|
||||
|
![]() |
#1461 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2009 in OBA
![]() Melbourne’s Australasia League dynasty rolled on with a record seventh straight title in 2009. The Mets were 107-55, beating their closest foe Auckland by 11 games. They joined rare world company with seven subleague pennants in a row, joining MLB’s Philadelphia (1941-47), CABA’s Mexico City (1967-73), WAB’s Kano (1997-2005), and SAB’s Ahmedabad (1994-02). Although only 73-89 in their fourth season, Canberra had reason for optimism with Australasia League MVP Merlin Megson. The 23-year old English right fielder led in runs (109), home runs (54), RBI (122), total bases (.398), slugging (.677), and wRC+ (189). Megson added a .315 batting average and 7.0 WAR. Melbourne’s Danny Morris won Pitcher of the Year in only his second season with the Mets. The 32-year old American from Arizona had washed out after a mediocre MLB career, joining Melbourne as an unremarkable reliever in 2008. He came out of nowhere in 2009 to win a Gold Glove and lead in wins (22-5), ERA (2.27), and WHIP (0.89). Morris had 286 strikeouts in 262 innings for a 159 ERA+ and 7.1 WAR. ![]() The Pacific League was very competitive with Guam earning its first title since 2001. The Golden Eagles finished 103-59, outlasting strong efforts from Samoa (99-63), Tahiti (98-64), and Honolulu (92-70). For the defending Oceania Champion Tropics, this was only the second time in seven years that they didn’t finish atop the PL. Guam earned its 14th pennant, more than any other OBA franchise. Tahiti’s Arjita Gabeja won his fifth Pacific League MVP, becoming the fourth OBA player to win five or more MVPs. The 30-year old Fijian moved to designated hitter in 2009 and led in runs (108), home runs (51), total bases (364), slugging (.623), and OPS (.976). Gabeja added 6.3 WAR, 117 RBI, and a .286 average. He also earned an eighth Silver Slugger. Samoa’s Austin Jong won a third straight Pitcher of the Year with a fourth consecutive 400+ K effort. The 24-year old Papuan led with 463 strikeouts, 53 FIP-, and 12.7 WAR. Jong added a 2.31 ERA over 319.1. innings, 21-12 record, and 162 ERA+. He would tear his rotator cuff the next season wouldn’t be a dominant force after that, although he still pitched another seven seasons. ![]() The 50th Oceania Championship was the third finals meeting between Melbourne and Guam, with the Mets having won in their 1967 and 1969 encounters. Melbourne did it again in 2009, taking a seven-game classic for their fifth OBA ring in six years. The Mets became seven-time OBA champs (1967, 69, 04, 05, 06, 07, 09). 1B Isaac Endo was finals MVP in his first season as a full-time starter. The 24-year old Guamanian went 11-27 with 6 runs, 1 double, 2 homers, and 2 RBI. ![]() Melbourne became the first-ever OBA team to win five titles in six years, as even Honolulu’s great dynasty had just enough gaps to spoil that. The only other franchises in any world league to do it was CABA’s Mexico City (1967-72), CLB’s Dalian (1989-94), WAB’s Kano (1997-02), SAB’s Ahmedabad (1986-91, 94-99), and AAB’s Kinshasa (1997-02). Other notes: OBA’s 12th perfect game came on May 22 by Fiji’s Akira Brady with eight strikeouts against Tahiti. This was Brady’s second season, but it introduced him to superstardom. By the end of his OBA run in 2024, most would peg him as OBA’s GOAT pitcher. Timothy Manglona became the fifth to reach 5000 strikeouts. Elliot McFall and Junia Lava both crossed 500 home runs, making it a nine-man club. Guadalcanal’s Aston Abavu had 36 triples, falling two short of Seymour Lennox’s record of 38. CF Ashton Hughes won his seventh Gold Glove. Tyler Straw won his seventh Silver Slugger, although it was his first at second base. The previous wins were all at shortstop. Timor had a 4.60 team ERA, a new PL all-time worst that held until 2034. The Australasia League for the 2000s had a .259 batting average and 3.88 ERA, which graded out as above average on the historical scale. The Pacific League had a .251 average and 3.65, which were more average. The AL actually had a 4.20 ERA in 2004, which is an all-time high as of 2037. Both were well higher than the previous years for OBA, which had been a below average to low scoring league prior. They were roughly in line with the most prominent leagues of the 2000s. OBA maintained this current pace for the next two decades. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1462 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2009 in EPB
![]() Minsk and Moscow again earned playoff spots out of the European League, although they switched spots from the 2008 season. The Miners took first at 106-56, while the Mules were second at 92-70. Moscow extended their playoff streak to five seasons, although it didn’t come easy. The Mules finished three games ahead of St. Petersburg and five better than Kazan. Volgograd was fifth at 84-78 and had the European League MVP Elemer Papp. The 29-year old Hungarian designated hitter led in runs (110), home runs (51), RBI (119), and total bases (352). Papp added a .289 average, 171 wRC+, and 6.3 WAR. It was a big bounce-back for Papp, who missed half of 2008 to a torn hamstring. Pitcher of the Year was Minsk’s Serghei Perenyi. The 30-year old Romanian joined the Miners in an offseason trade after seven solid seasons for Samara. Nicknamed “the Tornado,” Perenyi led in ERA (1.98), WHIP (0.89), and K/BB (12.3). He added a 16-2 record in 214 innings, 247 strikeouts, 168 ERA+, and 6.9 WAR. The Miners gave him a four-year, $22,940,000 extension in the spring. ![]() The Asian League was intense in 2009 with four teams within two games of first place. Krasnoyarsk narrowly took first at 93-69, ending a three-year playoff drought. Two-time defending EPB champ Yekaterinburg managed to take the wild card at 92-70, extending their playoff streak to seven years. The Yaks earned their tenth playoff berth in eleven years. Both Novosibirsk and Omsk finished at 91-71, only one behind Yekaterinburg for the wild card and two behind the Cossacks for the title. Last year’s ALCS runner-up Irkutsk was in the mix for a while, but finished fifth at 84-78. The top awards went to Yekaterinburg players with LF Aram Sargsyan getting MVP. The 30-year old Armenian switch hitter joined the Yaks in a 2008 trade with Irkutsk, quickly signing a seven-year, $47,500,000 extension. In 2009, he led in walks (104), OBP (.426), OPS (.985), and wRC+ (175). Sargsyan also had 7.4 WAR, a .312 average, 104 runs, 26 home runs, and won his fifth Gold Glove. Dorian Bejan won Pitcher of the Year, having also recently joined Yekaterinburg as a free agent. The 30-year old Moldovan had played with ABF’s Dushanbe the prior seven seasons. In his Yaks debut, he led in complete games (21) and shutouts (5). Bejan added 7.0 WAR, a 148 ERA+, 253.2 innings, 214 strikeouts, a 2.27 ERA, and 14-10 record. Moscow got revenge on Minsk in the European League Championship Series for the 2008 defeat, winning 4-1. This gave the Mules their fourth pennant in five years, a feat only achieved by the Miners, Irkutsk, and Yekaterinburg previously. This was also Moscow’s seventh EL pennant. In the Asian League Championship Series, the Yaks were looking to win their seventh pennant of the 2000s. The only team to beat them all decade was Krasnoyarsk, who knocked them off in 2001 and 2005. The Cossacks yet again were the kryptonite, upsetting Yekaterinburg 4-2 for their fifth AL pennant. ![]() The 55th Eurasian Professional Baseball Championship was the third finas meeting between Moscow and Krasnoyarsk. The Mules won in 1974 with the Cossacks getting revenge in 2005. In 2009, Moscow prevailed 4-2 for their second title in four years. It was the Mules’ 4th ring (1974, 1975, 2006, 2009). RF Viorel Rata was finals MVP as the 29-year old Romanian had 17 hits, 4 runs, and 6 RBI in 11 playoff starts. ![]() Other notes: Markiyan Konoplya became the 12th to reach 4500 career strikeouts. Shanin Lebedev became the third reliever to reach 400 career saves. It would be Lebedev’s last year, finishing third on the all-time list at 426. LF Wendelin Piotkowski won his seventh Gold Glove. 3B Boxuan Long won his 11th Silver Slugger, a position record. Long is the fourth player at any position in EPB to win the award 11 times. 2B Ilya Agzamov and OF Jov Sakharov both became eight-time Silver Slugger winners. In the 2000s, EPB had a league batting average around .234 and ERA around 2.99 with more offense coming from the Asian League. This graded out as low offense on the historical scale, but in line with what EPB usually was. It was among the lower scoring leagues, but still higher than APB or CLB. EPB would see a bump up in the 2010s, but still stayed below average relative to other leagues. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1463 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2009 in EBF
![]() Dublin had the top record among the European Baseball Federation Elite at 111-51, taking the Northern Conference’s top seed. The Dinos won their fourth British Isles Division title in five years. Luxembourg took the other bye atop the Northwest Division at 100-62. The Lancers ended a two-year playoff drought. In the Baltic Sea Division, Oslo (92-70) edged Vilnius (91-71) for the title. The Octopi ended a three-year playoff drought, but it was their first division title since 1975. The Victory earned the first wild card, earning their first-ever playoff berth in the franchise’s 55 year history. Defending European Champion Kyiv won the North Central Division at 87-75, beating Warsaw by six games. The three-time defending conference champs grew their playoff streak to six. The second wild card was an intense battle with Brussels, Cologne, and Manchester all tying at 89-73. Amsterdam was one back at 88-74, Paris was 87-75, and both Hamburg and Stockholm finished 86-76. The first tiebreaker game saw the Copperheads oust the Beavers, followed by a Crushers win over Cologne. Manchester earned their second playoff berth in three years. Helsinki had the worst record at 56-106 to suffer relegation. Prague was also relegated due to losing triple-digits at 61-101. Berlin barely escaped their own demotion at 63-99. Northern Conference MVP went to Oslo SS Harvey Coyle. The 22-year old Englishman already in his fourth season led in home runs (61), RBI (129), total bases (413), and WAR (13.7). Coyle also had 194 hits, 119 runs, a 1.073 OPS, and 195 wRC+. He also won his second Gold Glove with an outstanding 32.9 zone rating and 1.145 EFF. Pitcher of the Year was Luxembourg’s Aleksandr Velikevich. The 28-year old Belarusian righty led in ERA (2.09), and quality starts (24). Velikevich had a 16-7 record over 236.2 innings, 228 strikeouts, 7.1 WAR, and a 178 ERA+. He also had a no-hitter on August 13 with nine strikeouts and one walk versus Oslo. This was his peak season, as his career would be derailed in spring training 2011 with a torn rotator cuff. Kyiv swept Vilnius 2-0 and Manchester edged Oslo 2-1 in the first round of the playoffs. The defending champ Kings upset top seed Dublin 3-1 in round two, while Luxembourg outlasted the Crushers 3-2. Kyiv earned a fifth straight Northern Conference Championship berth with a shot at four straight pennants. It was the Lancers’ first final since 1982. In a seven-game classic, Luxembourg dethroned the Kings for their third pennant (1971, 1981). ![]() Five games separated the top division winner from the fourth seed in the Southern Conference. Athens earned the #1 seed with a 99-63 mark atop the East Central Division. The Anchors repeated as a playoff team, winning their first division title since 2002. The other bye went to Marseille at 97-65 atop the Southwest Division. The Musketeers hadn’t earned a playoff berth in 19 seasons since their 1980s dominance. Munich won the South Central Division and Bucharest claimed the Southeast Division, both at 94-68. The Mavericks extended the longest active EBF playoff streak to nine seasons, while the reigning conference champ Broncos earned repeat berths. The wild card race was a tight one with the first spot to Seville at 91-71. It was an impressive rebound for the Stingrays, who had gotten relegated after the 2005 season, but earned promotion back the next year. For the second spot, there was a three-way tie between Vienna, Barcelona, and Bratislava. Each were only one back of Seville at 90-72. The Vultures won tiebreaker games over both the Bengals and the Blue Falcons. Vienna is back in the playoffs after seeing their streak snapped in 2008 at five. Last year’s conference finalist Madrid fell five games short at 85-77. Three teams lost 100+ games and thus suffered relegation. Valencia (61-101) was the first Second League champ, but only lasted four years with the EBF Elite. Rome (62-100) had gotten demoted in 2007 and won the 2008 E2L title, but fell right back down. Tbilisi (62-100) had won four division titles earlier in the decade with two conference finals berths, but a 2009 collapse derailed the Trains. Vienna’s Ben Springer won his fourth Southern Conference MVP, adding to his 2002, 2003, and 2005 trophies. The 31-year old Austrian third baseman led in hits (222), and WAR (9.9). Springer had 109 runs, 41 homers, 121 RBI, and a .355/.393/.637 slash. Munich’s Lucio de Jesus won Pitcher of the Year in his fourth season with the Mavericks. The 34-year old Mexican lefty had come to Germany after five years in CABA and four seasons in MLB. In 2009, de Jesus won the ERA title at 1.93 while posting a 17-6 record in 214.2 innings, 216 strikeouts, a 204 ERA+, and 6.3 WAR. Vienna swept Munich and Seville edged Bucharest 2-1 in the first round. Top seed Athens swept the Stingrays, while Marseille ousted the Vultures 3-1. The Anchors hadn’t been in the Southern Conference Championship since 1998, while the Musketeers last made it in 1986. Marseille took the series 4-2 to earn their fifth pennant (1966, 81, 85, 86, 2009). ![]() The 60th European Championship was actually a rematch, as Marseille’s first-ever title came over Luxembourg in 1981. The Musketeers won a seven-game classic over the Lancers to earn their fourth EBF title, joining their 1981, 85, and 86 titles. Marseille is the first French champ since Paris’s 1997 title. Finals MVP was 2B Ethan Ngoy, a Congolese player who came to Marseille in 2008 after six seasons for AAB’s Brazzaville. In 17 playoff starts, Ngoy had 27 hits, 13 runs, 6 extra base hits, 7 RBI, and 7 stolen bases. ![]() Other notes: Marseille’s pitching staff allowed 231 walks for a 1.42 BB/9, which were both conference records that held until 2032. Richmond Diagne and Romano Piredda both joined the 500 home run club, giving it 24 members. SS Erik Weber won his seventh Gold Glove. Two-way player Atanas Kalkanov won his tenth Silver Slugger and his ninth as a pitcher. The EBF Elite in the 2000s had a league ERA around 3.84 and batting average around .263. Both graded as just above average offensively on the historical scale and among other leagues in the decade. EBF would maintain similar stats into the 2010s and 2020s. Promotion/Relegation: There was a massive shift as five teams lost 100+ games to suffer relegation (Valencia, Rome, Tbilisi, Helsinki, Prague). Valencia, Prague, and Rome were moved to the E2L’s Western Conference while Tbilisi and Helsinki ended up in the Eastern Conference. With that, earning promotion from the Second League were conference champs Leipzig and Edinburgh and conference finalists Lyon and Skopje. The fifth spot went to London, who also went 3-3 in the Round Robin and 96-66 along with Lviv. A better run differential for the season gave the Monarchs the tiebreaker over the Lunkers. London logically returned to the British Isles Division. Rotterdam, who had been moved to that division for balance’s sake, returned to their normal home in the Northwest Division. However, Edinburgh’s promotion meant there were seven British Isles teams and only six spots. The Enforcers due to lack of tenure were put into the Northwest. That meant two Northwest teams needed to be moved elsewhere for balance. Cologne was shifted to the North Central to plug Prague’s spot and Berlin was sent to the Baltic Sea Division in Helsinki’s former spot. In the Southwest Division, Lyon swapped into Valencia’s former spot. Leipzig took Rome’s South Central Division spot with no other shifts required in the Southern Conference. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1464 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2009 in BSA
Beisbol Sudamerica joined the expansion craze of 2009 and opted for a massive expansion as the game’s popularity had continued to climb on the continent. BSA opted to add a team to each of the six divisions, making a 36-team, 6x6 setup. They hoped the growth would allow BSA to compete more strongly with the likes of MLB and EBF.
