View Full Version : BBF VC Progressive HoF Election: 1920 Discussion
DoubleX
09-15-2008, 09:25 AM
Time seems right to get this going. First the rules and format:
Members and Format: The Veterans Committee is made up of 12 members (we may expand later) who will meet every 5 years to deliberate and then vote to elect players, pioneers, and contributors to the Hall of Fame. There will be separate ballots for each category. The 12 current members are: ag2004, blueblood, classic, dgarza, doublex, freakshow, jalbright, jjpm74, leecemark, paul wendt, philkid3, and windycityfan. Anyone is free to participate in the discussions, but only these 12 members will vote.
Players Voting: The voting for players will be in two stages, with a yes or no vote at each stagee. First members will vote on a master list, with to determined number of players with the most support making the final ballot. To be elected a player on the final ballot must receive at least 75% support from the VC. There is no limit or cap on how many candidates can be elected.
- Pioneer and Contributor Voting: Given that the pool of candidates will typically be smaller for pioneer and contributors than for players, we will just have one final vote.
Player Eligibility: All players that have had at least 15 years elapse from their first year of eligibility in the regular election will be eligible in the veterans election. Even if a player was dropped from the regular election ballot before 15 years elapsed, he must still wait for remaining of the 15 years to pass.
- Additional Contributor Eligibility: If a player was elected in the regular elections, he may still be eligibility to be inducted as a contributor by the VC (Al Spalding being an example of this).
The only thing left to decide in my mind is how many to put on the final ballots. I'm thinking as time goes by, the final players ballot could become larger due to the growing pool of players.
With that out of the way, with a simple discussion putting together a master ballot. For players, generally, I'll go back through the regular elections and add anyone here that lasted at least one election there (I might become more discerning later as the pool grows). Just to be clear how this will proceed, we'll put together a large list, then vote on who on that list should make the final ballot. At this stage we're not necessarily voting on who should be elected, just voting on who deserves that final consideration. The top vote-getters will then go on a final ballot (I'm thinking 15-20 for the players right now), and we'll then vote for election, 75% electing.
So this is my preliminary list of players:
Oyster Burns
Charlie Comiskey
Larry Corcoran
Frank Dwyer
Bob Ferguson
Mike Griffin
Ned Hanlon
Charley Jones
Denny Lyons
Bobby Matthews
Tommy McCarthy
Jim McCormick
Ed McKean
Cal McVey
Levi Meyerle
Tip O'Neill
Dave Orr
Lip Pike
Hardy Richardson
Mike Tiernan (assuming he's not elected in 1918, his last year of regular election eligibility)
Joe Start
Ezra Sutton
Will White
Mickey Welch
Feel free to suggest additions. Also, it is fair now to consider pre-1871 playing for any of these players.
Here's the tentative pioneer list as composed by JJPM. People on this ballot played almost entirely before the 1870s and because of the rapidly evolving game of the late 19th Century, I feel it is more appropriate to put them on a separate ballot.
Asa Brainard
Bill Craver
Jim Creighton
Candy Cummings
Cherokee Fisher
Davy Force
George Hall
Andy Leonard
Fergy Malone
Dick McBride
Dickey Pearce
Al Reach
Harry Wright
George Zettlein
Here's a contributors ballot, also put together by JJPM (I added Spalding):
Ferdinand Abell
Doc Adams
John T. Brush
Morgan Bulkeley
Alexander Cartwright
Henry Chadwick
Charlie Comiskey
Bob Ferguson
Ned Hanlon
William Hulbert
Ban Johnson
Denny McKnight
A.G. Mills
Frank Selee
Al Spalding
Harry M. Stevens
Chris Von der Ahe
James Whyte Davis
Harry Wright
Again, members, please feel free to add to these lists.
jjpm74
09-15-2008, 09:30 AM
Al Spalding was already elected as a player. Players can be listed twice?
