Steve Carlton at the Hall of Fame press conference on January 13, 1994. Despite his rocky relationship with the press, Carlton gave interviews for more than two hours. |
Ted Simmons in 1976. |
When Ted Simmons was elected to the Hall of Fame last week,
I took a closer look at the 1994 BBWAA Hall of Fame ballot, the only writers’
ballot that Simmons appeared on. It’s a pretty odd ballot, for reasons I’ll explain.
The writers voted in late 1993, and the results were made public on January 12,
1994. The only player elected by the writers that year was my favorite baseball
player: Steve Carlton, who was named on 95.6% of the ballots. At the time,
Carlton’s percentage was one of the top ten in the history of the Hall of Fame.
Carlton was a slam-dunk case for the Hall of Fame: he won 329 games, he was the
second pitcher to ever strike out 4,000 batters, he won 4 Cy Young Awards, and he
was a 10-time All-Star. Pretty open and shut.
Other than Carlton, there are now 8 players on the 1994
ballot who were subsequently elected to the Hall of Fame. They are: Orlando
Cepeda, Phil Niekro, Tony Perez, Don Sutton, Ron Santo, Bruce Sutter, Joe Torre—who
was elected for his accomplishments as a manager—and Ted Simmons. That’s a
pretty stacked ballot. Oddly enough, it includes two 300-game winning pitchers,
Phil Niekro and Don Sutton, who were NOT first-ballot Hall of Famers. It ended
up taking Niekro and Sutton FIVE tries to make it into the Hall. It’s bizarre
to think of two 300-game winners somehow not being first ballot Hall of Famers.
I don’t know if any of the voters have a thing about not
voting for someone on their first ballot, and then voting for them the second
time—separating
the Hall into “first ballot” guys and everyone else, but that’s the only reason I can think of for
not voting for a 300-game winner the first year they’re eligible. Yes, Tom
Seaver and Steve Carlton were better than Don Sutton, but it doesn’t mean that
Sutton doesn’t deserve to be in the Hall of Fame.
I suppose someone could object to Phil Niekro because he
lost so many games—274, 5th on the all-time list. Niekro led the
NL in losses four years in a row, from 1977-1980, but that’s more a reflection
of the crappy Braves teams he was pitching for than his pitching talents. In
1979, Niekro led the NL in both wins and losses, in addition to also
leading the league in games started, complete games, innings, hits, home runs,
walks, hit by pitch, and batters faced! Niekro didn’t achieve the same level of
fame as some of the other pitchers of his generation. Niekro never played in a
World Series, never won a Cy Young Award, and won 20 games in a season “only” 3
times. Back in the day, when pitcher wins were VERY important, this might have
made a difference to some voters. In contrast, Fergie Jenkins, who won 34 fewer
games than Niekro over his career, won 20 games in a season seven times,
including six years in a row. Seaver won 20 games five times, Carlton won 20
games six times, and Jim Palmer, who won 50 fewer games than Niekro, was an
eight-time 20 game winner.
Fortunately, WAR and other sabermetric stats have proven
Niekro’s value as a pitcher. If Niekro were hitting the ballot for the first
time in 2019, I think he’d sail into the Hall of Fame.
It's almost like Don Sutton decided to win 324 games in the
most low-key way possible. His season high for wins was 21, achieved in 1976,
the only year that Sutton won 20 games. Sutton never won a Cy Young Award, and
only led the league in a Triple Crown pitching statistic once, when he led the
NL in ERA in 1980. Sutton is 7th all-time in strikeouts, but the
closest he came to leading the league was two 4th place finishes.
Sutton just pitched forever, never got hurt, and won like 16 games every single
year. Sutton won 15 games or more in a season 12 times, which is impressive.
Sutton still managed to be effective after he turned 40. Steve Carlton turned
40 in December of 1984, and Sutton turned 40 in April of 1985. Despite Carlton’s
rigorous training regimen, and excellent physical health, in 1985 he went on
the disabled list for the only time in his career with a rotator cuff strain
and missed more than two months of the season. In short, Carlton was never the
same pitcher after that injury. From 1985 to the end of their careers in 1988,
Sutton’s record was 44-38, while Carlton’s was 16-37.
Anyway, back to the 1994 ballot. During this historical
period, it seems as though the writers were really stuck on electing just one
player at a time. It’s like Reggie Jackson, Steve Carlton, and Mike Schmidt
were just so amazing that they couldn’t even focus on the statistics of the
other players. The writers didn’t even elect anyone in 1996, when the ballot had
no first-ballot Hall of Famers on it. (The best players to debut on that ballot
were Bob Boone, Fred Lynn, and Keith Hernandez.) 1996 should have been a time
for them to clear the backlog on the ballot and elect Niekro, Sutton, and Tony
Perez in one fell swoop.