![]() The Bolivar League added the Maturin Makos into the Venezuela Division. The Barranquilla Blues joined the Colombia-Ecuador Division and the Trujillo Thoroughbreds entered the Peru-Bolivia Division. Two Brazilian teams joined the Southern Cone League with the Manaus Magpies in the North Division and Porto Alegre Armadillos into the Southeast Division. The Argentinian Salta Silver Hawks entered the South Central Division. ![]() Previously, BSA had four playoff teams per league. They added one to each league, but interestingly didn’t delineate a separate “wild card round.” The three division champs and two wild cards advanced, but all five would be seeded based on record with no consideration on if they won the division. In theory, two division champs could meet in the first round if both wild cards had better records. The first round would be a best-of-three hosted by the #4 seed over the #5 with the winner facing the top seed. The Division Series remained best-of-five, followed by a best-of-seven League Championship Series and best-of-seven Copa Sudamerica. Players were excited to have more teams and thus more jobs, but they did lose labor ground. BSA also changed the service time required for free agency starting in 2009, becoming the most restrictive in the world at ten years. Officials hoped it would keep the top South American teams on the continent and build more roster continuity. ![]() Only five wins separated the #1 seed from the #5 seed in the Bolivar League. The top seed went to Guayaquil at 101-61 atop the Colombia-Ecuador Division, repeating as the #1 seed. The Golds pitching staff allowed only 183 walks with a 1.14 BB/9, which both stand as BL all-time bests as of 2037. In the Peru-Bolivia Division, defending Copa Sudamerica champ Santa Cruz was first at 98-64. The Crawfish earned a fourth consecutive playoff berth. Callao was two back at 96-66, earning a wild card. Arequipa was 91-71 and Lima was 88-74 with both missing the playoffs. Valencia and Barquisimeto tied for the Venezuela Division at 97-65. The Velocity won the tiebreaker game for the division title, while the Black Cats got the first wild card. It was the second berth in three years for Valencia, while Barquisimeto earned repeat berths. All four playoff teams from 2008 in the Bolivar League made it back in 2009. Guayaquil 1B Rodrigo Aguilar won Bolivar League MVP. The 24-year old Ecuadoran lefty led in runs (129), home runs (71), RBI (170), total bases (463), slugging (.726), OPS (1.111), wRC+ (190), and WAR (9.8). He set a new single-season RBI record and as of 2037 is the only BSA slugger with 170+ RBI in a season. The previous record was 151 by both A.J. Nunez and Valor Melo. Aguilar was the second player in BSA history to hit 70+ homers in a season, joining Valor Melo (who did it thrice with 76, 76, and 74 in the 1970s). Aguilar’s .356 batting average was six points short of a Triple Crown. Barquisimeto’s Sebastian Marquez won Pitcher of the Year in his second full season. The 23-year old Venezuelan righty led in ERA (2.60), FIP- (65), and WAR (7.8). Marquez added a 19-7 record in 239 innings with 2339 strikeouts and a 154 ERA+. The Black Cats beat Callao 2-0 in the new first round of the playoffs, then fell 3-1 in the Divisional Series to top-ranked Guayaquil. The Golds earned their first Bolivar League Championship Series since 2002. Reigning champ Santa Cruz downed Valencia 3-1 on the other side. The Crawfish earned repeat pennants as they handled Guayaquil 4-1. ![]() The Southern Cone League’s North Division was loaded with the top two squads and the second wild card team. Fortaleza repeated as the #1 seed at 110-52, scoring 845 runs. That was the second-most in LCS history behind their own 858 from the prior season. Salvador was a strong second at 102-60, earning the first wild card and a fourth consecutive playoff berth. The Storm have made it to the postseason seven times in the 2000s. Recife was third at 93-69, which still netted the second wild card by a six game margin over Buenos Aires and Montevideo. The Retrievers ended an eight-year playoff drought. Defending Southern Cone champ Rio de Janeiro won the Southeast Division at 94-68, topping the Atlantics and Venom both by seven. The Redbirds broke their own league record of 266 home runs from the prior year, socking 279 dingers. That remains the all-time mark in the league as of 2037. Rio has the longest active playoff streak in BSA at seven seasons. Asuncion’s playoff streak grew to four-in-a-row atop the Southern Central Division at 92-70. Cordoba at 85-77 was their closest foe. The Archers earned their ninth playoff berth of the 2000s and 11th since 1997. It was a remarkable run considering they were abysmal with only one berth in their first 66 years as a franchise. Southern Cone MVP was Fortaleza 2B Antonio Arceo in his third full season. The 24-year old Bolivian switch hitter was the first Triple Crown hitter in BSA since 1976, posting the 11th such season. Arceo had 54 home runs, 148 RBI, and a .361 average while also leading in total bases (407) and WAR (10.4). He had a 195 wRC+, 1.064 OPS, and 113 runs scored. Buenos Aires veteran Fernan Murillo won Pitcher of the Year. The 31-year old Colombian lefty was in his 11th season with the Atlantics and led in strikeouts (304), K/BB (15.2), FIP- (59), and WAR (8.5). Murilllo added a 2.50 ERA over 238 innings, 12-10 record, and 148 ERA+. It was his fourth time leading in strikeouts. He would cross 200 career wins and 3500 strikeouts this season. Recife rolled Asuncion 2-0 in the first round, then pulled off a shocking 3-1 Divisional Series upset of #1 seed Fortaleza. This earned the Retrievers their first Southern Cone League Championship appearance since 1998. Salvador dethroned defending champ Rio de Janeiro 3-2, giving the Storm their third consecutive finals berth. Salvador won their third pennant in six years, cruising to a 4-1 victory over Recife. It was the eighth pennant for the Storm (1948, 62, 73, 79, 81, 04, 07, 09). ![]() Salvador denied Santa Cruz’s repeat bid and won their second Copa Sudamerica in three years. The Storm took the 79th finale 4-2 to improve to an impressive 6-2 all-time in the finals. This tied them with Buenos Aires and Sao Paulo for the most Cup wins. LF Henrique Valada had a big postseason, winning finals MVP and LCS MVP. In 16 playoff starts, the 35-year old lefty had 27 hits, 14 runs, 3 doubles, 3 triples, 4 home runs, and 16 RBI. Valada continued to be a big-time playoff performer, as he also won Copa Sudamerica MVP in 2007 and LCS MVP in both 2007 and 2004. ![]() Other notes: Santa Cruz’s Adrian Sanchez set single-season records for singles (188) and at-bats (685). Barquisimeto’s Augusto Mejia set playoff records for batting average, OBP (both .696) and OPS (1.870), albeit over only a six-game sample size. He went 16-23 with 3 doubles and 4 triples. It was a rough debut for expansion franchise Salta at 44-118; the all-time worst record in BSA history. They would hold the worst mark until Barquisimeto’s abysmal 33-127 in 2022. Emiliano Pina became the 10th to reach 1500 runs scored and the 20th to 1500 RBI. D.J. Del Valle also got to 1500 RBI later in the season. Del Valle won a historic 16th Gold Glove at first base. He is the only 16-time winner at any position in BSA history. To this point, the only player with more in world history was OBA/MLB legend Jimmy Caliw with 17 between SS and 2B. 2B Jose Antonio Sanez won his eighth Gold Glove. Beisbol Sudamerica’s had easily its highest-ever offensive stats in the 2000s. The DH-less Southern Cone League had a .263 batting average and 3.65 ERA, which graded at just above average historically. The 1990s had seen a 3.26 ERA and .248 batting average by comparison. The Bolivar League had a .275 batting average and 4.05 ERA. The batting average mark was the highest any league had seen ever to that point. The ERA mark was above average historically, but among the highest of any league in the 2000s. The BL had seen a .255 average and 3.55 ERA in the 1990s. BSA would maintain similar numbers in the next two decades, which would rank as above average to high. It would get overshadowed by the big offensive numbers that would come out of WAB and AAB specifically in the coming seasons. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1465 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2009 in EAB
![]() Nagoya had a historic 117-45 season, dominating the Japan League in 2009 and repeating as Central Division champs. This was the third-most wins in JL history behind only Sapporo’s 121-41 in 1950 and Yokohama’s 118-44 in 1924. Fukuoka won the #2 seed at 96-66, tying their own single-season team record from 1997 with 287 doubles. Last year’s top seed Hiroshima fell off hard from 106 wins to a mere 79-83. This was the first time the Hammerheads had posting a losing record since 1993. The Frogs earned their second division title in three years. Tokyo took a fourth consecutive Capital Division with their best record since 1994 at 93-69. Chiba gave them a run, but fell short at 90-72. This time, the terrible division was the North. Defending East Asia Baseball champ Niigata struggled to 78-84, but that was enough to win the division still by two games over Sendai. The Green Dragons won a fourth consecutive division title and their eighth of the decade. Despite a weaker season for Hiroshima, their star LF Hitoshi Kubota won his third straight Japan League MVP. The 26-year old switch hitter led in home runs (54), slugging (.669), OPS (1.056), wRC+ (207), and WAR (8.1). Kubota added 115 RBI and a .326 batting average. Kitakyushu’s Sekien Ida repeated as Pitcher of the Year. It was his third, having also won in 2004. The 31-year old Ida led in ERA (2.07), and WHIP (0.78), adding an 11-10 record over 204.1 innings, 268 strikeouts, a 163 ERA+, and 6.6 WAR. It was Ida’s fourth ERA title. The Kodiaks locked up their ace to another six years and $47,400,000 before the season started. Also notable was Fukuoka’s Heihachiro Okasawa winning a fourth straight Reliever of the Year, posting 6.7 WAR, a 414 ERA+, 0.84 ERA, 33 saves, and 170 strikeouts in 86 innings. The effort also earned him a second place in Pitcher of the Year voting and a second in WAR. Despite a 39-win difference between the two, Nagoya had to work hard to eliminate defending champ Niigata 3-2 in the first round. The Nightowls earned their first Japan League Championship Series appearance since 2000. Fukuoka topped Tokyo 3-1 on the other side, giving the Frogs their first JCLS since their 1980 pennant. The winner was guaranteed to end a long drought, since Nagoya’s last pennant was 1979. The Nightowls prevailed 4-2 over Fukuoka to become eight-time league champs. ![]() The Korea League had a shakeup with only one playoff team back from the prior year. Busan took the top seed at 106-56 atop the South Division for their second berth in three years. The Blue Jays hadn’t seen a division title since 1996. Gwangju was second in the division at 98-64, repeating as a wild card. Suwon claimed the North Division at 100-62, ending an eight-year playoff and division title streak. For the second wild card, Daegu (91-71) edged Seongnam (89-73) and defending KL champ Goyang (87-75). The Diamondbacks snapped a five-year postseason drought. Yongin finished 85-77, ending their four-year streak. Goyang 1B Seung-U Lee picked up Korea League MVP. The 30-year old lefty led in hits (226), RBI (124), and batting average (.367). Lee added 37 home runs, a 1.017 OPS, 176 wRC+, and 7.6 WAR. Pitcher of the Year was Dong-Hyun Jung, who signed a six-year, $53,400,000 free agent deal with Busan for 2009. He had previously been with Seongnam, winning POTY there in 2004. Jung led in wins (20-3), ERA (1.84), WHIP (0.82), K/BB (9.7), quality starts (27), FIP- (49), and WAR (10.9). Jung had a 204 ERA+ and 330 strikeouts in 253.2 innings, falling 14 Ks short of a Triple Crown. He also had a no-hitter in April with eight strikeouts and three walks versus Gwangju. Busan swept Daegu in the first round and Suwon survived in five over Gwangju. It was first Korea League Championship Series since 1996 for the Blue Jays and the first since 1997 for the Snappers. Busan bested Suwon 4-2 in the KLCS to end a 29-year title drought. It was the 11th ring overall for the Blue Jays. ![]() The 89th East Asian Championship renewed an ancient finals rivalry. Nagoya beat Busan in both the 1934 and 1940 finales. Both had multiple titles from long ago, but neither had won it all in more than 35 years. The Nightowls again proved to be the Blue Jays’ kryptonite, taking the series 4-2. It was their fifth EAB title, joining the two prior wins over Busan, plus titles in 1931 and most recently in 1964. ![]() This Nagoya group made history as the winningest Japanese team to win it all at 117-45. The only teams to win more games in EAB and claim the championship were 1928 Hamhung at 119-43 and 1921 Pyongyang at 118-44. Doing it in a modern context was especially impressive, as there hadn’t been an EAB team with 115+ wins since 1969. Other notes: Koji Iwasaki became the 27th member of the 600 home run club. RF Soo-Geun Yim won his eighth Silver Slugger and 2B Yoo Sen won his seventh. Offensive numbers in EAB stayed remarkably consistent in the 2000s compared to recent decades. The Japan League had a .247 batting average and 3.41 ERA, which both grade out as below average on the historical scale. With the DH, the Korea League was a higher 3.84 ERA and .261 average; both of which grade as above average. Both remained steady in the coming years. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1466 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2009 in CABA
![]() Ecatepec had the top record in the Mexican League with a 102-60 mark. The Explosion won the South Division for the third straight year and for the 13th time in 14 years. Ecatepec set a CABA record with a .299 team batting average and had the second-most hits in ML history at 1696, just behind Juarez’s 1701 from 2006. After missing the playoffs in three straight years, Monterrey was back with a 90-72 record atop the North Division. They finished four games ahead of both reigning CABA champion Hermosillo and Mexicali at 86-76. Those two squads took the wild cards in an absolutely intense race. Leon and Mexico City were both 85-77 while Tijuana, Torreon, and Guadalajara were each 84-78. The Hyenas earned a fourth straight playoff berth and the Maroons got their third in four years. Ecatepec’s Casimiro Salceda won Mexican League MVP. The 33-year old first baseman signed a five-year, $43,500,000 deal with the Explosion in the offseason after a decade with Hermosillo. Salceda had an all-timer season, becoming the tenth CABA hitter to earn a Triple Crown. He had 57 home runs, 158 RBI, and a .381 batting average. Salceda also led in runs (126), walks (69), total bases (436), OBP (.430), slugging (.715), OPS (1.145), wRC+ (223), and WAR (11.0). He had won a Silver Slugger in 2007 with Hermosillo and had some strong seasons, but few though Salceda had that kind of year in him. His Ecatepec teammate Madinson Chavarria won Pitcher of the Year. He had signed a one-year deal with the Explosion for 2009 after eight largely mediocre seasons for Nicaragua. The 30-year Salvadoran righty ledin wins at 23-5 and posted a 2.64 ERA over 235.2 innings, 238 strikeouts, a 144 ERA+, and 5.6 WAR. Chavarria had posted only 10.8 career WAR in his prior eight years. The division champs won the first round matchups with Ecatepec sweeping Mexicali and Monterrey over Hermosillo 3-1. This re-established the great Mexican League Championship Series rivalry of the 1990s. The Matadors hadn’t been back since 1999, while the Explosion were in their tenth MLCS in 11 years. Ecatepec’s bad luck continued, as they lost their fourth straight MLCS. Monterrey pulled off an easy upset 4-1 for their first title since 1997 and their 18th overall. ![]() Nicaragua won the Caribbean League title in 2008 as the second wild card. In 2009, the Navigators had the #1 overall seed and their first-ever 100+ win season at 105-57. It was Nicaragua’s first Continental Division title since 1989. They rolled the field with a 22-game gap to second place Panama. At 82-80, Salvador was third and had their playoff streak end at six seasons. It was only the second time since 1994 that the Stallions missed the postseason. Havana ended a three-year playoff drought and won the Island Division at 103-59. Santo Domingo (94-68) and Haiti (91-71) were the wild cards with a significant gap to the next closest competitor. The Dolphins earned a second wild card in four years. SD did it with historic offense, as their 931 runs scored set a CABA single-season record. This would remain the top mark until 2028. The Herons’ playoff streak grew to an impressive 13 seasons. Caribbean League MVP to Suriname 3B Juliano Dotello. The 27-year old Dominican led in runs (126), walks (108), OBP (.437), OPS (1.124), wRC+ (181), and WAR (10.2). Dotello added 56 home runs, 130 RBI, and a .333 average. His 108 walks fell one short of the CABA single-season record. The Silverbacks would try to lock Dotello up, but he ultimately left after the 2011 season for MLB and Philadelphia. Pitcher of the Year was Nicaragua’s Secretario Sanz. Nicknamed “Bad News,” the 33-year old Costa Rican was in his 11th season with the Navigators. He led in ERA (2.39), WHIP (0.95), and quality starts (22). Sanz added a 19-6 record over 233.1 innings, 222 strikeouts, 174 ERA+, and 6.4 WAR. Nicaragua beat Haiti 3-1 and Havana survived 3-2 against Santo Domingo in the first round of the playoffs. The Hurricanes earned their first Caribbean League Championship Series appearance since 2004. In a seven-game classic, Havana dethroned the defending champion Navigators. It was the sixth pennant for the Hurricanes, who hadn’t won the Caribbean crown since their 1975 CABA title. ![]() Havana continued to roll, defeating Monterrey 4-1 in the 99th Central American Baseball Association Championship. The Hurricanes became four-time CABA champs (1912, 1949, 1975, 2009). RF Einar Rodriguez was finals MVP in his 11th season with Havana. The 33-year old Cuban brought his home country team the title, picking up 23 hits, 12 runs, 5 doubles, 5 home runs, and 15 RBI in 16 playoff starts. ![]() Other notes: Luis Fernandez became the seventh member of the 700 home run club. He played two more years and finished with 762, which was third at retirement. Fernandez picked up his ninth Silver Slugger and first as a DH. Fernandez and Ryan Crowe both breached 1500 runs scored in 2009, making 15 CABA batters to reach that mark. Crowe also became the 24th to reach 1500 RBI. LF Ozzie Collard won his seventh Gold Glove. Donald Gonazlez won his eighth straight Silver Slugger. It was his fourth in a row as a third baseman with the prior four at first base. Dario Becker became the 25th pitcher to cross 3500 career strikeouts. CABA’s offensive statistics in the 2000s stayed roughly even with the 1990s. In the Mexican League, the batting average was .259 and the ERA was 3.65. This graded as around average on the historical scale. The Caribbean League was higher with the DH at a 4.05 ERA and .267 average. That was above average on the full scale and among the top-end compared to other leagues in the 2000s. CABA stayed mostly consistent in the following two decades. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1467 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2009 in MLB
![]() Boston posted Major League Baseball’s top record in 2009 atop the National Association at 107-55. The Red Sox won the Northeast Division for the fourth consecutive season and the fifth time in six years. They were one of four NA teams with 100+ wins, making it a tough fight to earn the bye. The #2 seed went to Washington at 105-57 in the East Division. The Admirals only won their division by three games over 102-60 Philadelphia. Both squads earned a third straight playoff berth with the Phillies posting a third straight 100+ win season. Philadelphia also earned its seventh playoff berth of the decade, the most of any NA team in the 2000s. Defending World Series champ Cincinnati narrowly missed out on the bye. The Reds ended up the #3 seed, winning the Lower Midwest Division at 103-59. Cincy picked up a third consecutive division title. They had to hold off Columbus, who took second at 95-67. The Chargers picked up the second wild card, ending a seven-year playoff drought. They fended off Toronto (93-69), Detroit (91-72), Cleveland (90-72), Louisville (88-74), and Hartford (88-74) for the final spot. The weakest playoff team by record was the Upper Midwest Division champ. Milwaukee and Detroit tied for first at 91-71 with Cleveland one back. The Mustangs won the tiebreaker game to end a four-year drought, bouncing back from a horrendous 57-win 2008. The Tigers’ hope for a third straight division title was thwarted. Impressively, Milwaukee made the playoffs despite having the lowest payroll in all of MLB at $110.5 million. Winnipeg’s collapse was also notable in the division, considering the Wolves had won pennants in 2004, 2006, and 2007. In 2009, Winnipeg was a lousy 66-96. Omaha was an awful 64-98 despite having the National Association MVP Killian Fruechte. In his fourth season for the Hawks, the left fielder from California led in runs (125), hits (213), home runs (53), total bases (400), triple slash (.356/.430/.668), OPS (1.098), wRC+ (227), and WAR (10.7). His 111 RBI fell six short of earning a Triple Crown. Omaha would give Fruechte an eight-year, $121,400,000 extension after the 2010 season. Pitcher of the Year was Columbus righty Trevor Ford in his fifth season. The 25-year old from Orland Park, Illinois led in WAR (9.0), FIP- (61), quality starts (27), and shutouts (7). Ford had a 19-6 record over 262.1 innings, 2.33 ERA, 266 strikeouts, and 151 ERA+. He signed a six-year, $56,200,000 extension with the Chargers before the 2009 season and went on to have a tenured career with largely average stats beyond this 2009 peak. Milwaukee edged Philadelphia and Cincinnati topped Columbus in the first round, both by 2-1 margins. Both upset the top seeds 3-2 in round two with the Reds over Washington and the Mustangs over Boston. It was Milwaukee’s first National Association Championship Series appearance since their 2002 World Series win. The defending champion Reds proved too much for the Mustangs with Cincinnati winning the NACS 4-2. It was only the third pennant for Cincy, who also won it all in 1919. ![]() The American Association’s top seed was Nashville at 98-64 atop the Southeast Division. The Knights earned a fourth straight playoff berth and their seventh of the 2000s. Las Vegas was one back and took the #2 seed at 97-65 in the Southwest Division. That ended an eight-year postseason drought for the Vipers. Both LV and Nashville had tough competition who jockeyed for the two wild cards. In the Southeast, Jacksonville was 92-70 with Tampa at 91-71 and Atlanta at 86-76. In the Southwest, it was Albuquerque at 91-71 and two-time defending AA champ San Diego at 87-75. The Gators got the first wild card, ending a three year drought. Meanwhile, the Isotopes won a tiebreaker game over the Thunderbirds to take the second spot. Albuquerque earned its eighth playoff berth of the 2000s, the most of any MLB team. The result also guaranteed a new AA champ with the Seals’ playoff streak ending at three. Oklahoma City won a very competitive South Central Division at 90-72, outlasting Dallas (89-73), Houston (85-77), and New Orleans (84-78). The Outlaws hadn’t been a playoff team since 1983. Last year’s division winner Austin placed fifth at 81-81. It was only the second miss in eight years for the Hornets. The Northwest Division was also tight with Salt Lake City claiming the crown at 87-75. The Loons survived 86-76 Seattle, 82-80 Calgary, 81-81 Portland, and 80-82 Denver and Vancouver. This ended a two-year drought for SLC, who earned six playoff appearances in the decade. Las Vegas’s big acquisition in the offseason was former Omaha 3B/1B Graham Gregor, giving him a massive eight-year, $144,800,000 deal. He lived up to the rich deal, winning American Association MVP. The 30-year old North Dakotan led in hits (219), total bases (429), triple slash (.361/.416/.707), OPS (1.123), wRC+ (204), and WAR (10.2). Gregor also had 50 home runs, 128 RBI, and 119 runs. Oklahoma City’s Mike Harris won Pitcher of the Year in his fifth season. The 25-year old righty from Waco, Texas led in complete games (25) and shutouts (7). Harris had a 2.50 ERA over 284 innings, 242 strikeouts, a 19-12 record, 150 ERA+, and 6.8 WAR. Prior to the season, the Outlaws gave him a six-year, $55,500,000 extension to remain their ace. Jacksonville topped Salt Lake City and Albuquerque ousted Oklahoma City in the first round, both 2-1. The Gators kept rolling, upsetting Las Vegas 3-1 in round two. Jacksonville hadn’t been to the American Association Championship Series since way back in 1967. Top seed Nashville fended off the Isotopes 3-2 on the other side. The Knights earned their third pennant of the decade (2001, 2006, 2009) with a swept of the divisional rival Gators. Nashville won its sixth AA pennant. ![]() In the 109th World Series, Nashville denied Cincinnati’s repeat bid, winning the title 4-2. SS Mohammed Mohamed dominated the playoffs, winning MVP of the second round, AACS, and World Series. The 35-year old Saudi in 15 playoff starts had 26 hits, 15 runs, 4 doubles, 5 home runs, and 20 RBI. Mohamed continued to be an all-timer in the playoffs, having also won World Series MVP in 2006 and the Arab League Championship MVP in 1998 and 1999. He also was conference finals MVP in ALB in 1995 and 1996, making Mohamed arguably the most decorated playoff performer ever. ![]() This was Nashville’s fourth MLB title, joining the 1954, 2001, 2006, and 2009 rings. The last MLB team to win three World Series rings over a nine-year stretch was Calgary from 1986-93. No team had won three in the same decade since New Orleans’ 1970-72 three-peat. While not quite a true dynasty with how spaced out their wins were, it was an impressive run in the modern MLB. Other notes: Portland’s Roosevelt Caulfield had a 42-game hitting streak in the late spring. This was the third-longest in MLB history behind Jayden Gagnon’s 49 in 1930 and Jon George’s 45 in 1961. Cincinnati’s Danny Bates learned how cruel the baseball gods could be. The pitcher had won World Series MVP in 2008, but set a 2009 playoff worst with 5 losses. In 30.1 innings, Bates was 1-5 with a 7.71 ERA. Wichita’s pitching staff allowed 1109 hits, setting a new all-time MLB low. It still ranks third lowest as of 2037. Despite that, the Wasps’ offense was total booty for a 512-553 run differential and 63-99 record. They didn’t have the worst offense in MLB though, as that distinction belonged to San Antonio. The Oilers made history, setting all-time American Association worsts in runs scored (509), slugging (.331), and OBP (.278). The runs and slugging are still the AA’s worst in 2037, although two teams would post worse OBPs in future seasons. San Antonio had the fewest runs in all of MLB in 2009 despite having the DH unlike the National Association’s losers. Clement Garcia became the 21st member of the 600 home run club. He finished with 656, which ranks 31st as of 2037. SP Theron Summers and CF Damien Yang both became eight-time Gold Glove winners. CF Morgan Short won his eighth straight Silver Slugger. In the 2000s, the National Association had a .243 batting average and 3.40 ERA, both of which grade out as below average on the historical scale. The American Association had a .254 average and 3.90 ERA, which are above average all-time. MLB was largely in the middle ground statistically compared to the other world leagues in the 2000s. Both were down in scoring slightly from the previous years and did mark all-time lows for MLB. MLB’s lows were still well above the all-time lows of the other long tenured leagues. The 2010s would dip slightly before rule changes pumped the numbers up in the 2020s. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1468 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 MLB Hall of Fame
Major League Baseball inducted three players into the Hall of Fame in 2010, although none of them got massive numbers. The headliner was first baseman Salvador Villasenor with a first ballot induction at 75.6%. The other two only barely crossed the 66% requirement. Pitcher Chris Doyle had 66.6% in his third ballot and SS Tom Burstein debuted at 66.2%.