BlueBlood
09-15-2008, 09:42 AM
Yeah, I thought we had agreed "no" to double inductions.
DoubleX
09-15-2008, 09:47 AM
Al Spalding was already elected as a player. Players can be listed twice?
That was a mistake. I copied and pasted a list I posted before we elected Spalding.
Yeah, I thought we had agreed "no" to double inductions.
We didn't agree. :) I thought it over and I think if there are rare circumstances where a player we elected also contributed greatly to the game, it seems limiting to only have them as a player. It doesn't do justice to the contributions. A person did enough to be elected in each capacity exclusive of the other, I see no problem in honoring that. I believe the others sports Hall of Fames do that. This will be limited though to players elected in the regular election, because in that election we're strictly judging the players on their playing careers and aren't considering much of what else they may have contributed. If you feel we've already appropriately honored a person, such as Spalding, then you don't need to vote for him as a contributor.
jjpm74
09-15-2008, 09:56 AM
Lip Pike, Joe Start, Cal McVey, all played in the 1860s and here should be listed as pioneers, not players IMO. Listing them as players is what killed their chances in the regular elections. Ezra Sutton played prior to 1876 as well.
On guys like Spalding, it seems redundant to consider them a second time when their off the field contributions are what pushed them over the edge in the first place.
DoubleX
09-15-2008, 10:19 AM
Lip Pike, Joe Start, Cal McVey, all played in the 1860s and here should be listed as pioneers, not players IMO. Listing them as players is what killed their chances in the regular elections. Ezra Sutton played prior to 1876 as well.
They'll stay as players because they were on the regular elections. The players ballot here will be entirely composed of players from the regular elections, as the players election here is meant to be a review. BUT, here you can consider their 1860s play. The difference here is that pioneer were players that were never in the regular elections.
On guys like Spalding, it seems redundant to consider them a second time when their off the field contributions are what pushed them over the edge in the first place.
It's not going to happen very often. But take a guy like Joe Torre. He is someone we can conceivably elect as a player. Should we then not be able to consider his separate career is a manager? If you don't want to vote for someone as a contributor, believing they've been honored enough as a player, then don't vote for that person as a contributor. It's as simple as that. Doesn't hurt to have them on the ballot though.
jjpm74
09-15-2008, 10:44 AM
Comiskey and Ferguson are listed as players, but only received player votes because of their off the field exploits. They don't need to appear on the VC players ballot, IMO since anyone who is on the VC who voted for them as players would be voting for them as contributors here. Neither one did enough as a player IMO. That may also be true of 2 or 3 others on the player list.
Brad Harris
09-15-2008, 11:10 AM
Members and Format: The Veterans Committee is made up of 12 members (we may expand later) who will meet every 5 years to deliberate and then vote to elect players, pioneers, and contributors to the Hall of Fame.
Why does the pioneers ballot need to recur every 5 years indefinitely? This is a set group of individuals, correct? What persons in the future, from the 20th Century, would qualify as a "pioneer" (in contrast to a "contributor")? How many such elections of these men should we have?
Players Voting: The voting for players will be in two stages, with a yes or no vote at each stagee. First members will vote on a master list, with to determined number of players with the most support making the final ballot. To be elected a player on the final ballot must receive at least 75% support from the VC. There is no limit or cap on how many candidates can be elected.
I like this format.
Additional Contributor Eligibility: If a player was elected in the regular elections, he may still be eligibility to be inducted as a contributor by the VC (Al Spalding being an example of this).
Strongly disagree, particularly if a guy's non-playing contributions are permitted to be part of the consideration in his election as a player. If someone's contributions merit a "double induction" then they ought to go in as a contributor.
The only thing left to decide in my mind is how many to put on the final ballots. I'm thinking as time goes by, the final players ballot could become larger due to the growing pool of players.
I'd recommend a maximum of 25.
For the players, Burns, Comiskey, Dwyer and Hanlon are clearly not on par with the rest.
Pre-1871 peformance definitely merits consideration.
