USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Hall is inevitable for star third baseman

- Scott Boeck

The results of the 2023 Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America balloting were set to be announced after Sports Weekly went to press. USA TODAY Sports Weekly looks at two top candidates:

Scott Rolen’s combinatio­n of defensive wizardry and offense made him one of the most complete players in baseball.

Though injuries would eventually take a toll on his body, the third baseman was a feared batter during his peak years.

Rolen played 17 seasons in the majors and ranks in the top 15 among third basemen in home runs (316), RBI (1,287) and slugging percentage (.490). Defensivel­y – both by traditiona­l statistics and advanced measuremen­t – he was one of the best third basemen of his generation, winning eight Gold Glove Awards.

A second-round pick by the Philadelph­ia Phillies in 1993, he made an immediate impact when he reached the big leagues, unanimousl­y winning the National League Rookie of the Year award in 1997. The following season, he establishe­d himself as a legitimate star with a .290/.391/.532 slash line, 31 home runs, 110 RBI and his earning his first Gold Glove.

The seven-time All-Star went on to play for the St. Louis Cardinals, Toronto Blue Jays and Cincinnati Reds before retiring in 2012.

Rolen, who is in the Cardinals Hall of Fame, was an integral part of the club that won the World Series in 2006. He hit .421 (8-for-19) with five runs scored in five games against the Detroit Tigers.

Why Rolen belongs in the Hall

Rolen hit with consistent power and could flat-out play the hot corner. His eight Gold Glove Awards trail only Brooks Robinson (16), Mike Schmidt (10) and Nolan Arenado (10) among third basemen in MLB history. He is also one of 15 infielders ever to win at least eight Gold Glove Awards.

During Rolen’s peak years from 1997 to 2004, he was one of the more powerful sluggers at the plate. He had at least 25 home runs and 100 RBI in five seasons. Only nine players in the majors had more such seasons during that span.

His WAR (46.3) during those eight years was higher than any player in the majors aside from Barry Bonds (71.2) and Alex Rodriguez (62.4), but they were later linked to performanc­e-enhancing drugs. It was also higher than Hall of Famers Jeff Bagwell (44.1), Chipper Jones (43.6), Larry Walker (43.4), Derek Jeter (41.7) and Vladimir Guerrero (40.3) over that span.

And an eight-year sample size is not a small one.

Among the 17 third basemen in the

Hall of Fame, Rolen has a career WAR (70.1) that would rank ninth, just behind Ron Santo (70.5) and ahead of Home Run Baker (62.8). The average WAR for Hall of Fame third basemen is 59.8.

Where Rolen doesn’t stack up

Rolen was often injured, mostly the latter part of his career. From 1997 to 2003, he played 150+ games five times, but never again after those seasons. From 2005 to 2012, at ages 30-37, he averaged 105 games, diminishin­g his overall case.

He retired with 2,077 hits, which is a low number by Hall of Fame standards. There hasn’t been a position player elected with fewer than that total since Johnny Bench in 1989 – and he’s considered one of the greatest catchers all time.

 ?? DILIP VISHWANAT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Scott Rolen, who is in the Cardinals Hall of Fame, was an integral part of the club that won the World Series in 2006.
DILIP VISHWANAT/USA TODAY SPORTS Scott Rolen, who is in the Cardinals Hall of Fame, was an integral part of the club that won the World Series in 2006.

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