Baseball: The World's Game (OOTP 22 Fictional World)

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  • MrNFL_FanIQ
    MVP
    • Oct 2008
    • 4984

    #2131
    2027 in BSA




    Two-time defending Bolivar League champ Barranquilla had their best season yet in their six-year playoff streak. The Blues finished 111-51 for the top seed and their fifth Colombia-Ecuador Division title. All six seasons of their streak have had 99+ victories. Everyone else in the division was below .500, including Quito at 79-83. That ended a three-year playoff streak for the Thunderbolts and was their first losing season since 2015.

    The next best records fought for the Peru-Bolivia Division with Lima (104-58) taking it over Santa Cruz (101-61). The Lobos broke the Beisbol Sudamerica record for runs scored at 931 and set a new record for team slugging percentage at .523. It was a surprise explosion for Lima, who ended the Bolivar League’s longest active playoff drought at 22 years. The Crawfish were denied a fourth straight division title, but easily got the first wild card. Santa Cruz allowed the fewest runs in the BL at 577.

    Caracas again claimed the Venezuela Division at 93-69, giving the Colts ten division titles in the last eleven years. Valencia was eight back in second at 85-77, but that was just enough to take the second wild card over 84-78 Ciudad Guayana. The Velocity picked up their fourth wild card in seven years. Barquisimeto and Arequipa both were five back on the last wild card at 80-82.

    Although the Arrows missed the playoffs, their LF Paco Amorim won his second Bolivar League MVP in three years. He broke his own BSA record for on-base percentage at .489 and now has BSA’s top three OBP seasons. His .489 ranked as the fourth-highest qualifying single-season OBP in all of pro baseball history. Amorim’s 107 walks were third-most in BSA history, two behind his record 109 from 2023.

    The 27-year old Brazilian lefty led in the triple slash (.387/.489/.765), OPS (1.254), wRC+ (223), WAR (11.1), home runs (57), and walks (107). Amorim also had 211 hits, 120 runs, 31 doubles, and 117 RBI with only 52 strikeouts. His 1.254 OPS was the second-best in BSA history behind only Juan Carlos Rivera’s 1.281 from 2023. Amorim’s slugging also ranked as fifth best. After the season, Arequipa signed Amorim to an eight-year, $185,200,000 extension.

    Barranquilla’s Fernando Alves won Pitcher of the Year in his ninth season. The 32-year old Brazilian righty led in wins (21-2), ERA (2.35), walks (74), and quality starts (26). Alves struck out 262 over 237.2 innings with 5.3 WAR and 167 ERA+.

    Caracas defeated Valencia 2-1 in the first round, then promptly was swept in the divisional series by Barranquilla. Lima also swept Santa Cruz, earning their first Bolivar League Championship Series trip since their 2001 pennant. The Blues dynasty remained too strong though, defeating Lima 4-2 for the first BL three-peat since Santa Cruz’s 2008-10 effort. Despite being in only their 19th season, Barranquilla now had many or more pennants than five charter franchises that started with the league in 1931.



    Santiago won the South Central Division for the eighth straight year and earned their 12th playoff trip in 13 years. For the fifth time in six years, the Saints also earned the Southern Cone League’s top seed, although this was their best record of the run at 109-53. Santiago’s .297 team batting average was the second-best in league history and they led all teams with 823 runs.

    The Chilean capital also set an all-time Beisbol Sudamerica attendance record at 2,905,410. Concepcion was second in the division at 97-65 to earn the first wild card, bouncing back after a rare losing season in 2026. The Chiefs earned their fifth wild card in six years and their 14th playoff appearance since 2011. Concepcion allowed the league’s fewest runs at 524.

    Sao Paulo won the Southeast Division at 101-61 and Manaus took the North at 99-63; both taking first by eight game margins. The Padres earned a fourth division crown in a row while the Magpies earned their second-ever (2017). For the second wild card, Rosario (93-69) edged reigning Copa Sudamerica champ Buenos Aires (92-70) and Brasilia (91-71). The Robins snapped a 13-year playoff drought. Also of note was Fortaleza’s playoff streak ending at six as the Foxes fell to 78-84.

    Santiago two-way star Will Arocha won his second Southern Cone League MVP in three years and also took his first Pitcher of the Year. The 26-year old Chilean had missed most of 2026 with a broken kneecap, bouncing back impressively for his fourth season. On the mound, Arocha led in wins (25-4) and innings (274.1). He posted a 2.23 ERA, 292 strikeouts, 163 ERA+, and 7.4 WAR. Arocha also earned Gold Glove honors as a pitcher.

    Arocha also played regularly at second base with 117 games and 105 starts offensively on the year. He had 4.8 WAR with a .292/.330/.543 slash, 145 wRC+, 122 hits, 70 runs, 13 doubles, 16 triples, 20 homers, 81 RBI, and 37 stolen bases. Arocha had the unique feat of winning MVP, POTY, Silver Slugger, and a Gold Glove all in the same year. That had only previously been accomplished once in all of professional baseball history back in 1968 by Totaro Uchiyama of the Japan League.

    Concepcion edged Rosario 2-1 in the first round, then fell 3-1 to Santiago in the divisional series. Manaus topped Sao Paulo 3-1 on the other side to earn their first trip to the Southern Cone League Championship. The Saints ended a four-year stretch of one-and-dones despite their regular season success. However, Santiago still fell short of the pennant for the seventh straight year. The Magpies pulled off a shocking sweep of the Saints, setting up a finals matchup between two teams from the 2009 expansion.



    The 97th Copa Sudamerica went all seven games with Barranquilla outlasting Manaus, earning their second Cup in three years. It was the eighth straight year without a Brazilian team on top, tying 1959-66 for the longest such drought. RF Rodrigo Enriquez was finals MVP in his fifth season. In seven playoff starts, he was 11-27 with 7 runs, 3 extra base hits, 4 RBI, and 5 steals. At 111-51, the 2027 Blues were tied for the ninth-best record by a Cup winner.



    Other notes: 2027 was the final season for legendary Recife 3B Niccolo Coelho at age 44. He finally hit a hard wall, struggling to 0.4 WAR with only 68 games and 24 starts. Coelho did get 16 RBI, getting him to 2231 and passing Milton Becker’s record of 2226. Coelho’s 926 homers did fall shy of Becker’s 941 for the top spot and his 3745 hits were second to Owen Arcia’s 3940. Coelho also retired as BSA’s all-time leader in runs (2133), total bases (7275) and WAR among position players (168.5).

    As of 2037 among all players in pro baseball history, Coelho ranks 20th in homers, 24th in RBI, 17th in runs, 19th in hits, 16th in games played, and 12th in WAR among position players. When adding pitchers and two-way guys, Coelho ranks 17th on the all-time WAR board. All 3369 of Coelho’s games came with Recife. The only player in pro baseball history with more games for one team was Angel Gabriel Cornejo, who played all 3444 of his games from 1936-59 with Cordoba.

    In other hitting milestones, Juan Rizo became the 18th member of the 3000 hit club. Rizo and Sebastian Nazario became the 35th and 36th to 1500 RBI. Daniel Schafer became the 23rd to score 1500 runs. Ronaldo Ayala and Elijah Reuter became the 78th and 79th to 2500 hits. Valencia’s Timo Ordonez had a 31-game hitting streak, which was the 21st time in BSA that a player had a 31+ game streak. In pitching, Julio Arias was the 68th to 200 wins and Ronaldo Navarette was the 37th to 300 saves.

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    • MrNFL_FanIQ
      MVP
      • Oct 2008
      • 4984

      #2132
      2027 in EAB




      The battle for the Japan League’s top seed came down to defending East Asia Baseball champ Sapporo and Chiba. The Comets ended up grabbing it and the Capital Division title at 100-62, while the Swordfish were 99-63 atop the North Division. Chiba earned their third playoff trip in five years and led the league in scoring with 766 runs. Sapporo got their fourth division title in five years. The Swordfish had to fend off 95-67 Niigata, who got the first wild card for their second berth in three years.

      Hiroshima repeated as West Division champ at 95-67, fending off Fukuoka by six games. The Hammerheads had the fewest runs allowed at 517. A tight Central Division had Kobe (93-69) outlast Kyoto (91-71), and Nagoya (89-73). The Blaze picked up their fifth consecutive division title.

      The Kamikaze at 91-71 ended as the second wild card to end a four-year playoff drought. They were one ahead of Saitama (90-72) and two ahead of both Nagoya and Fukuoka (89-73). That ended the Frogs’ playoff streak at seven years, which was the longest active streak in the Japan League.

      MVP went to Hiroshima 1B Hyung-Gwang Sohn in his fourth year as a starter. The 25-year old lefty led in runs (124), home runs (62), RBI (130), walks (78), total bases (406), OBP (.413), slugging (.719), OPS (1.132), wRC+ (241), and WAR (11.7). Sohn added 183 hits and a .324 batting average. The prior spring, the Hammerheads gave Sohn a five-year, $69,200,000 extension.

      Pitcher of the Year was Kobe’s Tsuneo Takao in his seventh season. The 27-year old righty had an 18-8 record, 1.86 ERA, 222.2 innings, 324 strikeouts, 0.83 WHIP, 183 ERA+, and 8.3 WAR. Takao didn’t lead in any stat, but was second in ERA, WAR, and WHIP; and finished third in strikeouts. The highlight of the season came on July 19 as Takao threw EAB’s 39th Perfect Game in a 15 strikeout performance against Niigata. This was his second career no-hitter as he also had one in 2021.

      The Green Dragons would edge the Blaze 2-1 in the wild card round while Hiroshima topped Kobe 2-1. Both pulled off divisional series upsets as the Hammerheads outlasted defending champ Sapporo 3-2 and Niigata ousted Chiba 3-1. The Green Dragons earned their first Japan League Championship Series trip since their 2008 title, while Hiroshima earned back-to-back trips.

      For the first time since 2012, the JLCS was a sweep with Niigata clobbering Hiroshima 4-0. The Green Dragons became seven-time Japan League champs (1990, 1991, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2027), an impressive haul for a 1978 expansion team. The Hammerheads now have been defeated in six straight JLCS trips. Hiroshima has made it more than any other team in the 21st Century, but they’ve gone 2-8 in their trips.



      Four teams were within three games of the Korea League’s top seed in 2027. Goyang barely took it at 98-64 atop the North Division, ending a seven-year playoff drought. Incheon was one back in the division at 97-65, giving the defending KL champs the first wild card. Busan won the South Division for the fourth straight year at 97-65 with Ulsan next at 95-67. The Blue Jays’ playoff streak grew to eight, the longest-active streak in EAB. The Swallows got repeat playoff trips as the second wild card and allowed the fewest runs at 525.

      There was an eight game drop to the third wild card spot which went to 87-75 Yongin, ending their six-year playoff drought. Hamhung (84-78) and Pyongyang (82-80) were the closest competitors. The Heat led the league with 752 runs, while the Pythons’ pitching staff had 1613 strikeouts. That was the third-most Ks in KL history and the most in a century. At 80-82, Changwon’s six-year playoff streak ended and they had their first losing season since 2014.

      Last year’s KLCS runner-up Gwangju also notably dropped to 75-87. Despite that, Grays DH Han Yi won his third Korea League MVP in four seasons. The 26-year old lefty led in hits (210), runs (114), homers (56), total bases (411), triple slash (.354/.414/.693), OPS (1.107), wRC+ (198), and WAR (9.8). Yi’s 129 RBI fell seven short of a Triple Crown.

      Meanwhile Ulsan ace Jin-Yu Jun became EAB’s first Triple Crown pitcher since 2018 with the 20th such season. The third-year righty repeated as Pitcher of the Year with a 21-9 record, 2.25 ERA, and 332 strikeouts in 243.2 innings. Jun also was the leader in WHIP (0.88), FIP- (47), and WAR (10.3).

      Ulsan edged Yongin 2-1 in the wild card round, then upset top seed Goyang 3-1 in the divisional series. The Swallows secured their first Korea League Championship Series trip since their 2015 pennant. Defending champ Incheon battered Busan 3-0 and went the distance against Ulsan. The Inferno survived 4-3 to repeat, becoming five time Korean champs (1950, 1954, 2002, 2026, 2027).



      Incheon was denied the overall title again as Niigata took the 107th East Asian Championship 4-2. The Green Dragons became four-time EAB champs (1991, 2006, 2008, 2027) and continued Japan’s recent finals dominance. The JL champ has won the title in seven consecutive seasons, the longest such streak in EAB history.

      2026 Japan League MVP Masanori Fukuoka was the finals MVP. In 17 starts, the 25-year old LF had 31 hits, 19 runs, 4 doubles, 5 homers, 14 RBI, 7 steals, 1.258 OPS, and 1.6 WAR. His effort was the second-most hits and third-most runs in EAB playoff history.



      Other notes: Chiba’s Naohisa Sakiyama had a four home run game against Yokohama, the 14th four-homer game in EAB history. Yeo-San Park became the 36th member of the 600 home run club and Ji-Hwan Kimw as the 74th to 500 dingers. Kunihiko Ishiguro was the 35th to score 1500 runs. Takerou Kanayama was the 97th to reach 2500 hits. SS Jae-Won Park and RF Chae-Yun Choi both won their 8th Gold Gloves.

      In pitching milestones, Nobuyoshi Yamauchi was the 14th to reach 250 career wins. Akikazu Yoshida and Toshikuni Naikai were the 68th and 69th to 200 wins. Naikai became the 19th to 4000 strikeouts, while Yun-Jae Paek and Il-Hwan Lee became the 45th and 46th to 3500 Ks.