Contributors worth adding to the ballot, some of whom died not long after 1920: Frank C. Bancroft, O.P. Caylor, Henry Lucas, Francis Richter, Arthur Soden, Alfred H. Spink, George Stallings, and John Montgomery Ward.
By the way, what's the eligibility criteria for inclusion on the contributor's ballot? Must the individual be retired? Dead?
Paul Wendt
09-15-2008, 11:37 AM
(my emphasis)
With that out of the way, with a simple discussion putting together a master ballot.
I can help with that and I'll be happy to vote. I will not be able to do research or much writing, less than my longest contributions on BBFHOF and Progressive players.
For players, generally, I'll go back through the regular elections and add anyone here that lasted at least one election there (I might become more discerning later as the pool grows).
. . .
So this is my preliminary list of players:
. . .
Feel free to suggest additions. Also, it is fair now to consider pre-1871 playing for any of these players.
Evidently you mean survived two elections, appeared on three ballots.
Among the two-and-out candidates, I believe Dunlap and Williamson were highest regarded by the baseball community; Williamson and York posted the best careers.
Here's the tentative pioneer list as composed by JJPM. People on this ballot played almost entirely before the 1870s and because of the rapidly evolving game of the late 19th Century, I feel it is more appropriate to put them on a separate ballot.
. . .
They played almost entirely before 1876. Several were quite young before 1871 and their careers center on the early 1870s.
Davy Force should have been on the regular ballot, and he was.
Some to add:
Jack Chapman (better as contributor)
Wes Fisler
Charlie Smith
Jimmy Wood
Here's a contributors ballot, also put together by JJPM (I added Spalding)
. . .
Charlie Comiskey, Ban Johnson, Harry M. Stevens [among others]
. . .
Again, members, please feel free to add to these lists.
Those three are still at work. Do you plan to cover men who are active?
Some to add:
William Cammeyer
Tim Murnane
O.P. Caylor
Al Spink
Ted Sullivan
Nick Young
Francis Richter is still at work. He belongs if you will cover active men.
Paul Wendt
09-15-2008, 11:43 AM
I thought it over and I think if there are rare circumstances where a player we elected also contributed greatly to the game, it seems limiting to only have them as a player. It doesn't do justice to the contributions. A person did enough to be elected in each capacity exclusive of the other, I see no problem in honoring that. I believe the others sports Hall of Fames do that.
basketball, yes.
John Wooden and Lenny Wilkens, player and coach
DoubleX
09-15-2008, 11:58 AM
Why does the pioneers ballot need to recur every 5 years indefinitely? This is a set group of individuals, correct? What persons in the future, from the 20th Century, would qualify as a "pioneer" (in contrast to a "contributor")? How many such elections of these men should we have?
It won't recur indefinitely. I'm guessing after the first few VC elections, we'll have done all we're going to do with the pioneers, and perhaps we'll incorporate the top remaining pioneers into the contributors ballot so as to not completely remove the possibility of election. But I do think at some point we'll abandon a separate pioneer section.
Strongly disagree, particularly if a guy's non-playing contributions are permitted to be part of the consideration in his election as a player. If someone's contributions merit a "double induction" then they ought to go in as a contributor.
I'll use this rare example again. What if we elect a player in the regular elections based on his playing career and then he goes on to be a great manager? Why not honor his managerial career just as we would honor any great managerial career?
For the players, Burns, Comiskey, Dwyer and Hanlon are clearly not on par with the rest.
They'll be on the preliminary ballot for now (maybe not Comiskey though who will be exclusively on the contributors ballot), and if you don't believe they belong, then you don't vote for them at the first stage and if they're clearly inferior, they probably won't make the final ballot. The first stage is meant to be pretty open, and we're just whittling down to the final list. Plus, at this juncture, we don't have all that many former-regular election players to look at, so we might as well include all the guys in the preliminary round that hung on for at least a year.