In addition to all the future Hall of Famers, the 1994
ballot was also full of excellent players who still haven’t made it into the
Hall of Fame but have been considered by various iterations of the Veterans’
Committee. Those players include: Steve Garvey, Tony Oliva, Jim Kaat, Dick
Allen, Ken Boyer, Minnie Minoso, Luis Tiant, and Dave Concepcion. There was
certainly an embarrassment of riches for the writers to choose from in 1994.
The 1994 ballot was the last time that anyone wrote Pete
Rose’s name down for Hall of Fame. Rose had been banned from baseball since
1989, and in 1991, just before Rose would have hit the ballot, had he not been
banned, the Hall of Fame made it clear that players on the ineligible list
(Rose) could not be considered for induction into the Hall of Fame. But some
sportswriters wrote Rose’s name on their ballots anyway, and Rose was named on
9.5% of the ballots in 1992, the highest total of his three years being written
in. In 1994, Rose was written in on 19 ballots, getting 4.2% of the vote. So,
more sportswriters wasted their votes on a protest for Pete Rose than voting
for Ted Simmons, who needed their help to stay on the ballot.
In addition to the banned Hit King being written in, there
were other oddities in 1994. While Ted Simmons only got 17 votes, for 3.7%, and
was dropped from future ballots, other players under 5% somehow reappeared the
following year. George Foster, Vida Blue, and Don Baylor all received fewer
votes than Simmons, and yet they all were on the 1995 BBWAA ballot. How did
this happen? Sloppy proof-reading? Both Baylor and Foster got less than 5% of
the vote on the 1995 ballot, and were dropped from future ballots. Vida Blue
actually got more than 5% of the vote on the 1995 ballot, at 5.7%, but
he was still dropped too. That just seems like adding insult to injury.
I don’t think Vida Blue is a Hall of Famer, despite his Hall
of Fame name, but he was an excellent pitcher. With 191 victories after 1982,
his age 32 season, Blue might have projected to someday join the Hall of Fame. However,
Blue didn’t win a single game in 1983, and the Kansas City Royals released him
in August. Blue had cocaine problems during this period as well, and in
addition to serving a jail term, he was banned from baseball for the 1984
season by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. Blue made a comeback with the Giants in 1985
and 1986, winning his 200th game and getting his 2,000th strikeout.
I’m not going to say that Vida Blue was better than Don Drysdale, but I will
point out that Blue has a slightly better won-loss record. Blue finished his
career at 209-161, and Drysdale was 209-166. Given how amazing the Dodgers were
throughout Drysdale’s career, it’s surprising his winning percentage wasn’t
higher.
Vida Blue is also the answer to two fun trivia questions: he
was the first pitcher to start All-Star games for both leagues, and he remains,
48 years later, the last switch-hitter to win the AL MVP. I met Vida Blue at a
baseball card show in 2017, and he was a very nice guy. He remembered my name
when I bumped into him walking around the show an hour after I got his
autograph, so that was cool.
I also met Don Baylor at a baseball card show when I was a
kid. It must have been shortly after he retired as a player. He was a nice guy,
and he was always a player I really liked. Someone said of Don Baylor, “He just
looked like an RBI, standing up there at the plate.” Baylor drove in 1,276
RBI’s during his career, so that was an apt quote. He was also unafraid of
taking one for the team, as he was hit by 267 pitches. Once he was on the
bases, Baylor was a threat to steal, as he racked up 285 steals, with a high of
52 in 1976.
One of the random facts I learned from the 2001 edition of The New Bill James Historical Baseball
Abstract is that 8-time Gold Glove
winning shortstop Mark Belanger had three books on his desk: “A baseball
encyclopedia, Marvin Miller’s autobiography, and Don Baylor, by Don Baylor.” (p.624) I don’t know how Bill James
knew this, but it’s interesting. Baylor and Belanger were teammates on the
Orioles in the early 1970’s, so that perhaps explains why the book found a
place on Belanger’s desk. I read Don Baylor’s autobiography when I was a kid
and I remember enjoying it, although I couldn’t tell you anything specific
about it. It’s never been one of the top three books on my desk. Maybe I should
read it again.