      It was the final year for the seven-time Pitcher of the Year winner Naikai, who had declined sharply after various injuries in his early 30s. He was done at only age 35, but his dominance was absurd with a 202-67 record, 1.80 ERA, 2544.1 innings, 4054 strikeouts, 365 walks, 188 ERA+, 36 FIP-, and 126.7 WAR.

      Naikai retired as EAB’s career leader in K/9 (14.34), WHIP (0.78), winning percentage (.751), and opponent’s OBP (.213). He was also second in opponent’s OPS and ERA behind only EAB saves leader Oki Tanaka. Even with a relatively lower inning count, Naikai also made it to third in pitching WAR. He’ll forever be remembered for his 2020 season, considered by many to be the greatest pitching season in baseball history. That year, he had an 0.64 ERA over 240 innings, 445 strikeouts, 22 walks, 19-1 record, 7 shutouts, 528 ERA+, 0 FIP-, and 18.5 WAR.

      Comment

      • MrNFL_FanIQ
        MVP
        • Oct 2008
        • 4984

        #2133
        2027 in CABA



        In a close race for the Mexican League’s #1 seed, North Division champ Tijuana (104-58) edged out South Division champ Leon (103-59). The Toros earned repeat division crowns and allowed the fewest runs in the league at 546. The Lions got their third straight playoff trip, but it was their first division title since 2020. Mexico City had taken the South in each year since apart from 2022.

        The reigning league champ Aztecs were still right in the mix, five back on Leon at 98-64. Mexico City’s playoff streak grew to seven as the first wild card, but they fell short of a fifth straight 100+ win season. The Aztecs led in scoring by far at 853 runs, 107 better than next best Leon. Mexico City also hit 268 home runs as a team, the second-highest tally in Mexican League history.

        For the remaining three wild cards, advancing were Guadalajara (90-72), Mexicali (89-73) and Cancun (87-75). Hermosillo was the first team out at 85-77, followed by Juarez, Monterrey, and Torreon each at .500. The Hellhounds earned their second playoff berth in three years. The Maroons ended a 17-year drought, while the Captains earned their first postseason trip since joining in the 2003 expansion. Cancun was the only team from that group without a playoff berth yet and they had only even finished above .500 once until now.

        The Jesters falling to 81-81 was significant as it ended a 13-year playoff streak. It was the third-longest streak in Central American Baseball Association history behind Monterrey’s 18-year run from 1988-2005 and Haiti’s 14-year reign from 1997-2010. It was only the seventh time Juarez has missed the playoffs in the 21st Century.

        Mexico City had the Mexican League’s MVP for the fifth straight season, although it was the first time for 2B Leonardo Martinez. The 27-year old righty led in home runs (67), RBI (146), total bases (451), slugging (.747), and WAR (11.9). Martinez tied for the eighth-most homers in a CABA season, five behind the record 72 shared by Darion Gaudi (2006) and Yohnny Galaz (1988). Martinez also had 209 hits, 121 runs, .346 average, and 235 wRC+.

        Tijuana’s Richard Wright won his seventh Pitcher of the Year in eight years and his fourth straight. He joined the legendary Ulices Montero and Junior Vergara as CABA’s only 7+ time winners. The 29-year old Jamaican lefty had the best ERA for the eighth year running with 1.65; the third-best of his career. He also had his second-best marks to that point in strikeouts (371), and WAR (12.2); both league bests.

        Wright also led in WHIP (0.79), K/BB (10.0), shutouts (9), and FIP- (36). He had a 213 ERA+ over 245.2 innings, an 18-9 record, and 8 saves. Wright had two one-hitters and two 19 K games. In only nine seasons so far, Wright had posted 84.8 WAR, 2837 strikeouts, 159-68 record, and 1.97 ERA over 2103.2 innings.

        The wild card round matchups both were 2-1 with Cancun shocking defending champ Mexico City and Guadalajara edging Mexicali. The Captains then stunned Tijuana 3-2 in round two to earn their first-ever trip to the Mexican League Championship Series. The Hellhounds also upset Leon 3-2 for their first MLCS trip since 2017.

        This was the first time in MLCS history that both division champs were absent from the matchup. Guadalajara ultimately cruised to a 4-1 win over Cancun to end a 50-year pennant drought. The Hellhounds became five-time Mexican League champs (1920, 1921, 1925, 1976, 2027).



        Reigning CABA Champion Bahamas took the Caribbean League’s top seed at 101-61 atop the West Division, giving the Buccaneers three straight playoff berths. The division wasn’t a pushover either as they had to fend off Santo Domingo (98-64) and Haiti (92-70), who both got wild cards. The Dolphins led the league scoring (869) and the Herons allowed the fewest runs (581). SD’s playoff streak grew to three and was their fifth berth in six years. Haiti ended a two-year drought. Because division winners didn’t get guaranteed seeding preference, Santo Domingo ended up as the #2 seed.

        The second best division winner was Honduras at 95-67 atop the Central Division, holding off 92-70 Guatemala. The Horsemen grew their playoff streak to five with back-to-back division titles. The Ghosts’ playoff streak grew to seven with a wild card, but it was their first time with fewer than 100 wins in the run. The next closest in the wild card race was Jamaica at 87-75. Suriname claimed the East Division for the second time in three years at 92-70, topping Guyana by eight. Last year’s division champ Puerto Rico dropped from 101 wins in 2026 to 76-86 in 2027.

        Salvador was a non-factor at 77-85, but their 1B Fernando Silva won Caribbean League MVP. The 24-year old Guatemalan lefty led in runs (126), home runs (59), RBI (143), total bases (463), slugging (.741), OPS (1.154), wRC+ (206), and WAR (10.5). Silva also had 239 hits, 39 doubles, and a .382 average. He signed a foru-year, $46,200,000 extension in the spring.

        Silva was second in batting average and denied the Triple Crown by Santo Domingo’s Niles Albury at .398, which was the fifth-best qualifying single-season in CABA. Albury notably had 252 hits, matching Prometheo Garcia’s CABA record from 1949 which hadn’t been touched since.

        After taking third in 2026, Guatemala’s Israel Montague regained the Pitcher of the Year mantle. He became a six-time winner, having taken it from 2021-25. Like in his prior wins, Montague had the best ERA at 1.90. The 30-year old Panamanian lefty also led in strikeouts (379), WHIP (0.75), K/BB (14.6), quality starts (23), shutouts (6), FIP- (42), and WAR (11.4). He had an 18-5 record and 207 ERA+ over 241 innings. Montague also had a 20 strikeout game on July 6 against Suriname. Montague signed a seven-year, $172 million extension with the Ghosts in May 2026.

        Round one had sweeps with Suriname over Haiti and Honduras over Guatemala. The top two seeds held in round two with Bahamas surviving 3-2 against the Silverbacks and Santo Domingo over the Horsemen 3-1. After no titles in their first 64 seasons, the Buccaneers now had a chance to repeat. The Dolphins quickly snuffed out those dreams though with an emphatic sweep in the Caribbean League Championship Series. Santo Domingo ended a 13-year pennant drought and won their 15th pennant, second in the CL to Honduras’s 17.



        The 117th CABA Championship was the second time Guadalajara and Santo Domingo had met in the finals. Back in 1976, the Hellhounds prevailed for their most recent title. The Dolphins got long overdue revenge by winning 4-2 in 2027, becoming nine-time champs (1917, 1927, 1960, 1962, 1982, 1984, 1985, 2012, 2027). This left Mexico City as the only team with more titles than the Dominican capital with 11.

        League MVP runner-up Niles Albury won finals MVP for Santo Domingo. The 25-year old Bahaman DH in 14 playoff starts had 23 hits, 13 runs, 4 doubles, 2 triples, 3 homers, and 7 RBI. Also worth mentioning was Guadalajara 1B Elieis Pinon, who set a CABA playoff record for runs scored (21) and at-bats (82). Pinon also had 19 RBI, tying the record which had been hit twice.



        Other notes: Noah Breton became CABA’s home run king in 2027, hitting 36 at age 36 in his third season with Juarez. This got him to 879, passing Hugh Boerboom’s 866 which had held since 2006. Breton also became the 7th to 2000 RBI, finishing the season 6th at 2028. He was within striking distance of Solomon Aragon’s record of 2137. Additionally, Breton had a league-best 74 walks in 2027 to get to 1389. That passed Mason Mick’s 1350 for the #1 spot on the leaderboard. Mick’s mark had held since 1943.

        CABA hits and runs king Matias Esquilin played his final season in 2027 at age 43, his 16th season with the Jesters and 23rd overall. He got 76 hits over 125 games and 75 starts, becoming the first to crack 4000 CABA hits. Esquilin ended with 4009 and was only the 6th in pro baseball history with 4K. He passed Prometheo Garcia the prior year for most hits in CABA (3871), however Garcia was the world leader at 4917 when combining his MLB and CABA totals.

        Esquilin’s scored 49 runs in 2027 to finish at 2413, passing Garcia’s combined tally of 2374. This put Esquilin 2nd in world history in runs scored behind world home run king Majed Darwish, who scored 2664 times in South Asia Baseball. Esquilin also finished as CABA’s all-time leader in games played (3519), at-bats (13,558), total bases (7276), stolen bases (1606), and strikeouts (3002). His 666 doubles fell just short of Adrian Tovar’s record 675 and his 2061 RBI ranked 3rd at retirement. Esquilin was 5th among position players for WAR at 136.2.

        On the world charts as of 2037, Esquilin ranks 8th in games, 5th in at-bats, 3rd in runs, 6th in hits, 32nd in doubles, 13th in steals, and 29th in strikeouts. He just misses the top 50 for WAR among all position players. Esquilin’s longevity was remarkable as one of only eight players ever with 3500+ games.

        In other milestones, Jose Leal became the 25th member of the 600 home run club and Manuel Aquino became the 63rd to 500. Aquino won his 7th Silver Slugger at third base. Payton Nandin was the 59th to 1500 runs scored. Nandin and Jarek Wilson-Smith both reached 2500 hits, achieved by 62 CABA batters. Jamarca Akim became the fifth CABA pitcher to 4500 strikeouts, finishing his career with 4524. Akim also ended 3rd in wins at 272 and 6th in pitching WAR at 106.43. Quirino Brito became the 29th pitcher to 3500 strikeouts.

        Nicaragua’s offense drew only 243 walks all year, a new Caribbean League worst. Both Jamal Forsyth and Fanfan Jean had four home run games, making 21 such games in CABA history. Despite that, it was the 4th time that four homers happened twice in the same year. For the first time since 2017 and 2018, CABA didn’t have a single no-hitter in 2027.

        Comment

        • MrNFL_FanIQ
          MVP
          • Oct 2008
          • 4984

          #2134
          2027 in MLB




          Three teams were separated by four games in the race for the National Association’s top seed. Washington ended up taking it at 102-60 atop the East Division, growing their playoff streak to five years. The Admirals had 291 home runs as a team, setting a new NA record. It was their third division title in five years. They had no real competition with second place New York at 83-79 and last year’s division champ Raleigh down at 76-86. Despite their finish, the Yankees led the NA in scoring at 812 runs.

          The #2 seed went to Chicago at 99-63 atop the Upper Midwest Division. The Cubs repeated as division champ and were 14 ahead of second place Cleveland. A notable shift in the division was Detroit at 75-87, their first losing season since 2016. It was only the second time in the 21st Century that the Tigers weren’t .500 or better.

          Last year’s NACS runner-up Montreal won the Northeast Division for the fourth year in a row. It was the closest division race with the Maples (98-64) four ahead of Ottawa (94-68) and nine ahead of Halifax (89-73). Both got wild cards with the Elks ending a four-year drought and the Hound Dogs securing their first playoff trip since joining in Major League Baseball’s 2021 expansion.

          Reigning National Association champ Cincinnati won the Lower Midwest Division at 95-67, extending MLB’s longest active playoff streak to eight seasons. It was the Reds’ seventh division title of the run, as they actually took second to Louisville in 2026 despite winning 102 games. Indianapolis was second in the division at 87-75.

          That mark was just enough to give the Racers the third wild card and final playoff spot, ending a four-year playoff drought. That was the weakest record by a wild card since the playoff expansion. Falling just short were Cleveland (85-77), Quebec City (84-78), Tulsa (84-78), Columbus (84-78), Louisville (83-79), New York (83-79), and Winnipeg (83-79). The Wolves allowed the fewest runs at 588.

          Helping Indianapolis across the line was National Association MVP Thomas Rich. Nicknamed “The Butcher,” the 28-year old first baseman led in runs (127), total bases (430), slugging (.720), OPS (1.136), wRC+ (216), and 9.4 WAR. The Westlake, Ohio native added 214 hits, 37 doubles, 57 home runs, 121 RBI, and a .358 average. Prior to the 2027 season, the Racers locked up Rich on an eight-year, $186,600,000 extension.

          Grand Rapids was a non-factor at 75-87, but their fourth-year ace Callum McGonagal won Pitcher of the Year. The 25-year old Irishman led in ERA (2.17), quality starts (27), and WAR (8.8). McGonagal added a 15-13 record over 253 innings, 251 strikeouts, and 178 ERA+. He was only two wins and two strikeouts from a Triple Crown.

          The division champs all advanced out of round one of the playoffs with Cincinnati over Ottawa 3-1, along with sweeps by Montreal over Halifax and Chicago over Indianapolis. The Maples edged the Cubs 3-2 in round two while top seed Washington fell 3-2 to the Reds. This set up a rematch in the National Association Championship Series.