![]() 2B Chaz Cimarron and RF Xavier Chojnacki both narrowly missed the cut. Cimmaron had 61.0% on his third ballot and Chojnacki picked up 60.6% in his seventh attempt. Six other players were above 50% with CF Will Kemme at 58.2% on his sixth go, CL Brendan Gordon at 56.4% for his fifth ballot, RF Mike Castaneda at 53.3% in his ninth go, RF Brian Ostrovskaya with 52.6% for his sixth ballot, SP Dirk Hughes at 52.3% in his second try and C Elliott McKay with 51.9% for his third go. No players were dropped from the ballot after ten failed tries. ![]() Salvador Villasenor – First Base – Indianapolis Racers – 75.6% First Ballot Salvador Villasenor was a 6’0’’, 200 pound left-handed first baseman from Almeria, Spain; a city of just under 200,000 people on the southeastern Mediterranean coast. Villasenor became the second MLB Hall of Famer born in Spain, joining Class of 2004 Rodrigo Badillo. Villasenor was a great contact hitter with a very strong bat, hitting 40+ home runs in five different seasons. He had nice gap power as well, getting around 29 doubles per his 162 game average. Villasenor was excellent at avoiding strikeouts and decent at drawing walks. He was much stronger against right-handed pitchers (.935 OPS, 180 wRC+) compared to against lefties (.735 OPS, 120 wRC+). Villasenor was cartoonishly slow and uncoordinated on the basepaths. He exclusively played at first base defensively and was firmly below average, but not awful. Villasenor had good durability and was a respected team captain. His work ethic, loyalty, and leadership made him a very popular figure with fans and in the clubhouse. Villasenor came to the United States to play college baseball at Kansas State. He had a strong college career, taking second in 1985 NCAA MVP voting. He also won a Silver Slugger that year and a Gold Glove as a freshman. In three seasons with the Wildcats, Villasenor played 144 games with 181 hits, 96 runs, 23 doubles, 53 home runs, 131 RBI, a .313/.359/.631 slash, 191 wRC+, and 9.1 WAR. Because of the regional restrictions still in effect for the first three rounds of the draft, the Spaniard wasn’t eligible until the fourth round. In the 1986 MLB Draft, he was picked with the 14th pick of the round (186th overall) by Indianapolis. Villasenor had come to the US at a very young age and was still only 20 when he was picked. The Racers would keep him in the minor leagues for 1987 and 1988 in Fort Wayne. Villasenor dominated the minors, earning MVP honors in both seasons. He officially debuted in 1989 at age 22, but only saw part-time action with 89 games and 69 starts. Still, Villasenor hit 24 home runs in that small smaple size. Despite that, he was back in the minors most of 1990, only playing 25 games. Villasenor won his third minor league MVP and is one of only two guys to earn that distinction. He finally earned the full-time gig in 1991 and held it for the next eight straight years. Villasenor’s first full season saw 42 home runs and a National Association best in slugging, OPS, and wRC+. He was slightly weaker in 1992, but won his first Silver Slugger that year. After a respectable 1993, Villasenor led in total bases in 1994 with 372, adding 43 home runs, a .932 OPS, and 6.9 WAR. He earned his second Silver Slugger and took second in MVP voting. That also ended a playoff drought for Indianapolis, although they lost in the second round. Villasenor won his third Silver Slugger in 1995, leading for the first time in RBI, and that spring inked an eight-year, $24,000,000 extension with the Racers. He quickly lived up to the deal in 1996, leading and posting career bests in hits (221), RBI (138), total bases (402), batting average (.373), slugging (.678), OPS (1.101), wRC+ (228), and WAR (10.4). Villasenor’s 46 home runs were also four short of earning a Triple Crown. He earned MVP honors and a fourth Silver Slugger. This also started a playoff run for Indianapolis, who won the National Association pennant against Boston. The Racers would fall to Edmonton in the World Series despite Villasenor getting 21 hits, 9 runs, 2 homers, 10 RBI, and a 151 wRC+ in his 16 playoff starts. He repeated as MVP in 1997 with a fifth Slugger, leading in hits, RBI, total bases, slugging, OPS, and wRC+. Indy made the playoffs from 1996-2000 and again in 2002. They won another pennant in 1999, but lost in a World Series rematch with Edmonton. The other berths all saw first or second round exits. In his playoff career, Villasenor had 54 games, 55 hits, 23 runs, 7 doubles, 10 home runs, 30 RBI, 19 walks, a .299/.357/.511 slash, 152 wRC+, and 1.6 WAR. Although he couldn’t get the Racers their first MLB title, Villasenor led them to their most sustained playoff run to date. Despite playing in the US, Villasenor also would return home to Spain for the World Baseball Championship, appearing in 20 editions of the event. He had 141 games and 100 starts from 1987-2006, getting 118 hits, 61 runs, 21 doubles, 31 home runs, 65 RBI, a .295/.362/.580 slash, 165 wRC+, and 5.5 WAR. Villasenor’s power dipped noticeably in 1999 and he was a platoon starter with 94 starts in 129 games. He earned the full-time job back the next three seasons and still provided positive value, but his award winning days were done. Villasenor was in a bench role in 2003, but signed for one more year on a qualifying offer in 2004. He was a part-time starter with middling results in his final season with Indianapolis. The time had come for the beloved captain, who was a free agent for the first time at age 38. Indy would soon after retire his #32 uniform and he’d remain very popular. Villasenor did play two more years in the newly formed European Second League with Wroclaw. He had a great 2005 for the Wolf Pack, but struggled in 2006. That year, back spasms and a partially torn labrum combined for mediocre play. Villasenor hoped to still play somewhere in 2007 and signed a minor league deal in September with Birmingham; Atlanta’s affiliate. He played 11 games there, then opted to retire that winter at age 41. For his MLB career, Villasenor had 2312 hits, 1170 runs, 369 doubles, 485 home runs, 1391 RBI, a .306/.346/.555 slash, 169 wRC+, and 76.8 WAR. His stats certainly weren’t out of place when looking at other Hall of Famers, but they weren’t jaw-dropping either. His prime was excellent and he won two pennants and two MVPs, but he didn’t reach either the 500 homer or 1500 RBI marks often expected out of first basemen. Helping Villasenor was a 2010 MLB ballot without any can’t miss debuts, making his resume pop a bit more by comparison. He received 75.6% for a first ballot induction as the headline of the three-player 2010 group. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1469 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 MLB Hall of Fame (Part 2)
![]() Chris Doyle – Starting Pitcher – Charlotte Canaries – 66.6% Third Ballot Chris Doyle was a 6’1’’, 190 pound right-handed pitcher from Riviera Beach, Florida; a city of 37,000 people within Miami’s metropolitan area. At his peak, Doyle had outstanding stuff, terrific movement, and strong control. His velocity peaked in the 96-98 mph range for his fastball, but it was his curveball which was an all-timer. Doyle also had a solid sinker and a rarely used changeup, owing to an extreme groundball tendency. Doyle also had excellent stamina, leading the American Association three times in innings pitched. He had a tireless work ethic, which allowed him to succeed even when others had given up on him early in his career. Doyle ended up becoming one of the most popular pitchers of his era. Doyle was a rare case of being an American pitcher selected straight out of high school. He attended Palm Beach Gardens High School and earned attention throughout the Florida baseball scene. In the 1984 MLB Draft, Doyle was picked late in the first round, 39th overall, by Jacksonville. He ultimately never played in the majors with the Gators. He was used initially as a reliever in minor league Tallahassee and struggled in 1985 and 1986. In July 1987, Jacksonville sent him and another pitcher to Charlotte for veteran 3B Ivan Lanz. Doyle debuted for the Canaries in 1988 at age 22, but they didn’t expect much out of him. From 1988-91, he tossed a mere 67.2 innings in relief with unremarkable results. Doyle kept plugging along and finally earned a full-time rotation spot in 1992 at age 26. He showed that he was worthy in that role and would toss 289+ innings each year for the next decade. Each of his seasons starting for Charlotte earned 8+ WAR, becoming one of the most reliable arms of his time. Doyle led in ERA in 1996 with a career best 2.56, taking second in Pitcher of the Year voting. From 1995-98, Doyle led four straight seasons in WAR. He peaked with a career best 10.3 in 1998, earning his lone Pitcher of the Year award. It wasn’t the easiest to get noticed with Charlotte, who never made the playoffs in his tenure. The Canaries were consistently just above average though with 85.7 wins per season during Doyle’s efforts. Charlotte gave Doyle a six-year, $20,680,000 extension in May 1994. He declined his contract option after the 1999 season, becoming a free agent for the first time at age 34. The Canaries would eventually retire his #25 uniform for his service, which saw a 165-109 record, 3.04 ERA, 2459.1 innings, 1925 strikeouts, 619 walks, 132 ERA+, 71 FIP-, and 71.2 WAR. Doyle got a big money five-year deal for $41,000,000 with Houston. He led in WAR for the fifth time in his debut season and posted 7.7 WAR his second year despite some bad luck with an above average Hornets squad. His velocity dropped significantly in 2002, struggling to reliably hit beyond the low 90s. His last year saw a career-worst 4.15 ERA over 208 innings and 91 strikeouts, as his role was reduced later on. Houston made it to the wild card round, but Doyle wasn’t used, ultimately never tossing a playoff innings. With the Hornets in three years, he had a 46-46 record, 3.94 ERA, 799.1 innings, 487 strikeouts, 208 walks, 100 ERA+, 80 FIP-, and 19.6 WAR. Doyle retired after the 2002 campaign at age 36. Doyle retired with a 211-155 record, 3.26 ERA, 3258.2 innings, 2412 strikeouts, 827 walks, 247/389 quality starts, 214 complete games, 122 ERA+, 73 FIP-, and 90.8 WAR. The advanced stats are quite favorable for Doyle, although he was only briefly considered a Pitcher of the Year candidate. As of 2037, he ranks 58th in WAR among MLB pitchers. Most, but not all 90+ WAR pitchers made the Hall of Fame eventually in MLB. However, Doyle was viewed as a borderline case for his law of raw dominance or major accolades. He missed the cut with 60.6% and 59.9% on his first two tries. With a quieter 2010 group, Doyle barely crossed the 66% requirement. At 66.6%, he earned a third ballot induction within MLB’s 2010 Hall of Fame class. ![]() Tom “Little Rat” Burstein – Shortstop – Los Angeles Angels – 66.2% First Ballot Tom Burstein was a 6’3’’, 200 pound left-handed hitting shortstop from Carlsbad, California; a city with 114,000 inhabitants in San Diego County. Nicknamed “Little Rat”, Burstein was a solid contact hitter with a great eye and an incredible knack at avoiding strikeouts. He wasn’t a powerful batter, but he could find the gap decently with 26 doubles and 7 triples per his 162 game average. Burstein’s home run power was limited to around 10 per season. Burstein was a very intelligent and crafty baserunner, finding success with steals despite having good-but-not-great speed. He was a career shortstop and was an excellent defender. As of 2037, Burstein ranks third all-time in MLB in zone rating at the position. He was reliably good defensively and not flashy, thus only winning two Gold Gloves despite excellent defensive production. Perhaps the biggest key was his ironman durability, starting 149+ games in 16 consecutive seasons. Burstein holds the fourth-most starts at shortstop in MLB history. He was a hard worker and reliable, becoming a fan favorite throughout his 17-year MLB career in Los Angeles as the leadoff man. Burstein left California to play collegiately at Virginia. As a Cavalier, he won NCAA Gold Gloves as a sophomore and junior. In 144 college games, Burstein had 160 hits, 91 runs, 28 doubles, 13 home runs, 51 RBI, a .287/.372/.421 slash, 134 wRC+, and 5.4 WAR. A great defensive shortstop with a good bat drew attention for the 1987 MLB Draft. Burstein was picked 25th overall by Los Angeles, where he’d spend his entire pro career. The Angels made him a full-time starter immediately and Burstein picked up the 1988 Rookie of the Year. His reliable production helped make LA a consistent contender into the 1990s. Burstein posted 11 seasons worth 6+ WAR, boosted by his defense. He wouldn’t be an offensive league leader with the exception of 1994, leading the American Association with 9.9 WAR. Burstein won three Silver Sluggers (1994, 1995, 2001) and two Gold Gloves (1998, 1999). He was never a MLB MVP finalist, but did take second in MVP voting for the 2001 World Baseball Championship. Burstein was part of six world champion American teams in his eight WBC appearances. In 174 starts for the United States, he had 210 hits, 128 runs, 41 doubles, 6 triples, 12 home runs, 79 RBI, 98 stolen bases, a .306/.385/.437 slash, 139 wRC+, and 6.5 WAR. Burstein’s WBC appearances came in the back-end of his career. In the front end, he was determined to win it all with the Angels. From 1989-98, Los Angeles earned seven playoff berths and three division titles. The Angels won the AACS in 1990, but lost the World Series to Virginia Beach. LA kept Burstein long-term with an eight-year, $20,280,000 extension after the 1992 season. Apart from 1990, Los Angeles couldn’t seem to get over the playoff hump. That changed with a World Series victory in 1997 over Minneapolis. The Angels got back to the AACS in 1998, but fell to eventual champion Vancouver. LA would fall into the lower middle-tier for the remainder of Burstein’s run. In the playoffs, his results were mixed. Burstein overall had positive value because of his defense, but his offense stats were mid. In 63 starts, Burstein had 75 hits, 34 runs, 11 doubles, 2 home runs, 26 RBI, 16 stolen bases, a .286/.346/.366 slash, 99 wRC+, and 0.8 WAR. Still, he was very popular with Angels fans for his role in their 1990s competitiveness. Burstein earned a five-year, $45,900,000 extension after the 1999 season at age 33. He struggled with his worst season to date by far, striking out about as many times in 2000 as the prior four seasons combined. Burstein bounced back in 2001 with an excellent 8.6 WAR effort. He had good efforts in 2002 and 2003, but saw notable setbacks in 2004. That year, he had his first significant injury with a torn ligament in his thumb, missing around two months. Burstein had middling batting stats that year as well with 96 wRC+ and only 0.9 WAR all season. He didn’t meet the vesting criteria in his contract and became a free agent for the first time at age 38. Burstein ended up moving to France to the newly formed European Second League in 2005, signing with Nantes for three years and $12,960,000. His bat was mediocre, but he still had enough defensive value to be playable. In 2006, a broken hand cost him the final half of the second. Burstein went unsigned in 2007 and retired that winter at age 41. Los Angeles quickly brought him home to retire his #14 uniform The final MLB stats for Burstein: 2964 hits, 1578 runs, 423 doubles, 118 triples, 160 home runs, 947 RBI, 1155 walks, 673 stolen bases, a .292/.367/.405 slash, 113 wRC+, and 112.2 WAR. As of 2037, he’s 24th in WAR among position players. However, the 113 wRC+ for his career highlights how much of Burstein’s value was defense. There were voters who felt his bat and offensive accumulations weren’t Hall worthy. Only three inductees got in with a lower career slugging percentage. Leadoff guys without homers and RBI always have an uphill climb with some voters as well. But Burstein was likeable, sturdy, and was a fan favorite who helped the Angels to two World Series appearances and one ring. He only got 66.2% in his debut, but that was enough to squeak across the line as a first ballot inductee in the 2010 MLB Hall of Fame class. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1470 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 CABA Hall of Fame (Part 1)
The 2010 Central American Baseball Association’s Hall of Fame class was a historic one with a record five players inducted. All five additions were first ballot guys with the headliners being third basemen Adrian Tovar at 99.3% and Jacky Castillo at 98.7%. CF Leonardo Andrade was next at a solid 86.3%. SP Emmanuel Bernabe received 79.5% and CF Sanson Delgado earned 72.6%. Only one other was above 50% with SP Benito Bertran getting 54.4% on his second try.
