Baseball Hall Of Fame.....

SPEEDY MCCREADY
SPEEDY MCCREADY Posts: 26,860
edited August 2013 in All Encompassing Trip
Barry Larkin???

Really???

I dont see it......

Good ballplayer???
Sure
Really good ballplayer???
Sure

Hall of Famer????

I dont see it....
Take me piece by piece.....
Till there aint nothing left worth taking away from me.....
Post edited by Unknown User on
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Comments

  • DS1119
    DS1119 Posts: 33,497
    Compared to other shortstops already in the HOF he had a very very nice career, arguably the best.
  • Jamminonthe1
    Jamminonthe1 Posts: 1,243
    DS1119 wrote:
    Compared to other shortstops already in the HOF he had a very very nice career, arguably the best.

    Yes and he's the piece between Ozzie Smith and the Jeter/A-Rod/Nomar/Omar generation.
  • DS1119 wrote:
    Compared to other shortstops already in the HOF he had a very very nice career, arguably the best.
    The best???

    Dont tell that to
    Banks
    Yount
    Wagner
    Ripken
    Smith

    hehehehehehehehe
    Take me piece by piece.....
    Till there aint nothing left worth taking away from me.....
  • DS1119
    DS1119 Posts: 33,497
    DS1119 wrote:
    Compared to other shortstops already in the HOF he had a very very nice career, arguably the best.
    The best???

    Dont tell that to
    Banks
    Yount
    Wagner
    Ripken
    Smith

    hehehehehehehehe


    I didn't say he was the best, but he's up there. Personally I think Phil RIzzuto was the best, since that's what my grandmother always told me :lol:! Larkin in my opinion deserves to be there.
  • F Me In The Brain
    F Me In The Brain this knows everybody from other commets Posts: 31,813
    Larkin was a top ss for 10 years. Always the leader as well.
    The love he receives is the love that is saved
  • mfc2006
    mfc2006 HTOWN Posts: 37,491
    Larkin's a good choice for the HOF.....

    can't wait to head to Cooperstown when Biggio & Bagwell get inducted! :D
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  • Larkin was a top ss for 10 years. Always the leader as well.
    Mark Grace led the National League in hits for the same decade Larkin played.....

    Mark Grace will NEVER see the Hall Of Fame....
    Take me piece by piece.....
    Till there aint nothing left worth taking away from me.....
  • SatansFuton
    SatansFuton Posts: 5,399
    The dude learned Spanish simply so he could communicate with his Hispanic teammates, he at least gets an A for effort on the leadership front. He's not somebody that off the top of my head I would have considered for the Hall of Fame, but he doesn't leave me scratching my head like I have over some past inductees.
    "See a broad to get dat booty yak 'em, leg 'er down, a smack 'em yak 'em!"
  • mfc2006
    mfc2006 HTOWN Posts: 37,491
    Larkin was a top ss for 10 years. Always the leader as well.
    Mark Grace led the National League in hits for the same decade Larkin played.....

    Mark Grace will NEVER see the Hall Of Fame....

    i could see Grace getting in there when he's older...classy guy & one helluva ballplayer.
    I LOVE MUSIC.
    www.cluthelee.com
    www.cluthe.com
  • mfc2006 wrote:
    Larkin was a top ss for 10 years. Always the leader as well.
    Mark Grace led the National League in hits for the same decade Larkin played.....

    Mark Grace will NEVER see the Hall Of Fame....

    i could see Grace getting in there when he's older...classy guy & one helluva ballplayer.
    Grace got something like 4% of the vote in 2009....
    And I am pretty sure will never be considered again......

    The guy led the 90's in hits....
    Had more hits than any other player in the 90's....
    And will Never Ever Ever see the hall....

    Barry Larkin is a Hall Of Famer and Fred Mcgriff isnt?????
    Barry Larkin is a Hall Of Famer and Lee Smith isnt????
    Take me piece by piece.....
    Till there aint nothing left worth taking away from me.....
  • DS1119
    DS1119 Posts: 33,497
    edited January 2012
    Larkin was a top ss for 10 years. Always the leader as well.
    Mark Grace led the National League in hits for the same decade Larkin played.....