          Cincinnati had a shot at a repeat and their fifth title of the 2020s. Montreal denied that dream though, rolling to a 4-1 victory over the Reds. The Maples ended a 39-year pennant drought and became 11-time National Association champs (1901, 1915, 1928, 1949, 1951, 1972, 1973, 1979, 1981, 1987, 2027). Montreal is also the first Canadian team to make the World Series since Winnipeg in 2007. Before this drought, the longest stretch without a Canadian team in the Fall Classic was ten years from 1905-14.



          In 2026, San Diego won the World Series as a 94-68 wild card and went onto win the Baseball Grand Championship. In 2027, the Seals exploded for a 119-43 record, dominating both the American Association and the Southwest Division. This was tied with 2013 Los Angeles for the second-best record in MLB history. The only better was Phoenix at 120-43 all the way back in 1906.

          San Diego hoped to have a happier ending than those two squads, as they both failed to make the World Series. The Seals allowed the fewest runs in all of MLB at 549, a rare feat for an AA team since it has the designated hitter and the National Association doesn’t. Despite their incredible win tally, the other three division champs all had 100+ win seasons.

          Seattle grabbed the #2 seed at 106-56, securing a fifth consecutive Northwest Division. The Grizzlies offense had 308 doubles, the third-most in MLB history. Houston was next atop the South Central Division at 104-58, their third division title in four years. Lastly, Nashville was the Southeast Division king for the second time in three years at 100-62. All four division champs took first place by 10+ games.

          The South Central’s El Paso (94-68) and Oklahoma City (92-70) emerged as the first two wild cards. The expansion Prairie Dogs earned their first-ever playoff berth and led MLB with 959 runs. The Outlaws picked up repeat playoff spots with their effort. For the final spot, there was a three-way tie at 90-72 between Anchorage, Denver, and Austin. Falling just short were Oakland (89-73), San Francisco (88-74), Charlotte (88-74), and Salt Lake City (87-75).

          The Avalanche won tiebreaker games over both the Dragons and Amigos, giving Anchorage its second wild card (2023). With El Paso and Halifax’s 2027 successes, half of the 2021 expansion teams have gotten to the playoffs already. Also worth a mention was Las Vegas struggling to 67-95, as it was the first losing campaign in 20 years for the Vipers.

          Oklahoma City RF Neil Hollinger won his second American Association MVP in three years. The 25-year old from Lloydminster, Alberta led in OBP (.427), slugging (.726), OPS (1.153), wRC+ (190), and WAR (8.8). Hollinger added 206 hits, 138 runs, 36 doubles, 55 homers, 139 RBI, and a .357 average.

          In his MLB debut, Rahman Omar won Pitcher of the Year for San Diego. The 32-year old Malaysian righty had won the top honor in 2024 and 2025 for Surabaya of Austronesia Professional Baseball. Omar left APB for MLB for 2027 on a six-year, $153,600,000 deal with the Seals. It is always hard to gauge how someone will adjust to a new league, but Omar delivered remarkably.

          Omar led in ERA (2.17), WHIP (0.93), quality starts (24), shutouts (5), FIP- (56), and WAR (10.9). He had a 205 ERA+ over 274 innings, 265 strikeouts, and 20-8 record. Sadly, this would be Omar’s only full season in MLB as he’d be plagued by various injuries after that, although he would still be effective in partial seasons for SD from 2028-30.

          All three first round series went the distance with the division champs surviving against the wild cards. Nashville beat El Paso, Houston topped Oklahoma City, and Seattle downed Anchorage. The Grizzlies then outlasted the Hornets 3-2 in round two, sending Seattle to its fifth consecutive American Association Championship Series. Top seed San Diego rolled Nashville with a sweep to set up an AACS rematch.

          It was only the eighth-ever AACS rematch and the first time in MLB’s history that both the AACS and NACS had rematches together. In an all-time classic, San Diego survived 4-3 to secure the repeat and their third pennant in five years. The Seals now had 12 pennants (1936, 1955, 1956, 1958, 1966, 1967, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2023, 2026, 2027), second only to Phoenix’s 13 among American Association teams.

          Although it would be unfair to call the Grizzlies chokers for losing to an 119-win Seals squad, Seattle made bad history by losing the AACS in five straight seasons. They joined APB’s Tainan (2002-06) and both Dakar (1990-94) and Freetown (1996-2001) of West African Baseball as the only teams in any pro baseball league to make a subleague final in five consecutive years and lose each time.

          Seattle joined Philadelphia (1941-47) and Houston (1910-14) as the only MLB teams to even make it to the LCS in five straight years, but that was little consolation for dejected Grizzlies fans. All time, Seattle was now 2-10 in their American Association Championship Series trips.



          In the 127th World Series, San Diego staked their claim for the greatest team in MLB history. The Seals defeated Montreal 4-2 to become the first repeat MLB champ since Phoenix in 2003-04. San Diego became the third franchise to repeat twice, as they also did it back in 1955-56. Los Angeles had repeats in 1945-46 and 1973-74, while Philadelphia had their 1941-44 four-peat along with a 1917-18 repeat. The Seals were now nine-time World Series champs (1936, 55, 56, 58, 66, 2007, 10, 26, 27), tying them with Denver for the most.



          Was this MLB’s best-ever team? The only two teams that won as many or more games didn’t make it to the World Series. San Diego topped Denver’s 114-48 squad for 2020 as the winningest champion. The Seals’ 112-50 mark in 1956 was the only other World Series winner who won 110+ games. The 2020 Dragons notably won the Baseball Grand Championship, giving them a credible argument for pro baseball’s best-ever team. San Diego would have a chance to top that and become the first repeat Grand Champion.

          Other notes: 2027 was notably the MLB debut for SS Harvey Coyle, who won nine MVPs in the European Baseball Federation and was EBF’s all-time home run king and WARlord. Coyle signed a two-year, $55,600,000 deal with Ottawa at age 40 and missed half the season to hamstring issues. Still, the Englishman played 83 games with .968 OPS, 167 wRC+, and 4.8 WAR; showing he could hang in MLB even in his 22nd season. 217.0

          Coyle reached two huge milestones though with his combined EBF/MLB stats. He got to 217.0 career WAR, passing Jimmy Caliw’s world record of 214.0 that had held since 1990. Coyle also hit 25 home runs to become the 6th in professional baseball history with 1000 career homers. Additionally, Coyle reached the 2000 runs scored milestone for his combined career.

          MLB home run king Isaac Cox became the 9th with 2000 runs scored in MLB. He only played 118 games in 2027 for El Paso due to injury, but still had 5.1 WAR, 38 homers, and 1.043 OPS. Cox now had 2093 runs for 2nd on the leaderboard, but still needed a few more good years to catch Stan Provost’s 2348 for 1st. Cox was also now at 2149 RBI, 3rd behind Provost (2271) and Bryson Wightman (2167). Now at 866 home runs, Cox had a realistic chance at becoming MLB’s first 900 homer player.

          In other milestones, Alberto Peron and Fritz Louissi became the 32nd and 33rd MLB sluggers to join the 600 home run club. Mike Rojas and B.J. Pasternack became the 105th and 106th members of MLB’s 500 homer club. Pasternack also reached 2500 hits, 1500 runs, and 1500 RBI in 2027. MLB now had 117 players with 1500 runs scored, 123 with 1500 RBI, and 270 with 2500 hits. Mike Rojas and Gilbert Windemere both had four home run games, an accomplishment now met 36 times in MLB history.

          In pitching notables, Vincent Lepp became the 10th member of the 300 win club and the first to join since 2001. The 38-year old Lepp went 22-7 in his debut for Houston with 5.5 WAR and a 3.64 ERA, moving his career record to 308-168. Lepp was also now at 4408 strikeouts, 6th all-time. Caden Bouley and Thad Stoner became the 48th and 49th to reach 250 wins. 223 MLB aces had made it now to 200 victories. Emmett Pierson became the 29th to reach 3500 career strikeouts.

          Montreal closer R.C. Tan set the playoff record with 10 saves, posting a 2.14 ERA over 21 innings and 15 appearances with 22 strikeouts. Tan tied the world playoff record, hit once by Martin Cornu in the 1981 EBF season. For the second time in three years, MLB didn’t have a single no-hitter thrown. LF Max Baldwin won his 11th Gold Glove and 1B Jan Rychtr won his 7th. Baldwin became only the 12th MLB player to win the award 11+ times and was the only one to do it in left field.

          Comment

          • MrNFL_FanIQ
            MVP
            • Oct 2008
            • 4984

            #2135
            2027 Baseball Grand Championship

            The 18th Baseball Grand Championship was hosted in Karachi, Pakistan. Earning the automatic bids were MLB’s San Diego and Montreal, CABA’s Guadalajara and Santo Domingo, EAB’s Niigata and Incheon, BSA’s Manaus and Barranquilla, EBF’s Rotterdam and Zagreb, EPB’s Minsk, OBA’s Port Moresby, APB’s Jakarta, CLB’s Zhengzhou, WAB’s Cotonou, SAB’s Pune, ABF’s Hyderabad, ALB’s Medina, and AAB’s Mogadishu. The at-large went to OBA runner-up Canberra.

            San Diego was the defending champion and one of the few teams to make it back to the event the following year. The Seals had plenty of hype following their historic 119-43 record and World Series win. San Diego delivered upon that hype with a 14-5 finish, becoming the first team to repeat as Baseball Grand Champion.



            It wasn’t a pushover for the Seals, who finished only one game ahead their World Series counterpart Montreal, Cotonou, and Rotterdam each at 13-6. Based on the tiebreakers, the Maples officially finished second with the Copperheads third and Ravens fourth. It was the third time that the top two spots came out of the same league (2010 with Philadelphia/San Diego and 2024 with EBF’s Dublin/Chisinau). San Diego was the eighth MLB team to win the BGC and the sixth from the American Association.

            When you combined their regular season, playoffs, and Grand Championship tallies, San Diego finished with a record of 144-53 and a .731 win percentage. These were new wins and win percentage records by a BGC winner, passing 2020 Denver’s 140-54. When you combine that with earning back-to-back Grand Championships, the 2027 Seals might have the strongest case yet for the greatest professional baseball team of all time.



            It was the Ravens who actually had the best run differential at +52, narrowly beating the Seals’ +46. Rotterdam had the most runs at 109, repeating as the fourth place finisher. They set a BGC record for team hits (171) and had the second-best slugging in BGC history at .538. It was Cotonou with the fewest runs allowed at 54. The Copperheads had also finished third back in 2010, matching the best finish by a WAB team (Bamako had also taken third in 2017).

            Canberra and Hyderabad were next at 12-7 with the Horned Frogs officially fifth and the Centurions sixth on the head-to-head tiebreaker. Jakarta and Zagreb rounded out the winning teams at 10-9. The next five teams were each at 9-10; Barranquilla, Incheon, Medina, Minsk, and Santo Domingo. Mogadishu, Pune, and Zhengzhou each finished 8-11. Guadalajara was alone in 17th at 7-12, followed by Manaus and Port Moresby at 6-13. EAB champ Niigata sat alone in last at 5-14.

            The top awards both went to Rotterdam players with CF Kamil Bufka taking Tournament MVP. The 28-year old Czech in 19 starts had 21 hits, 18 runs, 5 doubles, 11 home runs, 19 RBI, 1.100 OPS, and 1.3 WAR.

            Best Pitcher went to Rick Hoogeveen with the 29-year old Dutch lefty posting a 1.71 ERA in four starts, 1-0 record, 31.2 innings, 40 strikeouts, and 1.0 WAR. Hoogeveen didn’t have the run support that Canberra’s Tai-Chi Wang had, as Wang became the first pitcher with five wins in the event. The 26-year old Taiwanese righty was 5-0 with a 2.27 ERA in 39.2 innings with 40 strikeouts and 1.9 WAR.

            Other notes: Mostly as an opener, Canberra’s Shaun Muir set the BGC record for games started by a pitcher with 10.

            Comment

            • MrNFL_FanIQ
              MVP
              • Oct 2008
              • 4984

              #2136
              2028 MLB Hall of Fame (Part 1)

              Major League Baseball’s 2028 Hall of Fame class was an impressive one with four inductees. Three were absolute no-doubters with 1B Joran Mallery (99.1%), CF Morgan Short (98.8%), and SP Omari Green (96.5%). Joining them was SP Victor Burke, who finally got beyond the 66% requirement with 71.3% on his tenth and final opportunity.

              CL Etzel Urban was the first to miss with a 62.5% debut. 3B Jeanpaul Vick had 59.8% for his ninth ballot. 3B Kieran Wilson was also on his penultimate chance and got 58.7%. CL Sebastian Gomez was the other guy above 50% with 50.7% on his fifth go. Three players would fall off the ballot after ten failed tries.



              Among them was SP Jaxson Hardy, who peaked at 28.2% in his debut and ended at 10.0%. He won Pitcher of the Year in 2004 and had a 15-yaer career with Albuquerque, posting a 183-121 record, 3.22 ERA, 2819.2 innings, 2736 strikeouts, 618 walks, 120 ERA+, and 70.6 WAR. The pace was there for Hardy, but about half of his seasons were shortened by injuries, lowering his final accumulations. A few more healthy seasons probably gets him in or at least a closer look.

              RF Olen Lack got as close at 54.3% in his debut, but was down to a mere 8.2% at the end. He had 20 seasons with Seattle and one with Atlanta, winning five Gold Gloves and one Silver Slugger. Lack had 3014 games, 3271 hits, 1873 runs, 404 doubles, 120 triples, 446 home runs, 1559 RBI, 1240 walks, 718 stolen bases, .281/.351/.452 slash, 117 wRC+, and 82.7 WAR. The totals were impressive, but he was dismissed as a compiler by some voters. His lack of dominance and black ink put his resume behind his competition.

