From the desks of:
FINGERPRINTS OF DEM BUMS and HEAD-BUTTING MR. MET
THE QUIET MAN
According to baseballhall.org, the BBWAA Rules for Election, Article Five reads:
Voting shall be based upon player's record, playing ability, integrity, sportsmanship, character, and contributions to the team(s) on which the player played.
Based on their own criteria, it is unfathomable how Gil Hodges is continually denied enshrinement into baseball's Hall of Fame. The highest percentage of votes he ever received by the BBWAA was 63.4% in 1983, his final year on the writer's ballot. However, the former Veterans Committee, in my opinion, was far more negligent in their refusal to pass him through than writers who perhaps did not cover his playing career (and yes, I'm kind about it).
My own personal criteria for election into Baseball's Hall of Fame includes being among the dominant players at both their respective position and the game as a whole for at least a ten-year portion of a player's career.
By all accounts, Gil Hodges qualifies as a Hall of Famer. I'm not breaking new ground. His record reads as such: Baseball-Reference.com
There are 25 first basemen enshrined at Cooperstown; Hodges ranks 11th among them with 370 home runs. For twelve seasons spanning 1948-1959, Hodges led all first basemen in home runs, RBI, extra-base hits, and OPS. For the decade of the 1950s, he ranked second overall in the National League in home runs and RBI. From 1949 through 1959, Hodges slashed .280/.367/.507, while averaging 30 home runs and 101 RBI per season. He exceeded 20 home runs in eleven consecutive seasons, hit at least 30 home runs six times, and hit forty or more home runs twice. He exceeded 100 RBI in seven straight seasons. Upon his retirement, Gil Hodges ranked 11th on the all-time home run list and third among right-hand batters. Moreover, he helped the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers win seven National League pennants and two World Series championships. Gil triumphantly delivered Brooklyn's only two runs in Game Seven of the 1955 World Series against the Yankees. Starting with 1957, he won baseball's first three newly minted Golden Glove Awards for defensive excellence at first base.
His career with the Dodgers, which began in 1943, ended after the 1961 season. In 1962 Gil returned to the city, which still adored him unconditionally. He played 54 games for the expansion New York Metropolitan baseball club and then retired in 1963 after just 11 games. Five years later, he would become their manager. In his second season, the New York Mets would become World Series champions.
- His four-year record managing the Mets: 339-309 (.523)
Gil suffered a heart attack shortly before the start of the 1972 season, and on April 2, passed away at 47-years of age. He rests peacefully at Holy Cross Cemetery in Brooklyn.
The Hall of Fame's Golden Era Committee reconvenes in 2020. When they do, this epic injustice must finally be corrected.
Hall of Fame, now..!
October 16, 2021
GIL HODGES and the HALL of FAME
with segments featuring
All-Time New York Met Ed Kranepool
and yours truly.
Absolutely YES. He should have been in years ago. At the time of his retirement, he had the most home runs by a Right Handed hitter. It is a shame he is not in. The Baseball Hall of Fame is not complete without Gil Hodges
ReplyDeleteHis record is undeniable. One is left to think something more is at play.
Delete