Mark Prior will finally get his due!
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Trout would get 98+% of the vote if he retired right now, without a doubt.AggieEP said:
Trout is another case, for me if he didn't play another game he's already a no doubt Hall of Fame player. But he needs to grind another 1000 hits and 150 HRs to get his counting stats up to where the voters will bestow the "first ballot HoF" title on him. Just ludicrous to me.
Why not? An essential part of being a great athlete is having the physical ability to endure the grind of the game over time. If Yordan Alvarez got run over by a bus tomorrow would he make the Hall of Fame based on what he's done since 2019?AggieEP said:
The hall shouldn't punish players if their bodies just couldn't hold up.
DIckie Thon, come on down!AgRyan04 said:
Mark Prior will finally get his due!
The Porkchop Express said:Why not? An essential part of being a great athlete is having the physical ability to endure the grind of the game over time. If Yordan Alvarez got run over by a bus tomorrow would he make the Hall of Fame based on what he's done since 2019?AggieEP said:
The hall shouldn't punish players if their bodies just couldn't hold up.
I think that is more of the cherry on the sundae feel. Although some guys have clearly gotten Hall-worthy at the ends of their careers. I think Paul Molitor and Dave Winfield are guys who were probably on the border and really contributed late in their careers to win. Molitor led the league in hits and had 113 RBI at age 39, not to mention being WS MVP at 36.Farmer1906 said:The Porkchop Express said:Why not? An essential part of being a great athlete is having the physical ability to endure the grind of the game over time. If Yordan Alvarez got run over by a bus tomorrow would he make the Hall of Fame based on what he's done since 2019?AggieEP said:
The hall shouldn't punish players if their bodies just couldn't hold up.
I agree. Attendance is part of the grade. But I also disagree. I don't care that you played from age 36-39 getting 140 hits a season with a 680 OPS and reached a milestone. That hurts your case more than helps in my mind.
YokelRidesAgain said:Trout would get 98+% of the vote if he retired right now, without a doubt.AggieEP said:
Trout is another case, for me if he didn't play another game he's already a no doubt Hall of Fame player. But he needs to grind another 1000 hits and 150 HRs to get his counting stats up to where the voters will bestow the "first ballot HoF" title on him. Just ludicrous to me.
DeGrom probably hasn't done enough yet, and I doubt that the writers elect Pedroia. The standards of the baseball HOF are higher than those of basketball, football, and hockey.
You're drifting into territory way deeper though. Baseball stats are an intrinsic part of the culture of the game.AggieEP said:
I think you are taking an extreme example by using 2019-present with Yordan, but yes if you stretch that to 2029 then yes that's my argument. A decade of sustained greatness should be sufficient to be a hall of famer. That's pretty much my standard.
Unfortunately currently, you need to be great for a decade plus grind out another 6-7 years of stats as a replacement level player to get in. Why do we care so much about those replacement level years?
Miguel Cabrera is a good example, his last year with a WAR above 1.0 was 2016. Past that he grinded out 650 hits and 65 homers. That allowed him to get to 3000 and 500 respectively all the while being one of the worst hitters in baseball for 6 years.
Does Cabrera get in if he retires at 2500 hits and 450 homers... probably, but 3000 and 500 makes it a guarantee. The question is why does the hall care about numbers tacked on in this fashion? And why do fans?
Did we really need to see Biggio grind out a -2.4 WAR season so he could get to 3000 to know he was a hall of famer?
OK, well, although I don't agree with you, that would still make Trout a first ballot HOFer.AggieEP said:
Since Trout is signed for like 8 more years, we won't ever really know the answer to this question, but with just 1600 hits, 368 homers and no post season skins on the wall, I can tell you that I believe wholeheartedly that 20% or so of the voters would not vote for Trout. Especially if our last reminders of his greatness were the last 4 years when he only played the equivalent of 2 years.
All you are doing is solidifying my belief argument that Hall of Fame should be uber elite and I'm totally fine with many years going by without someone getting in. The Hall of Fame should be the greatest of all time, not the greatest of your era.AggieEP said:
I agree that numbers are inherent to baseball, but let's not forget all the ways the game has changed that makes those numbers irrelevant to winning these days.
EVERY single team in the league would take a .900 OPS hitter with 150 hits a year over a .800 OPS player with 200 hits a year. Good players these days take their walks and try to do damage by slugging because it's a proven fact that doubles and homers contribute more to winning than singles do.
At 150 hits a year you have to play 20 years to get 3000 hits. That's just not realistic for most guys.
With pitching wins the math is even more ludicrous. There were only 2 pitchers with more than 16 wins last year. It'd take 19 years averaging that to get to 300 wins. And I say the math is more ludicrous because a hitter can be terrible and still get 120 hits in a season at the end of their career, a starting pitcher has to remain good to rack up wins. If you have an ERA north of 5.00 you're not going to win 16 games very often.