![]() Pitcher Victor Alvares was the only player dropped after ten failed ballots. He had a 15-year career with Honduras and won Pitcher of the Year in 1988. Alvarez finished with a 169-128 record, 3.23 ERA, 2743.2 innings, 2802 strikeouts, 342 walks, 112 ERA+, 85 FIP-, and 55.5 WAR. He wasn’t a league leader generally, thus most voters put him as a “Hall of Pretty Good” type. Alvares peaked with his debut at 25.9% and ended at 8.5%. ![]() Adrian Tovar – Third Base – Trinidad Trail Blazers – 99.3% First Ballot Adrian Tovar was a 6’3’’, 200 pound right-handed third baseman from Primero de Enero, a town of around 22,000 people in central Cuba. Tovar was renowned as one of baseball’s great ironmen, starting 144+ games every season from 1984-2004. He was a full-time starter through his age 44 season. Tovar did it as a career third baseman and was known for a cannon arm. He graded as average to above average defensively and was a reliably steady presence there. At the plate, Tovar was fairly well rounded as a solid contact hitter with reliably good power. He was roughly average at drawing walks and avoiding strikeouts. Tovar never led in home runs, but he had 15 seasons with 30+ dingers and topped 40+ thrice. Tovar also was excellent at finding the gap, leading the league thrice in doubles. He averaged 33 doubles and 4 triples per his 162 game average. Tovar was a fairly intelligent baserunner, but his speed was firmly below average. With his longevity, reliability, work ethic, loyalty, and durability; Tovar became one of the most beloved Caribbean players of all time. He was a team captain for Trinidad for two decades and few garnered more respect among players and fans alike. Tovar quickly emerged as Cuba’s top prospect entering the 1981 CABA Draft. Trinidad selected him with the #2 overall pick and he played his entire 23 year career with the Trail Blazers. Tovar did still return home to Cuba in the front end of his career, playing for the national team from 1983-1991 in the World Baseball Championship. In 84 WBC games, Tovar had 87 hits, 49 runs, 17 doubles, 26 home runs, 59 RBI, a .297/.372/.628 slash, 181 wRC+, and 4.7 WAR. Tovar was used as a part-time starter with iffy results in his first two seasons with only 1.0 WAR over 121 starts. He earned a full-time starting role in 1984 and held that role firmly for 21 years. In 1985 and 1987, he led the Caribbean League in doubles. From 1985-89, Tovar won five straight Silver Sluggers. In 1987, Tovar led the CL in WAR (9.7) and wRC+ (193) while posting a .355/.400/.620 slash. This earned second place in MVP voting and convinced Trinidad to give him an eight-year, $8,960,000 extension the following summer. Despite his efforts, the Trail Blazers were still awful in his first few seasons. However, Tovar led the way for an amazing 1988 run. Trinidad went from 64 wins in 1987 to 94-68 in 1988, winning their first-ever CABA Championship against Juarez. Tovar was second in league MVP voting and took CABA finals MVP. He established himself as a hero there, getting 20 hits, 10 runs, 4 home runs, and 11 RBI over 17 playoff starts. The Trail Blazers spent the next three years in the middle of the standings while Tovar won Silver Sluggers again in 1989 and 1991. He led in WAR in 1991 and took third in MVP voting. Tovar had 18 straight seasons worth 5+ WAR and posted 7+ each year from 1985-1993. In 1992, Trinidad made it back to the playoffs and won another Caribbean League pennant. Tovar was CLCS MVP and had 18 hits, 10 runs, 3 homers, and 11 RBI over 14 playoff starts. Trinidad would fall to the Monterrey dynasty in the CABA Championship. The Trail Blazers had a franchise-record 106-56 season in 1993, but were upset in the CLCS by Honduras. That would be Tovar’s final playoff appearance, as Trinidad would be stuck around .500 for the rest of his run. In 37 career playoff starts, Tovar had 46 hits, 23 runs, 3 doubles, 2 triples, 8 home runs, 25 RBI, a .322/.364/.538 slash, 159 wRC+, and 1.5 WAR. 1993 saw Tovar’s lone batting title with a .347 average, along with a league-best 205 hits and 42 RBI with 9.7 WAR. He took second in MVP voting and won his sixth Silver Slugger. Tovar won four more Sluggers (1997, 1998, 2000, 2001). He signed a two-year, $5,200,000 extension in May 1996. At age 37, Tovar had his most powerful season with career bests in home runs (54), RBI (128), runs (118), OPS (1.040), and WAR (9.8). He finally won Caribbean League MVP and perhaps was the oldest-ever player to win their first MVP. Trinidad gave their beloved star another two years and $4,800,000 after that, then another two years and $6,000,000 after the 1999 season. Tovar won Silver Sluggers even as late as age 41. 2000 saw multiple major milestones reached, breaching 3000 hits, 1500 runs, and 600 home runs. He was the eighth to 3K hits, the tenth to 1500 runs, and the 11th to 600 homers. Tovar seemed ageless and some thought he’d have a chance to chase the all-time marks. 2002 was still a good season, but the weakest full-time year of his career with 4.2 WAR and 116 wRC+. Tovar fell to a league average hitter in 2003, but became the fourth to 3500 hits that year, the fifth to 700 homers, and the first to reach 600 career doubles. In 2004, he was firmly a below average hitter, but became the fourth to reach 2000 career RBI. After 2004, Tovar was only 148 hits short of Prometheo Garcia’s all-time mark, although the other top marks were further away. He was still physically in good health, but wasn’t sure he was good enough to keep starting. Tovar opted to retire that winter at age 44 and saw his #28 uniform immediately retired by Trindad. Tovar finished with 3338 games and 3221 starts, 3723 hits, 1871 runs, 675 doubles, 90 triples, 718 home runs, 2024 RBI, 720 walks, 6732 total bases, a .293/.336/.530 slash, 143 wRC+, and 140.8 WAR. At retirement, no CABA player had played more games and he would only get passed once in the preceding years. At retirement, Tovar was second in hits, second in runs, first in doubles, second in total bases, fifth in home runs, fourth in RBI, and fourth in WAR by a position player. As of 2037, Tovar still is CABA’s all-time doubles leader. He’s also fourth in WAR still, eighth in homers, sixth in RBI, third in total bases, third in hits, and fourth in runs. He’s also the all-time third base leader in assists, putouts, total chances, double players, errors, and innings. In world baseball history, only South Asia Baseball’s Manju Abbas has more games played at third base. Tovar was a remarkable ironman and a Caribbean League staple of the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s. He was an obvious no-doubt Hall of Famer at 99.3% to headline the huge five-player 2010 CABA class. When discussing the all-time best third basemen in all of baseball history, Tovar deserves a strong look. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1471 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 CABA Hall of Fame (Part 2)
![]() Jacky Castillo – Third Base – Tijuana Toros – 98.7% First Ballot Jacky Castillo was a 6’1’’, 200 pound left-handed hitting third baseman from Huajuapan, Mexico; a city with around 78,000 people in the southern Oaxaca state. Castillo was one of the strongest batters of the era and regularly went yard, topping 50+ home runs in eight different seasons. He was also a good contact hitter with a solid eye for walks, although his strikeout rate was average. Castillo’s power was concentrated on homers, although he still got you around 20-30 doubles most seasons. He mashed against right-handed pitching with a 1.057 OPS and 205 wRC+, while he was merely good with a 129 wRC+ and .789 OPS versus lefties. You couldn’t expect him to leg out extra bases often, as he was a very sluggish and slow baserunner. Castillo had a very strong arm, but was quite lacking in the range department defensively. The arm made him play at third base, where he made about 3/4s of his starts and graded as delightfully average. Castillo also had notable stints at second base and shortstop, but was abysmal defensively in both spots. His durability was pretty good with 145+ games in all but one season from 1991-2003. Castillo worked hard and socked dingers, making him a very popular Mexican baseball figure in the 1990s. The 1980s were a rough time for Tijuana, who ended up with the #1 overall pick for 1988 CABA Draft. The Toros selected Castillo with the hopes that he would turn things around with his power potential. He was used only as an occasional starter in his first two seasons, then earned the full-time gig in 1991. Castillo would be a fixture in the lineup through 2002 for Tijuana, only missing a month in 1995 to an ankle injury. His first full season as a starter saw 41 home runs, 8.8 WAR, and 113 RBI. For the rest of his Tijuana run, he hit 40+ homers in all but one season, 100+ RBI in all but two, and 7+ WAR in all but two seasons. Castillo led the Mexican League in runs scored thrice, hits once, homers, six times, RBI twice, total bases thrice, WAR four times, OPS thrice, slugging twice, wRC+ twice, and both batting average and OBP once. Castillo won ten consecutive Silver Sluggers from 1991-2000 and won an 11th in 2002. 1992 was a major breakout year, taking second in MVP voting with 53 home runs. He’d then win the award back-to-back in 1993 and 1994. In 1993, Castillo had career bests in homers (64), RBI (152), and runs (131) while adding a 1.106 OPS, 226 wRC+, and 11.9 WAR. He was only the third CABA hitter at that point to breach 150+ career RBI, falling short by two of the all-time record. Castillo hit 61 homers in 1994, becoming the third CABA hitter to hit 60+ multiple times. He also led in WAR with 9.7. This helped Tijuana become a regular playoff team in the 1990s, making seven appearances from 1992-99. Unfortunately for the Toros, they shared a division with Monterrey’s dynasty and were the wild card in each of those berths. Tijuana lost in the 1992 Mexican League Championship Series and fell five times in the wild card round. In the summer of 1994, Castillo inked an eight-year, $21,560,000 extension. He took second in 1996 MVP voting, then won the award for the third time in 1997 and the fourth time in 1998. 1997 saw his lone batting title at .368 and had career bests in WAR (12.1), wRC+ (230), hits (214), OBP (.423), and total bases (416). Castillo breached 10+ WAR for the fifth time in 1998 and also led in homers and RBI again. It was his fourth time smacking 60+ bombs. 1998 saw Tijuana finally oust the Matadors, winning the MLCS over Monterrey. The Toros would fall in the CABA Championship to Salvador, in the midst of their own Caribbean League dynasty. For his playoff career with Tijuana, Castillo had 38 starts, 38 hits, 22 runs, 4 doubles, 12 home runs, 30 RBI, a .268/.293/.549 slash, 150 wRC+, and 1.4 WAR. Castillo was also a popular national star as he played for Mexico from 1991-2003 in the World Baseball Championship. He had 157 games and 144 starts with 134 hits, 95 runs, 24 doubles, 50 home runs, 102 RBI, a .252/.336/.584 slash, 162 wRC+, and 7.0 WAR. He hit 50+ homers again in both 1999 and 2000, but saw a full-season career low of 36 in 2001. Tijuana’s playoff success ended at this point, although Castillo bounced back with 7.5 WAR and 43 homers in 2002. That would mark the end of an outstanding run with the Toros, who would later retire his #14 uniform. With Tijuana, Castillo had 2235 hits, 1323 runs, 325 doubles, 659 home runs, 1481 RBI, a .313/.370/.643 slash, 195 wRC+, and 113.5 WAR. Castillo could still command a hefty deal after a great 2002 and the Toros opted to rebuild. At 36 years old, Castillo signed a three-year, $15,600,000 deal with Honduras. The Horsemen had been a playoff regular, but had been stymied in the playoffs by Salvador and Haiti in recent years. Honduras did get over the hump in 2003, winning the CABA Championship over Ecatepec with a 110-52 season. Castillo earned a ring, but he was subpar with a 103 wRC+, 1.0 WAR, and 32 home runs over the season. Castillo did do nicely in his 10 playoff starts with 9 hits, 6 runs, 4 homers, and 11 RBI. By 2004, Castillo was relegated to a part-time role and struggled to 81 wRC+,-0.3 WAR, and 12 home runs in 95 games. He would join the 700 home run club, becoming the sixth member. Castillo retired that winter at age 38, finishing the Honduras run with 197 hits, 122 runs, 30 doubles, 44 home runs, 114 RBI, a .227/.301/.421 slash, 95 wRC+, and 0.7 WAR. Castillo’s career stats saw 2432 hits, 1445 runs, 355 doubles, 703 home runs, 1595 RBI, a .304/.362/.619 slash, 184 wRC+, and 114.3 WAR. As of 2037, he’s still ninth in home runs and 20th in WAR by position players, although he didn’t quite have the longevity to feature prominently on the other accumulation lists. His OPS does rank 31st and his slugging 23rd among all CABA hitters with 3000 plate appearances, even as the league’s power numbers grew in the later years. Debating between him and Adrian Tovar was a common thing for fans of the era. Tovar’s longevity and steadiness often won out, but Castillo’s raw power was unmatched in CABA during his peak. Both had just over 700 home runs, but Castillo did it over 1026 fewer games. Castillo would be THE headliner in most Hall of Fame classes, although he was slightly overshadowed by Tovar with the 2010 group. He was a no-doubter regardless, earning the honor at 98.7% among the impressive five-player crew. ![]() Leonardo Andrade – Center Field – Guadalajara Hellhounds - 86.3% First Ballot Leonardo Andrade was a 6’4’’, 205 pound right-handed center fielder from Marfil, Mexico; a suburb of Guanajuato in the central part of the country. Andrade was an excellent contact hitter with outstanding gap power and nice home run power. He had 34 doubles, 13 triples, and 30 home runs per his 162 game average. Andrade was okay at drawing walks and above average at avoiding strikeouts. Andrade was excellent at stretching out singles into doubles and doubles into triples. He wasn’t a prolific base stealer, but he was always a threat with good to great speed. Andrade had very good range, serving him well as a career center fielder. He graded out as quite solid defensively for his career, winning a Gold Glove in 1997. Many scouts looked at Andrade as a five-tool type guy. His home run power and arm strength weren’t elite, but were plenty good to make him a star. Andrade also had pretty good durability for most of his career, allowing him to be a great success. Andrade was picked second overall by Puebla in the 1990 CABA Draft and was a full-time starter immediately. He won Rookie of the Year in 1991 and posted 8+ WAR thrice in his six seasons with the Pumas. Andrade was a Silver Slugger winner in each year with Puebla and finished second in 1995 MVP voting and third in 1996. 1996 saw a career-best 10.0 WAR effort. Andrade would have five straight 9+ WAR seasons from 1996-99 using his all-around skill set. Puebla still largely struggled despite Andrade’s efforts. They would win a weak South Division in 1995 and earn a Mexican League Championship Series berth, but were summarily dispatched by Monterrey’s dynasty. The Pumas were back to .500 the next year and couldn’t convince Andrade to stick around. The squad would fall to the bottom of the standings for the next few years post- Andrade. With the Pumas, Andrade had 1070 hits, 559 runs, 180 doubles, 140 home runs, 505 RBI, 278 stolen bases, a .310/.354/.528 slash, 152 wRC+, and 42.4 WAR. He was a very hot free agent entering his age 29 season. He stayed in the South Division and Guadalajara hoped he’d help them compete with Ecatepec’s dominance in the division. The Hellhounds signed Andrade to an eight-year, $24,640,000 deal. Andrade won Silver Sluggers in his first two seasons with Guadalajara and his lone Gold Glove in 1997. He was third in MVP voting in both 1997 and 1998, but ultimately never won the top award. Andrade led the league with 209 hits in 1998, which was his only time leading the league in a major stat. He remained quite good in the next couple years, but not as elite as his Puebla prime. Injures also cost him about a month in both 2000 and 2001. Andrade didn’t turn around things for Guadalajara, who largely stunk in his tenure. The run ended with a thud as he suffered a partially torn UCL in May 2003, costing him most of the season. With the Hellhounds, Andrade ended up with 1144 hits, 58- runs, 177 doubles, 195 home runs, 626 RBI, a .327/.360/.585 slash, 176 wRC+, and 49.3 WAR. With one year left in his deal, Andrade was traded across the division to Ecatepec for 2004 for three prospects. A herniated disc cost him a month, but the 36-year old Andrade had an excellent bounce-back season worth 7.6 WAR. He posted a career best .363 batting average and 1.043 OPS during the run. The Explosion won their sixth consecutive Mexican League title in 2004 and took the CABA Championship over Honduras. Andrade had a big postseason and earned finals MVP, making 15 playoff starts, 19 hits, 13 runs, 6 doubles, 2 homers, 9 RBI, and a .317/.359/.517 slash. Ecatepec had lost the prior three years in the CABA final and many fans hold Andrade in high regard for helping snap that streak in his one year there. His original Guadalajara deal expired and Andrade was a free agent at age 37. Coming off a strong year, he earned international attention and ultimately left both Mexico and CABA. Andrade ended up in MLB and America on a two-year, $18,400,000 deal with Milwaukee. A herniated disc plagued him most of 2005 and his bat was unremarkable with 1.7 WAR and 106 wRC+. Andrade didn’t meet the vesting criteria for the second season, entering free agency in 2006. Montreal still thought he had something to offer and gave him three years and $27,400,000. Andrade lost some time to shoulder tendinitis, but posted a very nice 4.8 WAR effort in 113 games in 2006. 2007 had a respectable start, but ended in August with a torn PCL. The Maples let him go and Andrade was unsigned for 2008. He ultimately retired that winter at age 40. For his three MLB seasons, Andrade had 307 hits, 142 runs, 46 doubles, 15 triples, 47 home runs, 148 RBI, a .255/.296/.436 slash, 123 wRC+, and 8.8 WAR. In CABA, Andrade had 2376 hits, 1225 runs, 399 doubles, 158 triples, 354 home runs, 1220 RBI, 586 stolen bases, a .321/.360/.562 slash, 166 wRC+, and 99.4 WAR. As of 2037, he’s 34th in WAR among position players. Andrade wasn’t amazing enough at any one thing to dominate leaderboards, but he posted a very solid career. Perhaps Andrade was overlooked at times since he was largely on bad teams in his career. The playoff run in his one Ecatepec season helped solidify the resume for most doubters. Andrade earned 86.3% for an easy first ballot nod as the third of five members in the 2010 CABA Hall of Fame class. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1472 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 CABA Hall of Fame (Part 3)
