In a competitive round of voting, with holdovers from previous rounds receiving almost all the support, Alan Trammell edged out John Smoltz, Bobby Grich, Lou Whitaker and others to become the 25th player inducted into the High Heat Stats Circle of Greats. The COG voting will be on a two-week hiatus as your host drifts out of fair territory but will be back in play mid-August to start the 1947 round. More on Alan Trammell, and on the latest voting results, after the jump.
Highest OPS by a Shortstop in a League Championship Series (min. seven PAs)
1. Alan Trammell (1984) 1.314 OPS
2. Nomar Garciaparra (1999) 1.255 OPS
3. Alex Rodriguez (2000) 1.253 OPS
4. Dave Concepcion (1975) 1.227 OPS
5. Rich Aurilia (2002) 1.221 OPS
Highest OPS by a Shortstop in a World Series (min. seven PAs)
1. Dererk Jeter (2000) 1.344 OPS
2. Alan Trammell (1984) 1.300 OPS
3. Edgar Renteria (2010) 1.209 OPS
4. Marty Marion (1943) 1.185 OPS
5. Granny Hamner (1950) 1.181 OPS
Trammell’s nine Total Bases in Game 4 of the 1984 World Series remains a record, unbroken and untied, for a shortstop in a World Series game.
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Most all-around WAR, MLB, 1980-1990 (baseball-reference version of WAR):
1. Rickey Henderson 80.5
2. Wade Boggs 62.9
3. Alan Trammell 59.1
4. Robin Yount 57.6
5. Cal Ripken 57.5
6. Mike Schmidt 56.3
7. Ozzie Smith 55.7
8. Dave Stieb 54.3
9. George Brett 51.6
10. Eddie Murray 50.8
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–This was a closely contested round, with four guys within six votes at the top.
–Only two votes were cast for players born in 1948, out of a total of 183 votes (on 61 ballots). The very competitive nature of the round seems to have discouraged voters from casting “shout-out” or “favorite son” votes.
–Robbie Alomar, who has been eligible for every one of the 25 ballot rounds we have held, but recently has been on the bubble each round, nudged over 25% this time, getting off the bubble at least for the moment.
–Smoltz, Whitaker, Grich and Edgar Martinez all also appeared on more than 25% of the ballots cast this round, and so expand the number of rounds they have assured ballot eligibility.
–Smoltz appeared on more ballots than he has in any round since the 1964 round, 20 rounds ago.
–Ted Simmons fell a couple of votes short of the minimum needed to remain eligible, and thus loses his place on the ballot.
–With Trammell inducted and Simmons dropping off, the holdover list will be reduced from 13 players this round to 11 for the next round. Five will continue to be on the bubble: Sandberg, Murray, Winfield, Reuschel and Lofton.
As usual, you can check out the complete voting record for this past round at Google Docs. The link is here: COG 1948 Vote Tally
If you would like to review the history of the COG voting, a spreadsheet summary of the voting is here: COG Vote Summary , with a summary of the raw vote totals on Sheet 1 and a summary of the percentage totals on Sheet 2.
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The commenter who uses the screen name bells usefully suggested that the list of players inducted in the Circle of Greats so far, which is included at the end of each of these results posts, is getting a little long to be left completely un-annotated and organized solely by alphabet. For now at least, let’s try something new by categorizing the list by the position each player filled the most often during his career.
The Circle of Greats membership thus far:
Bert Blyleven, P
Roger Clemens, P
Tom Glavine, P
Randy Johnson, P
Greg Maddux, P
Mike Mussina, P
Curt Schilling, P
Gary Carter, C
Mike Piazza, C
Jeff Bagwell, 1B
Wade Boggs, 3B
George Brett, 3B
Mike Schmidt, 3B
Barry Larkin, SS
Cal Ripken, Jr., SS
Ozzie Smith, SS
Alan Trammell, SS
Robin Yount, SS
Rickey Henderson, LF
Tim Raines, LF
Barry Bonds, LF
Tony Gwynn, RF
Larry Walker, RF
Paul Molitor, DH
Frank Thomas, DH