During the offseason between the 1983 and 1984 WPK seasons, three new members were inducted into the WPK Hall of Fame.

Jamel "Cobra" McNeil, the greatest relief pitcher in the history of the WPK thus far, and one of the most despised players as well, was elected on his first ballot with a strong 93.7% of the vote in spite of his surly personality. McNeil was a multi-inning force out of the bullpen and won a record 8 Reliever of the Year awards while pitching for six different teams (three of them in two separate stints) and getting two championship rings. He finished his career with the most career strikeouts of any pitcher in the WPK in spite of starting only one game in his career (in his rookie season) and even today is third all-time in K's with 2,227. He holds career records in games pitched (1,064), in hits allowed per 9 innings pitched (5.87), in K/9 (10.66), in WHIP (1.03), in opponents average against (.185), in opponents OBP (.265), in opponents SLG (.267), and in opponents OPS (.532). He was a dominant force and the standard bearer for the position, in performance if not in personality.

Jesus Casiano is that rare breed of superstar who played for the same team his entire career. His uniform number 3 was retired by the Jacksonville Wolf Pack when he retired in 1979. Along with Jesus Hernandez, he defines the position of third base for the first generation of the WPK. Casiano is just one of two players in WPK history to win the Triple Crown in hitting and he did so in 1970 with arguably the best single offensive season in WPK history. He went .367/.423/.655 that year with 46 home runs and 152 RBI. His 417 total bases that season remains the single-season record in the WPK. Although decreasing range forced him to move to first base the final few seasons of his career, he won 6 Gold Glove awards as a third baseman earlier in his career. He was slow and he struck out quite a bit more than he walked but he was a force at the plate and in the field and was considered one of the smarter players of his era. He enters the Hall on his first ballot and it is well deserved.

Andy "Lemonhead" Wilson was probably the first true superstar in the WPK, and the biggest question with Wilson is just how good he could have been if he wasn't already 30 when the league formed. Likely had he been younger when the league started he would have ended up being a first ballot Hall of Famer instead of having to wait for his fifth ballot to be inducted. As it is, he won two Gold Gloves as a shortstop early in his WPK career and was a 2-time MGL MVP, leading the league in WAR 4 times and having a WAR of 5.1 at the age of 36, having moved to second base full time a few years prior. He wasn't a leader by any means but he was well-liked and very popular around the league and when you consider the numbers he put up without playing a single WPK game before the age of 30, he is well deserving of his plaque in the WPK Hall of Fame.