So again, stats matter but they also must be contextualized within the realities of the game as it is played today. In my estimation, 2400 hits and 200 wins should be our new "magic numbers."
The Porkchop Express said:All you are doing is solidifying my belief argument that Hall of Fame should be uber elite and I'm totally fine with many years going by without someone getting in. The Hall of Fame should be the greatest of all time, not the greatest of your era.AggieEP said:
I agree that numbers are inherent to baseball, but let's not forget all the ways the game has changed that makes those numbers irrelevant to winning these days.
EVERY single team in the league would take a .900 OPS hitter with 150 hits a year over a .800 OPS player with 200 hits a year. Good players these days take their walks and try to do damage by slugging because it's a proven fact that doubles and homers contribute more to winning than singles do.
At 150 hits a year you have to play 20 years to get 3000 hits. That's just not realistic for most guys.
With pitching wins the math is even more ludicrous. There were only 2 pitchers with more than 16 wins last year. It'd take 19 years averaging that to get to 300 wins. And I say the math is more ludicrous because a hitter can be terrible and still get 120 hits in a season at the end of their career, a starting pitcher has to remain good to rack up wins. If you have an ERA north of 5.00 you're not going to win 16 games very often.
So again, stats matter but they also must be contextualized within the realities of the game as it is played today. In my estimation, 2400 hits and 200 wins should be our new "magic numbers."
The Porkchop Express said:All you are doing is solidifying my belief argument that Hall of Fame should be uber elite and I'm totally fine with many years going by without someone getting in. The Hall of Fame should be the greatest of all time, not the greatest of your era.AggieEP said:
I agree that numbers are inherent to baseball, but let's not forget all the ways the game has changed that makes those numbers irrelevant to winning these days.
EVERY single team in the league would take a .900 OPS hitter with 150 hits a year over a .800 OPS player with 200 hits a year. Good players these days take their walks and try to do damage by slugging because it's a proven fact that doubles and homers contribute more to winning than singles do.
At 150 hits a year you have to play 20 years to get 3000 hits. That's just not realistic for most guys.
With pitching wins the math is even more ludicrous. There were only 2 pitchers with more than 16 wins last year. It'd take 19 years averaging that to get to 300 wins. And I say the math is more ludicrous because a hitter can be terrible and still get 120 hits in a season at the end of their career, a starting pitcher has to remain good to rack up wins. If you have an ERA north of 5.00 you're not going to win 16 games very often.
So again, stats matter but they also must be contextualized within the realities of the game as it is played today. In my estimation, 2400 hits and 200 wins should be our new "magic numbers."
I am 100% fine with that. I have a long list of guys who don't deserve to be in the Hall.Farmer1906 said:The Porkchop Express said:All you are doing is solidifying my belief argument that Hall of Fame should be uber elite and I'm totally fine with many years going by without someone getting in. The Hall of Fame should be the greatest of all time, not the greatest of your era.AggieEP said:
I agree that numbers are inherent to baseball, but let's not forget all the ways the game has changed that makes those numbers irrelevant to winning these days.
EVERY single team in the league would take a .900 OPS hitter with 150 hits a year over a .800 OPS player with 200 hits a year. Good players these days take their walks and try to do damage by slugging because it's a proven fact that doubles and homers contribute more to winning than singles do.
At 150 hits a year you have to play 20 years to get 3000 hits. That's just not realistic for most guys.
With pitching wins the math is even more ludicrous. There were only 2 pitchers with more than 16 wins last year. It'd take 19 years averaging that to get to 300 wins. And I say the math is more ludicrous because a hitter can be terrible and still get 120 hits in a season at the end of their career, a starting pitcher has to remain good to rack up wins. If you have an ERA north of 5.00 you're not going to win 16 games very often.
So again, stats matter but they also must be contextualized within the realities of the game as it is played today. In my estimation, 2400 hits and 200 wins should be our new "magic numbers."
If that's how you're defining it then no one will ever match the guys of the old days or steroid era. And you'll have a bunch of players you'll need to kick out. JV
I completely agree that it is ludicrous for any voter to look at Adrian Beltre, Greg Maddux, Randy Johnson, Rickey Henderson, Mike Schmidt, etc. and be like, "that guy sucks, not a Hall of Famer".AggieEP said:
The fact that any voter could look at what Trout has done to this day and not vote for him is ludicrous to me, but a reality of how the voting goes.
Admittedly, Cobb wasn't considering the modern era of baseball with reliever after reliever coming in throwing 95+ mph breaking balls, but you have to consider his response to a reporter who asked how he would hit in the 1950s.The Porkchop Express said:
You think God's really running simulations on how Ty Cobb would fare against modern pitchers up there?
The Porkchop Express said:
You think God's really running simulations on how Ty Cobb would fare against modern pitchers up there?
