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Colin Barnicle

Colin Barnicle

Posted: January 5, 2011 10:03 PM

It doesn't bother me that Jeff Bagwell didn't make the Hall of Fame. He has comparable numbers to Orlando Cepeda, Jim Rice and Andre Dawson, all of whom had to wait more than a decade until sportswriters chose to acknowledge them. It doesn't even bother me that he only received 41 percent of the vote despite the fact Willie Stargell, a statistically similar player, received double that amount (82 percent) on his first ballot because the guy had a "fatherly personality" and hit the ball a long way. In fact, it doesn't even bother me that Lee Smith garnered more attention at the polls than Bagwell did. No, what bothers me is why he didn't make it into the Hall of Fame.

The guy had muscles in a decade of muscles. So what? That doesn't mean he was on steroids. He has never privately or publicly been linked to them, but he has been penalized by sportswriters who were as complicit in the pedaling of the home-run surge, maybe more so, as any GM, owner or juiced-up player during the 15-20 year reign of what is now known as "The Steroid Era." Common sense would indicate that the vote was hypocritical. It is also a sports-page version of "profiling," which happens to be an unsubstantiated measure of guilt applied to people prior to a legal charge and condemned by any judicial system that wants to be taken seriously.

Hold on though, sportswriters don't always profile. No, no; they pick and chose when they do it and to whom they do it. Gaylord Perry was an admitted cheater. He doctored, scratched, scuffed balls, a penalty that carries the same suspension as Rafael Palmeiro's 10-game dismissal in 2005, but his Ph. D in spitball wasn't held against him. Don Drysdale won 153 of his 209 games from 1960-1968 in what was commonly called "The Pitching Era" with the aid of a higher mound. In 1969, Major League baseball lowered the mound because it gave pitchers like Drysdale, Koufax and Bob Gibson what MLB deemed to be an "unfair advantage" over hitters. That same year was Drysdale's last in the big leagues but, true to form, he was elected to the Hall of Fame. Mickey Mantle took "handfuls of greenies," illegal amphetamines, according to Jane Leavy's meticulously researched biography, The Last Boy. And, yes, Mantle along with many other players, probably the majority of them, who took illegal amphetamines from the 1940s onward have etched copper plaques in the Hall of Fame.

But Jeff Bagwell didn't get more votes because sportswriters looked at him and thought, "He must have used something," the same way a bad police officer might arrive at the scene of a crime and see a black kid in a hooded sweatshirt and think, "He must be involved." Pure and simple.The sportswriters were an accessory to the crime of steroids. They were in the locker room. They saw what was happening and they chose to not to say anything. Now, they are penalizing any player they assume to be guilty with heretic fervor.

The problem is that those who critique and cover the game have been allowed to dictate to it as well. Sportswriters wouldn't be allowed to call balls and strikes. They wouldn't be allowed to vote on whether instant replay should be a larger part of the game. They certainly wouldn't be allowed to pick who was the starting pitcher in the All-Star game. Yet they are allowed to choose who should have the title "Hall of Famer" bestowed upon them.

I understand. They are, by chosen profession, the only people who are qualified by the number of games witnessed and the volume of years spent chronicling it (you have to have 10 years covering baseball before you are allowed into the Baseball Writers Association) who can have a vote. Many, like Buster Olney, Jim Caple, Tim Kurkjian and others do an extremely diligent and honest job of voting. But, with something like the Jeff Bagwell vote, many more did not, and it needs to be changed.

A problem is only a problem if it has no solution. So here it is: Create a panel for voting. Allow the voters to choose as many players as they want and whoever they want and create some guidelines for eras, like the 1990s, that were known to have been fueled by illegal substances. The panel ought to have sportswriters on it, undoubtedly they should have some say, but not all of it. The rest of the voting community should be filled out with people who know and love the game, people like baseball aficionados (Doris Kearns Goodwin, Bill James, Bob Costas), ex-players and managers (Don Zimmer, Tommy Lasorda, Joe Torre) who can make accurate, detailed judgments about players, their ability, their career.

If the rules don't change and player's like Jeff Bagwell and eventually Mike Piazza, Frank Thomas and Jim Thome, keep ending up with less than half the vote because writers "think they might" have done something wrong then in 15 years it could be that eight of the top 20 home-run hitters of all-time are listening to speeches on the steps of Cooperstown instead of giving them. For those Hall of Fame voters, that's about 40 percent.

 

Follow Colin Barnicle on Twitter: www.twitter.com/colinbarnicle

 
 
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09:25 PM on 01/16/2011
Colin-

Like it or not-perception is going to be the new reality in HOF elections for a few decades. Why?- 400 lb gorilla is still in the room (steroids). Possibly it moved to the corner with a small lampshape over its head, but it's there.

Look, now there's a group of journalists who are providing constantly shifting moralism. It is unpredictable. There are no HOF standards right now. Its rumor that now reins as king and that is an absolute travesty. However, after that fateful day in 2005 in front of Congress, nobody including the commissioner stepped up and defined who should be in and who should be out. At least judge Landis was definitive. The commissioner was hoping that the courts would help him out in ostrasizing Barry Bonds. That fizzled big time. Now Alan is planning to leave the game without addressing this issue. Tragic wimpiness.

