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ALinChainz
01-04-2005, 02:20 PM
By RONALD BLUM, AP Sports Writer

January 4, 2005


NEW YORK (AP) -- Wade Boggs was overwhelmingly elected to the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility Tuesday, and Ryne Sandberg made it with just six votes to spare on his third try.

Boggs, a five-time American League batting champion for the Boston Red Sox, was selected by 474 of the record 516 voters who are 10-year members of the Baseball Writers' Association of America.

The 91.86 percent of ballots he received was the 19th-highest percentage in Hall history, and he became the 41st player elected on his first chance.

Sandberg, the 1984 National League MVP for the Chicago Cubs, was picked by 393 voters. He appeared on 76.2 percent of ballots, just above the 75 percent cutoff (387). Sandberg received 49.2 percent of votes in 2003 and got 61.1 percent last year, falling 71 votes short.

Reliever Bruce Sutter, appearing on the ballot for the 12th time, received 344 votes (66.7 percent), up from 301 last year but 43 shy of what was needed this time. He was followed by Jim Rice (307), Rich Gossage (285) and Andre Dawson (270).

Willie McGee, also on the ballot for the first time, received 26 votes, exactly at the 5 percent cutoff to avoid being dropped in future years. Darryl Strawberry, another first-time eligible, got six votes.

Pete Rose, ineligible for the ballot because of his lifetime ban from baseball, received nine write-in votes, six fewer than last year and his lowest total. Rose, who admitted last year that he bet on the Cincinnati Reds while managing them in the late 1980s, has been written in on 239 of 6,687 ballots (3.6 percent) over 14 years.

He must be reinstated by late November to appear on the ballot in 2006, the final year he would be eligible.

Boggs, known for his array of pre- and postgame rituals, was a 12-time All-Star during an 18-year career, finishing with 3,010 hits.

He won batting titles in 1983 and from 1985-88, becoming the first player to win the AL batting championship in four straight years since Rod Carew from 1972-75. Boggs, who hit .300 or higher 15 times, finished with a .328 career average and was the only player in the 20th century with seven straight 200-hit seasons. He also became the first player to get 200 hits and 100 walks in four consecutive seasons.

A two-time Gold Glove winner at third base, Boggs played for the Red Sox from 1982-92, then spent five seasons with the New York Yankees, helping the team win the 1996 World Series and riding a police horse around Yankee Stadium after the final victory.

His final two seasons were with his hometown Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

On Aug. 7, 1999, Boggs became the 23rd member of the 3,000-hit club, connecting off Cleveland's Chris Haney to become the first player to get No. 3,000 with a home run. After circling the bases, Boggs kissed home plate.

Sandberg was a nine-time Gold Glove second baseman and a 10-time All-Star. He hit 277 homers, the most by a second baseman at the time of his retirement, and led the NL with 40 in 1990. His .989 fielding percentage is the highest at the position.

Boggs and Sandberg will increase the Hall of Fame's membership to 260, of which 102 were selected by the BBWAA. Induction ceremonies are July 31 in Cooperstown.

Results of voting by the Veterans Committee will be released March 2. Gil Hodges, Tony Oliva and Ron Santo were among the 25 candidates on that ballot.

Among the players eligible for the first time on next year's BWAA ballot are Orel Hershiser, Will Clark and Dwight Gooden.

Figs
01-04-2005, 02:35 PM
I guess he'll be wearing a Red Sox hat....

Va Beach VH Fan
01-04-2005, 08:36 PM
Both good choices.....

Bob_R
01-04-2005, 08:57 PM
Originally posted by Va Beach VH Fan
Both good choices.....

You just took the words right off my fingertips.

ALinChainz
01-04-2005, 11:42 PM
Both were among the elite of their postion of their era.

Did that make sense?

:D

redblkwht
01-05-2005, 01:04 AM
Originally posted by ALinChainz
Both were among the elite of their postion of their era.

Did that make sense?

:D Agreed..
Justified..finally!!!!!

redblkwht
01-05-2005, 01:07 AM
BTW Joe Morgan can kiss my ass too..egotistical bigot bastard.
every catagory but 1 Ryno beat your ass at..
plus in front of you was pete in the line-up..behind you was the power.
yes joe YOU had more help. put Joe on the cubs of the 80's & lets
see those inflated numbers diminish. Jagoff!

redblkwht
01-05-2005, 02:12 AM
Poetry in motion..Legend lives on.


DID I MENTION FUCK YOU,
JOE MORGAN?

ALinChainz
01-06-2005, 12:15 AM
Now, I'll have to say I liked Morgan too.

:D

redblkwht
01-06-2005, 01:05 AM
WTF ever man, Joe Morgan has expressed his dis..
on national tv about Ryne Sandberg, FUCK HIM.
Last year he dogged him good, the fucking lame duck
tv analyst, he sucks at that too, did i mention that?
Him & Mcarver need to get a condo together & move in.
Good fit.:rockit2:

ALinChainz
01-06-2005, 10:20 AM
Was just back then, when the Big Red Machine was happening was when I was getting into the sports big time and back then you really only ever saw the Tigers on TV, so when you had the chance to watch National League teams play, you did it.

I'm not saying he's Mr. Personality or anything, just thought he was a good second baseman.

Not a huge Cubs fans, at all really, but when cable first came around, WGN carried the Cubs and you got to see them more too. I'm a Sandberg fan too, thought he was a damn good one, at bat and with the glove.

redblkwht
01-07-2005, 01:46 AM
It just pisses me off every chance Joe gets, he dissed Ryne in
every comment..envy um..yeah.
I hope Ryne clocks him when elected.
that would be suh---weet!!:D

Figs
01-07-2005, 02:43 PM
Good choice. I'm glad the Hall decides now, instead of players "selling" it to certain teams.



http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-halloffame-boggsplaque&prov=ap&type=lgns


Boggs to get Red Sox cap on Hall plaque


January 7, 2005
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) -- Wade Boggs will have a Boston Red Sox cap on his Hall of Fame plaque.

Boggs, elected to the Hall this week along with Ryne Sandberg, spent the first 11 seasons of his career with Boston, winning five American League batting titles. He played with the New York Yankees from 1993-97, then finished with two seasons for his hometown Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

The Hall picks which cap will appear on a player's bronze plaque. Boggs told the Hall he didn't care which team was selected.


``The logo selection is based on where that player makes his most indelible mark,'' Hall president Dale Petroskey said Friday.

``The choice of which team's logo appears on a player's plaque is our decision,'' he said. ``The wishes of each inductee were considered, but ultimately, it is important that the logo be emblematic of the historical accomplishments of that player's career.''

After leaving the Red Sox, Boggs won his only World Series championship ring with the Yankees. He got his 3,000th career hit with Tampa Bay.

``If you take away any of my time spent with any of the three teams in my career, I'm likely not considered a Hall of Famer,'' Boggs said. ``It's a decision they made and I'm fine with it. If the Hall of Fame had picked my Little League cap, I would have been happy with that.''

Sandberg will have a Chicago Cubs cap on his plaque, and it was an easy decision. After playing 13 games for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1981, he was traded to the Cubs and spent the rest of his 16-season career in Chicago.

Boggs and Sandberg will be inducted July 31 along with any players elected by members of the Veterans Committee, whose vote is announced March 2.