Contributors worth adding to the ballot, some of whom died not long after 1920: Frank C. Bancroft, O.P. Caylor, Henry Lucas, Francis Richter, Arthur Soden, Alfred H. Spink, George Stallings, and John Montgomery Ward.
By the way, what's the eligibility criteria for inclusion on the contributor's ballot? Must the individual be retired? Dead?
No clue. I've said a few times now that I'd like someone else to oversee this part if possible. I don't really feel my knowledge of contributors is good enough where I can effectively manage that ballot.
Also, you mentioned Ward there, he's someone we've already elected as a player, but might have enough distinct non-player contributions where he'd make it independently as a contributor as well.
To be clear here, I'm saying that it may be appropriate to elect a person in separate capacities if they did things in clear separate capacities. Again, the example of a person that has a great playing career, retires, and we elect him as a player, then goes on to a great managerial career, is perhaps most illustrative of this.
DoubleX
09-15-2008, 12:05 PM
Evidently you mean survived two elections, appeared on three ballots.
I meant survived at least one, though perhaps the list I gave suggests otherwise? It's just an easy way for me to put a tentative list together as I have those "Dropped from Previous Election" sections in each regular election. As our pool of players becomes larger, I'll probably become more discerning and not just automatically include everyone that survived at least one election.
Anyway, the list I give is just a preliminary list and is really just suggestions. People are free to make suggestions to that list and I don't have a limit in mind at this point as most of the players will be scrapped in our first round of voting anyway.
Davy Force should have been on the regular ballot, and he was.
Noted, thanks. He'll go with the players then.
Those three are still at work. Do you plan to cover men who are active?
Some to add:
William Cammeyer
Tim Murnane
O.P. Caylor
Al Spink
Ted Sullivan
Nick Young
Francis Richter is still at work. He belongs if you will cover active men.
Like I said to Classic, I really haven't thought about eligibility for contributors. What's the consensus here? Can contributors be active and be eligible?
jalbright
09-15-2008, 12:18 PM
I don't care so much that contributor candidates are active, but I want to be sure we have a clear picture that their body of work in the sport is worthy. Also, the Hall gets generally better publicity for live over posthumous inductions. With those points in mind, I'd propose that they either be retired (dead being an extreme form of retirement), or at least 60 or 65 years old before being eligible.
jjpm74
09-15-2008, 12:25 PM
I don't care so much that contributor candidates are active, but I want to be sure we have a clear picture that their body of work in the sport is worthy. Also, the Hall gets generally better publicity for live over posthumous inductions. With those points in mind, I'd propose that they either be retired (dead being an extreme form of retirement), or at least 60 or 65 years old before being eligible.
This sounds fair, but I'd even amend that to anyone who has been a contributor for at least 20 years, is retired or is over 65 years old. That 20 year provision would allow us to look at someone like Connie Mack in the context of when the actual HOF inducted him rather than waiting until 1940 or later (Mack was inducted in 1937).
Brad Harris
09-15-2008, 01:05 PM
This sounds fair, but I'd even amend that to anyone who has been a contributor for at least 20 years, is retired or is over 65 years old. That 20 year provision would allow us to look at someone like Connie Mack in the context of when the actual HOF inducted him rather than waiting until 1940 or later (Mack was inducted in 1937).
Totally agreed. A contributor has to meet at any one of the above criteria in order to be eligible.
jalbright
09-15-2008, 01:14 PM
Connie was born in 1862, so he was 75 when he was inducted. The way I meant the rule was that since he was already over 65 in 1937, he was eligible. I don't think it would be bad to make Connie wait until after 1927. (Heck, his second dynasty hadn't matured yet). Also, if we go to just 20 years, guys who were player/contributors could be eligible late in their playing careers if we count their time playing. I'm not too keen on that. Age 60 or 65 or out of the game due to retirement/death seems about right to me.