    Mark Grace will NEVER see the Hall Of Fame....



    Because Mark Grace was a first baseman. If he played shortstop and kept his offensive statistics he'd be in. Unfortunately singles hitters at the corner position aren't really that sexy a pick and he never truly dominated his era. I mean, he only made three all-star teams, never topped 200 hits in a season, never had over 100 RBIs in a season, and his single season high for homers was 17. Consistent, but no MVP's and not ever in the discussion for that. When you think of first baseman from the late 80's through the 90's, other than people in CHicago, not alot think of Mark Grace.
    Post edited by DS1119 on
  • DewieCox
    DewieCox Posts: 11,432
    He deserves it. I was surprised to hear this wasn't his first year of eligibility.
  • pjhawks
    pjhawks Posts: 12,914
    i thought Larkin was borderline. kind of surprised he made it. I think if Barry Larkin is a Hall-of-Famer then Jimmy Rollins should be right there.

    and Jack Morris should have made it. that guy was a top pitcher for a while and a big game pitcher. don't care about the numbers.
  • 81
    81 Needing a ride to Forest Hills and a ounce of weed. Please inquire within. Thanks. Or not. Posts: 58,276
    pjhawks wrote:
    i thought Larkin was borderline. kind of surprised he made it. I think if Barry Larkin is a Hall-of-Famer then Jimmy Rollins should be right there.

    and Jack Morris should have made it. that guy was a top pitcher for a while and a big game pitcher. don't care about the numbers.


    he was borderline....according to his vote count last year, but this years class was weak...and they wanted to put somebody in...that is alive.
    81 is now off the air

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  • Cliffy6745
    Cliffy6745 Posts: 34,026
    pjhawks wrote:
    i thought Larkin was borderline. kind of surprised he made it. I think if Barry Larkin is a Hall-of-Famer then Jimmy Rollins should be right there.

    and Jack Morris should have made it. that guy was a top pitcher for a while and a big game pitcher. don't care about the numbers.

    I don't get the hate on Larkin, he was one of the first shortstops that could hit, as someone else said. Prior to him, shortstops were of the Ozzie offensive numbers, after they are of the Jeter/Nomar/Arod.

    Hilarious about Rollins. Larkin played for 19 seasons and had better numbers in his last year than Rollins has had in 3 years or so, granted Larkin has a few down years before that, but the point stands, you can't even compare the two.
  • davidtrios
    davidtrios Posts: 9,732
    i think you're gonna see a lot of larkin type players get inducted bc they didnt cheat.
  • F Me In The Brain
    F Me In The Brain this knows everybody from other commets Posts: 31,813
    DS1119 wrote:
    Larkin was a top ss for 10 years. Always the leader as well.
    Mark Grace led the National League in hits for the same decade Larkin played.....

    Mark Grace will NEVER see the Hall Of Fame....



    Because Mark Grace was a first baseman. If he played shortstop and kept his offensive statistics he'd be in. Unfortunately singles hitters at the corner position aren't really that sexy a pick and he never truly dominated his era. I mean, he only made three all-star teams, never topped 200 hits in a season, never had over 100 RBIs in a season, and his single season high for homers was 17. Consistent, but no MVP's and not ever in the discussion for that. When you think of first baseman from the late 80's through the 90's, other than people in CHicago, not alot think of Mark Grace.

    This
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  • Monster Rain
    Monster Rain Posts: 1,415
    Grace was never good enough to be a Hall of Famer. He only even amde 3 All-Star teams so he was rarely one of the top 1B in the NL. I think he also only had 1 Top 5 finish in MVP voting, whereas Larkin actaully won the award. I never put much stock in the "Led the (insert decade) in _____" arguments because more often than not it ignores the fact that better players either started or ended their careers in the middle of that decade. For example, Kirby Puckett had to retire in 1995 and Derek Jeter was a rookie in 1996. Hits are even tougher for that type of category because it doesn't account for batting average or OBP. I'd be willing to bet that Frank Thomas was better than Grace in both categories during the 1990s, but Thomas walked so much that it would be virtually impossible for him to have as many hits.