              SP Stan Miller debuted at 38.1%, but was down to 6.2% by his tenth ballot. He had a 17-year career with Cleveland with a 224-168 record, 2.99 ERA, 3998.1 innings, 2729 strikeouts, 854 walks, 112 ERA+, and 65.0 WAR. Miller had longevity, but lacked the raw dominance and never was a Pitcher of the Year finalist. Thus, he fit into the “Hall of Pretty Good” space.

              Dieudonne Guegan was worth a mention, falling off on his eighth ballot at 5.0%. He was a two-way whose career was evenly split between MLB and CABA, keeping his stats in either league too low to have a chance. His combined pitching though saw a 220-169 record, 3.07 ERA, 3674.2 innings, 3752 strikeouts, 857 walks, 122 ERA+, and 84.9 WAR. He notably led his league four times in strikeouts. Guegan also had 980 games and 608 starts in the field with 13.8 WAR, .804 OPS, and 121 wRC+. If those totals all came in one league, Guegan probably has a good shot. He also won a World Series with Tampa and CABA Championship with Juarez.

              SP Timothy Shibuya was also worth a quick mention, falling below 5% on his ninth ballot. He had a 183-148 record, 3.07 ERA, 3037.1 innings, 2667 strikeouts, 116 ERA+, and 61.8 WAR. Shibuya had two ERA titles and a Pitcher of the Year in 2008 with Winnipeg. He declined quickly after an age 30 labrum tear, preventing Shibuya from getting the bigger totals needed to make the cut.



              Joran “Hat” Mallery – First Base – Boston Red Sox – 99.1% First Ballot

              Joran Mallery was a 6’9’’, 200 pound left-handed first baseman from Merrimack, New Hampshire; a town of 26,000 people. He was nicknamed “Hat” for his fondness of oversized hats (
              they’re funny because they’re bigger than a normal hat.) Mallery was a great contact hitter with a solid eye for drawing walks and avoiding strikeouts. His gap power was especially impressive, leading the league in doubles seven times.

              Mallery’s home run power wasn’t prolific, but it was steady. His 162 game average got you 27 homers, 33 doubles, and 2 triples. It shows how great his gap power was to get so many doubles despite putrid speed and baserunning. Mallery fared notably better acing right-handed pitching (.898 OPS, 166 wRC+) compared to lefties (.717 OPS, 114 wRC+).

              Defensively, Mallery only ever played first base, a spot perfect for his long 6’9’’ frame. He was a consistently good-to-great defender and won three Gold Gloves. Mallery also had outstanding durability, starting 144+ games in all but his first and final seasons. He was very steady and consistent, proving great value over a 21-year career.

              Mallery attended the University of Wisconsin and over three seasons had 146 games, 170 hits, 106 runs, 27 doubles, 46 home runs, 118 RBI, .311/.390/.614 slash, 195 wRC+, and 9.6 WAR. Despite a solid showing, he wasn’t considered a first round prospect by many scouts. Mallery was picked by Boston 10th in the second round, 70th overall in the 2002 MLB Draft. He played 93 games and started 79 as a rookie with excellent production, posting a 4.4 WAR and .962 OPS. Mallery was second in Rookie of the Year voting and had a full-time job from 2004 onward.

              In his first full year starting, Mallery earned 2004 MVP honors and a Silver Slugger. He led the National Association in runs (112), hits (217), total bases (341), and WAR (9.0) and had a 31-game hitting streak in the late spring. Boston ended a six-year playoff drought and got to the NACS, but fell to Winnipeg.
              The Red Sox fell to .500 in 2005, but Mallery again won a Silver Slugger. He led in hits (206), doubles (47) and batting average (.344).

              Mallery won his second MVP and third Slugger in 2026 as the WARlord (9.4) and doubles leader (41). This year also had his career high 35 home runs. Boston started a five-year playoff streak, although they didn’t get beyond round two from 2006-09. Mallery was second in MVP voting in 2008 with his career best WAR at 10.1. He also had career highs in hits (233), batting average (.363), and OBP (.419). Prior to the 2008 campaign, the Red Sox signed Mallery to an eight-year, $98,700,000 extension.

              Boston had the top seed in 2009 at 107-55, but went one-and-done. The Red Sox were 101-61 in 2010 and got back to the NACS, but were denied by Philadelphia. In the playoffs, Mallery’s numbers were good with 35 starts, 39 hits, 21 runs, 7 doubles, 5 homers, 12 RBI, .810 OPS, 140 wRC+, and 1.2 WAR.

              He also represented the United States from 2005-11 in the World Baseball Championship with 143 games, 157 hits, 81 runs, 38 doubles, 32 home runs, 103 RBI, .310/.406/.579 slash, and 8.2 WAR. Mallery was third in 2011’s MVP voting and won world titles with the American team in 2005, 2007, 2008, 2010, and 2011.

              Boston fell to 81-81 in 2011, then dropped to 67-95 in 2012 for their first losing season of Mallery’s career. His production dropped that year to 3.8 WAR and .741 OPS, career lows to that point. Since 2004, he had been worth 6+ WAR each year. Mallery did still win a Gold Glove in 2012 and had won his first the prior year. Feeling a change of scenery was required, Mallery opted out of his deal to become a free agent at age 30.

              With the Red Sox, Mallery had 1511 games, 1862 hits, 889 runs, 350 doubles, 259 home runs, 929 RBI, .324/.387/.529 slash, 181 wRC+, and 73.8 WAR. He was very popular as a native New Englander and his #14 uniform would eventually get retired in Boston. Las Vegas was optimistic that Mallery could return to form and signed him to a four-year, $96,400,000 for 2013.

              Mallery fared better than 2011, but was still down from his Red Sox prime with 4.9 WAR and .877 OPS. He didn’t feel like it was the right fit and he opted out of the Vipers deal after one year. Mallery then signed a five-year, $108 million deal with St. Louis. His 2014 with the Cardinals was worth 3.6 WAR, but his 2015 looked more like his peak self. Mallery led the NA in doubles (42) and RBI (124) and posted 7.5 WAR.

              He had a big impact though as St. Louis went 107-55 and 112-52, winning the National Association pennant both years. The Cardinals couldn’t claim the World Series though, falling to Phoenix in 2014 and Denver in 2015. In 30 playoff starts, Mallery was rock solid with 30 hits, 11 runs, 6 doubles, 7 home runs, 15 RBI, .886 OPS, 174 wRC+, and 1.4 WAR. His Baseball Grand Championship stats were less impressive with only 0.2 WAR over 33 games. St. Louis went 7-12 in the 2014 event and 10-9 in 2015.

              Mallery again utilized the opt-out in his deal, becoming a free agent again at age 33. In two seasons for St. Louis, Mallery had 318 games, 345 hits, 183 runs, 72 doubles, 59 home runs, 225 RBI, .288/.351/.505 slash, 164 wRC+, and 11.1 WAR. Even if the stint was short, he was appreciated for his hole in back-to-back pennants for the Cardinals.

              Next was a five-year, $120 million deal with Houston. This one actually stuck for all five years, although Mallery’s prime days were gone. He did lead in doubles and win a Gold Glove in 2018, but otherwise he was merely a decent regular season starter for the Hornets. In 786 games, Mallery had 695 hits, 388 runs, 149 doubles, 116 home runs, 406 RBI, .246/.333/.426 slash, 111 wRC+, and 12.8 WAR.

              Mallery made his mark in 2019 though, winning American Association Championship Series MVP as Houston edged Nashville for the pennant. They went on to upset defending champ Kansas City in the World Series for their first MLB title in 67 years. In 20 playoff starts in 2019, Mallery had 20 hits, 13 runs, 3 doubles, 6 home runs, 10 RBI, .855 OPS, and 0.8 WAR. He kept similar production in the Baseball Grand Championship with 0.7 WAR and .817 OPS over 19 starts, helping the Hornets finish alone in seventh at 10-9.

              Now 39-years old in 2021, Mallery signed with Philadelphia for one year with 1.9 WAR and .708 OPS. He joined New York in 2022 and had a surprise renaissance with 6.0 WAR and .899 OPS for the Yankees. Mallery also smacked 35 home runs, surprisingly matching his career high. Despite that comeback season, that was the end of his MLB run.

              Mallery still had international suitors and ended up in the African Association of Baseball on a two-year, $23 million deal with Lilongwe. He declined sharply though and had -0.4 WAR and .645 OPS over 122 games and 97 starts. Mallery retired after the 2023 season at age 41.

              For his MLB career, Mallery finished with 3085 games, 3349 hits, 1690 runs, 637 doubles, 45 triples, 523 home runs, 1815 RBI, 1185 walks, 1619 strikeouts, .293/.363/.494 slash, 156 wRC+, and 110.6 WAR. He notably got to second on MLB’s doubles list behind only Stan Provost’s 682. Mallery also ranks 46th in all of pro baseball history as of 2037 with 650 doubles when adding his AAB tally.

              On the MLB leaderboards as of 2037, Mallery is 13th in games, 24th in hits, 55th in runs, 23rd in total bases (5645), 31st in RBI, 68th in walks, and 26th in WAR among position players. Mallery is probably on the borderline of being considered “inner circle,” depending on how strict one’s definition was. He was a Hall of Fame lock under any metric and was nearly unanimous at 99.1%. Mallery actually managed to finish slightly above WARlord Morgan Short for the highest percentage, but it was really three co-headliners for Major League Baseball’s 2028 class.



              Morgan “The Machine” Short – Center Field – Salt Lake City Loons – 98.8% First Ballot

              Morgan Short was a 6’0’’, 200 pound left-handed center fielder from Denver, Colorado. Short was called “the Machine” for his tireless work ethic and leadership. He was always willing to go above and beyond for his fans and was one of the smartest guys in the game. Short became an absolutely beloved baseball icon across the United States and by WAR ranks as the best-ever American player.

              Short’s contact ability was truly exceptional and on a scale from 1-10, some scouts gave him a 12/10 at his prime. He was excellent at drawing walks, but his ability to avoid strikeouts was truly absurd. Short had a 3.1% strikeout rate for his career and is the only player in all of pro baseball history to have 10,000 career at-bats with fewer than 500 strikeouts.

              He was noticeably better against right-handed pitching with .994 OPS and 172 wRC+ for his career, but was plenty solid facing lefties with .828 OPS and 131 wRC+. Short’s gap power was quite good with 32 doubles and 9 triples per his 162 game average. He also was terrific at legging out extra bases with elite speed and baserunning skills. Short’s one “flaw” offensively was a lack of prolific home run power, but he still was good for 22 dingers per 162 games.

              Apart from the very end of his career, Short was a career center fielder and graded as an excellent defender that won six Gold Gloves. The physical toll of the position did catch up to Short in his 30s and he missed significant chunks of time in the back end of his career. Even still, Short powered through for an incredible 21-year career.

              Short played his college baseball for the University of Virginia, winning a Silver Slugger as a sophomore. In three years for the Cavaliers, Short had 143 games, 176 hits, 109 runs, 26 doubles, 5 triples, 30 home runs, 89 RBI, .333/.426/.572 slash, 192 wRC+, and 9.2 WAR. Those efforts led to being selected 10th overall by Salt Lake City in the 2001 MLB Draft.

              The Loons were still a relatively new franchise having entered MLB in the 1982 expansion. They got their first playoff berth in 2000, but fell hard to 67-95 in 2001. Short debuted in 2002 with a Rookie of the Year campaign at 6.0 WAR. He led the American Association in on-base percentage at .417, starting a five-year streak leading the stat. Short also won his first Silver Slugger and SLC got a wild card, falling in the first round.

              From 2003-08, Short led in batting average each year and had OPS above one and OBP’s above .430. Each season also was worth 9+ WAR with 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2008 all being the league’s best at 11.9.
              Short won MVP in those four seasons and took third in 2003. He won Silver Sluggers each year and started a five-year streak of Gold Glove wins from 2006-10. In 2007, Short still got to 9.8 WAR despite losing a month to a strained oblique.

              During that stretch, Short led in runs twice, hits thrice, doubles thrice, OPS thrice, and wRC+ once. 2006 had his career best slugging (.611), OPS (1.061), and doubles (48). Short’s highest runs mark was 130 in 2005 with his best hit tally 224 in 2003. He also led in stolen bases twice with Sal Lake City, peaking with 67 in 2009. Short’s 11.9 WAR seasons rank as the 7th-10th best by a MLB position player as of 2037.

              Salt Lake City did make the playoffs from 2004-06 with Short, but the small market squad couldn’t claim the pennant. 2004 was their best effort, falling in the AACS to Phoenix. The Loons lost in the first round in 2005. In 2006, they earned a bye at 100-62, but went one-and-done. In his 18 playoff starts, Short had 27 hits, 10 runs, 3 doubles, 2 triples, 1 homer, 4 RBI, .397/.446/.544 slash, 169 wRC+, and 1.1 WAR. SLC fell to 78-84 the next two years, then had a first round exit in 2009.

              During this time, Short became a beloved superstar across the United States, but not because of his work in Utah. He became a fixture in the World Baseball Championship and shined on that stage greater than anyone else. In his first WBC in 2003, Short was second in MVP voting and led all players in runs and walks. This was his first world championship ring for the USA. Short ended up with additional rings in 2005, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2014, 2017, and 2020.

              Short remained a beast for his entire career in the WBC, leading the event in runs scored six times, hits six times, doubles once, total bases once, steals six times, and WAR thrice. Short was second again in 2008’s MVP voting, then won it for the first time with a historic 2009. That year in 25 starts, Short had 49 hits, 32 runs, 7 doubles, 7 homers, 18 RBI, 19 steals, .462/.521/.726 slash, 1.247 OPS, and 2.7 WAR.