I’ve always been struck by how Don Baylor’s career is kind
of a reverse image of Reggie Jackson’s. Granted, Baylor never climbed the
ladder of super-duper stardom the way that Reggie did, but Baylor played for
all the same teams that Reggie did. Jackson and Baylor were part of the
blockbuster trade that sent Reggie from the A’s to the Orioles in April of
1976. Jackson played only one year for the Orioles, while Baylor only played
one year for the A’s. While Reggie went to the Yankees and then to the Angels,
Baylor went to the Angels and then to the Yankees. Jackson and Baylor were
teammates for one year, on the 1982 Angels. Jackson led the AL in home runs
that year with 39, while Baylor added 24 home runs of his own. Adding to the
symmetry of their careers, both played their last season for the Oakland A’s:
Jackson in 1987, Baylor in 1988.
The 1994 ballot also featured yet another veteran member of
the 1987 Minnesota Twins besides Steve Carlton and Don Baylor: Joe Niekro,
Phil’s younger brother. Joe was a pretty solid pitcher, tying his brother for
the NL lead in wins in 1979, and winning 221 games in his career. Joe was
released by the Twins in May of 1988, just a week after the team let Steve
Carlton go. In his only appearance on a Hall of Fame ballot, Joe got six votes.
But Joe Niekro still fared better than his longtime Houston
Astros teammate, Jose Cruz, who only received two votes. Cruz wasn’t a Hall of
Famer, but he was a very good player who put together a nice career.
At the very bottom of the ballot were five players who
didn’t receive any votes for the Hall of Fame: Scott McGregor, one of those
very good pitchers that the Baltimore Orioles seemed to turn out like clockwork
in the 1970’s and 1980’s, Bob Horner, one of the few players to never spend a
day in the minor leagues, Mario Soto, who had back-to-back seasons of 274 and
242 strikeouts in 1982 and 1983, and Chris Chambliss and George Hendrick.
Chris Chambliss just has one of those names that sticks with
you. The alliteration, the way the “is” at the end of “Chris” is echoed by the “iss”
at the end of “Chambliss.” Also, “Chambliss” sounds like a fancy champagne. Ordering
the Chambliss is always going to impress your date. For the record,
Chris Chambliss’ full name is Carroll Christopher Chambliss. That’s wonderful.
Also, I’m pretty sure that Chris Chambliss invented the soul patch. (Okay, he
probably didn’t, but he’s the first baseball player who had one.) I’m kind of surprised
that some New York sportswriter didn’t give Chambliss a vote just because of
his walk-off home run in Game 5 of the 1976 ALCS, which brought the Yankees
their first pennant since 1964.
Chris Chambliss had a “nice career,” which I officially define
for a position player as achieving one or more of the following: 1,000 runs, 2,000
hits, 200 home runs, and 1,000 RBI’s. The only one of these milestones
Chambliss achieved was 2,000 hits, as he finished his career with 2,109 hits,
but it still qualifies him for a “nice career.”
George Hendrick, like Steve Carlton, was known for not
talking to the press. The joke going around in the early 1980’s was that the worst
thing that could happen to a sportswriter would be to have to cover a game
where Steve Carlton pitched a one-hitter, and the player who got the one hit
would be George Hendrick, meaning that you wouldn’t be able to get a quote out
of the two main participants of the game.
The San Diego Padres made an odd decision in trading Hendrick
to the St. Louis Cardinals in May 1978. Hendrick was coming off a season where
he hit 23 home runs and batted .311. (According to the sabermetric stats WAR
and OPS+, both of which hadn’t been invented yet, it was Hendrick’s best
season.) The Padres traded Hendrick straight up for pitcher Eric Rasmussen. The
most exciting thing about Eric Rasmussen is that during the 1976-77 off-season
he changed his legal name from Harold to Eric. Rasmussen went 22-30 for the
Padres over three seasons. Hendrick played for the Cardinals through 1984, was
a two-time All-Star with the Cards, won two Silver Slugger Awards, and had an
OPS+ of 125. Rasmussen has been a minor league pitching coach for the Minnesota
Twins organization since 1991, a fact that I’m embarrassed I didn’t know until
today. Random George Hendrick fact: former MLB player, and insightful
commentator Doug Glanville credits Hendrick with starting the trend of players wearing
longer pants and not showing any sock. Since I’m a stirrup sock guy, I have to
dock George Hendrick a point for starting this uniform trend. However, since
Hendrick hit 267 home runs and drove in 1,111 RBI’s, he does get points for having
a “nice career.”
So that’s a look at the 1994 BBWAA Hall of Fame ballot. Like
every Hall of Fame ballot, it was full of superstars and interesting players.
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