Monterey Herald

Bonds falls short, Jeter voted into Hall

Former Giants slugger denied entry for 8th time

- By Jon Becker

Barry Bonds, down to the final three outs of his candidacy on the Baseball Hall of Fame ballot, struck out again on Tuesday.

Baseball’s greatest player of the past quarter century, Bonds’ path to Cooperstow­n continues to be compromise­d by performanc­eenhancing drug accusation­s as he was named on 60.7 percent of the Baseball Writers Associatio­n of America ballots, still well shy of the necessary 75 percent for the hallowed hall.

The former Giants star, who left Major League Baseball in 2007 as its all-time home run leader with 762, will appear on the ballot just two more times before dropping off.

The Hall’s doors did swing open for another iconic star Tuesday when former Yankees great Derek Jeter was voted in after earning 99.7 percent of the vote. Jeter, a 14-time All-Star and fivetime world champion, was just one vote shy of joining former Yankees teammate Mariano Rivera, who last year became the first player to be unanimousl­y selected to the Hall of Fame. Only one of the 397 voters didn’t cast a vote for Jeter.

Meanwhile, former Rockies slugger Larry Walker, who won three National League batting titles, was also inducted as he received 77.6 percent of the votes while making it by just six votes.

Jeter and Walker will be joined at the induction ceremonies in New York on July 26 by former catcher Ted Simmons and the late Marvin Miller, former head of the players associatio­n, both of whom were elected by the Modern Baseball Era Committee last month.

Despite Bonds missing the cut for the eighth straight year, he is still trending toward induction as his voting totals have increased for the sixth straight year. He was named on 59.1 percent of the ballots last year after appearing on 56.4 percent of them two years

ago. The good news for Bonds, a seven-time MVP winner who remains in the conversati­on of the game’s all-time greats, Hall of Fame history has shown that rarely has a player received at least 50 percent of the vote and not get in eventually.

Then again, there’s never been such a polarizing candidate like Bonds, the most feared player in the game for a large chunk of his 22-year career, and then the game’s most reviled after being accused of taking shortcuts (PEDs) to further stardom.

Roger Clemens, arguably the top pitcher in baseball over the past 25 years, has been joined at the hip with Bonds in suspicion and castigatio­n, also failed to gain entry into Cooperstow­n for the eighth straight year. The seven-time Cy Young

Award winner, who was also widely suspected of PED usage, was named on 61.0 percent of the ballots Tuesday.

Ex-Diamondbac­ks and Red Sox pitching star Curt Schilling earned the thirdmost votes (70 percent) but came up 20 votes shy of making it in on his eighth try. Slick-fielding former Giants shortstop Omar Vizquel, an 11-time Gold Glove winner, earned 52.6 percent of the vote.

Jeff Kent, another former Giants infielder, saw his vote percentage total jump from 18 percent last season to 27.5 percent on Tuesday.

Onetime A’s slugger Jason Giambi, who admitted to steroid usage during his career, was named on just six of the 368 ballots in his first year of eligibilit­y. He and former A’s teammate Eric Chavez, who received just one vote, will fall off the ballot since they came up short of the necessary 5 percent of the vote to remain eligible.

 ?? DAN ROSENSTRAU­CH — BANG ARCHIVES ?? The Giants’ Barry Bonds looks up at an eighth-inning home run to tie the game against the Cardinals at AT&T Park in San Francisco on April 18, 2007.
DAN ROSENSTRAU­CH — BANG ARCHIVES The Giants’ Barry Bonds looks up at an eighth-inning home run to tie the game against the Cardinals at AT&T Park in San Francisco on April 18, 2007.

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