![]() Emmanuel Bernabe – Starting Pitcher – Salvador Stallions – 79.5% First Ballot Emmanuel Bernabe was a 5’10’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Las Tunas, Cuba; a city of around 214,000. Bernabe wasn’t dominant at any one phase, but he was good to occasionally great with his stuff, movement, and control. His 95-97 mph cutter was his strongest pitch and was mixed with a good forkball, plus a decent curveball and changeup. Bernabe was excellent at holding runners and had pretty good stamina. He also had reliable durability for the first decade of his career, tossing 250+ innings from 1993-2001. Bernabe was picked 16th overall in the 1990 CABA Draft by Jamaica. The Jazz kept him on the reserve roster for all of 1991, but brought him up as a starter in 1992. Bernabe was third in 1992 Rookie of the Year voting and had three decent seasons for Jamaica. He led in innings pitched and complete games in 1994, although he was also first in losses. The Jazz at this point were firmly a bottom-rung franchise. With Jamaica, Bernabe had three seasons, a 46-41 record, 3.58 ERA, 745 innings, 625 strikeouts, 141 walks, 106 ERA+, and 12.3 WAR. The 27-year old Bernabe was traded before the 1995 season to Salvador straight up for another young pitcher Adonis Garcia. This began what would be Bernabe’s signature run. The Stallions thought he’d be a long-term investment, giving him a four-year $11,480,000 extension only a few weeks into his run. Salvador had won the CABA Championship in 1994 and hoped to start a dynasty. In his Salvador debut, Bernabe led the Caribbean League in wins at 26-5 and quality starts at 24, earning Pitcher of the Year honors. He took second in 1996’s and 1997 POTY voting as well. This helped begin a dynasty run for the Stallions, who earned eight straight playoff berths from 1994-2001. They lost in the 1995 Caribbean League Championship Series to Santiago, but won four straight pennants from 1996-1999. Salvador won it all in 1997 and 1998, giving Bernabe two CABA rings. He didn’t get a ton of run support in his playoff career with a 5-8 record, but still posted a solid 3.28 ERA and 124 ERA+ over 137.1 playoff innings with 134 strikeouts, 25 walks, and 3.2 WAR. His role in the great dynasty helped see his #2 uniform eventually retired. The Stallions were a wild card in 2000 and 2001, then missed the playoffs in 2002. Bernabe saw one last CLCS appearance in 2003. Bernabe also pitched four editions late in his career of the World Baseball Championship for Cuba, posting a 6-1 record in 60.1 innings, 3.43 ERA, 53 strikeouts, 103 ERA+, and 1.0 WAR. Bernabe would stay long-term in El Salvador, signing a six-year, $19,760,000 contract extension after the 1998 season. 1999 and 2000 saw his top two seasons by WAR with 9.0 and 8.7, although he wasn’t a Pitcher of the Year finalist either season. Bernabe generally wasn’t a league leader despite his regularly strong production, largely due to not being a dominant strikeout guy. He kept chugging along until a major set-back in June 2002. Post-concussion syndrome would force Bernabe to the shelf for 10 months. He bounced back with a very good 2003. Bernabe’s velocity dropped noticeably in 2004 and although he had an excellent 17-3 record, his 4.55 ERA was mediocre and by far a career worst. Bernabe retired that winter at age 36. His Salvador stats saw a 175-88 record, 3.04 ERA, 2421.1 innings, 2267 strikeouts, 371 walks, 190/290 quality starts, 118 complete games, 132 ERA+, 75 FIP-, and 63.2 WAR. Bernabe ended with a 221-129 record, 3.16 ERA, 3166.1 innings, 2892 strikeouts, 512 walks, 247/383 quality starts, 125 ERA+, 79 FIP-, and 75.6 WAR. As of 2037, he’s 46th in WAR among CABA pitchers. Bernabe never had the raw dominance or longevity to earn a lot of attention, but he quietly built up a very sturdy resume. Being reliably good and a key part of a dynasty run was enough for most voters. Bernabe received 79.5%, which was fourth-best among the five 2010 CABA Hall of Fame inductees. Regardless, he earned his spot on the first ballot among an impressive group. ![]() Sanson Delgado – Center Field – Haiti Herons – 72.4% First Ballot Sanson Delgado was a 6’3’’, 185 pound left-handed hitting center fielder from Pinar del Rio, Cuba; a city of 191,000 in the nation’s west. Delgado had above average contact skills and a respectable eye for the ball, especially against righties. He had a fairly extreme split with a strong .919 OPS and 146 wRC+ versus righties and a subpar .704 OPS and 96 wRC+ against lefties for his career. Delgado wasn’t a prolific power hitter, but he had plenty of pop in his bat. He had 32 home runs, 27 doubles, and 9 triples per his 162 game average. His speed was merely above average despite playing center field and his baserunning skills were lacking. Delgado had some lingering small injuries, but was durable enough to play 135+ games in 19 of his 22 pro seasons. Defensively, Delgado played almost exclusively in center field. Although he didn’t have amazing top speed, he had solid range and glove work. Delgado graded out as firmly above average to good in center. He wasn’t outstanding at any one thing, but Delgado was average to good pretty much across the board, leading to a lengthy and successful career. Delgado was picked 18th overall by Haiti in the 1984 CABA Draft and would play his entire CABA career with the Herons. He only played 21 games in 1985, but took over the starting job in 1986 and held it through 2004. In his first full season, Delgado led the Caribbean League in WAR, slugging, OPS, and wRC+. That was his official rookie season, earning Rookie of the Year honors. Delgado was also second in MVP voting and won a Silver Slugger. Delgado wouldn’t win another Silver Slugger until 1998, although that was more a function of sharing a position and league with eventual home run king Hugh Boerboom. Delgado would post nine seasons worth 6+ WAR, although he wouldn’t be a league leader again except for in 1994, when he posted the best OPS and OBP. Delgado was steady for Haiti, who was stuck in the middle tier in the 1980s and early 1990s. After the 1990 season, the Herons gave Delgado a five-year, $8,800,000 extension. Haiti made the playoffs in 1991, but Delgado missed the postseason to elbow tendinitis and they lost in the wild card round. The Herons wouldn’t make the playoffs again until 1997, although that would mark the beginning of a dynasty run and decade-plus streak. Delgado kept chugging along as a popular player into his 30s. Now 32, he signed a five-year, $10,000,000 extension after the 1994 season. In these later years, Delgado did play for his native Cuba in the World Baseball Championship. He saw 68 games and 47 starts from 1995-2004, posting 45 hits, 23 runs, 13 doubles, 15 home runs, 32 RBI, a .265/.360/.606 slash, 163 wRC+, and 2.3 WAR. Delgado didn’t see any notable decline in his game through his 30s, putting up the same reliable stats year in and year out. He finally got to see Haiti with success, beginning their playoff streak in 1997. The Herons lost in the Caribbean League Championship Series in 1997 and 1998, and then lost in the first round of 1999. Salvador’s dynasty proved to be a barrier at the start of their streak. Haiti was plenty happy with Delgado, giving him another two years and $6,000,000 in May 2000. The Herons won three straight Caribbean League titles from 2000-02. They lost the 2000 CABA Championship in Ecatepec, but won it all in the 2001 and 2002 rematches with the Explosion. Delgado finally got to see rings after two decades with Haiti and his long service would lead to his #7 uniform eventually being retired. One criticism is that Delgado’s playoff stats weren’t anything special. In 46 playoff starts, he had 41 hits, 23 runs, 7 doubles, 8 home runs, 18 RBI, a .243/.301/.426 slash, 93 wRC+, and 0.6 WAR. Injuries cost him about half of 2002, but he was on a great pace and earned another two years at $7,600,000. In 2003, a 40-year old Delgado was still good for 7.6 WAR, although the Herons lost in the first round of the playoffs. In 2004, Delgado posted his first truly lousy season with 0.1 WAR and 89 wRC+ over 155 games. He did cross 1500 career runs in this final season, but fell just short of the 3000 hit and 600 home run milestones. No CABA teams gave Delgado a look for 2005, although his baseball career did continue in the newly formed European Second League. Delgado ended up an outsider in Moldova on a two-year, $6,880,000 deal with Chisinau. He was still a respectable starter in 2005, even if his bat had declined to a .202 average. Delgado posted negative value in 2006 and retired after that season at age 44. For his entire pro career, he had 3075 games, 3064 hits, 1614 runs, 518 doubles, 166 triples, 606 home runs, 1813 RBI, a .280/.337/.523 slash, 133 wRC+, and 108.3 WAR. With Haiti, Delgado had 2918 hits, 1542 runs, 491 doubles, 164 triples, 580 home runs, 1719 RBI, 218 stolen bases, a .288/.343/.540 slash, 137 wRC+, and 106.4 WAR. As of 2037, he’s 28th all-time in WAR among position players. He’s also still 16th in RBI, 25th in both runs and hits, 15th in doubles and 34th in home runs. Delgado is also 13th in games played and some voters dismissed him as a compiler. Even then, the accumulations on paper seem like a pretty easy choice. With such a loaded 2010 group as well, Delgado looked less impressive for some voters. He only got 72.6%, but that was enough to cross the 66% line for a first ballot induction. Delgado was a fine player to round-off a historic five-player group. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1473 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 EAB Hall of Fame
![]() Two players were added into the East Asia Baseball Hall of Fame in 2010. Pitcher Sung-Hyun Tak was the headliner with 92.2% in his debut. Two-way pitcher/outfielder Makhmud Hakim grabbed the second spot at 74.3%, crossing the 66% requirement on his third try. 3B Shigefumi Tsukehara came painfully close, but missed out with 64.3% on his third ballot. No one else was above 50% and no players were dropped from the ballot after ten failed attempts. ![]() Sung-Hyun Tak – Starting Pitcher – Suwon Snappers – 92.2% First Ballot Sung-Hyun Tak was a 6’0’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Incheon, South Korea. Tak threw hard with 98-100 mph peak velocity and boasted great stuff and movement with excellent control. His slider was his most deadly pitch, but he also had a strong splitter, cutter, and changeup in the arsenal. Tak’s stamina was weak compared to most EAB aces of the era and he was plagued by injuries throughout his career. When healthy though, Tak was lights out. Tak was signed as a teenage amateur by Suwon in January 1986. He spent most of five years in their developmental academy, officially debuting in 1990 at age 21 with ten relief appearances. Tak was moved to the starting rotation in 1991 and stayed there for a decade. He had a strong debut season, taking second in 1991 Rookie of the Year voting. In his second season, Tak led the Korea League in ERA at 1.96 and WIHIP at 0.87, taking second in Pitcher of the Year voting. Suwon also snapped a seven-year playoff drought in 1992 and won the KL pennant before falling to Kitakyushu in the EAB Championship. Tak had a great playoff run with a 1.95 ERA over 37 innings, 47 strikeouts, 194 ERA+, and 1.4 WAR. For his whole career, he was a great playoff pitcher with a 2.25 ERA over 92 innings, 111 strikeouts, 13 walks, 169 ERA+, and 2.9 WAR. Tak also was a successful pitcher on the global stage, appearing from 1992-2001 for South Korea in the World Baseball Championship. He tossed 124 innings with an 11-5 record, 2.69 ERA, 143 strikeouts, 30 walks, 134 ERA+, 66 FIP-, and 3.8 WAR. The Snappers were regularly a playoff team during Tak’s run with eight berths and eight division titles from 1992-2000. Apart from their 1992 pennant though, Suwon struggled to do anything in the postseason. They lost in the 1997 KLCS to Yongin while suffering first round playoff exits in each of the other appearances. Tak led in wins in 1993 and took third in POTY voting. 1994 saw a setback as a torn biceps knocked him out for the summer. He led in WAR for the first time in 1995 with 9.8, but still was a finalist with a second place POTY finish. Tak was third in 1996 and earned a big payday for his continued success. He inked a seven-year, $24,920,000 extension with Suwon in March 1997. In 1997, Tak led in WAR again and finally earned his first Pitcher of the Year. A torn triceps in 1998 cost him the final two months of the regular season and the playoffs. Tak bounced back with a third in 1999 POTY voting, leading in WAR for the third time. At age 31 in 2000, Tak had perhaps his finest season with a career-best 10.0 WAR, 47 FIP-, and 27 quality starts. He led Korea in ERA (2.07), and WHIP (0.88) while leading in strikeouts for the first time with 277. Tak won his second Pitcher of the Year and fell only two wins short of the Triple Crown. This was “grace” for him, as Tak quickly fell from here thanks to injuries. In May 2001, Tak suffered a partially torn UCL, putting him on the shelf for 10 months. He was back by spring training 2002, but wouldn’t pitch an inning in the regular season. Tak tore his flexor tendon in late March, costing him the next 13 months. He rehabbed and returned to play in 2003, but had lost a lot of velocity and stamina. Suwon used him in 50.1 innings of relief, although he did still pitch respectably in that role. With one year left on his big contract, Suwon traded Tak in the offseason to Kawasaki for catcher prospect Shoshichi Namba. That proved a good move by the Snappers, as Namba gave them a solid decade of service behind the plate and won a Gold Glove. The Killer Whales used Tak out of the bullpen, but he struggled in only 16 innings of action. Tak didn’t get a chance to improve over the small sample size, as a strained biceps and herniated disc kept him out most of 2004. He retired that winter at age 36. Suwon would quickly honor him for his excellent service by retiring his #30 uniform Tak ended with a 174-77 record, 2.53 ERA, 2245.1 innings, 2499 strikeouts, 306 walks, 204/298 quality starts, 52 complete games, 150 ERA+, 63 FIP-, and 74.4 WAR. The advanced stats show how dominant Tak was in his prime, although he didn’t stick around long enough to make a dent on the al-time leaderboards. EAB’s Hall of Fame voters tended to be favorable towards guys with impressive short-bursts. Tak wasn’t an exception, receiving 92.2% and a first ballot induction in 2010. ![]() Makhmud Hakim – Outfielder/Pitcher – Niigata Green Dragons – 74.3% Third Ballot Makhmud Hakim was a 6’3’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher and switch-hitter from Zhuzhou, China; a prefecture-level city of 3,855,000 in the Hunan province. Hakim was a two-way player who had a full career as an outfielder and a five-year run as a starting pitcher. At the plate, he was above average to good contract skills with a nice eye and solid knack for avoiding strikeouts. Hakim also above average in terms of power, averaging 26 home runs, 26 doubles, and 9 triples per his 162 game average. Hakim had good speed and great baserunning instincts. He made about 3/5s of his starts in right field with around 1/5 in left and the rest either as a pitcher or designated hitter. Defensively, Hakim was firmly mediocre. He worked very hard though and had outstanding durability, a rare trait from a two-way guy as they often physically break down from the workload. As a pitcher, Hakim had excellent control and in his prime showed decent stuff and movement. He lacked the stamina expected from a starting pitcher and rarely could go deep in games, which limited his use as an arm. Hakim had a nice fastball/slider one-two punch and a rarely used changeup. The lack of diversity in his arsenal also limited his pitching opportunities. Hakim’s unique skillset made him a popular player throughout his run. Although born in China, Hakim’s family left for Japan when he was a teenager and he ended up an EAB prospect instead of a CLB one. Hakim soared up the big board with his two-way potential and was picked third overall in the 1986 EAB Draft by Niigata. The Green Dragons kept him in developmental in 1987 and debuted him in 1988 as mostly a pinch hitter and occasional reliever. Hakim became a full-time starter in the outfield in 1989 and held that down for the rest of his Niigata run. He would only see 42.1 innings as a pitcher in his first two full seasons with unremarkable results there. Hakim looked great as a batter though and won Japan League MVP in his second full season in 1990. He led the league in runs (113) and WAR (8.3) while posting career bests in home runs (37) and RBI (109). That season, he also set a JL single game record against Chiba with 11 RBI. That day, he was 5-5 with 4 homers, 1 double, and 5 runs scored. This also gave Niigata its first look at contention. The Green Dragons were a 1978 expansion team and hadn’t posted a winning season up to that point. In 1990, Niigata earned the Japan League pennant, falling to Seongnam in the EAB Championship. In 1991, the Green Dragons would win it all, beating Goyang in the finale. Niigata suffered a first-round exit in 1992, then fell into mediocrity for about a decade after that. In the 1990 run, Hakim had 23 hits, 7 doubles, 6 runs, 3 home runs, and 12 RBI in 16 playoff starts. In 1991, he won EAB Championship MVP with 15 hits, 7 runs, 4 doubles, 3 home runs, and 6 RBI at the plate. That was his first year as a full-time pitcher, excelling in the playoffs with a 1.80 ERA over 30 innings with 22 strikeouts and a 3-1 record. In 1991, Hakim won his second league MVP, Pitcher of the Year, and two Silver Sluggers (one in RF, one as a pitcher). At the plate, he had 7.0 WAR over 128 games with a 1.023 OPS and 211 wRC+. In his first full season pitching, he led in wins at 21-3 with a 2.35 ERA over 230 innings, 189 strikeouts, 140 ERA+, and 6.4 WAR. Hakim regressed on the mound in 1992 with a 3.86 ERA and 84 ERA+, although he still had 4.2 WAR. That was his finest hitting season though, which won him his third MVP and two more Silver Sluggers. Hakim had league and career bests in the triple slash (.393/.438/.702), OPS (1.140), wRC+ (257), and WAR (10.3). At the time, that was the second-best batting average and 10th-best single season OPS in EAB history. The batting average still ranks eighth as of 2037. During his MVP prime, Hakim did briefly play for his country China in the World Baseball Championship, helping them win the 1993 and 1994 world titles. He played from 1991-94 with 73 games and 63 starts, 61 hits, 35 runs, 13 doubles, 10 home runs, 29 RBI, a .245/.310/.426 slash, 113 wRC+, and 0.9 WAR. Hakim was just used as an outfielder, pitching just one inning in relief in 1993. Hakim won another Silver Slugger as a pitcher in 1993 and posted 6.1 WAR at the plate and 4.1 on the mound. The Green Dragons fell to 79-89 and plummeted to 68-94 in 1994. Niigata figured they weren’t going to be able to keep Hakim, who was due for free agency after the 1995 campaign. At the deadline, he was sent to Kobe for pitchers Tsuneichi Kitikawa and Shogo Hino. Hakim posted 5.5 WAR and 182 wRC+ offensively in 1994 and 1.3 WAR pitching with only 11 starts on the mound that year. Each was with Niigata, as Kobe didn’t use Hakim as a pitcher in 1994’s regular season. He did make two starts with a 1.35 ERA over 13.1 in the playoffs as the Blaze lost the JLCS to Kitakyushu. 