....just remember that this year's Baseball HOF class will consist of Scott Rolen and Fred McGriff. I think both players are 'borderline' at best, but that is kind of beside the overall point, which is that McGriff backdoored/Harold Bainesed his way into the HOF through some bogus committee in which McGriff received twice as many votes as Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds COMBINED. I find Rolen's case to be even more incomprehensible....his first year on the ballot, Rolen received only 10.2% of the vote. Five years later, Rolen is getting 76.3% of the vote and being enshrined.
I think its painfully obvious that MLB is in dire need of HOF players who didn't disgrace themselves or the sport in some way, so now they are putting in anyone who was pretty good but doesn't have any 'baggage' (sorry, Jeff Kent). But the Rolen case has another element of 'geek' factor. Someone spouts some stats and the thought is "if you are smarter than everyone else in the room, you'll think that Scott Rolen is a HOFer." This catches on, and the same 9 out of 10 people who saw Scott Rolen play for his entire career and did not view him as a HOFer eventually change their memories of Rolen and 5 years later they think "I got to see a HOFer play in Scott Rolen."
I think Rolen was a great player, and his defense was consistently excellent. He was a winner. I would consider putting him in the HOF. It was ridiculous that he only received 10% of the vote when he became eligible....but what happened? How did that same voting entity so overwhelmingly consider Rolen a HOFer merely 5 years later?