Hall of Famers by Final Year in the Majors

208 players have been inducted into the Hall Fame based on their playing careers in the major leagues. The following is a breakdown of how many of those played their final year in the majors in each decade:

2000 through 2009: 5 players
1990 through 1999: 16 players
1980 through 1989: 19 players
1970 through 1979: 19 players
1960 through 1969: 15 players
1950 through 1959: 17 players
1940 through 1949: 23 players
1930 through 1939: 34 players
1920 through 1929: 13 players
1910 through 1919: 19 players
1900 through 1909: 15 players
1890 through 1899: 13 players

The 2008 and 2009 final year guys have not even been eligible yet (the 2008 guys are just being voted on for the first time now, results to be announced in January). But this breakdown might provide a sense of what might be expected to ultimately be the number of guys that will be inducted whose careers ended between 2000 and 2009.

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Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
11 years ago
Reply to  birtelcom

@1/birtelcom,

That’s really odd; since 1999, three relief pitchers (Eck, Sutter, Goose) have been inducted, but only one starter, Burt Blyleven (who retired the year before Ryan).

Doug
Editor
11 years ago

1940 through 1949: 23 players
1930 through 1939: 34 players

Frankie Frisch sure had a lot of friends.

Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

@3/Doug,

It’s not entirely due to ole’ Frankie; even if you removed _all_ of the dubious FOFF choices, the 1930s/40s finishers have more HOFers than any other two decades put together.

We all know why that is; the 1930s/40s finishers played mainly in the 20’s/30’s, with .300+ BA’s and 100+ RBI totals commonplace. Plus, their cases have been picked over very thoroughly, first by the BBWAA and then the various iterations of the Veterans’ Committee.

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago

Well done, birtelcom — a timely reminder of an ongoing disparity. Some of it may be balanced down the road by veterans’ committees. But I still think that some voters don’t make enough adjustment for two enormous changes in MLB since WWII: — The number of teams has almost doubled, so you’d expect eventually to see more HOFers per decade in the 24- to 30-team era than in pre-expansion decades. — The talent pool has grown even more than the number of teams, so (I believe) the tail end of the MLB talent spectrum has risen considerably, making individual dominance… Read more »

birtelcom
birtelcom
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Maybe, but: –Just because you have more teams doesn’t necessarily mean you get more of the greatest players. If there are four great tennis players in a generation, it probably doesn’t matter if you let the top 32 into the best tournaments or the top 64 of the top 128, you’re just letting more inferior players in, not expanding the number of greats. –On the other hand, you are right that if you expand the entire population pool that contributes potentially great players, you will likely get more great players. The question then is whether the talent pool has actually… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  birtelcom

I think there are a lot of ways to show that the bottom of the MLB talent spectrum is significantly higher now than before integration. To avoid the complications of WWII, I’ll compare 1931-40 to 2004-13. — In 1931-40, for seasons of 300+ PAs, the 10th percentile in OPS+ was 69. The 20th percentile was 81. (1,386 seasons) — In 2004-13, for seasons of 315+ PAs (raising the threshold to match the longer schedule), the 10th percentile in OPS+ was 75. The 20th percentile was 84. (2,500 seasons) (I can’t think of a similar way to measure the pitchers. I… Read more »

Dr. Doom
Dr. Doom
11 years ago
Reply to  birtelcom

The question of whether or not other sports actually siphon off major league talent is an intriguing one to me. How many players can you name who were MAJOR prospects in baseball who chose another sport? I can think of one – John Elway. But the list of those who chose to play baseball (perhaps alongside another sport, but chose baseball nonetheless) is long, indeed: Bo Jackson, Deion Sanders, Jim Thorpe, Dave Winfield, Drew Henson, Brian Jordan, Danny Ainge, Jeff Samardzija… the list is pretty endless. Point being, the argument you’d have to make is that kids are specializing in… Read more »

Voomo Zanzibar
Voomo Zanzibar
11 years ago
Reply to  Dr. Doom

Here’s a stat:

African-Americans as % of MLB rosters

1974 27%
2013 9%

The influx of international talent certainly has something to do with this. That and the virtual disappearance of places to play baseball in the inner cities.

As for how many basketball and football players have MLB bodies?
Not all hoopers are 6’10”.
And not all pigskinners are 300 pounds.
Apart from Centers and Offensive Linemen, I’d say that almost everyone athletic enough to play either of those sports could certainly manage the half a dozen wind sprints that a baseball player rips off over three hours.

Ed
Ed
11 years ago
Reply to  Voomo Zanzibar

Meanwhile, there’s been corresponding dropoff among white players in basketball and football. The last white american basketball player to win the MVP was Larry Bird in 85-86. Since then, Steve Nash of Canada and Dirk Nowitzki of Germany have won the award. So it can’t be a pure talent/athleticism issue.

And in football, there are virtually no white running backs, wide receivers or defensive backs.

Dr. Doom
Dr. Doom
11 years ago
Reply to  Voomo Zanzibar

Not all hoopers are 6’10”, no, but they’re almost all 6’3″. How many non pitchers are 6’3″ or more? Likewise, there’s a fairly normal distribution of African Americans as a relative percentage of the US population, especially when you remove the international players. And as far as football bodies, speed and muscle are integral. In baseball, hand-eye coordination is of paramount importance. It’s a different skill set. And again, elite athletes TEND to choose baseball. I just don’t think baseball is actually losing players to the NFL or NBA.

donburgh
donburgh
11 years ago
Reply to  Dr. Doom

Here’s a 2009 Yahoo article about how the Braves were interested in Troy Polamalu in high school. but he sensed his future was in football.

http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ys-klimapolamalu012909

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[…] across decades, both Hall of Famers and others. The seed was birtelcom’s recent “Hall of Famers by Final Year in the Majors,” and more precisely, from an exchange we had in those comments, which I’ll summarize […]