Brad Harris
09-15-2008, 01:20 PM
Connie was born in 1862, so he was 75 when he was inducted. The way I meant the rule was that since he was already over 65 in 1937, he was eligible. I don't think it would be bad to make Connie wait until after 1927. (Heck, his second dynasty hadn't matured yet). Also, if we go to just 20 years, guys who were player/contributors could be eligible late in their playing careers if we count their time playing. I'm not too keen on that. Age 60 or 65 or out of the game due to retirement/death seems about right to me.
I'm adamantly opposed to counting playing time in that 20 year window. Perhaps a 30-year window would be better though. A guy who starts his contributor career at the age of 35 would thus be eligible at roughly the same time as the age-eligibility criteria factor sets in. What do you think?
jalbright
09-15-2008, 05:33 PM
I'm OK with it, but I think age 60 or 65 is just easier to deal with, which is why I suggest it. I mean, when exactly does Buck O'Neill's or Paul Krichell's or a bunch of other guys start the 20 or 30 year clock ticking? It's not always easy finding birth dates, but it's usually manageable.
jjpm74
09-15-2008, 06:13 PM
I'm adamantly opposed to counting playing time in that 20 year window. Perhaps a 30-year window would be better though. A guy who starts his contributor career at the age of 35 would thus be eligible at roughly the same time as the age-eligibility criteria factor sets in. What do you think?
Same here except in the case where a player's contribution overlaps (the player-manager).
leecemark
09-15-2008, 06:30 PM
--Retired, 65 or dead seems the easiest and best rule.
dgarza
09-15-2008, 08:15 PM
Are Silver King & Tommy Bond eligible? Fred Dunlap?
DoubleX
09-16-2008, 12:50 PM
dgarza, I believe those players will be eligible.
Classic will be running the contributor elections. He'll set up a separate thread for that election and fill everyone in regarding eligibility and what not.
AG2004
09-17-2008, 10:17 AM
--Retired, 65 or dead seems the easiest and best rule.
I would prefer a cutoff of 60, since we are holding the election only once every five years.
Let us suppose we have someone who turns 64 in an election year. With our schedule, he won't be eligible until he turns 69. Some candidates might not be able to make it to age 68 or 69. A cutoff of 60 would guarantee that everyone would get a shot before they turn 65, and thus give people a greater chance of honors while they are alive.
If there were a special election each year just for contributors who turn 65 in that calendar year, I would be more supportive of using 65 instead of 60 as the minimum age for active contributors.
DoubleX
09-19-2008, 11:24 AM
I'm wondering if it's going to be too much to ask for people to vote twice here - once to create a final ballot and once for election.
jjpm74
09-19-2008, 11:30 AM
I'm wondering if it's going to be too much to ask for people to vote twice here - once to create a final ballot and once for election.
I honestly don't see a need to whittle down the ballot any further. The strong candidates will be the ones most people vote for whether we scale it down or keep it as is.
Brad Harris
09-19-2008, 11:50 AM
Contributor election thread will be posted in a few days.
dgarza
09-20-2008, 06:44 AM
I'm wondering if it's going to be too much to ask for people to vote twice here - once to create a final ballot and once for election.Option : have the entire process take 2 "years"; 1 to create the final ballot, 1 for final election; 5 year gap still preserved between each part of the process
Paul Wendt
09-20-2008, 12:34 PM
I meant survived at least one [appeared in two annual elections], though perhaps the list I gave suggests otherwise? It's just an easy way for me to put a tentative list together as I have those "Dropped from Previous Election" sections in each regular election.
Yes, the list suggests otherwise because it does not include those who were on our 1901 and 1902 ballots only.
Tom York
Ned Williamson
Jack Rowe
Charlie Buffinton
Davy Force
Silver Flint
Fred Dunlap
Abner Dalrymple
Dave Foutz
I see that one other player from the classes of 1901-1905 was on the ballot twice, Frank Dwyer, and you listed him. Perhaps "Dropped from Previous Election" does not begin at the beginning.[/QUOTE]
Paul Wendt
09-20-2008, 12:45 PM
I honestly don't see a need to whittle down the ballot any further. The strong candidates will be the ones most people vote for whether we scale it down or keep it as is.
