Chicago Sun-Times

Hall- worthy duo waltz in

Selig, Schuerholz were good for game

- Bob Nightengal­e bnighten@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

NATIONAL HARBOR, MD. One man resurrecte­d a woeful, ailing franchise, forever changing a city’s image in the Deep South.

The other repaired, refurbishe­d and nurtured an industry to its greatest prosperity and peace in its history.

Former commission­er Bud Selig and former general manager John Schuerholz will be forever linked in baseball folklore, elected together Sunday into the National Baseball Hall of Fame by the Today’s Game Era ballot.

Schuerholz, the architect of two World Series titles, five pennant winners and 16 playoff berths, was a unanimous choice by the 16- member committee.

“I know some Hall of Famers, saw many Hall of Famers perform,” Schuerholz said, “but never inmy imaginatio­n did I imagine someone would pick up the phone and say, ‘ Congratula­tions, you have been elected into baseball’s Hall of Fame.’ Those words will ring in my head and brain for the rest ofmy life.”

Selig, the fifth commission­er to be inducted, received 15 votes.

Former manager Lou Piniella received seven votes, five shy of the necessary votes needed for induction.

“To say this is a great day in my life would be an understate­ment,” Selig said. “I’ve looked forward to this day for a long time. I’m truly honored, to say the least.”

Selig, the ninth commission­er in baseball history, arguably has been the best of them all.

He took over at a time when baseball was at war with the union, prompting the cancellati­on of the 1994 World Series, and the rampant steroid era.

Selig was in control when baseball cleaned up those messes.

Today, baseball has the longest run of labor peace of any sport in North America — 26 years by the time the new labor agreements expires in 2021 — and the most comprehens­ive drug program in sports.

“Baseball’s a metaphor for life,” Selig said. “Those were tough moments. And ’ 94 was a very, very tough moment. It was terribly painful. It broke my heart. It was painful, but I think it served as a great lesson.”

Just like the steroid era, when many of baseball’s greatest stars and some of its finest records were found tainted because of the illegal use of performanc­eenhancing drugs.

“It was painful, with a lot of ups and downs,” Selig said. “But the fact of that matter is that we did what a social institutio­n should do.

“We solved our problem and now have the toughest testing program in American sports. For a sport that never had a drug testing program, we came a long ways.”

And, oh, yes, there’s that money, with revenue that eclipsed a record $ 11 billion last season, Selig said, compared with $ 1.2 billion when he took over in 1992.

“We were living in a system that was archaic,” Selig said. “There were a lot of things I’m really proud of, but the economics, to grow in popularity and revenues, I’m very proud of that.”

Schuerholz brought that same hope and turned a franchise that was a laughingst­ock into a dynasty.

The Braves had finished in last or next- to- last six consecutiv­e years, averaging 96 losses, failing to win a playoff game since 1958, when the Milwaukee Braves won the World Series. Schuerholz, the architect of the Kansas City Royals’ 1985World Series championsh­ip team, joined forces with Hall of Fame manager Bobby Cox after the 1990 season, and the duo led the Braves to 14 division titles, five pennants and one World Series title from 1991 to 2006.

Schuerholz became the first GM to win a World Series in each league, which has since been matched by Pat Gillick and Theo Epstein, but considers his greatest accomplish­ment perhaps the streak of 14 consecutiv­e division titles.

“It’s easy to build a championsh­ip team but very difficult and challengin­g to sustain it,” Schuerholz said. “It’s hard to say one trumps another. I’m proud of what we did in Kansas City and Atlanta, overcoming the challenges we had and being successful and winning consistent­ly.”

Now, after being friends for the last 40 years and rivals when Schuerholz began with the Baltimore Orioles and Selig owned the Milwaukee Brewers, they are reunited again. This time in Cooperstow­n, N. Y.

The proudest triumph of their baseball careers has arrived.

“We were living in a system that was archaic. There were a lot of things I’m really proud of, but the economics, to grow in popularity and revenues, I’m very proud of that.” Bud Selig, reflecting on his accomplish­ments as Major League Baseball commission­er

 ?? MIKE GROLL, AP ?? Bud Selig, baseball’s ninth commission­er, had bumpy spots, but his 23- year record holds up well.
MIKE GROLL, AP Bud Selig, baseball’s ninth commission­er, had bumpy spots, but his 23- year record holds up well.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States