              The 2009 effort set WBC event records for both hits and runs. The hits mark and Short’s 35 singles are still WBC records as of 2037, while the runs mark would be passed once. Short was third in 2010 and 2011’s MVP voting. Then in 2020 at age 39, Short won his second WBC MVP, leading all players in hits (37), runs (25), total bases (66), steals (24), and WAR (2.0). He became the ninth player to win Tournament MVP multiple times.

              With his remarkable longevity and consistency over 20 years, plus the USA’s common deep runs, Short racked up remarkable tallies in the World Baseball Championship. He started 307 games with 414 hits, 304 runs, 71 doubles, 11 triples, 68 home runs, 195 RBI, 156 walks, 247 stolen bases, .335/.415/.575 slash, 182 wRC+, and 22.9 WAR.

              As of 2037, Short is the WBC’s all-time leader in at-bats (1237), runs, hits, singles (264), doubles, stolen bases, caught stealing (92), and WAR among all players. Short is also 2nd in games played, 4th in batting average and 20th in OBP (250 plate appearances required), 29th in homers, 8th in RBI, and 2nd in total bases (711). This made Short beloved domestically and known worldwide. His graciousness towards players and fans of all nationalities made Short a true citizen of the world.

              After the 2009 season, Short left Salt Lake City for free agency at age 28. With the Loons, he had 1216 games, 1623 hits, 850 runs, 278 doubles, 97 triples, 172 home runs, 746 RBI, 574 walks, 393 steals, .359/.431/.578 slash, 167 wRC+, and 82.8 WAR. Short’s #25 uniform would get retired and he’d be remembered as SLC’s first superstar player. For his next run, he signed an eight-year, $111,100,000 deal with Los Angeles. The Angels were hoping Short could end their 11-year playoff drought, as they had been stuck around .500 generally in that run.

              It worked, as LA started a six-year playoff streak. Short won Silver Sluggers from 2010-12 with a Gold Glove in 2010. He took third in 2011’s MVP voting, then won the award for the fifth time in 2012. Short joined Elijah Cashman and Andrei Tanev as MLB’s only 5+ MVP winners. He was the WARlord in both 2011 and 2012, getting 11.8 in 2012. That year also had his seventh batting title with a career best .381 average and .452 OBP. Although Los Angeles made the playoffs from 2010-12, they didn’t get beyond round two.

              In 2013, Short ran into his first injury troubles, missing three months between a strained hamstring and shoulder tendinitis. Even so, the Angels exploded for a 119-43 season; the second-most wins in an MLB season ever. Unfortunately, they were upset in the second round by Phoenix with Short struggling to an 3-17 series. His overall playoff numbers with LA were okay with 18 starts, 23 hits, 9 runs, 3 doubles, 1 triple, 3 home runs, 8 RBI, .835 OPS, 135 wRC+, and 0.6 WAR.

              Short used his contract opt-out to leave Los Angeles after four seasons. For the Angels, he had 547 games, 691 hits, 367 runs, 104 doubles, 24 triples, 69 home runs, 282 RBI, 173 steals, .334/.408/.507 slash, 151 wRC+, and 34.2 WAR. Heading towards his age 33 season, Short signed a five-year, $115,000,000 deal with Brooklyn.

              With the Dodgers, Short won Silver Sluggers in 2014, 15, and 16 along with a 2016 Gold Glove. He became the first (and only as of 2037) MLB player at any position with 14 Silver Sluggers. Short is only one of two in world history with 14+ Sluggers as a center fielder. When healthy, Short’s production was still very good with Brooklyn.

              The trouble was staying healthy though. It was a number of different ailments; most notable was a ruptured MCL in September 2017. That was the one season the Dodgers made the playoffs with Short, but he was unavailable as they ultimately fell to Boston in the National Association Championship Series. Brooklyn didn’t have any losing seasons with Short, but were generally a few games out of the playoff picture.

              For the Dodgers, Short had 620 games, 709 hits, 421 runs, 97 doubles, 22 triples, 84 home runs, 279 RBI, 330 walks, 220 steals, .322/.410/.500 slash, 171 wRC+, and 37.5 WAR. In 2018, Short became the 61st member of MLB’s 3000 hit club. While a Dodger, Short also became MLB’s all-time WARlord He ended his time at Brooklyn at 154.5, passing Elijah Cashman’s top mark for position players (136.6) and the #1 overall spot by pitcher Ned Giles at 151.7.

              Short signed a three-year, $74,800,000 deal for 2019 with Houston. He would be out from August onward with a fractured ankle, missing the playoff run. The Hornets went on a surprise run to the World Series, giving Short a championship ring. He never did get to play in the Fall Classic or Baseball Grand Championship sadly. Short was out almost all of 2020 with torn ankle ligaments and an oblique strain.

              With Houston, Short managed only 127 games in two years, but still had 7.1 WAR, 140 hits, 86 runs, 19 doubles, 14 home runs, 53 RBI, .316/.418/.472 slash, and 147 wRC+. Soon to be 40-years old, Short ended up signing three-year, $61,200,000 deal with Sacramento. This was expected to be a big ticket boom for the Shamrocks, who were set to make their debut season with 2021’s league expansion.

              The ankle injuries had tanked Short’s range so he was moved to the corners. He could still bat, leading in OBP for the sixth time in 2021 with 5.5 WAR over 125 games. Short was still providing positive value until August 14, 2022, when his career came to an abrupt end. He took an errant fastball to the head, suffering a career-ending fractured skull at age 41.

              It was a horrifying end to an incredible career, showing that the baseball gods could be cruel even to immortals. It was a traumatizing event for his legions of fans, although thankfully Short did make a full recovery in retirement. With Sacramento, Short had 223 games, 249 hits, 146 runs, 37 doubles, 28 homers, 83 RBI, 66 steals, .318/.413/.493 slash, 146 wRC+, and 8.9 WAR.

              Short finished with 2733 games, 3412 hits, 1870 runs, 535 runs, 155 triples, 367 home runs, 1443 RBI, 1355 walks, 367 strikeouts, 877 steals, .341/.420/.535 slash, .955 OPS, 162 wRC+, and 170.5 WAR. As of 2037, Short is still the WARlord and ranks 80th in games, 19th in hits, 16th in runs, 49th in total bases (5358), 22nd in singles (2355), 18th in doubles, 85th in triples, 28th in walks, and 9th in steals. Among all MLB batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Short ranks 9th in batting average, 3rd in OBP, and 38th in OPS.

              On the world leaderboards as of 2037, Short ranks 8th in WAR among position players and 13th amongst everyone. Against the world’s Hall of Famers, Short has the 22nd best batting average and 3rd-best on-base percentage. He also is the WARlord among American players, ahead of 3B Graham Gregor (148.0) and SP Vincent Lepp (144.4).

              So is Morgan Short the greatest player in MLB history? If WAR is the decisive metric, then yes, but there’s a fierce debate. A big part of Short’s huge WAR totals come from his great defense in center field, high walk rate, low strikeout rate, and great baserunning. For some, those factors are considered far less important than power stats.

              Short certainly wasn’t a mere singles slap hitter, but the lack of home run and RBI tallies do work against him even if he was an incredibly efficient hitter. He also never had the signature playoff run, although his many awesome performances in the World Baseball Championship can’t be completely ignored.

              When looking at the Hall of Fame metrics, Short does lead in JAWS at 125.0 and is 2nd in standards, but he ranks 14th in black ink, 32nd in grey ink, and 7th in monitor. Of course, this just reaffirms how impossibly difficult it is to compare different players at different positions with different skillsets across different eras.

              Seven-time MVP and former home run king Elijah Cashman often still gets cited by many as the GOAT. Only a few other batters come up in the GOAT conversations, then you have trying to figure out where the great pitchers slot in. Even when factoring in everybody, you’d be hard pressed to find Short outside of most top 10 lists for MLB players. When factoring in all players in all leagues, it gets a lot tougher. You could plausibly place Short into the top 10, especially with his success coming in MLB’s American Association, generally viewed as the world’s highest talent subleague. Short generally makes any top 50 list and is typically somewhere in most top 25s.

              Another question to ask, is Morgan Short the best-ever center fielder? He also has the highest career WAR there as well, but there are a couple other guys close behind. It would be hard to find a scholar that doesn’t have Short at least in the top 5 all-time for center fielders.

              In any event, Short was a true immortal of the game and one-of-a-kind. Credible arguments could be made for Short as MLB’s best-ever player, the best-ever American-born player, and the best-ever center fielder. It is surprising that he only got 98.8% and actually was just behind Johan Mallery in vote share for the 2028 Hall of Fame class. Regardless, Short has his deserved inner-circle spot amongst Major League Baseball’s greats.

              Comment

              • MrNFL_FanIQ
                MVP
                • Oct 2008
                • 4984

                #2137
                2028 MLB Hall of Fame (Part 2)



                Omari “Blitz” Green – Starting Pitcher – Denver Dragons – 96.5% First Ballot

                Omari Green was a 6’1’’, 200 pound right-handed starting pitcher from Rosenberg, Texas; a city of around 38,000 people in Houston’s metropolitan area. Green had excellent stuff with solid movement and good control. His velocity topped out in the 97-99 mph range and he had four equally potent pitches; fastball, slider, forkball, and changeup. The nickname “Blitz” came from how quickly Green liked to work on the mound.

                Green’s stamina was good relative to most MLB aces and he had ironman durability, tossing 240+ innings in each of his 16 seasons. He was a solid defensive pitcher, but his ability to hold runners was merely okay. Green had tremendously high character and was respected throughout the game as one of the great team captains. His talent, along with his leadership, loyalty, work ethic, and intelligence, made Green one of the finest pitchers to ever do it.

                For college, Green spent three years at the University of Texas, dominating with a 25-8 record, 1.47 ERA, 294.2 innings, 390 strikeouts, 90 walks, 216 ERA+, and 16.0 WAR. He won Pitcher of the Year honors as a junior in 2006 with a 1.24 ERA over 94.2 innings, 142 Ks, and 6.4 WAR. As of 2037, Green ranks 26th in WAR in NCAA history. That certainly put him at the top of many draft boards and in the 2006 MLB Draft, Green was picked second overall by San Antonio.

                Green was a full-time starter immediately for the Oilers with mixed results initially. He wasn’t elite right away, but his reliable innings made him worth 4+ WAR each year from 2008-11. In 2012, Green had his first of ten straight seasons with 6+ WAR. Despite his efforts, San Antonio mostly remained a bottom-tier franchise. They started to show life going 81-81 in 2010, their first non-losing season since 1998. The Oilers made it to 85-77 in 2011, but collapsed back down to 66-96 in 2012.

                2013 was set to be Green’s final season under contract and San Antonio wasn’t sure they could or wanted to afford the deal he was going to command. Thus, the 26-year old Green was traded in the offseason to Los Angeles for two prospects. With the Oilers, Green had a 74-102 record, 3.34 ERA, 1601.2 innings, 1239 strikeouts, 487 walks, 113 ERA+, and 29.7 WAR.

                With the Angels, Green led the American Association in strikeouts (289) and shutouts (7) for the first time. He also had a career best 2.38 ERA and 24-6 record, but surprisingly didn’t make the top three in Pitcher of the Year voting. Los Angeles had a historic 119-43 season, the second-most wins in MLB history. However, they were upset in the second round of the playoffs by Phoenix. Green gave up five runs over 9.2 innings as his lone playoff start went into extras.

                Green didn’t come to terms with LA and entered free agency at age 27. He was a hot commodity and signed a five-year, $115 million deal with defending World Series champion Denver. This started his signature run with the Dragons in the middle of what became an MLB record 13-year playoff and division title streak. Denver hoped Green could help them create a legendary dynasty run.

                He delivered right away, taking third in 2014’s Pitcher of the Year voting. However, Green had a lackluster 4.50 ERA in two playoff starts as Denver fell in the second round. Green redeemed that in 2015 as the Dragons won their second World Series in three years, defeating St. Louis in the Fall Classic. He earned World Series MVP, a rare accomplishment for a pitcher. Over 42 playoff innings and five starts, Green was 4-1 with a 2.57 ERA, 39 strikeouts, and 1.1 WAR.

                Green was even more dominant in the Baseball Grand Championship. Denver finished 15-4, taking second behind Johannesburg due to the head-to-head tiebreaker. In four starts, Green was 3-0 with a 1.07 ERA, 33.2 innings, 53 strikeouts, 14 walks, and 2.4 WAR. As of 2037, Green’s WAR mark is the eighth-best by a pitcher in BGC history. This forever cemented his spot as an important part of Denver’s lore, regardless of what came next.

                While the playoff streak continued, Denver had little postseason luck for the following four years. They had a first round exit in 2016, AACS loss in 2017, and second round exits in 2018 and 2019. In the latter two years, the Dragons had earned the #1 seed, only to go one-and-done. Green’s playoff results were a mixed bag these years, but he remained impressive in the regular season.

                He led in strikeouts in 2016 to take third in Pitcher of the Year voting. After the 2017 season, Green signed a six-year, $162,200,000 extension to remain Denver’s ace. In 2018, he won his lone Pitcher of the Year, leading the American Association in WAR (8.8) and FIP- (68). He was even more impressive in 2019 with AA and career bests in strikeouts (310) and WAR (9.4), although he took second in POTY voting behind Las Vegas’s Daniel Newqvist.

                Green kept rolling in 2020, taking third in Pitcher of the Year voting. This was Denver’s strongest season of the playoff streak at 114-48, ending with a World Series win over Cincinnati. Green had a respectable playoff run at 3-1, 3.38 ERA, 29.1 innings, 30 strikeouts, and 0.8 WAR. The 2020 Dragons were the winningest team to claim the World Series to that point and had a case as being MLB’s best-ever team.

