DEBATABLE: Does Barry Bonds’ Pittsburgh HOF Induction Bring Him Closer to Cooperstown?
Mark and Manny dispute whether or not Barry Bonds will eventually get into Cooperstown and if he does, will it be in the next decade?
Mark and Manny dispute whether or not Barry Bonds will eventually get into Cooperstown and if he does, will it be in the next decade?
On Saturday, May 25 a special baseball game was held in Cooperstown, home of the Baseball Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame East-West Classic was at Doubleday Field and featured 30 former MLBbros.
An instant classic it was as the East defeated the West 5-4 in six innings.
The moment that decided the East-West Classic — and @ryanhoward called his shot!
🎞️: @MLB pic.twitter.com/vk3aNCREeY
— National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum ⚾ (@baseballhall) May 25, 2024
2008 World Series champ Ryan Howard was named MVP after hitting a go-ahead three-run homer in the fifth to give the East the lead.
“It’s always been a fraternity,” Howard said after the game. “The cool part about it is you have your teammates that you play with coming up in the Minor Leagues. And a lot of the guys you play against at each level in the Minor Leagues, so in a sense you’re coming up together with them, as well. … And just to have this kind of brotherhood and continue to have it is special.”
Over 5,700 fans came out to watch former All-Star and Hall of Fame players.
Curtis Granderson hit the first home run of the game.
The Grandyman can!@cgrand3 has the first home run at the East-West Classic in Cooperstown 💥 pic.twitter.com/4YPynmkqOB
— MLB (@MLB) May 25, 2024
“It’s cool,” he said, wearing a Newark Eagles jersey. “Anytime I got a chance to play in these [Negro League throwbacks] throughout the course of a season, I always looked forward to it and loved it, so I’m happy to get a chance to put it back on again today.”
No doubt about it: This was an instant Classic. pic.twitter.com/OGVZJMCG9b
— National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum ⚾ (@baseballhall) May 25, 2024
What a better way to honor the Negro Leagues than to have former MLB players coming together for a game?
It was a wonderful sight witnessing generations of MLBbros out there on the diamond.
Edwin Jackson took the mound to start the game, and it was good to see him reminiscing about his time in the big leagues and he let people know that he still has a little left in the tank.
Before the game, they did a home run derby contest and Adam Jones defeated Prince Fielder. One player who received a lot of recognition from the crowd was star outfielder and Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. Along with the game, the weekend featured a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Souls of the Game exhibit.
Want to watch Prince Fielder hit some homers? Of course you do. pic.twitter.com/cehM3Csuj3
— National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum ⚾ (@baseballhall) May 25, 2024
Rowan Ricardo Phillips, an award-winning poet, was one of the consultants who was included in the development of the project, and he was pleased to see all the support.
“The fact that people really want to start and think about the roots of the story, the voices, from the beginning, people we don’t often think about — Bud Fowler, Octavius Catto, those types of players, it really excites me,” he said. “I think what’s really wonderful about the exhibit is, we can rethink the story of baseball that we want to tell to ourselves and to our future selves. Instead of thinking, well, let’s pick this up from 2020 or 2024 or whatever.”
Expect a lot more events similar to this in the near future and we can’t wait to see more of our MLBbro’s come together and fellowship with one another.
Barry Bonds belongs in the Hall of Fame.
So does Gary Sheffield.
The MLBbros were both all-time sluggers.
Both had a major impact in the game during their long careers in baseball.
Bonds won seven MVPs and is MLB’s all-time home run king with 762 career bombs. Sheffield was a nine-time All-Star and slugged 509 career homers and 1,676 RBI.
Both got my 2021 Hall of Fame vote.
So did ace Roger Clemens and slugger Sammy Sosa. Those are the four votes I cast on my ballot.
Under normal circumstances, all four would be shoo-ins. But all four stars are marred by the steroid controversy.
Hence, my fellow Baseball Writers Association of America voters have blocked their entrance to Cooperstown, New York.
This is not the first time deserving MLBbros have been controversially kept out of the Hall of Fame.
For Bonds, his situation has reached dire proportions. He’s on the ballot for the final time.
This is Bonds’ 10th and final try. There’s a bright side for Bonds.
Unlike some of the other star players that have Hall-worthy credentials, but didn’t muster up enough support to come close to getting in, Bonds has continued to gain support, not lose it.
In fact, Bonds could have been done in by the voters long ago, eliminated from the ballot long before their 10 years were up.
For Bonds:
2017: 53.8 percent
2018: 56.4 percent
2019: 59.1 percent
2020: 60.7 percent
Sheffield has seen his numbers go up with support, too.
In his first five tries on the ballot, he got between 11 and 14 percent.
In 2020, Sheff got 30.5 percent. And last year, it blew up to 40.6 percent.
Sheffield has three more years of eligibility left to get to the 75 percent needed to make it to the Hall.
The writers’ history of rallying to vote players in on their last try is well documented.
Enter Larry Walker in the 2020 Class. In his 10th and final try, Walker got 76.6 percent of the vote, a 22- percent jump from 2019. It was the biggest increase by any player in his last year of eligibility in 65 years.
Hence, I can see this happening for Bonds.
You can’t tell the story of baseball without him. Plus, all his numbers and awards count. They haven’t been stripped of anything.
Rob Parker’s Hall of Fame Ballot Is About Numbers Not Narrative
And the truth remains, Bonds never tested positive for PEDs nor was he suspended by the game for being caught. His named was linked in the 2004 BALCO scandal.
Sheffield was mentioned in the Mitchell Report and implicated in the BALCO scandal with respect to the use of performance- enhancing drugs.
That’s why newcomers to the ballot – Alex Rodriguez and David Ortiz – will be hurt. Easily they have the numbers, but A-Rod was suspended by the game for PED use and Big Papi reportedly tested positive for the stuff.
Hard to blame writers in the case where players were clearly busted.
And if all the players in the Steroid Era were tested and just Bonds and Sheffield came back dirty, there would be a real reason to exclude the slugger from the Hall.
But the water is muddy. With that being the case, the numbers should be taken at face value.
Plus, and more importantly, there are other players either linked to PEDs or rumored to have used the stuff who were voted in by the same writers keeping Bonds and Sheff out.
Enter Mike Piazza, Pudge Rodriguez and Jeff Bagwell.
I’ve voted for Bonds all 10 years he’s been on the ballot. Same goes for Sheff in his first eight tries.
Both belong in the Hall.
1. Bonds – All-time HR king. Period.
2. Clemens – Seven Cy Young Awards, most ever.
3. Sammy Sosa – Over 600 homers. Hall-worthy.
4. Gary Sheffield – Over 500 homers. Hall-worthy.
Derek Jeter gets his well-deserved Hall of Fame nod on Wednesday.
The 14-time All-Star and five-time World Series champ is our #MLBbro of the week.
By Rhett Butler | MLBbro.com Contributor
Monday (Aug.9) marked the 50th anniversary of Paige’s induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.
He became the first MLBbro to play the bulk of his career in the Negro Leagues and receive “baseball’s highest honor.”
This entire week is Satchel Paige week in Kansas City and the anniversary of his historic milestone is being acknowledged in a big way.
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