MLB

Why the Baseball Hall of Fame needs a selection tweak

Johnny Damon, Andruw Jones and Johan Santana are in jeopardy of falling off the Hall of Fame ballot after one year of consideration. Each will struggle to reach the five percent of the vote necessary to remain.

Perhaps none are Hall of Famers, though Jones and Santana, in particular, have interesting cases. But I am still not sure why they have to fall off the ballot rather than receive future consideration.

There are thoughtful voters who believe if you do not get five percent of the vote you do not deserve to stay on the ballot. After all, as Jay Jaffe noted in his “Cooperstown Casebook,” since the modern era of voting (beginning in 1966), the lowest percentage ever received by a player to ultimately be elected was Bert Blyleven’s 14.1 percent in his second year of eligibility.

But when a large majority of voters were selecting well short of the maximum 10 allowed, the five percent rule made more sense. But the crowded ballot – namely created by having suspected steroid cheats get enough votes to stay eligible, but not get elected – has meant there may be more than 10 candidates a voter believes should be inducted, but not enough slots to honor them all. Therefore, there is some chance that stars who would get larger vote totals are falling off because of a modern predicament that did not exist when the five percent rule went into place.

Blyleven’s case is informative. He was championed mainly by those who rely on more modern analytics, suggesting a candidate could start with a low percentage and gain a groundswell.

Thus, I would advocate that if you get less than one percent of the vote you fall off the ballot in Year 1. Aside from that you could next fall off if you do not accrue a total of 15 percent in any three-year period. This would provide a longer period of consideration for those such as Jones and Santana. I do not understand the complaints about the ballot becoming even more crowded. I mean does it really matter if there are 33 names on the ballot (as there was this year) or 40?


Brandon MorrowGetty Images

Brandon Morrow came from a minor league contract to invaluable piece on the Dodgers’ NL champion to signing a two-year, $21 million contract with the Cubs, likely to close. One item that made the righty attractive: Lefties had a .308 OPS against him – the lowest over the past 50 seasons by a righty (minimum 35 relief appearances).

The only righty to appear twice in the top 10, not surprisingly, was Mariano Rivera (1999, 2008), owing of his devastating cutter. Yet, Rivera ranks fourth in this period for a career total (.524). No. 1? That would be Dellin Betances (.490). And No. 5 is David Robertson (.537).

In fact, last year Betances and Robertson were tied for fifth at .441. Who was second? Chad Green (.411). Thus, the Yanks begin next season with three of the better righty relievers at getting out lefty hitters.