In a sense it "should" make no difference because there is no limit on the number of votes cast. When Cooperstown instituted two stages in the 1940s, the writers were limited to casting ten votes, so narrowing the field in a stage one should have increased the percentage support for everyone in stage two.
Although it "should" make no difference, I would not be surprised to learn that it does make one in practice.
jjpm74
09-20-2008, 10:54 PM
In a sense it "should" make no difference because there is no limit on the number of votes cast. When Cooperstown instituted two stages in the 1940s, the writers were limited to casting ten votes, so narrowing the field in a stage one should have increased the percentage support for everyone in stage two.
Although it "should" make no difference, I would not be surprised to learn that it does make one in practice.
I can't see a whittled down ballot impacting who I vote for. If someone I would have voted for doesn't make the ballot, all that means to me is that I'll have 1 less name on the ballot I submit.
leecemark
09-20-2008, 11:30 PM
Yes, the list suggests otherwise because it does not include those who were on our 1901 and 1902 ballots only.
Tom York
Ned Williamson
Jack Rowe
Charlie Buffinton
Davy Force
Silver Flint
Fred Dunlap
Abner Dalrymple
Dave Foutz
I see that one other player from the classes of 1901-1905 was on the ballot twice, Frank Dwyer, and you listed him. Perhaps "Dropped from Previous Election" does not begin at the beginning.[/QUOTE]
--At least Williamson and possibly others deserve another look based on where our standards have gone. Heck, maybe all of them deserve another hearing.
jjpm74
09-20-2008, 11:38 PM
At the very least, I'd like to give Williamson and Dunlap a closer look.
DoubleX
09-25-2008, 08:50 AM
Ok, it's time to get going with this. Here are the proposed master ballots for the players and pioneers (Classic will be running the contributors). I'll give one more day for suggested additions, but after that we'll get going with voting.
The plan is still to have two rounds for the players (one for the pioneers), but I don't know how realistic it is to expect everyone to vote twice within a week or two, and it might just be better to have one vote, where each voter names everyone they feel should be elected, and 75% elects. My problem with this is that the pool could eventually become too large, as I do think we should have a defined pool that people are voting from (hence the first vote).
Players:
Tommy Bond
Charlie Buffinton
Oyster Burns
Charlie Comiskey
Larry Corcoran
Abner Dalrymple
Fred Dunlap
Frank Dwyer
Bob Ferguson
Silver Flint
Davy Force
Dave Foutz
Mike Griffin
Ned Hanlon
Charley Jones
Silver King
Denny Lyons
Bobby Matthews
Tommy McCarthy
Jim McCormick
Ed McKean
Cal McVey
Levi Meyerle
Tip O'Neill
Dave Orr
Lip Pike
Hardy Richardson
Jack Rowe
Joe Start
Ezra Sutton
Mike Tiernan
Will White
Mickey Welch
Ned Williamson
Tom York
Pioneer Players:
Asa Brainard
Bill Craver
Jim Creighton
Candy Cummings
Cherokee Fisher
Wes Fisler
George Hall
Andy Leonard
Fergy Malone
Dick McBride
Dickey Pearce
Al Reach
Charlie Smith
Jimmy Wood
Harry Wright
George Zettlein
leecemark
09-25-2008, 08:57 AM
Players:
Tommy Bond
Charlie Buffinton
Oyster Burns
Charlie Comiskey - maybe when he shifts to contributors
Larry Corcoran
Abner Dalrymple
Fred Dunlap
Frank Dwyer
Bob Ferguson
Silver Flint
Davy Force
Dave Foutz
Mike Griffin
Ned Hanlon - also better as contributor
Charley Jones - willing to consider
Silver King
Denny Lyons
Bobby Matthews
Tommy McCarthy
Jim McCormick
Ed McKean - willing to consider
Cal McVey - yes
Levi Meyerle - willing to consider
Tip O'Neill
Dave Orr
Lip Pike - yes
Hardy Richardson - yes
Jack Rowe
Mike Tiernan - willing to cosndier
Joe Start - yes
Ezra Sutton - yes
Will White
Mickey Welch - yes
Ned Williamson - willing to consider
Tom York
Contributors:
Asa Brainard
Bill Craver
Jim Creighton
Candy Cummings
Cherokee Fisher
Wes Fisler
George Hall
Andy Leonard
Fergy Malone
Dick McBride
Dickey Pearce - yes
Al Reach - yes
Charlie Smith
Jimmy Wood
Harry Wright - yes
George Zettlein
--The above are only player contributors? I thought we had a longer list. Chadwick, Hulbert, etc?