1995 was Hakim’s sixth and final Silver Slugger (his fourth as a pitcher) and saw a third place in MVP voting. He had a nice 2.76 ERA over 224.2 innings for 3.2 WAR on the mound and 5.0 WAR, a .904 OPS, and 169 wRC+ at the plate. Kobe missed the playoffs and Hakim entered free agency after the season at age 31. This marked the end of his East Asia Baseball Career, although he still played for another decade elsewhere. At the plate, Hakim finished with 1065 games and 935 starts, 1204 hits, 647 runs, 198 doubles, 79 home runs, 201 home runs, 596 RBI, 310 walks, 237 stolen bases, a .326/.379/.586 slash, 193 wRC+, and 49.3 WAR. Pitching, he had 1017.1 innings, a 3.07 ERA, 64-42 record, 1017.1 innings, 857 strikeouts, 107 ERA+, and 19.1 WAR. Hakim’s Hall of Fame case was a tricky one, hurt by low accumulations from only a nine-year run. His batting stats in that stretch were outstanding, but the grand totals were much lower than many voters wanted. Hakim graded as merely above average as a pitcher, but that extra value got him to 68.4 WAR combined, putting him closer to the borderline. Some voters held him leaving against him, but others did give Hakim some credit for his post-EAB tenure. He just missed the Hall of Fame cut at 62.4% in 2008 and 62.9% in 2009. On his third try, Hakim crossed the 66% line at 74.3% to earn a spot in the 2010 East Asia Baseball Hall of Fame. Hakim’s career continued into America, signing a six-year, $21,840,000 deal with the Dallas Dalmatians of Major League Baseball. Dallas wanted him to focus on hitting though and his two-way exploits ended when he left Japan, apart from three innings in 2001 in a relief appearance. The learning curve was a bit steep for Hakim, who posted a very average debut season in 1996. He was below average in 1997, but bounced back as a serviceable starter in the next four seasons with Dallas. He managed to lead the American Association in triples with 18 in 1999. The Dalmatians had playoff berths in 1996 and 1998, but couldn’t get beyond the second round. With Dallas in total, Hakim had 941 games, 922 hits, 489 runs, 141 doubles, 52 triples, 142 home runs, 523 RBI, a .258/.318/.445 slash, 108 wRC+, and 14.7 WAR. He was a free agent again after the 2001 season at age 37. Hakim stayed in Texas, inking a two-year, $14,400,000 deal with Houston. He would put up similar numbers in his stay with the Hornets with 301 hits, 152 runs, 49 doubles, 36 home runs, 141 RBI, a .265/.336/.424 slash, 106 wRC+, and 5.7 WAR. Hakim still had suitors as a 39-year old free agent in 2004 and snagged a two-year, $15,400,000 deal with Albuquerque. He struggled starting for the Isotopes with a 85 wRC+ and 0.1 WAR over 145 games. Hakim was cut following spring training in 2005. Baltimore gave him a look in 2005 as a backup, playing 112 games with 38 starts and 0.8 WAR. That marked the end of his MLB tenure, which saw 1501 games, 1386 hits, 730 runs, 209 doubles, 209 home runs, 70 triples, 767 RBI, 148 stolen bases, a.256/.319/.436 slash, 106 wRC+, 21.3 WAR. It wasn’t anything special, but a quite serviceable run for a guy in his 30s. Hakim was briefly under contract with Las Vegas in 2006, but was cut after two weeks in the minors. Hakim wasn’t ready to give up the game yet and searched worldwide for a job. He ended up in the Arab League with Kuwait, posting 0.7 WAR and 114 wRC+ over 132 games. Hakim was unsigned in 2007 and retired that winter at age 43. For his entire hitting career, Hakim had 2698 games and 2438 starts, 2714 hits, 1433 runs, 432 doubles, 155 triples, 425 home runs, 1419 RBI, 832 walks, 420 stolen bases, a .283/.342/.493 slash, 140 wRC+, and 71.4 WAR. With the pitching stats, he had 90.5 WAR, which ranks 22nd among all two-way players as of 2037. Hakim is second in offensive WAR among all two-way guys though, as most of those in front of him had stronger and more tenured pitching runs. Hakim leaves an interesting legacy and at his peak in the early 1990s was among the most impressive players in the game.
__________________
Baseball: The World's Game fictional world reports Continental Baseball Federation world reports (8-tier promotion/relegation sim and college feeder) Last edited by FuzzyRussianHat; 07-30-2024 at 06:57 AM. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1474 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 BSA Hall of Fame
Beisbol Sudamerica’s 2010 Hall of Fame ballot didn’t have any no-doubt guys debuting, giving the opportunity for returners to make a stand. Two of them earned induction by crossing the 66% requirement. Pitcher Orlando Salas got to 77.3% in his third ballot and 2B Leonardo Salvador earned 74.9% for his sixth attempt. Both guys were best known for their tenure with Medellin. Catcher Moises Avalos only narrowly missed the cut with 62.2% for his second ballot. Two debuting first basemen did cross the 50% mark with Nyx Navas at 54.3% and Rafael Cervantes at 54.0%.
![]() Dropped after ten failed attempts was LF Josh “The Crow” Espinosa. He had an 18-year career between Ciudad Guayana, Caracas, and Maracaibo and won four Silver Sluggers. Espinosa had 2647 hits, 1278 runs, 456 doubles, 211 triples, 324 home runs, 1249 RBI, a .300/.340/.510 slash, 136 wRC+, and 77.8 WAR. He was very rarely a league leader and only once a MVP finalist. That and the lack of big power stats hurt Espinosa with most voters. He peaked at 45.1% in 2002 and ended at 25.1%. ![]() Orlando Salas – Starting Pitcher – Medellin Mutiny – 77.3% Third Ballot Orlando Salas was a 6’1’’, 195 pound right-handed pitcher from Quilpue, Chile; a city of around 150,000 inhabitants within the greater Valparaiso metropolitan area. Salas had tremendous pinpoint control and strong stuff, although his movement was lousy and he had issues allowing home runs. His fastball hit the 97-99 mph range and was mixed with a forkball, slider, curveball, and changeup. Salas had very good stamina and was strong at holding runners, although he did run into a few major injuries. Salas was a controversial figure, known for being outspoken and a bit of a malcontent. Detractors said he was lazy, selfish, and dumb. But his talent was undeniable, leading to an impressive 15-year career. In January 1981, a teenaged Salas was spotted and brought from Chile to Colombia. Medellin signed him as an amateur free agent and he’d ultimately spend his entire career with the Mutiny. It was a long process for Salas, who spent basically seven years in their developmental system. He did debut in 1987 at age 23, but only saw three relief appearances. Salas saw a bit more use in 1988, but struggled with a 4.70 ERA over 59.1 innings. He looked better with a 3.73 ERA over 103.2 innings in 1989, but still was a part-timer. Salas gave up four runs in nine playoff innings that year as Medellin lost in the Bolivar League Championship Series was Ciudad Guayana. He was moved into the full-time rotation from 1990 onward. Salas’s trouble allowing homers was a problem in his first few full seasons, allowing the most homers in the league thrice. He still provided innings and had a great K/BB, leading the league four times in that. Salas was very much a “boom or bust” type pitcher, especially in his earliest years. In 1992, he posted a career and league-best 395 strikeouts and had 5.8 WAR. Still, he allowed a career-worst 54 home runs with a 3.59 ERA and 103 ERA+. Salas stepped up in the 1992 postseason, going 3-0 with three complete games, 4 four runs allowed, and 40 strikeouts. Medellin got back to the BLCS, but lost again versus the Giants. The Mutiny made the BLCS again in 1993, 1996, and 1998, but couldn’t get over the hump. They had a league-best 106-56 mark in 1994, but lost in the first round. Apart from the 1992 run, Salas’s playoff stats were spotty. He had a 3.84 ERA over 82 innings, 5-5 record, 111 strikeout, 7 walks, 93 ERA+, 71 FIP-, and 2.6 WAR. He also pitched for Chile from 1988-2003 in the World Baseball Championship, but had lousy overall numbers. Salas tossed 177.1 WBC innings with a 5.02 ERA, 9-10 record, 228 strikeouts, 46 walks, 48 home runs, 73 ERA+, and 0.5 WAR. In 1993, Salas had a career-best 2.84 ERA and led the league in wins at 20-11 and complete games at 26. He took second in Pitcher of the Year voting, which earned him a five-year, $9,660,000 extension the next summer. Salas was second again in 1994, leading in wins (24-10), innings (308), strikeouts (377), WHIP (0.91), K/BB (18.9), and complete games (25). He still also allowed a league-worst 51 homers. That was Salas’ last time as a POTY finalist. He led in strikeouts again in 1995 and had a career-best 7.1 WAR, although his ERA worsened. He struggled in 1996 and multiple injures meant Salas only played half of the season. He stayed healthy the next three years with again inconsistent results, but did enough to earn a four-year, $9,520,000 extension after the 1998 season. In 2000, a 36-year old Salas missed the entire season with severe shoulder inflammation. He missed a few starts in 2001, but posted a respectable effort even as his velocity declined. In 2002, a hamstring strain cost Salas a notable chunk of the season with middling results when he was healthy. After the 2002 season, Salas was traded by Medellin to Buenos Aires for two prospects and a draft pick. He ultimately never pitched an inning for the Atlantics. In spring training 2003, Salas tore his rotator cuff and a later setback ended his career at age 39. Despite his outspoken nature, Medellin did opt to retire Salas’ #28 uniform. Salas finished with a 184-147 record, 3.59 ERA, 3097 innings, 3561 strikeouts, 310 walks, 454 home runs allowed, 11.5 K/BB, 202/392 quality starts, 191 complete games, 101 ERA+, 88 FIP-, and 59.7 WAR. As of 2037, his ERA is the worst of any BSA Hall of Famer and his WAR is among the worst of any starters. Salas’s resume seems to be very borderline, but he did have a lot of strikeouts relative to his innings and only played games for one franchise. Yet, the voters almost made Salas a first-ballot guy, missing the cut barely in 2008 at 63.0%. Salas dropped to 56.1% in 2009, but a quieter 2010 group allowed him to jump to 77.3%. Later scholars argue that Salas is one of the weaker inductees into BSA”s Hall of Fame, but he ultimately led the way for the 2010 ballot. ![]() Leonardo “Golden” Salvador – Second Base – Medellin Mutiny – 74.9% Sixth Ballot Leonardo Salvador was a 6’0’’, 200 pound right-handed second baseman from Panama City. Salvador was a great contact hitter and a master at putting the ball in play and avoiding strikeouts. He had tremendous gap power with 27 doubles and 21 triples per his 162 game average. Salvador was quick and a stellar baserunner, stealing at an impressive rate and legging out extra bags regularly. Salvador wasn’t a home run hitter, only getting 5-10 per year. He also very rarely drew walks, giving him a weaker on-base percentage than you’d expect considering his batting averages. Salvador dealt with some small injuries off and on, but still managed to play 120+ games each year from 1983-98. Just over half of Salvador’s career starts were at second base, where he graded out as a terrible defender. He also struggled in some starts at third base, but looked respectable at a brief stint in right field. Salvador also made about ¼ of his starts as a designated hitter. His contact skills and speed gave him a spot in the lineup despite his flaws. Salvador was also incredibly well respected, known for his great leadership and work ethic. A teenaged Salvador was spotted and signed in October 1977 by Quito, sending him to Ecuador. He debuted in 1981 at age 20, but was mostly a pinch hitter and pinch runner in his first two seasons. Salvador played 206 games, but made only 39 starts in his initial two years. The Thunderbolts gave Salvador a full-time spot in 1983, putting him in right field. Salvador stayed in RF in 1984, then switched to second base afterward. Quito won the Bolivar League title in 1981 and 1983, falling both years in Copa Sudamerica. Salvador was a backup in 1981, but a strong starter in the 1983 run with 18 hits, 9 runs, 6 extra base hits, 6 RBI, and 11 stolen bases with a .400 batting average. He won BLCS MVP, but they lost to Sao Paulo in the final. That season, Salvador led the league in stolen bases with 93. Salvador picked up Silver Sluggers in 1985 and 1986. In 1986, he led the league in hits (213) and triples (30) while posting a career best .347 batting average and 6.9 WAR. Salvador also led in triples for Quito in 1987 and 1988. The Thunderbolts fell into mediocrity in Salvador’s final seasons. Despite playing in South America, Salvador returned to his native Panama regularly for the World Baseball Championship. From 1984-99, he played 143 games with 137 starts with 183 hits, 86 runs, 29 doubles, 12 triples, 11 home runs, 54 RBI, 80 stolen bases, a .324/.350/.477 slash, 134 wRC+, and 6.0 WAR. For Quito, Salvador had 1381 hits, 624 runs, 203 doubles, 166 tripl,es 60 home runs, 465 RBI, 538 stolen bases, a .328/.346/.498 slash, 130 wRC+, and 33.3 WAR. After the 1989 season, the soon-to-be 29-year old Salvador was entering his last year of team control. The Thunderbolts opted to trade him to Medellin for three players. The Mutiny wanted Salvador long-term and signed him to a six-year, $7,360,000 extension before his first spring training. This would be his signature run which started as a designated hitter. Medellin moved him to third base in 1995, then back to second base in the final few seasons. Salvador led in hits and stolen bases in 1990, hitting career bests for both (214 and 93). He also led in triples in 1991. Salvador put up steady stats for Medellin, who earned five playoff berths from 1992-98. The Mutiny couldn’t get over the hump with four losses in the BLCS and a first-round exit. Salvador couldn’t be blamed, as his playoff starts in 40 games saw 43 hits, 20 runs, 3 doubles, 6 triples, 2 home runs, 11 RBI, 24 stolen bases, a .314/.329/.467 slash, 123 wRC+, and 1.5 WAR. Medellin was especially impressed by Salvador’s leadership and give him a three-year, $6,240,000 extension after the 1996 season. In 1998 at age 37, Salvador won his third Silver Slugger and his lone one with Medellin. He regressed hard in 1999 and was eventually benched, posting -1.6 WAR and a .520 OPS over 104 games and 59 starts. This year, he still was able to become the 6th member of the 3000 hit club. Salvador retired after the 1999 season at age 38. For his Medellin run, he had 1629 hits, 744 runs, 230 doubles, 172 triples, 69 home runs, 573 RBI, 571 stolen bases, a .316/.332/.468 slash, 125 wRC+, and 32.3 WAR. The Mutiny honored Salvador by retiring his #3 uniform. For his career, Salvador had 3010 hits, 1368 runs, 433 doubles, 338 triples, 129 home runs, 1036 RBI, 1109 stolen bases, a .322/.338/.481 slash, 127 wRC+, and 65.6 WAR. As of 2037, he still sits sixth all-time in triples, 19th in hits, and 14th in stolen bases. Still, by WAR and advanced stats, he’s among the weaker BSA inductees. Salvador’s lack of home run power and walks, plus poor defense, hurt his value. Salvador’s leadership and respect earned him some voters, but many thought he was borderline. He debuted at 51.9% and grew to 58.2% and 57.5% the next two seasons. Salvador barely missed the 66% cut in 2008 at 65.4%, then dropped slightly to 61.0% in 2000. The sixth ballot finally was the winner for Salvador with 74.9%, earning his spot in the 2010 Hall of Fame class. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1475 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 EBF Hall of Fame (Part 1)
The 2010 European Baseball Federation ballot had a lot of guys on the borderline, but ultimately added three players. 1B Luigi Cuttone had a big bump on his sixth ballot, leading the group at 84.9%. Two others barely got in across the 66% requirement. 1B Peter Brikmann was the best debutant at 68.6% and RF Bernard Martin made it with 67.4% for his sixth try.
