pretty cool article in The Athletic by a HOF voter who compiled a list of 5 players never associated with PEDs who should be in Hall not named Pete Rose. #5 on his list, but number 1 in your heart
But you asked for only five, so here are the five players I think most deserve to be in the Hall of Fame but aren’t:
1. Curt Schilling — It’s not the Hall of Facebook. It’s not the Hall of X. It’s the Hall of Fame. So it’s absurd to keep out a three-time Cy Young Award runner-up like Schilling, who was a certifiable October monster (11-2, 2.23 ERA in 19 postseason starts, averaging seven innings a start). If you’re interested, I wrote more about Schilling in
my ballot column in 2022, his final year on the writers’ ballot.
2. Lou Whitaker — I’m big on the idea that Chase Utley and Jimmy Rollins should go into the Hall together (and then be given plaques right next to each other on the wall). So it would bring me so much joy to see Alan Trammell and Whitaker finally be able to keep each other company in the plaque gallery. Whitaker’s 75.1 career wins above replacement are the seventh-most of any second baseman in history, according to Baseball Reference. Guess what the six above him have in common?
3. Jim Edmonds — Andruw Jones just got elected to the Hall. I think Edmonds actually had a better career. Edmonds won eight Gold Glove Awards, had a 132 career OPS+ and didn’t even make it to a second year on the ballot. Jones won 10 Gold Gloves and had a 111 OPS+. Edmonds’ case has been bugging me since he got bounced off the ballot 10 years ago. Let’s hope he shows up on an era-committee ballot soon. He hasn’t been eligible before now.
4. Lance Berkman — Like Edmonds, Berkman was one-and-done on the writers’ ballot. He might even be our worst one-and-done ever. Do you know who owns the best career OPS of any “clean” retired player who is eligible for the Hall? If you guessed Berkman (.943), you’re my kind of astute reader.
5. Johan Santana — Timing is everything. So if Santana had debuted on the writers’ ballot this year, instead of the overstuffed 2018 ballot, I bet he’d be raking in more votes than Félix Hernández. How about this for a seven-year peak: 106-48 won-lost record, .688 win percentage, 2.86 ERA, 156 ERA+, two Cy Youngs, four top-three Cy Young finishes, three strikeout titles, three ERA titles and four straight years leading his league in WHIP. Wow.