New York Daily News

FUTURE FAMERS OF AMERICA

Active players who should have no problem getting into Cooperstow­n

-

s we segue from the Hall-ofAFame

election to the soon arrival of pitchers and catchers, this is a good time to celebrate the active players who don’t have to do anything more for us to earn a ticket to Cooperstow­n.

By my count — and I admit to being a hardliner — there are six: Max Scherzer, Justin Verlander, Clayton Kershaw, Miguel Cabrera, Joey Votto and Zack Greinke. And quite possibly after this season, we’ll be able to add Jose Altuve to the “doesn’t have to do anything more” list.

Here are their cases:

MAX SCHERZER and JUSTIN VERLANDER

Buck Showalter, above all, doesn’t want to hear that neither Verlander nor Scherzer need to do anything more for us to cash their tickets for the Hall of Fame. The Mets manager, of course, is counting on each of them continuing to perform in the fashion that has allowed them to accumulate so much bold face in their records. In Verlander’s case, it’s three times leading the league in wins, four times in innings pitched, five times in strikeouts, four times in WHIP, two Cy Youngs and three runner-ups. His 244 wins are tops among active pitchers. If there’s a knock to be found in Verlander’s credential­s, one supposes it would be his 1-6, 5.63 ERA in nine World Series starts. Scherzer’s boldface is equally prolific — four times leading the league in wins, three times in strikeouts and complete games, twice in innings, plus three Cy Youngs and one runner-up. The only question on either of these stalwart righties is how high a percentage they will get from the BBWAA voters.

MIGUEL CABRERA

This will be quite the farewell tour for the Tigers slugger who is expected to retire after this season.

But for 20 years, we have gotten to witness one of the greatest righthande­d hitters of all time — and that is not an exaggerati­on. Winner of two MVPs and the 2012 Triple Crown, Cabrera has won three batting titles, led the league in on-base percentage four times, and homers, RBI and OPS twice. He is also one of only seven players in history with 3,000 hits and 500 homers, two of whom, Alex Rodriguez and Rafael Palmeiro, got there with the help of PEDs, while another Albert Pujols, just retired and will be flying into the Hall of Fame in five years.

CLAYTON KERSHAW

Plagued by injuries in recent years, it is likely Kershaw, who will turn 35 in March, will also be retiring after this year, although he is still the Dodgers’ most effective starter, just in a more limited capacity. He needs three wins for 200, but all his other Hall-of-Fame boxes are not only checked but pure Koufaxian: Three Cy Young awards, one MVP, five ERA titles, three strikeouts titles, three times leading the league in wins and four times in WHIP. Kershaw’s only fault has been the postseason where he has mystifying­ly been an ordinary-at-best starter (13-12, 4.22 ERA) and a big reason why the Dodgers lost two of his three World Series.

JOEY VOTTO

“Mr. Red” is an icon in Cincinnati and one of the consistent­ly best players in the game for 16 years. He’s not going to get 3,000 hits (2,093) or maybe not even 400 homers (342), but he’s been an on-base machine, seven times leading the NL in OBP, while maintainin­g a lifetime .297 batting average. There’ll undoubtedl­y be some debate on him, but not for me. He won the MVP in 2010 and had six other top 10 finishes including a second in 2017. I’m also partial to players who play their entire careers with one team. Which brings us to another first baseman who spent his entire career with one team: Don Mattingly, who finished at .307 with 222 homers and 2,153 hits. Even though his stats will be dwarfed by Votto’s, there is something Mattingly was that Votto was not. For at least four seasons, Mattingly was acknowledg­ed as the best player in the game.

ZACK GREINKE

While no one was seemingly noticing, this much traveled righty has been quietly compiling a compelling Hall-of-Fame resume. His 223 career wins are second most (to Verlander) among active pitchers. He just signed on for another year with the Royals and it’s quite possible he could get the 118 strikeouts needed for the Hall-of-Fame magic number 3,000. But even if he falls short of that, he had two ERA titles, twice led the league in winning percentage, won a Cy Young and finished in the top 10 four other times. He probably won’t be a first ballot Hall-of-Famer, but compared to the generation of emasculate­d starters coming behind him, his numbers are going to look pretty daunting.

Next year, you can probably add Altuve to this list. He’s already got three batting titles, four seasons of leading the league in hits, an MVP and the second most postseason homers (23) to his credit. But he still needs 65 hits for 2,000 (a minimum Hall-of-Fame requiremen­t for me), eight more homers for 200 and maybe another 100-run season.

 ?? ?? MAX SCHERZER
MIGUEL CABRERA
CLAYTON KERSHAW
JUSTIN VERLANDER
MAX SCHERZER MIGUEL CABRERA CLAYTON KERSHAW JUSTIN VERLANDER
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States