![]() Very close but just short was LF Henrique Agnelo at 63.4% on his second ballot and SP Reggie Hobart with 61.9% for his seventh ballot. Also above 50% were pitchers Vincent Cassar at 59.2% on his seventh ballot, Nicholas Friis with 56.2% in his tenth and final try, and Viktor Fredsgaard at 54.1% on his fourth ballot. For Friis, the 56.2% finish was a major surprise considering he dropped as low at 7.3% the prior season. He had a 14-year career with Amsterdam and won three EBF titles with the Anacondas, finishing with a 176-95 record, 3.34 ERA, 2551 innings, 2323 strikeouts, 434 walks, 115 ERA+, and 55.1 WAR. His resume very much reads as “Hall of Pretty Good.” Also dropped after ten ballots was RF Louie Jones, who spent 11 years with Madrid and won two Silver Sluggers and two EBF titles. He had 1819 hits, 981 runs, 269 doubles, 407 home runs, 1225 RBI, a .302/.331/.562 slash, 141 wRC+, and 48.4. Jones played his final five years in AAB after falling off in EBF. He peaked at 32.6% in 2002 and finished at 26.0% as another Hall of Pretty Good guy. ![]() Luigi Cuttone – First Base – Rome Red Wolves – 84.9% Sixth Ballot Luigi Cuttone was a 6’1’’, 200 pound left-handed first baseman from Ferrara, a city of 132,000 inhabitants in northern Italy. On the whole, Cuttone was a solid contact hitter with nice home run power, hitting 30+ homers ten times and 40+ four times. He was very good at avoiding strikeouts, but below average at drawing walks. Cuttone’s gap power was decent with around 25-30 doubles per year. He wasn’t going to leg out extra bases often with subpar speed and horrendously clumsy baserunning. Cuttone was far better hitting against right-handed pitching with a career .966 OPS and 163 wRC+. Versus lefties, he was a merely average .739 OPS and 106 wRC+. Cuttone was a career first baseman and a reliably solid defender, winning a Gold Glove in 1997. He had excellent durability, but fell out of full-time starting roles at times due to struggles against left-handed pitching. Cuttone emerged as one of the better hitting prospects from Italy in the 1984 EBF Draft. With the 13th overall pick, he was selected by Rome, where he played his entire pro career. Cuttone saw limited use in his first three seasons, making only 43 starts over 242 games. The Red Wolves made him a full-time starter in 1988 and he held that role through the 1994 season. Cuttone won Silver Sluggers in 1988, 1990, and 1991 with his lone Gold Glove in 1997. He was never an MVP finalist and rarely a league leader, but he did lead the Southern Conference in RBI in both 1990 and 1994. Cuttone also led in total bases in 1991 and had a career best 8.2 WAR, 177 wRC+, and 1.008 OPS that season. Cuttone wasn’t incredible, but he was steady with 11 seasons worth 4+ WAR. Rome was delightfully average for Cuttone’s tenure, scoring 78.4 wins per season. The Red Wolves made the playoffs in both 1991 and 1994, but were one-and-done both times. Rome gave Cuttone an eight-year, $17,300,000 extension after the 1991 season and he remained a very popular player even as the franchise was mid. Cuttone also had popularity among Italian fans generally for his efforts in the World Baseball Championship from 1987-98. He had 110 games and 103 starts with 118 hits, 52 runs, 18 doubles, 27 home runs, 72 RBI, a .299/.332/.554 slash, 156 wRC+, and 4.5 WAR. By his early 30s, Cuttone started struggling more against lefties. He was used in a platoon role in 1995 and was primarily a backup in 1996 with only 21 starts. Cuttone was a full-time starter in 1997 and started most of 1998 with still respectable numbers. In 1999, he only started 17 games with very average results over 115 games. Cuttone’s contract ended there and he was unsigned in 2000 despite his efforts to find a home. He finally retired that winter at age 38. Cuttone finished with 2041 hits, 1025 runs, 309 doubles, 406 home runs, 1246 RBI, a .320/.355/.573 slash, 154 wRC+, and 61.9 WAR. It was a nice career over a fairly short peak, but he definitely was borderline in totals. First basemen especially are often expected to have more eye-popping stats and awards. Cuttone was a good power hitter, but 400 homers is a small number compared to most of the greats at the position. He was also hurt by Rome being a relatively forgettable squad in his time. Cuttone debuted at 47.9% in 2005 and slowly gained ground. He barely missed in 2008 at 64%, then fell slightly down in 2009 at 60.4%. Cuttone earned a big bump up with a wide open 2010 field with 84.9%, earning a sixth ballot induction to lead EBF’s 2010 Hall of Fame class. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1476 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 EBF Hall of Fame (Part 2)
![]() Peter Brinkmann – First Base – Lisbon Clippers – 68.6% First Ballot Peter Brinkmann was a 6’3’’, 200 pound left-handed first baseman from Kaufungen, Germany; a town of 12,000 in the center of the country. Brinkmann was a tremendous home run hitter that hit 50+ in seven EBF Elite seasons and 40+ in 10 seasons. He was a good contact hitter against right-handed pitching with a .962 OPS and 162 wRC+, while iffy against lefties with a .718 OPS and 106 wRC+. Brinkmann didn’t get many doubles or triples, using with around 10-20 per year. He was merely okay at drawing walks and below average at avoiding strikeouts. Brinkmann was painfully slow and a clumsy baserunner. He was a career first baseman and was mediocre defensively, but not abysmal. Brinkmann had good durability and became very popular between socking dingers and his great leadership. He was a team captain and considered a great man with a tireless work ethic and loyalty. Brinkmann was picked coming out of high school in Germany, as his home run power potential was spotted from a young age. He was picked 20th overall by Vienna in the 1987 EBF Draft. The Vultures kept him in developmental from 1988-90, debuting him in 1991 at age 22. Brinkmann was primarily a pinch hitter in his first two seasons with only 45 starts. He earned the starting job in 1993, posting 51 home runs and a 1.040 OPS to earn his first Silver Slugger. Brinkmann hit 51 homers and led the Southern Conference in 1994, winning another Silver Slugger. With Vienna, he had four seasons with 45+ homers. The Vultures were stuck in the mid-tier during this point with no playoff berths. In six seasons, Brinkmann had 705 hits, 393 runs, 78 doubles, 229 home runs, 501 RBI, a .299/.342/.631 slash, 157 wRC+, and 21.9 WAR. 1997 was Brinkmann’s last year under Vienna’s control. Figuring they wouldn’t keep him, he was traded to Birmingham for two prospects and a draft pick. Brinkmann led the Northern Conference with 54 home runs, but posted a career-worst 129 wRC+ and 3.3 WAR. He struggled in three playoff starts as the Bees went one-and-done in the playoffs. Brinkmann was now a free agent at age 29 heading into 1998. Lisbon saw Brinkmann’s potential and gave him a six-year, $12,720,000 deal. This became his signature run with an incredible debut season with 72 home runs, 130 RBI, 414 total bases, 1.089 OPS, 197 wRC+, and 8.1 WAR. That was only the fourth 70+ homer season in EBF history to that point, falling three short of Mattias Stole’s record of 75 from 1994. Brinkmann won his third Silver Slugger and was second in MVP voting. The Clippers were on a playoff streak when Brinkmann arrived, having won conference titles in 1992, 1995, and 1997. They won the Southwest Division in his debut season, but lost in the first round. The Clippers lost in the conference final in 1999, then missed the playoffs in his remaining seasons as they hovered just above .500. In 1999, Brinkmann topped himself and became EBF’s single season home run king with 76. This remained the EBF Elite record until 2036 and still ranks second all-time. Brinkmann also led in RBI, total bases, slugging, and wRC+ while posting a career-best 8.7 WAR. He won his lone MVP and his fourth Silver Slugger. Brinkmann led again in home runs in 2000 and 2002 with 59 and 55, respectively. 2000 saw a career-best 155 RBI and his fifth Silver Slugger. His towering homers made his very popular in Portugal. Brinkmann was also popular back home in Germany for his work in the World Baseball Championship. From 1992-06, he played in 12 WBCs with 82 games, 64 starts, 76 hits, 53 runs, 29 home runs, 55 RBI, a .304/.375/.684 slash, 201 wRC+, and 4.2 WAR. Brinkmann’s contact ability waned into his mid 30s. He posted a mere 1.8 ERA and 113 wRC+ in 2003, then was benched in 2004. His final season saw only 42 starts in 113 games with a 104 wRC+ and 0.7 WAR. In total with Lisbon, he had 1021 hits, 602 runs, 92 doubles, 356 home runs, 785 RBI, a .290/.324/.623 slash, 155 wRC+, and 32.7 WAR. That marked the end of his EBF Elite career, although he was able to find a home in the newly formed European Second League. Brinkmann went to France at age 36 on a three-year, $9,600,000 deal with Lyon. The lower competition gave him more life, hitting 57 homers in 2005 and 44 in 2006. With the Lords, he had 14.9 WAR and 150 wRC+ over three years with a .249/.327/.502 slash. Brinkmann hoped to get back to the top tier, but couldn’t. Livv signed him for 2008, but he struggled to a .187 average over 106 games and 32 starts. Brinkmann retired after the 2008 season at age 40. He had 15.7 WAR and a .816 OPS over four seasons in the Second League. In his EBF Elite career, Brinkmann had 1875 hits, 1077 runs, 184 doubles, 639 home runs, 1398 RBI, a .289/.327/.618 slash, 153 wRC+, and 57.9 WAR. As of 2037, he’s still 15th all-time in home runs and 31st in slugging among all batters with 3000 plate appearances. Outside of dingers though, Brinkmann’s totals were on the low end and he lacked playoff accolades. Crushing homers goes a long way though, especially when you become the single-season home run king. Brinkmann barely crossed the 66% line with 68.6%, but he got enough to earn a first ballot addition to join the 2010 EBF Hall of Fame class. ![]() Bernard Martin – Right Field – Brussels Beavers – 67.4% Sixth Ballot Bernard Martin was a 6’2’’, 200 pound switch-hitting right fielder from Brebieres, France; a commune of 5,000 people near the northern border. Martin had a strong bat, hitting 30+ home runs in 13 seasons and 40+ in five seasons. He was respectable at finding the gap with around 25 doubles per season. Martin was good at drawing walks, but he was merely an above average contact hitter with a subpar strikeout rate. He was also firmly below average on the basepaths with unimpressive speed. Martin played exclusively in right field and was known for having an absolute cannon of an arm. However, his range and glove work were both mediocre, leading to a poor grade for his career. Martin stayed fairly durable, playing 120+ games in all but his rookie season. He was outspoken, but in a less abrasive way than most who get that label. Some could argue it contributed to his popularity during his run. Despite growing up in a small area, Martin’s potential was noticed by scouts even in high school. He was picked 17th overall in the 1980 EBF Draft by Brussels. He didn’t play in 1981 or 1982, debuting in 1983 at age 22. He only saw 61 games and 18 starts that first year with iffy results. Martin was a full-time starter in 1984 and emerged as a good starter by 1985. Martin wasn’t a league leader, but he had six seasons worth 4+ WAR for Brussels. His strong effort came in 1987 with 7.8 WAR, a 1.028 OPS, 47 home runs, and 124 RBI; all career highs. Martin shared a position and conference with Sean Houston, meaning he never won a Silver Slugger in his best years as Houston won 11 straight from 1982-92. The Beavers were content with the results, giving Martin a three-year, $3,680,000 extension after the 1988 season. Brussels wasn’t great for most of the 1980s, but found some competitiveness to start the 1990s. The Beavers earned playoff spots in 1990 with a one-and-done and 1991 with a conference finals defeat to Amsterdam. These would be Martin’s only playoff appearances. He stunk over 14 starts with a .125/.276/.250 slash. 1991 was also Martin’s weakest season with Brussels since his first full year in 1984. The Beavers were worried Martin peaked and didn’t re-sign him after the 1991 campaign, making him a first time free agent entering his age 31 season. With Brussels, Martin had 1264 hits, 726 runs, 209 doubles, 288 home runs, 787 RBI, a .285/.359/.541 slash, 150 wRC+, and 39.1 WAR. At this point, Martin wanted to return home to his native France. He had come home for the World Baseball Championship starting in 1987, playing through 1999 for the French team. In 95 games and 81 starts, Martin had 58 hits, 49 runs, 9 doubles, 26 home runs, 51 RBI, a .194/.294/.485 slash, 128 wRC+, and 2.3 WAR. Martin couldn’t find a long-term deal, but inked a one year, $1,380,000 contract in 1992 for Paris. He earned an all-star game appearance with a 4.6 WAR effort in his one season for the Poodles. That effort made Marseille interested when he circled back to free agency. The Musketeers gave Martin a six-year, $10,620,000 contract. He held down the starting gig during a down period for Marseille, who averaged 76.8 wins per season in his tenure. Martin topped 4+ WAR thrice and led the Southern Conference in 1994 with 68 walks. He also had a nice 46 home run effort in the 1995 season. In total, Martin had 871 hits, 520 runs, 122 doubles, 219 home runs, 547 RBI, a .268/.339/.520 slash, 134 wRC+, and 23.1 WAR. Martin’s last year was his weakest with a career worst .235 batting average, although he still had 31 homers. A free agent again at age 38, he signed in 1999 with Munich. Martin fared a bit better in a part-time role with 1.8 WAR and a 134 wRC+ over 124 games and 53 starts. He was unsigned in 2000 and retired that winter at age 39. Martin finished with 2365 hits, 1376 runs, 365 doubles, 560 home runs, 1475 RBI, 935 walks, a .278/.351/.531 slash, 143 wRC+, and 68.6 WAR. He was the 17th to reach 500 home runs, but his stats otherwise were very borderline when compared to other EBF Hall of Famers. Martin wasn’t a league leader, lacked awards, and lacked team success. The resume on the surface reads to many as a “Hall of Good” guy. Martin debuted at 52.8% in 2005 and fluctuated for five years, getting as close at 63.5% in 2009. 2010 had no “can’t miss” debuts, leaving an opening for Martin to just cross the 66% requirement. He did just that at 67.4% to earn a sixth ballot induction. Martin is probably one of the weakest additions in EBF’s Hall, but the man has his plaque regardless and won’t be shy in telling you about it. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1477 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 EPB Hall of Fame
In back-to-back years and for the third time in four years, Eurasian Professional Baseball didn’t add any players into its Hall of Fame. The closest to the 66% requirement was 3B Igor Urban with 60.0% in his third ballot. SP Temuujin Munkhuu grabbed 57.9% on his third try with fellow pitchers Wojciech Grzybek taking 57.5% on his second go and Mikhail Kripak at 56.1% on his fifth ballot. The best debut was closer Nijat Arzhanov at 55.8%.
![]() Falling off the ballot after ten failed tries was pitcher Vavrik Kvocera, who had a 16 year career between EPB and MLB. Baku was his primary team with a EPB career of a 2.46 ERA, 160-132 record, 2895 innings, 3107 strikeouts, 540 walks, 157 complete games, 117 ERA+, and 64.4 WAR. Kvocera had no major awards or black ink and was mostly stuck on forgettable teams. He got as high as 45.4% on his second ballot, but generally stayed in the teens with a finish at 15.4%. A firm “Hall of Pretty Good” type player. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1478 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 OBA Hall of Fame
Pitcher Owen Killion was the lone addition for the Oceania Baseball Association Hall of Fame in 2010 with a debut at 77.7%. Closer Garnet Wallace was the closest to joining him, but fell shy of the 66% requirement with a 61.2% for his seventh ballot. That was Wallace’s best performance to date. SP Kurt Sanders was the other player above 50% with 54.1% on his sixth ballot.
![]() 1B Netani Mohammed was dropped after ten failed ballots. The Fijian lefty had a 17 year career almost entirely with Port Moresby, winning two Silver Sluggers and four Gold Gloves. He had 1868 hits, 1192 runs, 233 doubles, 466 home runs, 1096 RBI, 1081 walks, a .222/.313/.436 slash, 137 wRC+, and 66.8 WAR. Mohammed is one of a select few with 1000+ walks, but his low batting average and high strikeout rate hurt him. He also had good power, but not outstanding power expected at first base. Mohammed peaked at 35.0% in 2002 and finished with a mere 11.6%. ![]() Owen Killion – Starting Pitcher – Brisbane Black Bears – 77.7% First Ballot Owen Killion was a 6’0’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Melbourne, Australia. He had dynamic stuff with solid control and above average movement. Killion only had 93-95 mph peak velocity, but his cutter was a tough one to crack. He also had a screwball, curveball, and circle change in the arsenal. Killion’s stamina was merely average compared to most OBA aces, but he generally stayed healthy. He was hard working and loyal, known as a quiet and humble guy that kept his head down. Killion wasn’t a highly touted prospect, picked late in the second round of the 1991 OBA Draft. With the 33rd overall pick, he was grabbed by Brisbane. The Black Bears didn’t use him in 1992, then made him a part-time starter with iffy results in 1993. Killion earned a full-time role for the following six seasons and led the Australasia League five times in quality starts. Killion had five seasons worth 6.5+ WAR and topped 8+ each year from 1997-99. He was third in 1996 and 1997’s Pitcher of the Year voting. The 1996 effort earned a four-year, $4,880,000 contract extension signed that spring. In 1998, Killion led the AL with a career best 379 strikeouts and led with 8.0 WAR, winning his lone Pitcher of the Year. Killion was arguably better in 1999 with a career best 2.13 ERA and AL best 370 strikeouts. He also tossed seven shutouts, including a no-hitter on May 20 with 11 Ks and 1 walk against Gold Coast. Killion ended up second in POTY voting, his final time as a finalist. Despite his efforts, Brisbane didn’t post a winning season during his entire tenure, peaking with a .500 mark in 1999. In total for Brisbane, Killion had a 118-96 record, 2.64 ERA, 2042 innings, 2216 strikeouts, 345 walks, 203/257 quality starts, a 120 ERA+, and 45.5 WAR. He also played from 1995-01 for Australia in the World Baseball Championship, posting a 3.83 ERA in 49.1 innings with 72 strikeouts, 15 walks, a 96 ERA+, and 1.1 WAR. Killion was entering the final year of his deal at age 31 in 2000. Brisbane opted to get some trade value, switching him to Port Moresby for C Hashim Muhamad and SP Gene Amezquita. The Mud Hens wanted Killion long-term and before playing a game, gave him a six-year, $14,400,000 extension. Killion had a great debut season in Papua New Guinea with a career best 9.5 WAR and 56 FIP-. 2001 was strong as well with 8.0 WAR, following by a good 2002 at 5.7 WAR. Killion regressed in 2003 with a career worst 4.35 ERA and missed the final part of the season to shoulder inflammation. Port Moresby fell towards the bottom of the standings for much of the decade. In 2004, Killion looked cooked with a mediocre 1.2 WAR over 248 innings, a career worst along with a new low of 117 strikeouts. He opted to retire after that effort at age 35. With Port Moresby, Killion had a 69-65 record, 3.27 ERA, 1290.2 innings, 1175 strikeouts, 233 walks, 111 ERA+, and 26.5 WAR. The final stats saw a 187-161 record, 2.89 ERA, 3332.2 innings, 3391 strikeouts, 578 walks, 312/425 quality starts, 116 ERA+, 83 FIP-, and 72.0 WAR. Killion wasn’t overly flashy and had a strong WAR despite relatively fewer innings than many other all-time aces. As of 2037, he ranked 32nd in pitching WAR. Some detractors thought his resume was more borderline, but you could definitely find other inductees with softer credentials. Enough were convinced that Killion had the goods. He debuted on the quiet 2010 Oceania Hall of Fame ballot at 77.7%, making him the lone inductee. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1479 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 APB Hall of Fame (Part 1)
Austronesia Professional Baseball added three players into the Hall of Fame from the 2010 voting. Two were easy first ballot adds with pitcher Wisnu Mahmudiana at 98.9% and fellow pitching Ninoy Lumar at 88.3%. OF Eli Cheng narrowly joined them on his second ballot, breaching the 66% requirement with 67.0%. Closer Chang-Heng Chang was the only other guy above 50%, taking 56.8% on his second try.
