The BBWAA released their ballot for the Hall of Fame class of 2018 yesterday. The results of the vote are due to be revealed on January 24th, with induction taking place next July. After Jeff Bagwell, Tim Raines, and Ivan Rodriguez were elected in last year’s voting, the new ballot contains 14 holdovers along with 19 newcomers, which may continue the logjam caused by the current BBWAA rules which limit the number of votes on one ballot to 10 and the ongoing refusal by some writers to vote for players tainted by PEDs, leaving too many qualified candidates fighting for limited spots.
Let’s take a look at the returning candidates today before moving on to the newcomers.
Barry Bonds
Years on ballot: 5
2017 Percentage: 53.8
The all time home run champion saw his vote percentage rise for the third straight time last year, so the PED bias holding him back may be subsiding. Having hit the halfway point in his election cycle, whether he has enough time to get up to 75% remains to be seen.
Roger Clemens
Years on ballot: 5
2017 Percentage: 54.1
Roger Clemens, he of the 354 career victories and 7 Cy Young awards, also found himself with a third consecutive rise after his fifth run through the voting process. For some odd reason, perhaps by having played for more teams, Clemens continues to get marginally more support than his fellow PED poster child Barry Bonds.
Vladimir Guerrero
Years on ballot: 1
2017 Percentage: 71.7
The former Expo and Angel should have no issue getting in this year, considering he was only 15 votes short last year.
Trevor Hoffman
Years on ballot: 2
2017 Percentage: 74.0
One of only 2 pitchers with over 600 saves, Hoffman missed election last year buy a mere 5 votes. I would expect him to break through this year.
Jeff Kent
Years on ballot: 4
2017 Percentage: 16.7
The 2000 NL MVP managed a slight increase in vote percentage last year, but has a long way to go and not a whole lot of time left, so the future does not look good for him.
Edgar Martinez
Years on ballot: 8
2017 Percentage: 58.6
The longtime DH for the Mariners saw another big jump last year, but has only 2 elections left and may not have enough time to build up to the necessary 75%. His long career as a DH in the Pacific Northwest may be holding him back.
Fred McGriff
Years on ballot: 8
2017 Percentage: 21.7 Continue reading →