I understand what you're trying to say but you are minimizing what Trout has already accomplished:AggieEP said:YokelRidesAgain said:Trout would get 98+% of the vote if he retired right now, without a doubt.AggieEP said:
Trout is another case, for me if he didn't play another game he's already a no doubt Hall of Fame player. But he needs to grind another 1000 hits and 150 HRs to get his counting stats up to where the voters will bestow the "first ballot HoF" title on him. Just ludicrous to me.
DeGrom probably hasn't done enough yet, and I doubt that the writers elect Pedroia. The standards of the baseball HOF are higher than those of basketball, football, and hockey.
Since Trout is signed for like 8 more years, we won't ever really know the answer to this question, but with just 1600 hits, 368 homers and no post season skins on the wall, I can tell you that I believe wholeheartedly that 20% or so of the voters would not vote for Trout. Especially if our last reminders of his greatness were the last 4 years when he only played the equivalent of 2 years.
Luckily he will play and will hit plenty of the counting number milestones like 500 homers to make this a non issue.
_lefraud_ said:I understand what you're trying to say but you are minimizing what Trout has already accomplished:AggieEP said:YokelRidesAgain said:Trout would get 98+% of the vote if he retired right now, without a doubt.AggieEP said:
Trout is another case, for me if he didn't play another game he's already a no doubt Hall of Fame player. But he needs to grind another 1000 hits and 150 HRs to get his counting stats up to where the voters will bestow the "first ballot HoF" title on him. Just ludicrous to me.
DeGrom probably hasn't done enough yet, and I doubt that the writers elect Pedroia. The standards of the baseball HOF are higher than those of basketball, football, and hockey.
Since Trout is signed for like 8 more years, we won't ever really know the answer to this question, but with just 1600 hits, 368 homers and no post season skins on the wall, I can tell you that I believe wholeheartedly that 20% or so of the voters would not vote for Trout. Especially if our last reminders of his greatness were the last 4 years when he only played the equivalent of 2 years.
Luckily he will play and will hit plenty of the counting number milestones like 500 homers to make this a non issue.
There might be 5 guys that wouldn't check his name today, just for the attention, but nowhere near 20%.
What you are missing is the degree to which Hall voters who would be persuaded an argument like "only got (X number) of hits" and the like have either died off or have been purged from the ballot. The fact that the likes of Todd Helton and Billy Wagner are polling in the 70-80% range demonstrates that the kind of voters you are talking about are a very small percentage of the electorate.AggieEP said:
If Lance Berkman with an OPS of .978 over a ten year span can get less than 5% of the vote and not even get a second year... my thoughts are that Trout's numbers currently don't make him as much of a lock with the voters. They value longevity more than they value players who were only great for 10 or so years.
If your last statement was true, then there's no way that Mauer and Helton are getting elected to the Hall.AggieEP said:
There are a lot of guys with 1600 hits and 300 homers over a ten year span that aren't in the hall, and who didn't even spend much time on the ballot.
Lance Berkman (2000-2009) 1553 hits and 309 homers
Mark Texiera (2003-2012) 1580 hits and 338 homers
Alfonso Soriano (2002-2011) 1586 hits and 319 homers
NONE of those guys are Trout, but I think it does highlight that the counting numbers he has right now are very much in line with hall of good numbers from players in the recent past that did not get serious looks from hall voters.
If Lance Berkman with an OPS of .978 over a ten year span can get less than 5% of the vote and not even get a second year... my thoughts are that Trout's numbers currently don't make him as much of a lock with the voters. They value longevity more than they value players who were only great for 10 or so years.
YokelRidesAgain said:What you are missing is the degree to which Hall voters who would be persuaded an argument like "only got (X number) of hits" and the like have either died off or have been purged from the ballot. The fact that the likes of Todd Helton and Billy Wagner are polling in the 70-80% range demonstrates that the kind of voters you are talking about are a very small percentage of the electorate.AggieEP said:
If Lance Berkman with an OPS of .978 over a ten year span can get less than 5% of the vote and not even get a second year... my thoughts are that Trout's numbers currently don't make him as much of a lock with the voters. They value longevity more than they value players who were only great for 10 or so years.
And when you take into account that Trout is way, way better than Helton/Tim Raines/Larry Walker, etc. was, the anticipated results become pretty obvious.
Agreed._lefraud_ said:
It's really odd you keep bringing up Berkman in a discussion about Mike Trout. But we can go a different route, WAR. Can't get screwed out of that metric.
Trout will get in at any point he retires with a huge percentage of the vote because he was clearly the dominant player in the league for a long stretch that makes his career totals obsolete. But that is a real rarity._lefraud_ said:
I'll post the pic again since you seemed to have missed it the first time.
Thats 3 MVPs and 4 other runner ups…he could have less than 1000 hits and 200 homers, and this hardware alone gets him 98% if he never swings a bat again.