http://www.sacbee.com/100/story/104977.html
Keep him out based on stats, not steroids
Mark McGwire had too many mediocre seasons in his prime to be Hall worthy.
By Nick Peters - Bee Staff Writer
Published 12:00 am PST Tuesday, January 9, 2007
The ballots are in, and we'll know this morning whether Cal Ripken and/or Tony Gwynn have become the first players to earn unanimous induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
We'll also learn if Mark McGwire sneaks in as the first candidate under steroids suspicion to join the elite at Cooperstown. According to preliminary polls, he won't make it, and performance enhancement will be the excuse.
It shouldn't be. This observer's ballot did not include "Big Mac," but for other reasons that might elude the adoring fans who watched him blast 135 home runs and amass 294 RBIs for St. Louis in 1998 and '99 as the poster boy of baseball's renaissance.
No, I also remember some awful years with the A's shortly after the far less bulky first baseman set a major-league rookie record with 49 home runs for Oakland in 1987. He certainly wasn't a Hall of Famer when he was traded in 1997.
McGwire revived his career with 52 home runs and a career- high .312 average in 1996, yet too many mediocre seasons preceded it. In a three-year period (1989 to '91) his batting averages were .231, .235 and .201.
For his 16-year career, McGwire had merely 1,626 hits, or 101.6 per year. Granted, he finished with 583 home runs, but 345 of them were walloped in a seven-season span (1995 to 2001) when he allegedly had a power boost.
Before steroid accusations became the vogue, this Hall of Fame voter faced a similar dilemma with Harmon Killebrew. His lifetime batting average was lower than McGwire's (.256 to .263), and he had merely 2,086 hits in 22 years.
I felt he wasn't worthy, but he got in on the strength of 573 home runs, a total that carried more weight a generation ago than McGwire's numbers do now. Plus, Killebrew was more consistent, with eight 40-homer seasons and six home run titles.
McGwire had six 40-homer seasons and four titles. Moreover, Killebrew enjoyed nine seasons with more than 100 RBIs. McGwire had seven, fewer than Jeff Kent. And, of course, "Killer" has the benefit of the doubt about doing it without chemical aid.
Moreover, McGwire no doubt damaged his chances with an ill-advised, lame appearance before Congress, when he declared, "I'm not here to talk about my past" when asked about steroid use.
Then again, some players are supportive. When former Cardinal Bruce Sutter was inducted last summer, he endorsed Mc- Gwire's candidacy and made his point by telling reporters: "Mark doesn't have to prove he is innocent; someone else has to prove he is guilty."
About the writer: The Bee's Nick Peters can be reached at npeters@ sacbee.com.
Keep him out based on stats, not steroids
Mark McGwire had too many mediocre seasons in his prime to be Hall worthy.
By Nick Peters - Bee Staff Writer
Published 12:00 am PST Tuesday, January 9, 2007
The ballots are in, and we'll know this morning whether Cal Ripken and/or Tony Gwynn have become the first players to earn unanimous induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
We'll also learn if Mark McGwire sneaks in as the first candidate under steroids suspicion to join the elite at Cooperstown. According to preliminary polls, he won't make it, and performance enhancement will be the excuse.
It shouldn't be. This observer's ballot did not include "Big Mac," but for other reasons that might elude the adoring fans who watched him blast 135 home runs and amass 294 RBIs for St. Louis in 1998 and '99 as the poster boy of baseball's renaissance.
No, I also remember some awful years with the A's shortly after the far less bulky first baseman set a major-league rookie record with 49 home runs for Oakland in 1987. He certainly wasn't a Hall of Famer when he was traded in 1997.
McGwire revived his career with 52 home runs and a career- high .312 average in 1996, yet too many mediocre seasons preceded it. In a three-year period (1989 to '91) his batting averages were .231, .235 and .201.
For his 16-year career, McGwire had merely 1,626 hits, or 101.6 per year. Granted, he finished with 583 home runs, but 345 of them were walloped in a seven-season span (1995 to 2001) when he allegedly had a power boost.
Before steroid accusations became the vogue, this Hall of Fame voter faced a similar dilemma with Harmon Killebrew. His lifetime batting average was lower than McGwire's (.256 to .263), and he had merely 2,086 hits in 22 years.
I felt he wasn't worthy, but he got in on the strength of 573 home runs, a total that carried more weight a generation ago than McGwire's numbers do now. Plus, Killebrew was more consistent, with eight 40-homer seasons and six home run titles.
McGwire had six 40-homer seasons and four titles. Moreover, Killebrew enjoyed nine seasons with more than 100 RBIs. McGwire had seven, fewer than Jeff Kent. And, of course, "Killer" has the benefit of the doubt about doing it without chemical aid.
Moreover, McGwire no doubt damaged his chances with an ill-advised, lame appearance before Congress, when he declared, "I'm not here to talk about my past" when asked about steroid use.
Then again, some players are supportive. When former Cardinal Bruce Sutter was inducted last summer, he endorsed Mc- Gwire's candidacy and made his point by telling reporters: "Mark doesn't have to prove he is innocent; someone else has to prove he is guilty."
About the writer: The Bee's Nick Peters can be reached at npeters@ sacbee.com.