                Denver then staked their case for being the best-ever team in all of pro baseball history by winning the Baseball Grand Championship at 15-4.
                Green was again a beast in the BGC, going 3-0 in four starts with a 1.26 ERA, 47 strikeouts, 35.2 innings, and 2.1 WAR. When counting up their regular season, playoff, and BGC results, the Dragons finished 202 at 140-54. That was the best record by a BGC winner to that point and would only later be topped by San Diego in 2027 and Hamamatsu in 2036. In any case, Green was a huge reason while Denver’s 2020 squad was one of the absolute best ever in baseball history.

                On May 25, 2021; Green had his lone no-hitter in a 13 strikeout, three walk game against Salt Lake City. He had a strong playoff run with a 1.87 ERA in 33.2 innings, but Denver fell 4-3 to New Orleans in the AACS. For his playoff career, Green had a 13-7 record, 3.16 ERA, 179.2 innings, 152 strikeouts, 39 walks, 122 ERA+, and 3.5 WAR. As of 2037, he ranks 30th in playoff pitching WAR, 5th in wins, and 7th in strikeouts. Green also ranks 11th in pitching WAR in the BGC despite only appearing in event twice, posting a stellar 1.17 ERA over 8 starts, 6-0 record, 69.1 innings, 100 strikeouts, and 4.5 WAR.

                Green’s velocity dipped noticeably in 2022, posting career worsts in ERA (4.43), strikeouts (166), and WAR (3.2). He earned his third World Series ring with Denver, but wasn’t used in the playoffs. Green also wasn’t used in the BGC with the Dragons tying for ninth at 10-9. He retired that winter at age 36 and Denver immediately retired his #1 uniform. In nine years in Colorado, Green had a 170-90 record, 2.98 ERA, 2455 innings, 2269 strikeouts, 597 walks, 130 ERA+, and 64.4 WAR.

                The final stats for Green had a 268-198 record, 3.07 ERA, 4329.1 innings, 3797 strikeouts, 1143 walks, 340/524 quality starts, 283 complete games, 50 shutouts, 125 ERA+, 81 FIP-, and 101.5 WAR. As of 2037, Green ranks 28th in wins, 42nd in innings, 10th in complete games, 19th in shutouts, 16th in strikeouts, and 23rd in pitching WAR.

                Depending on your strictness level, Green could qualify as an inner-circle Hall of Famer. He needed a few more years or a bit more dominance to make top 10 lists, but Green’s candidacy wasn’t at all in doubt. He was a critical part of Denver’s decade of dominance and was a major piece for the historic 2020 Grand Champion squad. At 96.5%, Green joined the loaded 2028 Major League Baseball HOF class as a co-headliner.



                Victor Burke – Starting Pitcher – Seattle Grizzlies – 71.3% Tenth Ballot

                Victor Burke was a 6’0’’, 190 pound left-handed pitcher from Yuba City, California; a city with around 70,000 within the Greater Sacramento area. Burke’s stuff was quite strong, although his movement and control were above average at best. He wasn’t going to overpower many with a 94-96 mph fastball, but his splitter and cutter were equally fast and it was hard to know which was coming. Burke also had a weak knuckle curve as his fourth pitch.

                Burke’s stamina was above average to good compared to typical MLB aces. He had great durability, tossing 240+ innings each year from 1998-2011. He had an excellent pickoff move and was considered solid at holding runners and at defense. Burke was also quite intelligent, making the most of his abilities.

                From 1992-94, Burke attended the University of Memphis, posting a 19-11 record over 281.1 innings, 2.30 ERA, 341 strikeouts, 153 ERA+, and 12.0 WAR. As a sophomore, he took third in Pitcher of the Year voting. Burke was then selected 31st overall by Los Angeles in the 1994 MLB Draft. He saw limited use in the majors in 1995 and 1997, split between there and minor league Bakersfield. Burke spent all of 1996 in Bakersfield and was the Minor League Pitcher of the Year. Although he wasn’t used in the playoff run, Burke did earn a World Series ring in 1997 with LA.

                Burke got the full-time call up in 1998 and remained a regular MLB starter through 2012. He ate a lot of innings with the Angels, but was generally above average. Los Angeles fell into the middle tier with no playoff berths from 1999-09. With LA, Burke finished with a 121-93 record, 3.64 ERA, 2037 innings, 1620 strikeouts, 633 walks, 107 ERA+, and 32.9 WAR.

                The Angels gave Burke a four-year, $19,880,000 extension after the 2001 season. By 2004, LA were sellers and moved Burke in a late June trade to Seattle for two prospects. The Grizzlies just missed the playoffs that year, ending a six-year streak. They thought Burke could give them pitching depth long term though and signed him in May 2005 to a five-year, $34,500,000 extension.

                In 2005, Burke led the American Association in wins at 21-7. Seattle took the top seed at 105-57 and won their first-ever World Series, defeating Philadelphia in the finale. Over five playoff starts, Burke had a 3-1 record, 3.07 ERA, 26 strikeouts, 19 walks, 131 ERA+, and 0.4 WAR. The Grizzlies dropped to 82-80 in 2006, but got back to the top seed in 2007 at 102-60. They lost to San Diego in the AACS with Burke posting a 3.55 ERA over 25.1 playoff innings.

                Burke stayed steady for the rest of the decade, although Seattle retreated into the middle of the standings. He signed a two-year, $20 million extension after the 2009 season. Burke had his worst ERA of his career in 2010 at 4.44, but bounced back down to 3.21 in 2011. 2011 ended seeing career bests in both WAR (7.2) and complete games (22) at age 37. Ultimately, he was never a Pitcher of the Year finalist.

                With Seattle, Burke had a 126-84 record, 3.65 ERA, 1966.1 innings, 1634 strikeouts, 598 walks, 107 ERA+, and 38.7 WAR. He was a free agent for 2012 at age 38 and signed a one-year deal with Baltimore worth $14,800,000. Burke won his 250th game with the Orioles and had 2.3 WAR and a 3.09 ERA over 183.2 innings. He then signed for two-years and $21,200,000 with New York. Burke was used in long relief for 113.2 innings with the Yankees, but was cut in late July to end his MLB career.

                Burke wasn’t ready to be done and put out worldwide feelers. He finished 2013 in West Africa Baseball with 1.4 WAR and 3.28 ERA over 57.2 innings with Accra. Burke tried an MLB comeback and signed a two-year, $22,200,000 deal for 2014 with Las Vegas. However, he was cut following lackluster results in spring training 2014. Burke moved to Iraq with the Arab League’s Sulaymaniyah, but only saw two starts for the Sultans. He retired that winter at age 41.

                In MLB, Burke finished with a 263-198 record, 3.61 ERA, 4300.2 innings, 3485 strikeouts, 1304 walks, 303/523 quality starts, 235 complete games, 38 shutouts, 107 ERA+, 92 FIP-, and 74.3 WAR. As of 2037, Burke ranks 31st in wins, 45th in innings, 36th in complete games, 34th in strikeouts, and 33rd in walks. Burke notably misses the top 100 for pitching WAR.

                The rate stats suggested a guy who sustained above average production over a long period. Many voters thought Burke was never elite enough to be worthy of Hall of Fame induction. Supporters thought he checked the accumulation boxes needed to belong. Most, but not all MLB pitchers that reached 250+ wins and 3500 Ks had made it in. Supporters also pointed out Burke’s role in Seattle’s first World Series ring after 105 years of trying.

                Burke debuted at 51.6% in the 2019 ballot and never dropped below 50%, although he stayed in the 50s for his first five tries. Burke got as close as 62.3% in 2024 and 64.2% in 2026, but was still short of the 66% requirement. In his tenth and final try in 2028, Burke got the bump needed up to 71.3% to earn the fourth and final spot in Major League Baseball’s 2028 Hall of Fame class. He became the fifth player in MLB history to earn induction on his tenth ballot.

                Comment

                • MrNFL_FanIQ
                  MVP
                  • Oct 2008
                  • 4984

                  #2138
                  2028 CABA Hall of Fame




                  First baseman Pancho Burgos was the lone inductee into the Central American Baseball Association Hall of Fame for 2028. Burgos made it upon his debut at 86.1%. The only other player above 50% was 1B Hasan Alvizo at 57.7% on his fourth ballot.

                  No one was dropped after ten failed ballots, but 1B David Jack deserves a brief mention. He fell below 5% on his seventh try and was notably the 18th CABA slugger to join the 600 home run club. Jack had 1839 hits, 1168 runs, 263 doubles, 607 homers, 1379 RBI, 645 walks, 2074 strikeouts, .256/.321/.552 slash, 134 wRC+, and 50.2 WAR. Homers alone can often boost guys across the line, but Jack lacked accolades or other skills needed to get much traction even with his dingers.



                  Pancho Burgos – First Base – Guadalajara Hellhounds – 86.1% First Ballot

                  Pancho Burgos was a 6’3’’, 200 pound right-handed first baseman from Nuevo Laredo, a city of 373,000 on the Mexico-United States border. Burgos was a great contact hitter and was solid at avoiding strikeouts, although he drew walks sparingly. He had a reliable pop in his bat as well with a 162 game average of 28 doubles, 13 triples, and 29 home runs. Burgos had above average to good speed as well, although his baserunning skills were sloppy.

                  Burgos wasn’t one to be a league leader, but he was reliable and consistent. He was also quite durable, playing 135+ games in all 15 of his professional seasons. Burgos played third base as a rookie, but was abysmal there. He was exclusively a first baseman the rest of his career with reliably strong defense, even winning a Gold Glove in 2009. Burgos was a good teammate and became a popular figure in Guadalajara.

                  In the 2005 CABA Draft, Burgos was taken out of high school by the Hellhounds with the 10th overall pick. Guadalajara kept Burgos in their academy for 2006 and 2007, debuting him in 2008 as a full-time starter. His second year saw his first of six seasons worth 6+ WAR and his lone Gold Glove. Burgos dipped a bit in 2010, then had started a streak of 5+ WAR seasons from 2011-17.

                  Burgos was never an MVP finalist or Silver Slugger winner,, especially with the competition at first base from other batters. But he would have four seasons with 100+ runs, eight with 200+ hits, seven with 30+ homers, nine with 100+ RBI, 14 with a .300+ batting average and nine with a .900+ OPS. Burgos’s best effort was 2015, which had career highs in runs (113), hits (227), homers (40), average (.352), slugging (.630), OPS (1.000), wRC+ (182), and WAR (7.9).

                  He also didn’t get a ton of recognition as Guadalajara was forgettable for much of his run. In April 2011, Burgos signed a four-year, $33,700,000 contract extension. He declined his contract option after the 2014 season, but signed a new seven-year, $102,200,000 extension with the Hellhounds. After being below .500 for most of the 2000s, Guadalajara did improve in the 2010s. Although they still generally missed the playoffs, they did finish .500 or better six times in the decade.

                  Guadalajara finally broke through in 2017 with a division title, ending a 20-year playoff drought. They would be defeated by Juarez in the Mexican League Championship Series. Burgos was mid in his lone playoff chance, going 10-40 in 10 games with 5 runs, 2 doubles, 1 triple, 1 homer, and 4 RBI. He did notably had a 33-game hitting streak in the early summer of 2017, which was tied for the seventh-longest streak in CABA history to that point.

                  The Hellhounds fell off hard after that and wouldn’t be back above .500 until 2025. Burgos’s production dropped down in those later years, although he was still a respectable starter. His deal expired after the 2021 season, becoming a free agent for the first time at age 36. Burgos signed with Costa Rica and gave the Rays 2.3 WAR and .821 OPS as a starter in 2022, although his power had dropped to a sub .500 slugging percentage. He went unsigned in 2023 and retired that winter at age 38. Guadalajara quickly brought him back in to retire his #20 uniform for his 14 years of service there.

                  In total, Burgos had 2337 games, 2953 hits, 1324 runs, 405 doubles, 186 triples, 425 home runs, 1516 RBI, 307 walks, 1029 strikeouts, 398 steals, .326/.351/.553 slash, 152 wRC+, and 74.5 WAR. As of 2037, Burgos ranks 23rd in hits, 68th in runs, 73rd in doubles, 80th in triples, 36th in total bases (5005), 42nd in home runs, and 97th in WAR among position players. Burgos’ batting average also ranks 79th among all CABA hitters with 3000+ plate appearances.

                  Although he was never in MVP conversations, Burgos put up nice totals that surprised some voters. Especially with a weaker 2028 ballot, Burgos stood out amongst the choices. He received 86.1% for a first ballot selection as the lone inductee in 2028 for the Central American Baseball Association’s Hall of Fame.

                  Comment

                  • MrNFL_FanIQ
                    MVP
                    • Oct 2008
                    • 4984

                    #2139
                    2028 EAB Hall of Fame (Part 1)

                    East Asia Baseball’s 2028 Hall of Fame class was an impactful one with four players getting first ballot induction. SP Do-Kyun Lee was the clear headliner at a near unanimous 98.8%. Fellow pitchers Si-Hun Choi and Takeo Nagai were next with solid marks of 86.4% and 83.3%, respectively. 1B/DH Hyogo Murayama narrowly joined them at 70.9%, just crossing the 66% requirement. Two second ballot guys fell short but were above 50% with C Ha-Jan Au at 58.8% and CL Geon-U Kang with 53.3%.



                    LF Kazuo Satoh fell off the ballot after ten failed tries, peaking at 51.5% in 2020 and ending at 18.8%. He was hurt by leaving for MLB at age 29 after a stellar eight year run with Bucheon, where he won one MVP, four Silver Sluggers, and two Gold Gloves. Satoh notably had 13.37 WAR in 1999, which still ranks as the fifth-best by a position player in EAB as of 2037.

