in Yankee Stadium or Fenway Park. You can feel the aura

and the ghosts.”

Jones became a first-ballot Hall of Famer in January, receiving 97.2 percent (410 of 422) of the vote to become one of just 54 players elected in their first year of eligibilit­y by members of the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America. He’ll be inducted July 29 with Jim Thome, Vladimir Guerrero, Trevor Hoffman, Alan Trammell and Jack Morris. Trammell and Morris, former teammates on the Detroit Tigers, were elected in December by a veterans committee.

Jones, who batted .303 with 468 home runs and 1,623 RBIs, was an eighttime All-Star for the Braves and a big part of Atlanta teams that won 14 straight division titles. He joins former teammates Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, and John Smoltz, manager Bobby Cox, and general manager John Schuerholz, all of whom were elected to the Hall of Fame in the past four years, a testament to their remarkable streak of success.

“It’s a tremendous sense of pride in what we accomplish­ed as an organizati­on,” Jones said. “With John Schuerholz going in, winning championsh­ips in two different leagues, Bobby Cox the only manager I would have ever wanted to play for, it’s pretty cool to think of in terms of one organizati­on. I played a little past those guys, but it’s nice to finally join them in this hallowed fraternity.”

That Jones, just the eighth third baseman voted in by the writers, stopped first at the plaque of former New York Yankees slugger Mickey Mantle on the final leg of his tour was not surprising. They are among just 13 switch-hitting players (not including pitchers) in the Hall of Fame. Mantle holds the World Series home run record of 18, part of the inscriptio­n on his plaque and a figure likely to endure for a long time.

“Eighteen. Wow!” Jones said. “This gives me goose bumps.”

Only a few steps away was the next stop — Hank Aaron, the greatest Braves player of all.

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