![]() SP Carson Lim fell off the ballot after ten failed tries. He had a 14-year career and won a Pitcher of the Year in 1985 with Quezon and won in 1991 for Semarang. He had a 155-121 record, 2.46 ERA, 2346 strikeouts, 419 walks, 113 ERA+, and 60.5 WAR. Multiple injuries kept Lim from having greater tallies and his production could be hit or miss. Even the pitcher-centric APB voters though he lacked the accumulations, giving him only 11.0% on his final ballot. Lim peaked at 45.7% in 2004. ![]() Wisnu “Roach” Mahmudiana – Starting Pitcher – Batam Blue Raiders – 98.9% First Ballot Wisnu Mahmudiana was a 6’1’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Ponorogo, Indonesia; a regency in the East Java Province with around 950,000 people total. Mahmudiana had incredible stuff with excellent movement and very good control. His stellar fastball regularly was in the 97-99 mph range and was mixed with a strong curveball and changeup offering Mahmudiana’s stamina was very average relative to other PAB aces, but he generally stayed healthy. He posted 200+ innings in all but his final season. Mahmudiana was an incredibly intelligent pitcher who knew how to perfectly pick his spots. He was also adaptable and loyal, becoming one of the most dominant forces of his era. Mahmudiana ended up becoming a beloved superstar of Indonesian baseball. His excellence was noticed as he rose through the amateur ranks. By the time Mahmudiana was eligible for the 1989 APB Draft, most scouts ranked him as the top overall prospect. Batam agreed, picking him with the #1 overall pick. Mahmudiana spent his entire career with the Blue Raiders and had a full load immediately as a rookie with 208.2 innings. Despite winning Rookie of the Month four times, he was second in Rookie of the Year voting. He helped Batam go from an atrocious 56-106 in 1989 to a Malacca League title in 1990. The Blue Raiders would earn eight playoff appearances in the 1990s. By his second season, Mahmudiana was already a bonafide ace, tossing his first of 12 seasons worth 8+ WAR. He was third in 1991’s Pitcher of the Year voting. Mahmudiana also became a national superstar pitching for Indonesia from 1992-2003 in the World Baseball Championship. He tossed 220 innings with a 15-9 record, 2.29 ERA, 321 strikeouts, 61 walks, a 159 ERA+, 61 FIP-, and 7.9 WAR. In 1999, he posted a 0.96 ERA over 37.1 innings with 45 strikeouts as the Indonesians defeated Nigeria for their first-ever world title. Indonesia also was the runner-up in 1997 and 2000 and a semifinalist in 1993. As of 2037, Mahmudiana leads all Indonesian pitchers in WBC history in WAR and sits second in strikeouts. His local dominance was unmatched, winning five consecutive Pitcher of the Year awards from 1993-97. He took second in 1992, 1998, 1999, and 2000. 1997 also saw a Sundaland Association MVP win with second place MVP finishes in both 1992 and 1993. Mahmudiana led in wins thrice, ERA four times, strikeouts four times, WHIP five times, K/BB thrice, quality starts twice, FIP- five times, and WAR six times. Mahmudiana had four seasons worth 13+ WAR, peaking with 14.0 in 1995. That was his finest season in the minds of many, winning a Triple Crown with a 22-5 record, 0.91 ERA, and 406 strikeouts. The ERA mark was the second-lowest in APB history to that point for a qualifying pitcher and still ranks fifth as of 2037. That season saw a 0.55 WHIP, which set a new world record in any league over 162+ innings. Mahmudiana’s mark would get passed thrice in APB but held until 2014. He also set APB records in H/9 (4.08), triple slash (.136/.162/.202), and OPS (.364) that each held as all-time marks until Ching-Chen Yao’s historic 2014. Mahmudiana also crossed 400+ strikeouts thrice with a high of 441 in 1996. Mahmudiana would throw four no-hitters and two perfect games in this stretch. In 1994, he was perfect on August 14 with 16 strikeouts against Depok. Mahmudiana had two no-nos in 1996 with a 16 K, 1 BB effort on August 1 versus Singapore and a 12 K, 2 BB game on September 8 over Depok. The second perfecto had 18 Ks on September 23, 2001 versus the Demons. Mahmudiana also had 45 consecutive scoreless innings from 8/9/99 to 9/11/99. Perhaps most impressive was his playoff stats, posting a better postseason ERA than his regular season one. In 132.2 innings, Mahmudiana had a 1.49 ERA, 11-6 record, 173 strikeouts, 18 walks, 6 complete games, 170 ERA+, 57 FIP-, and 4.9 WAR. Batam went 3-5 in their Sundaland Association Championship appearances, winning pennants in 1991, 1997, and 1998. Mahmudiana was especially dominant with a 4-0 record and 0.79 ERA in 34 innings in 1991 and 25 scoreless innings and a 3-0 record in 1997. In 1998, the Blue Raiders won it all, defeating Quezon in the Austronesia Championship. They fell to Cebu in 1991 and Taoyuan in 1997. Batam locked Mahmudiana down on a seven-year, $8,190,000 extension after the 1993 season. He received another five years and $19,600,000 after the 1999 campaign. The Blue Raiders’ time in the spotlight ended as the new millennium dawned. They went 83-79 in 2000, then posted seven straight losing seasons after that. Mahmudiana was still looking strong into his mid 30s and climbing up the leaderboards. Trouble arose in August 2002 with a partially torn labrum ending his season. That hurt his velocity significantly with 2003 seeing 94-96 mph peaks compared to his previous 97-99 mph marks. Mahmudiana looked merely average for the first time since his rookie year. The decline worsened in 2004 and Mahmudiana was reduced to an opener role, only seeing 85.2 innings with 0.4 WAR. He retired that winter at age 38 and didn’t quite get to record chase as much as fans hoped. Mahmudiana’s #2 uniform would be immediately retired in front of a packed house. He stayed a prominent icon of Indonesian baseball for years after. Mahmudiana finished with a 227-110 record, 1.63 ERA, 3452 innings, 4879 strikeouts, 344/424 quality starts, 130 complete games, 55 shutouts, 158 ERA+, 43 FIP-, and 143.3 WAR. He has the fifth best ERA among Hall of Fame starters and as of 2037, still ranks 11th among all APB pitchers with 1000+ innings. His 0.76 WHIP ranks sixth best and his .480 opponent OPS is seventh still in 2037. Mahmudiana finished just below Hadi Ningsih (144.5) for the WARlord title and ranks third in 2037. He’s 15th in wins and ninth all-time in strikeouts. Mahmudiana also in 2037 is one of only five APB pitchers to win Pitcher of the Year five or more times. When you add in his playoff dominance and WBC outings, Mahmudiana emerges as one of the strongest pitchers in the world during his 1990s prime. He certainly deserves consideration when discussing the inner circle pitchers in APB history. Mahmudiana was an obvious headliner for the 2010 Hall of Fame class, leading the way at 98.9%. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#1480 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2,616
|
2010 APB Hall of Fame (Part 2)
![]() Ninoy “Scoops” Lumar – Starting Pitcher – Cebu Crows – 88.3% First Ballot Ninoy Lumar was a 6’6’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Calumpit, a municipality of just under 120,000 people in the Central Luzon part of the Philippines. The nickname “Scoops” came from his tendency to grab extra scoops of ice cream after games. He was a scrappy sparkplug type with a tireless work ethic, which served him over a brief but excellent career. Lumar had fantastic stuff with very good movement and control. He had a stellar 97-99 mph fastball and a deadly slider as his top pitches, but his curveball and changeup were also plenty effective. Lumar had outstanding stamina in his prime and always wanted to go deep into games, leading the league five times in complete games and twice in innings pitched. However, that likely exacerbated his later rotator cuff troubles. Lumar quickly emerged as one of the premiere prospects out of the Philippines for the 1993 APB Draft. He was taken second overall by Cebu and pitched 172 in his rookie year with okay results. Lumar was a full-time starter after and tossed 270+ innings in six of the next eight seasons. He lost part of 1996 to a strained oblique. Cebu had won three pennants and an APB title from 1990-92, but stunk in 1993 to earn the #2 pick for Lumar. They made the playoffs in 1996, but he missed it due to a finger blister. Sadly, Lumar never got to pitch in the playoffs in his career. The Crows bounced between mediocre and mid for the remaining years of Lumar’s tenure. He even led the Taiwan-Philippine Association with 20 losses in 1997 despite posting 7.5 WAR. Lumar earned national notoriety starting in 1996, playing for his country through 2004 in the World Baseball Championship. He was excellent on the world stage with a 1.77 ERA over 122.1 innings, 5-4 record, 159 strikeouts, 31 walks, 204 ERA+, and 4.7 WAR. Lumar tossed 29.2 scoreless innings over his first two WBCs. In 1998, Lumar was second in Pitcher of the Year voting. He then won the award three consecutive seasons from 1999-01, leading each season in WAR, WHIP, K/BB, and complete games. He also led twice in wins, strikeouts, innings pitched, and shutouts during that stretch. 2001 was the strongest by many measures with career bests in Ks (415), WHIP (0.73), WAR (11.6), FIP- (51), and shutouts (10). In April 1998, Cebu gave Lumar a seven-year, $14,740,000 extension and had been very pleased with the individual results, although still frustrated by the lack of team success. Lumar also wanted to win and had been considering using his opt out after his 2002 campaign. The math changed after it was a poor season with a mere 2.6 WAR and 101 ERA+. Even worse, Lumar’s year ended with a torn rotator cuff on September 1, putting his entire career future in doubt. Surprising many especially after a big injury, he opted for free agency at age 32. With Cebu, Lumar had a 136-114 record, 2.13 ERA, 2350 innings, 2892 strikeouts, 416 walks, 176 complete games, 47 shutouts, 127 ERA+, and 63.1 WAR. The Crows would later retire his #58 uniform. Quezon signed Lumar to a four-year, $24,600,000 deal with hopes of recapturing the magic. They did briefly in 2003, as he posted a TPA and career-best 1.59 ERA and finished third in Pitcher of the Year voting. Forearm inflammation limited him to only 187.1 innings though, but he was still excellent in the short burst. In 2004, Lumar looked awful to start the season, posting a terrible 3.90 ERA, 72 ERA+, and 0.7 WAR over 101.2 innings. Forearm inflammation in late May knocked him out for most of the summer. Lumar hoped to bounce back in 2005, but tore his rotator cuff for a second time in spring training. Doctors told him that was it and he officially retired that winter at age 35. With Quezon, he had 7.0 WAR in 289 innings with a 2.40 ERA and 303 strikeouts. Lumar finished his career with a 154-129 record, 2.16 ERA, 2639 innings, 3195 strikeouts, 468 walks, 235/322 quality starts, 185 complete games, 126 ERA+, 73 FIP-, and 70.1 WAR. Lumar didn’t have the longevity to factor into a prominent leaderboard spot, but his rate stats certainly compared favorably to other APB Hall of Famers. Even though he never saw team success, three Pitcher of the Year awards are hard to argue against. Lumar received 88.3% for a first ballot induction with APB’s three-player 2010 class. ![]() Eli Cheng – Outfield/Designated Hitter – Taipei Tigercats – 67.0% Second Ballot Eli Cheng was a 6’3’’, 190 pound left-handed outfielder from Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Cheng was an impressive slugger with an excellent eye for working counts and drawing walks. He was also an above average contact hitter with a respectable strikeout rate. Cheng hit 41 home runs per his 162 game average, which was especially impressive in the low offense world of APB. His gap power was respectable also with 25 doubles per 162. Cheng was good both ways, but notably stronger against righties (166 wRC+, .920) compared to lefties (123 wRC+, .741). He was a very smart and crafty baserunner, but was still limited by very lackluster speed. This also made it tough to find Cheng a home defensively, as his range was atrocious. About 1/3 of his starts were in right field with around a ¼ in left field and a small bit at first base. He was a putrid defender at any spot, although RF was marginally his best. Cheng also started about 1/3 of the time as a designated hitter, which was his most effective role. His durability was respectable and he could mash, meaning Cheng was going to find a spot in spite of his deficiencies. His towering homers made him a beloved superstar for Taiwanese baseball fans. Cheng was a stud at Gubao High School in Taipei and quickly drew scouting attention from each of the Taiwanese teams. Taipei thought it was worth snagging him early, even if it would be a few years before he’d play. Cheng was picked 6th overall in the 1980 APB Draft and largely sat in developmental from 1981-83. He did debut in 1982 at age 20 but only saw 20 plate appearances and two starts. In 1984, Cheng was promoted to a full-time spot. In his rookie season, Cheng was the starting designated hitter and led the Taiwan-Philippine Association with 38 doubles, earning 1984 Rookie of the Year honors. He moved to right field in 1985 and won his first Silver Slugger, leading the TPA in slugging, OPS, and wRC+. This also earned Cheng a second place finish in MVP voting. He won another Slugger in 1986 and took home his first MVP. Cheng’s MVP season was a Triple Crown effort with a .305 average, 44 home runs, and 102 RBI. He also led in runs, walks, total bases, triple slash, OPS, wRC+, and WAR. Taipei was still stuck in the middle tier that year despite his efforts. The team improved to 96 wins in 1987, but still saw its playoff drought extend to 17 seasons. Cheng regressed a bit that year, hampered by a torn hamstring in the spring. 1988 had Cheng’s third Silver Slugger and a third place in MVP voting despite losing six weeks to a fractured wrist. Still, Taipei ended their playoff drought and Cheng was a force in the playoffs. In 11 starts, he had 11 hits, 7 runs, 2 homers, and 4 RBI, leading the Tigercats to an APB Championship win over Semarang. Cheng was the finals MVP and cemented his spot as an all-time fave for Taipei fans. The Tigercats won another TPA pennant in 1989, but lost the final to Medan. Cheng won his second MVP and a fourth Silver Slugger (his first as a DH), posting a second Triple Crown season with a .301 average, 51 home runs, and 108 RBI. Cheng also had a career best 10.0 WAR and led again in runs, walks, total bases, triple slash, OPS, and wRC. Taipei wanted to sign him long-term, but could only get Cheng to agree to a two-year, $3,000,000 extension in spring 1990. 1990 was a fifth Silver Slugger back in right and a third place in MVP voting. Taipei won the Taiwan League in both 1990 and 1991, but lost both years to Cebu in the Association final. For his playoff career with Taipei, Cheng had 35 starts, 27 hits, 13 runs, 4 doubles, 4 homers, 9 RBI, and 16 walks with a .214/.317/.373 slash. Outside of the 1988 run, Cheng’s playoff performances weren’t good. He also made 62 starts from 1985-90 for Taiwan in the World Baseball Championship. Cheng was strong on the world stage, posting a .287/.453/.802 slash, 5.2 WAR, 58 hits, 47 runs, 6 doubles, 32 home runs 55 RBI, 56 walks, and 227 wRC+. 1991 was his third and final MVP and his sixth Silver Slugger, now playing at first base. Cheng led in homers, RBI, total bases, and runs for the third time. With that, his Taipei run ended with 1149 hits, 650 runs, 182 doubles, 313 home runs, 693 RBI, 549 walks, a .278/.365/.558 slash, 180 wRC+, and 54.7 WAR. Although a relatively brief run, the Tigercats later retired Cheng’s #29 uniform. He was a free agent for the first time at age 30 and received looks from around the world. He left his home country for nine years and ended up in Sin City. Cheng signed a seven-year, $16,960,000 deal with Major League Baseball’s Las Vegas Vipers. Cheng lost six weeks of his debut season to a strained oblique. He was healthy in 1993 in easily his finest MLB season, leading the American Association in runs (121), home runs (54), and slugging (.627). These were all career highs, as was his 123 RBI and 1.020 OPS. Cheng earned a Silver Slugger in left field and a second place finish in MVP voting. He won a second Slugger in 1995, but wasn’t a league leader for the rest of his run. A fractured ankle cost Cheng three months in 1996 and he was never quite the same player with Las Vegas. He was a starter for two more years, but saw his power numbers noticeably dip. The Vipers made the playoffs in 1992 and 1995 with first round exits, then lost in the 1997 AACS to Los Angeles. Cheng stunk in the playoffs with an atrocious .070/.130/.093 slash in 12 starts. For his Las Vegas run as a whole, he was a great player. Cheng had 890 hits, 561 runs, 132 doubles, 231 home runs, 638 RBI, 462 walks, a .272/.368/.528 slash, 141 wRC+, and 27.3 WAR. He was a free agent again after the 1998 season at age 37. Seattle was interested and gave Cheng two years and $8,880,000. He was an okay starter in 1999 and missed part of the season to a sprained ankle. A week into the 2000 season, Cheng’s MLB tenure effectively ended from a torn PCL. With Seattle, he had 129 games, 118 hits, 74 runs, 19 homers, 72 RBI, 72 walks, a .260/.367/.458 slash, 118 wRC+, and 2.3 WAR. For his entire MLB tenure, Cheng had 1008 hits, 635 runs, 161 doubles, 250 home runs, 710 RBI, 534 walks, a .2771/.368/.520 slash, 138 wRC+, and 29.3 WAR. Cheng returned home to Taiwan and hoped he could still recapture some of that magic at age 39. He was still extremely popular and both fans and teams remembered the good ol’ days. Tainan gave Cheng a one-year, $2,640,000 deal and he delivered a Silver Slugger as a DH. It was his ninth for his pro career and seventh in APB. He left in 2002 for Taoyuan and had a respectable effort with 3.3 WAR for them. It was a two-year, $4,560,000 deal with the Tsunami, but they traded him in the offseason to Davao. Cheng’s one year for the Devil Rays was lousy with a 99 wRC+ and 0.4 WAR over 141 games. He decided to retire with that at age 41. For his full pro career, Cheng had 2680 games, 2469 hits, 1476 runs, 395 doubles, 646 home runs, 1611 RBI, 1267 walks, a .264/.356/.519 slash, 155 wRC+, and 92.3 WAR. Combined, that is a pretty rock solid Hall of Fame case. But his APB accumulations were lower since he had only eight great years with Taipei, plus his decent final three years in his return. In APB, Cheng had 1461 hits, 841 runs, 234 doubles, 396 home runs, 901 RBI, 733 walks, a .259/.347/.519 slash, 167 wRC+, and 62.8 WAR. As of 2037, no APB Hall of Fame hitter would get in with fewer hits or WAR, but his OPS would rank seventh among HOF members. The rate stats were excellent, but some voters couldn’t get over the short tenure. APB voters were also notoriously tough on batters and some downed Cheng for his weaker playoff runs. Still, he had a great run to the 1988 title for Taipei, won three MVPs, and two Triple Crowns. Cheng would miss the cut in his debut, barely falling short of the 66% requirement at 64.1%. He only got a slight bump to 67.0% in 2010, but that was enough for the second ballot induction. Cheng rounded out a very impressive 2010 APB Hall of Fame class. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Bookmarks |
|
|