                    Satoh’s EAB totals ended up being 1255 games, 1646 hits, 821 runs, 199 doubles, 164 triples, 266 home runs, 890 RBI, 396 steals, .328/.376/.624 slash, 166 wRC+, and 60.0 WAR. Satoh had a good MLB run and one year in WAB, giving him full career stats of 2474 games, 2814 hits, 1579 runs, 381 doubles, 258 triples, 500 home runs, 1623 RBI, 651 steals, 654 walks, .305/.358/.566 slash, 150 wRC+, and 97.8 WAR. The combined numbers would’ve gotten him in if they all came in one league, but the even career split kept his accumulations in any one league too low for most voters.

                    Also dropped after ten failed ballots was 2B Jae-Min Hwang, who peaked at 44.9% in 2020 and ended with 11.8%. Most of his run was with Niigata, winning six Silver Sluggers and two EAB titles. Hwang was also the 2006 EAB Championship MVP and led the league four times in both batting average and hits.

                    Hwang had 1834 games, 2297 hits, 928 runs, 416 doubles, 107 triples, 52 home runs, 687 RBI, 314 walks, 580 strikeouts, 360 steals, .340/.369/.456 slash, 147 wRC+, and 73.2 WAR. It was often tough for leadoff guys to gain traction without the big power numbers, plus second base was often an overlooked spot too. Hwang’s totals were also hurt by injury issues in his 30s. Although he fell short of the ultimate honor, Hwang’s #2 uniform was retired by the Green Dragons for his role in their 2000s success.

                    DH/1B Jun-Yeong Song also fell after ten ballots, getting as high as 26.8% on his debut before ending at 8.2%. He was another leadoff guy who lacked the big power numbers and only won Silver Slugger once. Song had 2232 games, 2818 hits, 1192 runs, 546 doubles, 107 triples, 102 homers, 1029 RBI, 387 walks, 347 steals, .346/.380/.477 slash, 136 wRC+, and 58.3 WAR.

                    Song’s batting average notably ranks 4th as of 2037 among EAB batters with 3000+ career plate appearances. He did also lose value for many voters since he was a DH for about ¾ of his starts. Song did notably have the rare distinction of winning three championship rings each with different teams, taking the EAB title in 1997 with Yongin, 2003 with Seongnam, and 2013 with Daegu.



                    Do-Kyun Lee – Starting Pitcher – Seoul Seahawks – 98.8% First Ballot

                    Do-Kyun Lee was a 6’4’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Siheung, South Korea; a city with around 511,000 people. Lee’s stuff was absolutely incredible and graded as a 10/10 from some scouts in his prime, a very rare grade for a starter. He also had impressive control of his arsenal, although his movement could be inconsistent and lead to home run issues.

                    Lee’s fastball was stellar and regularly hit the 99-101 mph range. He didn’t lose much speed with a great sinker and also had a screwball and changeup in the arsenal. Lee’s stamina was quite solid in his prime and his durability was strong for most of his run. He was great at holding runners, but did grade as subpar defensively otherwise.

                    With his impressive strikeout tallies, Lee was a popular player throughout South Korea. However, many fans would quickly sour on him with his outspoken and toxic personality. Lee was loud, self-centered, lazy, and a bit dumb; often clashing with teammates and media. Those traits though made him a favorite of the Twitter troll type of sports fan that you wouldn’t trust next to an unattended drink.

                    Lee’s stuff was undeniable even as a teenager and he was brought to the capital Seoul on a developmental contract in June 2005. After just over six years in their academy, Lee debuted mostly in relief for 2011. He became a full-time starter in 2012, then became THE strikeout guy in the Korea League in 2013. From 2013-20, he led the league each season in Ks.

                    He was more than just strikeouts though, as Lee won four straight ERA titles from 2015-18. He was the WARlord from 2014-20 with Seoul and had 10+ in four different seasons. Lee also led five straight years in WHIP from 2015-19 and thrice led in shutouts. From 2015-17, he earned three consecutive Triple Crown seasons. Lee joined Aiya Kodama as the only three-time Triple Crown pitchers in EAB history and is one of only three in any league to achieve the feat consecutively.

                    Lee is one of six in EAB history to win five Pitcher of the Year awards, taking it in 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018. He was also second place in 2019’s voting. In 2015, Lee became the first EAB ace to record a 400+ strikeout season, setting a new high mark at 447. He also was 27-8, becoming the third in EAB with a 27+ win season. On April 27, 2015; Lee recorded a 22 strikeout game against Busan, tying the EAB single-game record set by Michiro Yabuta back in 1924.

                    The 447 strikeouts remained the record briefly as Toshikuni Naikai topped it with 460 in 2018. Lee’s mark still remains #2 as of 2037 and he would breach 400+ in three more seasons. Only Lee (4) and Naikai (3) have reached the mark in EAB. His 2017 was his best season by WAR at 12.3, which ranks as EAB’s seventh-best by a pitcher. Lee’s top ERA came in 2017 at 1.93.

                    Lee made world history on September 29, 2016 in an extra innings affair with Jeonju. Over 11.2 innings, Lee struck out 26 batters, a single-game record that hasn’t been matched anywhere before or since. He breached 20 Ks in eight different games with only Naikai besting him in EAB with ten. Lee had 15+ strikeouts in 61 EAB games and would do it five times later in MLB. He also notably struck out 11 consecutive batters on August 6, 2020.

                    After a stretch in the middle tier, Lee helped Seoul return to contention with three straight trips to the Korea League Championship Series from 2017-19. The Seahawks were thwarted each time, twice by Changwon and once by Seongnam. Lee’s playoff stats were quite solid with a 6-1 record over 71 innings, 2.28 ERA, 116 strikeouts, 14 walks, 165 ERA+, and 3.2 WAR. Seoul would fall one game short of the playoffs in 2020.

                    Lee signed a seven-year, $154,600,000 extension before the 2017 season. However, his personality clashes with members of the organization and media were becoming more of a problem. After the 2020 season, Lee opted out of his deal and became a free agent heading towards age 32. This marked the end of his time pitching in EAB.

                    With Seoul, Lee had a 164-87 record, 2.47 ERA, 2404 innings, 3467 strikeouts, 271 walks, 198/266 quality starts, 154 complete games, 29 shutouts, 153 ERA+, 59 FIP-, and 85.3 WAR. Even though he only pitched 10 years in Korea with nine as a starter, Lee ranks 55th in strikeouts, 40th in shutouts, and 32nd in pitching WAR as of 2037.

                    Among EAB pitchers with 1000+ innings, Lee also ranks 55th in ERA and 6th in WHIP (0.86). He also sits 7th in K/9 (12.98), 32nd in BB/9 (6.76), and 7th in BB/9 (1.01).
                    Lee’s .579 opponent’s OPS ranks 46th, his .206 batting average is 30th, and .235 OBP is 9th. Even with the personality clashes, Seoul did eventually retire his #6 uniform at the end of his career.

                    Lee is generally viewed as the best pitcher of the 2010s for the Korea League and the second-best in East Asia Baseball for the time behind only Naikai. Even with a smaller sample size, Lee’s incredible strikeout dominance was among the best ever in any league. That plus five Pitcher of the Year awards made Lee a Hall of Fame lock, even if he was a loudmouth jerk. He received 98.8% to headline EAB’s four-player class in 2028.

                    His career continued for another six seasons in Major League Baseball. Even while in the United States, Lee did still come back to represent South Korea in the World Baseball Championship. From 2012-23, Lee had a 9-7 record, 173.2 innings, 2.95 ERA, 284 strikeouts, 40 walks, and 4.9 WAR.


                    Lee’s MLB run began in 2021 on a six-year, $120 million deal with Detroit. The Tigers had been a playoff regular in the past decade, but hadn’t managed to win the National Association pennant. Lee helped them change that in 2021, leading in his MLB debut in Ks and WAR. The season included a 30-inning scoreless streak in the fall. Detroit ultimately lost in the World Series to a 112-win New Orleans squad.

                    In the playoffs, Lee had a 1.91 ERA over 47 innings, 3-1 record, 63 strikeouts, and 2.2 WAR. Only once before had an MLB pitcher gotten 50+ Ks in the playoffs, falling just short of Kato Tu’s record 65 from 1919.
                    Lee’s WAR was also the second-best ever by a pitcher in MLB history behind only Ned Giles’ 2.3 from 1938. He also had a good showing in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 2.65 ERA over 34 innings and 54 strikeouts. Detroit would finish 11-8, part of a five-way tie for fourth place.

                    Lee dipped a bit in 2022, but was still solid with 6.5 WAR. He also had a 20 strikeout game on April 7 against Louisville, becoming the first in world history with a 20K game in multiple leagues. The Tigers would miss the playoffs at 86-76, but bounced back with four straight division titles from 2023-26. The previously durable Lee though would see a major setback in May 2023 with a stretched elbow ligament knocking him out 12 months.

                    He was still good in 2024 and 2025 for the Tigers, but his stuff with diminished with his velocity now peaking in the mid 90s. Lee was decent in the later playoff runs, which included a Detroit World Series win over Nashville. He had a 4.00 ERA over 27 innings in the 2025 Baseball Grand Championship as the Tigers tied for fourth at 12-7.
                    Lee’s overall playoff stats with Detroit saw a 2.79 ERA over 87 innings, 5-3 record, 96 strikeouts, 134 ERA+, and 3.1 WAR.

                    Lee’s velocity really plummeted in 2026 and he had a 9.00 ERA in three starts for Detroit, who cut him outright on April 10. In total for the Tigers, Lee had a 63-37 record, 3.05 ERA, 1022.1 innings, 1119 strikeouts, 148 walks, 120 ERA+, and 26.1 WAR. Even with the injury and bad final year, Lee certainly proved to be an impactful signing for Detroit.

                    Chicago employed Lee for only two days in late April and he never saw the field before being cut again. Sacramento gave him a look in May with Lee struggling to a 5.14 ERA over 77 innings. Lee didn’t want to accept that he was done and looked around in 2027. After going unsigned all year, he finally retired at age 38.

                    Lee’s combined pro baseball stats saw a 230-128 record, 2.70 ERA, 3503.1 innings, 4630 strikeouts, 433 walks, 198 complete games, 41 shutouts, 140 ERA+, 65 FIP-, and 112.0 WAR. Even if you disliked him as a person, Lee was one of the best pitchers of his era and one of the all-time best at getting whiffs. His Seoul run especially was among the strongest decades by any starter, securing Lee’s spot into EAB’s Hall of Fame.



                    Si-Hun Choi – Starting Pitcher – Kawasaki Killer Whales – 86.4% First Ballot

                    Si-Hun Choi was a 6’2’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Gimcheon, South Korea; a city of 135,000 in the central part of the country. Choi was well-rounded with good to occasionally great stuff, movement, and control. His fastball peaked in the 95-97 mph range, but it was his excellent changeup which earned the most whiffs. Choi also had a decent curveball and forkball in the arsenal.

                    Choi’s stamina was very good and he generally avoided major injuries, tossing 200+ innings in all but two of his 18 seasons. He graded as solid defensively and at holding runners. Choi was outspoken and not the brightest, but he wasn’t actively problematic like his Hall of Fame classmate Do-Kyun Lee. Choi sometimes said the wrong thing at the wrong time, but no one questioned his work ethic or commitment.

                    In June 2000, a teenaged Choi moved from South Korea to Japan on a developmental contract with Kawasaki. He spent the better part of six years in their academy, debuting in 2005 at age 21 with five poor starts and a 6.75 ERA. They carried on making Choi a full-timer the next year with decent production initially, taking second in 2006’s Rookie of the Year voting. He never was overwhelmingly dominant, but he settled into reliably having a sub-three ERA with 200+ strikeouts and 4+ WAR most years.

                    Kawasaki was rebuilding when Choi arrived and found their first successes with him in 2010 and 2012. The Killer Whales had the #1 seed both years, but went one-and-done both seasons. They stayed generally above .500, but outside of the playoffs from 2013-17. In August 2014, Choi signed a six-year, $66,600,000 extension to stick with Kawasaki long-term.

                    Choi was never a Pitcher of the Year finalist and rarely a league leader. He had the most wins in 2015 at 21-8 and led in WHIP in 2013 at 0.83. His best WAR marks were 5.4 in both 2016 and 2017. Kawasaki made it back to the playoffs in 2018, falling in the Japan League Championship Series to Osaka. Then in 2019, the Killer Whales took the pennant, but fell to Seongnam for the EAB Championship.

                    With Kawasaki, his career playoff numbers were okay with a 3.36 ERA in 75 innings, 2-5 record, 80 strikeouts, 10 walks, 97 ERA+, and 0.5 WAR. He went on a surprise tear in the 2019 Baseball Grand Championship, taking third in Best Pitcher voting with a 1.83 ERA over four starts, 3-1 record, 34.1 innings, 42 strikeouts, and 1.3 WAR. The Killer Whales finished 9-10 in the event.

                    Despite that effort, Kawasaki declined his contract option after the 2019 campaign, making Choi a free agent for the first time at age 36. For the Killer Whales, he had a 198-139 record, 2.76 ERA, 3238.1 innings, 3084 strikeouts, 544 walks, 121 ERA+, and 59.2 WAR. Kawasaki would later retire his #11 uniform for his steady work over a 15-year run.

                    Choi signed a two-year, $27 million deal with Busan and gave them his standard production in 2020. The Blue Jays earned the Korea League’s top seed, but lost in the first round with Choi giving up four runs over seven innings in his one playoff start. In 2021, he struggled with injuries, capped off by a torn labrum in July. With Busan, Choi finished with a 16-14 record, 2.94 ERA, 288 innings, 274 strikeouts, 128 ERA+, and 5.4 WAR.

