The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Beltrán brings baggage to ballot

- By Noah Trister

With Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling off the ballot, next year’s Hall of Fame vote figures to be a bit less contentiou­s.

Then again, the top newcomer arrives with his own recent baggage. Forget about steroids for a minute, it’s time to talk about sign stealing.

Carlos Beltrán is eligible for the Hall of Fame in 2023, and although the sweet-swinging outfielder had a distinguis­hed career at the plate and in the field, he was implicated in the Houston Astros’ sign-stealing scandal. It cost him a managing job with the New York Mets.

It’s unclear whether voters will treat Beltrán as harshly as they have Bonds, Clemens and various other stars whose accomplish­ments have been called into question by allegation­s of performanc­eenhancing drug use. All of

Bonds’ home runs and Clemens’ Cy Young Awards weren’t enough for either to reach the 75% threshold for induction to the Hall in voting by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America, and they were both rejected in their 10th and final year on the ballot.

Schilling turned off voters with his behavior in recent years, including social media posts about Muslim extremists, transgende­r people and journalist­s. He and Sammy Sosa also fell short in their 10th year in the voting announced Jan. 25. David Ortiz was the only player elected.

Needless to say, next year’s ballot will look a lot different.

The newbie

Beltrán stands out on next year’s eligibilit­y list: A nine-time All-Star, his 20year career included 435 home runs, 312 stolen bases and some impressive postseason numbers. Beltrán finally won a World Series in his final season — with Houston in 2017.

When that team was later investigat­ed, MLB said Beltrán was among those involved in the illicit use of electronic­s to steal signs. The Mets, who had hired him to be their manager, parted ways with him before he was even in charge a single game, although A.J. Hinch and Alex Cora — two other managers who were cut loose amid the fallout from that scandal — are now back in charge in bigleague dugouts.

Rolen inching closer

Scott Rolen is the top returning player on next year’s ballot after receiving 63.2% of the vote this time around. He was in his fifth year under considerat­ion and improved from 52.9%.

Ryan Thibodaux, who runs an online Hall of Fame ballot tracker, said sometimes if a player’s support surges among voters who release their ballots publicly, it takes a little longer for his support to grow among voters who keep their choices private.

“You saw it with (Tim) Raines and you saw it with Edgar (Martinez) and you saw it with Larry Walker. When those guys made their big jump, they still didn’t make a big jump on the private ballots,” Thibodaux said. “But that did happen the next year. But the only caveat with that is that the private-ballot jump with all of those guys was always their 10th year on the ballot. So with Rolen, he’s got five more years after this year. There’s no real imperative, time-wise.”

 ?? GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Carlos Beltrán is eligible for the Hall of Fame in 2023.
GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Carlos Beltrán is eligible for the Hall of Fame in 2023.

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