Jim Thome was never a mass-market superstar, and wasn’t one to attract controversy — he had a reputation as one of the nice guys in baseball. Neither was his COG support controversial, as the voters embraced him strongly in his first round of eligibility, quickly making him the 82nd inductee into the High Heat Stats Circle of Greats. More on Jim and the voting after the jump.
Most Career Regular Season Walks, All-Time, Major League Baseball
1. Barry Bonds 2,558
2. Rickey Henderson 2,190
3. Babe Ruth 2,062
4. Ted Williams 2,021
5. Joe Morgan 1,865
6. Carl Yastrzemski 1,845
7. Jim Thome 1,747
8. Mickey Mantle 1,733
9. Mel Ott 1,708
10. Frank Thomas 1,667
Most Career Regular Season Home Runs, All-Time, Major League Baseball
1. Barry Bonds 762
2. Hank Aaron 755
3. Babe Ruth 714
4. Willie Mays 660
5. Alex Rodriguez 654
6. Ken Griffey 630
7. Jim Thome 612
8. Sammy Sosa 609
9. Frank Robinson 586
10. Mark McGwire 583
Jim Thome is currently 7th on both of the lists above. The only other players besides Thome on both of these top 10 lists are Barry Bonds and Babe Ruth. Among the others on the Top 10 Walks list, Rickey Henderson is 139th on the home runs list, Ted Williams and Frank Thomas are tied for 18th, Joe Morgan is 179th, Yaz is 37th, Mantle is 16th and Ott is 24th. From the Top 10 Homers list, Aaron is 27th on the walks list, Mays is 22nd, A-Rod is 53rd, Griffey is 42nd, Sosa is 156th, Frank Robinson is 25th and Mark McGwire is 40th. The only player besides Bonds, Ruth and Thome who is in the top 15 on both the all-time homer and all-time walks lists is Harmon Killebrew, who is on neither top 10 list but is 11th in homers and 15th in walks.
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Most Post-Season Home Runs For a Single Franchise, Other than the Yankees
18, Albert Pujols for the Cardinals
17, Jim Thome for the Indians and David Ortiz for the Red Sox
14, Nelson Cruz for the Rangers
13, Jim Edmonds for the Cardinals, Chipper Jones for the Braves and Manny Ramirez for the Red Sox
The only guys with more post-season homers for the Yankees than Thome had for the Indians have been Bernie Williams with 22, Derek Jeter with 20 and Mickey Mantle with 18.
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Highest OPS Against Right-Handed Pitching, Expansion Era (1961-2014) (min. 500 PAs)
1. Barry Bonds 1.084
2. Jim Thome 1.034
3. Todd Helton 1.001
4. Lance Berkman .995
5. Larry Walker .993
Highest SLG Against Right-Handed Pitching, Expansion Era (1961-2014) (min. 500 PAs)
1. Barry Bonds .626
2. Jim Thome .608
3. Larry Walker .586
4. Carlos Delgado .582
5. Mark McGwire .581
Highest OBP Against Right-Handed Pitching, Expansion Era (1961-2014) (min. 500 PAs)
1. Barry Bonds .458
2. Wade Boggs .433
3. Joey Votto .430
4. Jim Thome .426
5. Todd Helton .425
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Most Rbat in a Season, American League, since 2002 (OPS+ in parens)
1. Jim Thome (2002) 70.1 Rbat (197 OPS+)
2. Mike Trout (2013) 67.6 Rbat (179 OPS+)
3. Alex Rodriguez (2005) 65.9 Rbat (173 OPS+)
4. Alex Rodriguez (2007) 64.8 Rbat (176 OPS+)
5. Miguel Cabrera (2013) 64.7 Rbat (188 OPS+)
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Most Rbat in an Age 39 Season
1. Barry Bonds (2004) 106.4
2. Ted Willams (1958) 47.2
3. Hank Aaron (1973) 37.6
4. Babe Ruth (1934) 36.9
5. Jim Thome (2010) 31.7
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Notes on this round’s voting:
–This round had 18 holdovers eligible for your votes, and it seemed likely that the number would be reduced for the next round.
–But the ballots cast this round successfully spread the votes so widely that there will again be 18 holdovers in the next round. Dizzy Dean fell short of the 10% support level he needed to remain eligible and will drop off, but Dizzy is replaced by Jim Edmonds, who was nudged over the 10% level with some late support and will join the holdover list. The number of holdovers “on the bubble” will also remain where it was at nine, with Dean also replaced by Edmonds in that subcategory of the holdovers.
–Although the votes were widely spread among the large group of holdovers, voters were still able to give Jim Thome a strong victory, appearing on an impressive 44% of the ballots cast, while also giving Luke Appling more than enough support (appearing on a third of the ballots cast) to earn another extra round of guaranteed ballot eligibility. That gives Appling a larger stash of guaranteed eligibility than anyone except Killebrew and Alomar.
–With Dean under 10% and Appling over 25%, that left 16 other holdovers — each of those appeared on more than 10% but fewer than 20% of the ballots cast this round.
–After a few lower-turnout rounds over the winter holiday season, a more normal 66 ballots were cast this round. 66.4 ballots has been the average number of ballots cast per round through the 82 rounds of Circle of Greats voting thus far, so the 66 votes cast this round was quite normal indeed.
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The full spreadsheet showing this round’s vote tally is here: COG 1970 Vote Tally.
The vote summary for recent Circle of Greats voting rounds is here: COG Vote Summary 2 . An archive w ith details of the 1968 through 1939 rounds is here: COG 1968-1939 Vote Summary . In both cases, raw vote totals for each past round appear on Sheet 1 and the percentage totals for each past round appear on Sheet 2.
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A spreadsheet listing the full membership to date of the Circle of Greats, along with some of their stats, is here: Circle of Greats Membership . You can also find that same link any time by clicking on “Circle of Greats” at the top of the High Heats Stats home page.
Another COG data spreadsheet showing each season a COG member played in the majors, along with the team he played for that season and his baseball-reference WAR (overall WAR for everyday players, pitching WAR for pitchers) for the season, is here:
Circle of Greats Seasons