Post
by Edgy MD » Wed Jan 22, 2025 5:08 pm
The voters who voted against many of those figures can speak for themselves, and many have. To me, it doesn't matter, because when you're in, you're in, and the percentages don't matter to me. Others feel otherwise. All people are flawed, so if you're pedantic enough, or want to distinguish yourself with a "Look at me!" minority view, no matter how strained, you can make a case against anybody.
In Ted Williams' time, the notion of distinguishing between "Hall-of-Famer" and "First-Ballot Hall-of-Famer" — which is still a distinction plenty of people still make even though nothing in the voting instructions suggests it should be there — was even more pronounced. Beyond that, there wasn't the five-year waiting period for a stretch, so players like Joe Dimaggio would lose votes from some writers based on the notion that he might un-retire, as if somehow an actual Hall-of-Famer on the field playing would be farcical.
I, actually, would love to date a person's eligibility as something like 20 years from the start of his or her professional career. That way we would occasionally have a few Hall-of-Famers still taking the field late in their careers, with a nice little patch on the sleeve to show off.