    Lee Smith retired with the all-time saves record, but he really had that record simply because he stuck around long enough to compile the numbers. He was rarely the best closer in the league--there were usually several closers who were better than him. He had a very high ERA for a closer in several seasons and wasn't the dominant force that guys like Rivera and Eckersley are/were. Saves are a bit of a misleading stat because even a mediocre closer can have 35-40 saves if he has a big enough lead when he enters the game. I wouldn't rank Smith as highly as Eckersley, Gossage, Fingers, Rivera, or Hoffman.

    McGriff definitely belongs in the Hall. I find it ridiculous that voters can simultaneously refuse to vote for steroid users like McGwire (and I agree with them on that) and not vote for McGriff despite the fact that his career only seems less impressive than other players due to other players using steroids. If the strike hadn't shortened the 1994 and 1995 seasons, he'd have over 500 HRs and over 2,500 hits. Even as it stands, 493 HRs is extraordinary. He was in the Top 10 in MVP voting 6 times, led each league in HRs (the AL ni 1989, the NL in 1992) and was in the Top 10 in HRs 5 more times, and made the All-Star team 5 times (I'm not sure how it wasn't more other than there were some questionable "every team needs an All-Star" choices like Ron Coomer in 1999 and Tony Clark in 2001 and an odd choice of Canseco as a DH over McGriff at 1B as Tampa Bay's All-Star in 1999 despite McGriff's ability to play the field and his higher average and similar HR total). McGriff's numbers are very similar to Eddie Murray's. Murray hit 11 more HRs but needed over 500 more games to do it and their career averages are .287 (Murray) and .284 (McGriff). Murray did reach the 500 HR and 3,000 hit marks but their average 162-game season totals are eerily similar. McGriff's was .284/32/102 and Murray's was .287/27/103. McGriff had a higher SLG, OBP, and OPS, and more 100-RBI seasons.
    mfc2006 wrote:
    Mark Grace led the National League in hits for the same decade Larkin played.....

    Mark Grace will NEVER see the Hall Of Fame....

    i could see Grace getting in there when he's older...classy guy & one helluva ballplayer.
    Grace got something like 4% of the vote in 2009....
    And I am pretty sure will never be considered again......

    The guy led the 90's in hits....
    Had more hits than any other player in the 90's....
    And will Never Ever Ever see the hall....

    Barry Larkin is a Hall Of Famer and Fred Mcgriff isnt?????
    Barry Larkin is a Hall Of Famer and Lee Smith isnt????
  • intodeep
    intodeep Posts: 7,249
    I have always felt they need to redo the hall.

    You need to honor people like Barry Larkin but you can't consider him a baseball legend. He was a great player

    They should have multiple levels of the hall of fame and people should be inducted into their right group. Maybe 3 or 4 levels with the top one being names that when echoed you know you are talking about one of the greatest ever to play

    I mean Babe Ruth and Barry Larkin are not even playing in the same ballpark.
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  • F Me In The Brain
    F Me In The Brain this knows everybody from other commets Posts: 31,813
    intodeep wrote:
    I have always felt they need to redo the hall.

    You need to honor people like Barry Larkin but you can't consider him a baseball legend. He was a great player

    They should have multiple levels of the hall of fame and people should be inducted into their right group. Maybe 3 or 4 levels with the top one being names that when echoed you know you are talking about one of the greatest ever to play

    I mean Babe Ruth and Barry Larkin are not even playing in the same ballpark.

    Hehe, not really many people that would be considered in the same ballpark as The Babe. (Hitting more homers than the team totals for the rest of the league? And boozing like a grade A champ all the while? He was epic!)

    Lark would have had more gold gloves to add had everyone not insisted on honoring The Wizard of Oz well past his prime. Same thing for All Star Starts.
    The love he receives is the love that is saved