Bagwell was the best player at his position along with Frank Thomas during this era. He won a gold glove. Bagwell also had shoulder degenerative arthritis which would be extremely rare in a mid-30s healthy individual without a very clear shoulder injury in the past.

I dont think there can be a true standard to establish on who was legit or not in the 'Steroid Era". Unfortunately it is now the preponderance of hearsay and reputation. Both of those things can be 'spun' by off-the-field 'campaigns'. President Nixon did this after he left the presidency in disgrace.
08:49 PM on 01/12/2011
The idea of having Bill James vote on the Hall is a great one, by the way. The guy is the most brilliant baseball mind of all time.
08:48 PM on 01/12/2011
The Hall is full of cheaters. If we're not going to kick out Perry, Mantle, Mays, and Ruth, stop bashing all these guys who played in the 90s. A guy should get in based on his performance versus his contemporaries. Bags' numbers are Hall-worthy. And when a certain Barry Lamar Bonds is up for enshrinement, he should waltz in the front door of Cooperstown. Anything less renders the entire Hall a joke.
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MG Metiva
For Great Justice, I shall post.
12:49 AM on 01/10/2011
Eventually MLB's hall of fame will have the Hideo Nomos, Tim Wakefields, Kenny Rogerses, and Jamie Moyers move into the hall of fame because of the sluggers feast that was the 1990's and early 2000's.
07:43 PM on 01/07/2011
Not sure where the idea came from that there is no reason to suspect Bagwell:

From Tom Verducci in SI:
http://spo­rtsillustr­ated.cnn.c­om/2011/wr­iters/tom_­verducci/0­1/04/hall.­of.fame.ba­llot/index­.html?eref­=sihp

The Oddest Call

Jeff Bagwell: He should eventually get in, but his first-year support will be interestin­g to watch. Bagwell's numbers look worthy of Cooperstow­n, but he has been tied to steroid speculatio­n enough that he "defended" himself in an ESPN.com interview last month. His defense? "I have no problem" with a guy juicing up, he said. To take such a position today is wildly irresponsi­ble. It also invites the very talk that Bagwell claimed to be "sick and tired of."

Bagwell was an admitted Andro user who hired a competitiv­e bodybuilde­r to make him as big as he could be, who claimed, McGwire-li­ke, that Andro "doesn't help you hit home runs," who went from a prospect with "no pop" to massively changing his body and outhomerin­g all but six big leaguers in the 13 seasons before steroid penalties (Ken Griffey Jr. and five connected to steroids: Bonds, Sosa, Rafael Palmeiro, Mark McGwire and Juan Gonzalez), and who condones the use of steroids -- but said, "I never used."
01:52 PM on 01/07/2011
There was a list with I think 104 names, that entire list should be released so that we know who was and who wasn't involved. This way there is no doubt to someone like Bagwell.
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MG Metiva
For Great Justice, I shall post.
12:51 AM on 01/10/2011
Bags wasn't on the list. Most of the players were journeymen or busts like Mark Carreon, Dave Martinez, and Trent Durrington.
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
08:33 AM on 01/06/2011
Hall of fame voters have zero integrity when it comes to anything. There's no point in micro analyzing a single vote for the hall when the whole voting system has turned into a purely popularity contest where sports "journalists" personal biases, big and small, are all that count in their "deliberations."
Having sports "jounralists" vote for the Hall is like having a prison parole board made up entirely of inmates.
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SCboy
Dogs are people too.
06:13 AM on 01/06/2011
Life is composed of good luck things and bad luck things. Bagwell had the good luck of having natural talents that allowed him to make an excellent living playing a game in front of thousands of adoring fans. He had the bad luck to do it during the steroid era.

As much as some may want to make Hall of Fame entry an objective thing, it is simply not going to happen. In any arena where human beings are voting on other human beings there will be a subjective element. It sucks for Jeff Bagwell but it also sucks for the millions and millions of people who have had to endure similar circumstances.
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MG Metiva
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12:54 AM on 01/10/2011
Hideo Nomo would have the good fortune of being a reasonible "solid", statistically speaking, pitcher during the steroid era. Nomo will probably get in first to third ballot, Bagwell ends up getting in through the old timers committee in 40 years worth of time.
12:53 AM on 01/06/2011
All of this is making the Hall of Fame honors into a joke. The BBWAA have completely fallen down on the job in recent years. I would love to have people like Bill James or Pete Palmer involved. They know way more than any sportswriter about these players and have the ability to put a player's performance into the context of the era they played in. Colin, I'm with you on this. Leaving out Jeff Bagwell is bad enough. Leaving out Mark McGwire is absurd, and displays a punitive stance against him by the BBWAA. They want to punish him and the rest of these guys. He only picked the game up after the debacle of 1994 and carried back to the pennicale. And the writers and media all went willingly along for the joy ride at the time. It's a snub. No good deed goes unpunished.
12:30 AM on 01/06/2011
Are you kidding me--leaving Hall of Fame voting to the likes of Bob Costas and Doris Kearns Godwin? I think Barnicle Bill has overdosed on Ken Burns. The steroid guys like Bagwell deserve no such Hall of Fame honors. Greenies didn't help a player hit the ball ridiculous distances. It kept them awake.