DoubleX
09-25-2008, 09:21 AM
--The above are only player contributors? I thought we had a longer list. Chadwick, Hulbert, etc?
That's my mistake. I meant to title them as "Pioneers." Classic will be handling the contributors election in a separate thread and will post a proposed ballot.
And did I read right? You had a "yes" next to Mickey Welch? :)
EDIT: I believe we might actually elect a number of players this time. I know you feared that we might elect too many in this process, but your ballot indicates that we'll be adjusting here for those players that fell between the cracks of the expanding standards of the regular ballot. I don't think it'll be routine here that we'll elect a number of players, I think this one is unique because it's the first and we're doing a sort of standards correction here. The regular election's standards are becoming more defined and I suspect less players will fall through the cracks now.
Freakshow
09-25-2008, 09:28 AM
Ok, it's time to get going with this. Here are the proposed master ballots for the players and pioneers (Classic will be running the contributors). I'll give one more day for suggested additions, but after that we'll get going with voting.
Looking back at the UQFC, here are five more players to consider for the ballot: John Clapp, John Peters, Jim Whitney, Jack Burdock and Arlie Latham.
leecemark
09-25-2008, 09:29 AM
--With the Beckley/Van Haltren/Duffy standard now clearly in place I can no longer justify Welch's exclusion. He isn't anything close to inner circle, but he does pretty clearly meet the standards we, as a group, have adopted.
BlueBlood
09-25-2008, 02:58 PM
I vote "yes" on:
Players:
Jim McCormick
Lip Pike
Hardy Richardson
Joe Start
Ezra Sutton
Pioneer Players:
Jim Creighton
Candy Cummings
Dickey Pearce
Al Reach
Harry Wright
Willing To Consider
Players:
Cal McVey
Mickey Welch
jjpm74
09-25-2008, 03:00 PM
I'm confused. What are we doing here? Are we voting already?
DoubleX
09-25-2008, 03:50 PM
I'm confused. What are we doing here? Are we voting already?
We're not voting yet. That will begin tomorrow. Right now I'm trying to finalize the master ballot. So if you want someone to be on the ballot, now's the time to suggest.
jjpm74
09-25-2008, 04:20 PM
On the ballot, not necessarily voting for these:
Players:
Tommy Bond
Charlie Buffinton
Larry Corcoran
Fred Dunlap
Frank Dwyer
Davy Force
Dave Foutz
Charley Jones
Silver King
Denny Lyons
Bobby Matthews
Tommy McCarthy
Jim McCormick
Ed McKean
Cal McVey
Levi Meyerle
Lip Pike
Hardy Richardson
Joe Start
Ezra Sutton
Mike Tiernan
Mickey Welch
Ned Williamson
Tom York
Pioneer Players:
Asa Brainard
Bill Craver
Jim Creighton
Candy Cummings
Wes Fisler
George Hall
Andy Leonard
Fergy Malone
Dick McBride
Dickey Pearce
Al Reach
Jimmy Wood
Harry Wright
George Zettlein