                    He worked his way back from injury and signed with Daegu in 2022. Choi had a full season, albeit with lackluster results with a 4.52 ERA over 243 innings. He stepped up in four playoff starts though with a 4-0 record, 2.90 ERA, 31 innings, and 20 strikeouts. This helped the Diamondbacks win the Korea League pennant, although they lost to Fukuoka for the EAB Championship. Choi retired with just after his 39th birthday, not even sticking around for the BGC.

                    Choi ended with a 234-162 record, 2.89 ERA, 3769.1 innings, 3516 strikeouts, 651 walks, 325/477 quality starts, 141 complete games, 41 shutouts, 118 ERA+, 90 FIP-, and 65.7 WAR. As of 2037, Choi ranks 29th in wins, 32nd in innings, 32nd in complete games, 6th in shutouts, 49th in strikeouts, and 100th in WAR.

                    Advanced stats suggested Choi was probably closer to “good” rather than “great.” He didn’t have the big awards or black ink, but Choi hit pretty much all of the accumulation check marks that voters looked for out of a starting pitcher. He earned 86.4% for a first ballot induction as the second of four members in East Asia Baseball’s 2028 Hall of Fame class.

                    Comment

                    • MrNFL_FanIQ
                      MVP
                      • Oct 2008
                      • 4984

                      #2140
                      2028 EAB Hall of Fame (Part 2)




                      Takeo Nagai – Starting Pitcher – Kyoto Kamikaze – 83.3% First Ballot

                      Takeo Nagai was a 6’0’’, 200 pound right-handed starting pitcher from Toba, Japan; a town of around 18,000 people in the Kansai region. Nagai had solid movement on his pitches along with above average stuff and control. His velocity topped out in the 95-97 mph range and he had a three-pitch arsenal of cutter, changeup and slider. Each was equally potent and led to an extreme groundball tendency.

                      Nagai’s stamina was on the low end compared to other EAB aces, but excellent durability meant he still delivered 200+ innings in all but his first two seasons. Nagai struggled at holding runners, but he was excellent at fielding his position, winning four Gold Gloves. He was criticized for coasting on his natural abilities as well as selfishness. Critics claimed Nagai was selfish and lazy, but his talent was still strong enough for a great career regardless.

                      He was a beast at Chiba’s Keiai University, earning the #6 overall pick by Kitakyushu in the 2005 EAB Draft. Nagai was split between starting and relief in his first two years with decent results, even winning his first Gold Glove in 2007. The Kodiaks made him a full-time starter in 2008 and he was worth 4+ WAR each year through 2019.

                      Kitakyushu bounced back and forth in the standings during Nagai’s tenure, but was never quite good enough to end their playoff drought. He won his second Gold Gove in 2011, but never quite reached elite status with the Kodiaks. Over six seasons, Nagai had a 62-67 record, 3.15 ERA, 1238 innings, 1165 strikeouts, 302 walks, 106 ERA+, and 27.0 WAR. He left for free agency after the 2011 season heading towards his age 28 campaign.

                      Nagai signed a seven-year, $64,600,000 deal with Kyoto to begin his signature run. The Kamikaze were coming off back-to-back EAB Championship wins and wanted to fully cement a dynasty. Kyoto was 95-67 in 2012, but missed the playoffs by one game. Nagai had a strong debut, posting his career bests instrikeouts (277), record (21-4), and WAR (8.5). That earned a third place in Pitcher of the Year voting.

                      He fell back towards his Kitakyushu production in 2013, but did win a Gold Glove. He gave up three runs in eight innings in his one playoff start as Kyoto lost in the first round. In 2014, Nagai was elite and led in wins (21-7) and quality starts (27) while posting a 2.40 ERA. He earned his lone Pitcher of the Year and his fourth Gold Glove. Nagai also had a no-hitter against Yokohama with five strikeouts and two walks on July 21.

                      Kyoto also reclaimed the throne, winning the EAB Championship at 101-61 for their third title in five years. Nagai had a great postseason with a 2.14 ERA over 46.1 innings, 4-1 record in 6 stats, 38 strikeouts, and 1.3 WAR. He carried that into the Baseball Grand Championship with a 3-0 record and 1.88 ERA over four starts, 28.2 innings, and 35 strikeouts. Although Nagai did well personally, the Kamikaze finished in the bottom half at 8-11.

                      That was the peak of this dynasty run for Kyoto, who hovered around the middle of the standings for the following five seasons. Nagai stayed fairly steady and even had his career best ERA of 2.39 in both 2017 and 2018. Over seven years for the Kamikaze, Nagai had a 125-61 record, 2.70 ERA, 1709 innings, 1653 strikeouts, 301 walks, 125 ERA+, and 43.0 WAR.

                      Nagai was a free agent again for 2019 coming up on age 35. He joined Chiba with a four-year, $45,400,000 and ultimately gave them three steady seasons. The Comets did have a first round playoff exit in 2020, but were losers in Nagai’s other years. He posted a 30-36 record, 2.89 ERA, 662.2 innings, 610 strikeouts, 123 walks, 116 ERA+, and 14.5 WAR.

                      With a year left on his deal, Nagai was traded after the 2021 season by Chiba to Seoul for two prospects. In his one year with the Seahawks, Nagai had a 3.84 ERA over 204 innings, 162 strikeouts, and 4.0 WAR. He might have been able to stick around another few years, but with his contract expiring Nagai retired at age 38.

                      Nagai finished with a 225-181 record, 2.94 ERA, 3813.2 innings, 3590 strikeouts, 775 walks, 346/496 quality starts, 79 complete games, 21 shutouts, 115 ERA+, 79 FIP-, and 88.4 WAR. As of 2037, Nagai ranks 38th in wins, 28th in innings, 43rd in strikeouts, and 23rd in pitching WAR.

                      He wasn’t at the tip-top of the leaderboards, but he checked the accumulation boxes most voters wanted. Nagai also had a Pitcher of the Year win and championship ring to put his resume over the top. At 83.3%, Nagai received first ballot honors and was the third of four added into the East Asia Baseball Hall of Fame in 2028.



                      Hyogo Murayama – First Base/Designated Hitter – Ulsan Swallows – 70.9% First Ballot

                      Hyogo Murayama was a 6’2’’, 205 pound left-handed first baseman and designated hitter from Tokyo, Japan. Murayama was a great contact hitter with a respectable eye for drawing walks and avoiding strikeouts. His power wasn’t prolific, but was steady with 34 doubles, 4 triples, and 27 home runs per his 162 game average. Murayama was stronger facing right-handed pitching (150 wRC+, .897 OPS) but wasn’t bad against lefties (126 wRC+, .803 OPS).

                      While a strong batter, Murayama’s overall athleticism was poor. He was very slow and sluggish as a baserunner and as a defender. Just over half of Murayama’s career starts were at first base, where he graded as a terrible glove man. Most of his time at 1B came in the second half of his career. Murayama was a designated hitter in all of his non-1B appearances. Excellent durability did mean that his quality bat was always ready to go. Murayama was also a known prankster in the clubhouse who could break even his most stone-faced teammates.

                      Murayama attended Choshi Shogyo High School and his batting potential was noticed even then. He was picked 22nd overall by Kobe in the 2005 EAB Draft, who hoped to develop him into a star. Most don’t realize he was picked by the Blaze since he never played for them. After only seven months in their academy, Murayama was sent to Ulsan in a three-player trade. The Swallows debuted Murayama in 2007 at age 20, but he struggled as mostly a pinch hitter with 54 games and 3 starts.

                      Ulsan moved him into a starting role in 2008 with decent results initially. Murayama found his power stroke by 2010 and had his finest season in 2011. That year, Murayama won a Silver Slugger at DH and took second in MVP voting, leading the Korea League in runs (121), hits (234), RBI (132), total bases (417), and average (.357). Murayama’s runs, hits, and total bases were career bests as were his 45 home runs, .636 slugging, 1.029 OPS, 184 wRC+, and 9.0 WAR. He finished four homers short of a Triple Crown season.

                      Murayama never matched that power production, but he topped 5+ WAR, 100+ runs, 200+ hits, 30+ homers, and 125+ RBI in each of the next three seasons. He won his second Silver Slugger in 2012 and took third in 2013’s MVP voting. Murayama also hit for the cycle in 2012, a feat he’d match in 2017. In March 2013, Murayama signed a six-year, $156,200,000 extension with Ulsan.

                      The Swallows ended a four-year playoff drought in 2012 and started a four-year streak. They lost in the first round from 2012-14, despite winning 100+ games in the latter two years. Ulsan finally broke through in 2015 at 90-72, upsetting Seongnam in the Korea League Championship Series. The Swallows were later defeated by Yokohama in the EAB Championship. In that playoff run, Murayama had 18 hits, 10 runs, 5 homers, 16 RBI, and .854 OPS over 18 starts. He had similar stats in the Baseball Grand Championship with 19 hits, 6 runs, 4 doubles, 6 homers, 10 RBI, and .838 OPS over 19 starts. Ulsan would be near the bottom in the BGC at 6-13.

                      Ulsan surprisingly fell to 70-92 in 2016, then rebounded in 2017 with a first round exit at 93-69. The Swallows began an eight-year playoff drought after that and started the 2020s at the very bottom. Murayama’s playoff stats were good overall with 36 games, 43 hits, 19 runs, 6 doubles, 2 triples, 7 home runs, 25 RBI, 14 walks, .319/.382/.548 slash, 151 wRC+, and 1.7 WAR.

                      While Murayama was still a positive value starter, he was no longer in awards conversations in the back end with Ulsan. He finished with 1953 games, 2357 hits, 1110 runs, 433 doubles, 330 home runs, 1358 RBI, 581 walks, .319/.366/.523 slash, 143 wRC+, and 58.2 WAR. The Swallows would retire his #33 uniform at the end of his playing career. His deal expired after the 2019 season, becoming a free agent at age 33.

                      Murayama returned home to Japan on a three-year, $15,880,000 deal with Hiroshima. He had a strong debut season with .907 OPS and 5.8 WAR, but fell to more modest production the following years. For the Hammerheads, Murayama played 459 games with 440 hits, 183 runs, 71 doubles, 73 home runs, 218 RBI, .281/.324/.478 slash, 147 wRC+, and 10.3 WAR. Hiroshima would be outside the playoffs as Fukuoka rose in the West Division at this time. Murayama went unsigned in 2023 and retired that winter at age 36.

                      In total, Murayama had 2412 games, 2797 hits, 1293 runs, 504 doubles, 53 triples, 403 home runs, 1576 RBI, 679 walks, 1364 strikeouts, .312/.359/.515 slash, 144 wRC+, and 68.5 WAR. As of 2037, Murayama ranks 45th in hits, 25th in doubles, 76th in total bases (4616), and 39th in RBI. He does rank outside the top 100 in WAR, losing plenty of points as a designated hitter.

                      The DH penalty did impact some voters, but he hit some nice milestones like 2500+ hits, 1000+ runs, 500+ doubles, 400+ homers, and 1500+ RBI. Murayama also was twice an MVP finalist with a batting title and helped Ulsan to a pennant. The good outweighed the bad for the majority of voters as Murayama debuted with 70.9%. That crossed the 66% requirement for a first ballot induction to cap off a strong four-player 2028 Hall of Fame class for East Asia Baseball.

                      Comment

                      • MrNFL_FanIQ
                        MVP
                        • Oct 2008
                        • 4984

                        #2141
                        2028 BSA Hall of Fame

                        Beisbol Sudamerica had two slam dunk additions into the Hall of Fame for 2028 with 2B Antonio Arceo at 99.0% and 1B Alex Salinas at 95.5%. Two other debuts were above 50% but short of the 66% requirement with CL Samuel Andrade at 56.6% and SP Rodrigo Quiroz at 50.5%. The best returner was LF Dick Jimenes at 45.7% in his tenth and final opportunity.



                        For Jimenes, his ballots stayed remarkably consistent with all but one in the 40-46% range. He won three Silver Sluggers over a 15-year career with 2139 games, 2378 hits, 1290 runs, 338 doubles, 265 triples, 465 home runs, 1321 RBI, 674 stolen bases, .298/.335/.581 slash, 152 wRC+, and 70.4 WAR. Jimenes didn’t quite have either the big accolades or crazy longevity required to get more attention. He was also primarily on bad teams with only three playoff games, limiting his recognition.

                        SP Fenix Vega also fell off the ballot at 5.8% in his tenth and final try, peaking with his debut at 33.1%. Over 14 years between Arequipa and Callao, Vega had two ERA titles with a 156-111 record, 3.04 ERA, 2682.2 innings, 2520 strikeouts, 129 ERA+, and 56.8 WAR. His rate stats were good, but injuries kept the former #1 overall pick from bigger accumulations. Vega might have been on pace, but ended up doomed to the Hall of Pretty Good.



                        Antonio “Tubby” Arceo – Second Base – Fortaleza Foxes – 99.0% First Ballot


                        Antonio Arceo was a 6’0’’, 195 pound switch-hitting second baseman from La Paz, the capital of Bolivia. He was nicknamed “Tubby” for his stomach flab in his later years. Despite not having a massive frame, Arceo was one of the strongest home run hitters of all-time. He gave you 55 dingers per his 162 game average, posting 50+ homers in 13 seasons. Arceo’s gap power was respectable with 29 doubles and 3 triples per 162.

                        Arceo was a great contact hitter facing right-handed pitching, posting a career 1.035 OPS and 178 wRC+ against RHP. He was merely okay against lefties with .747 OPS and 104 wRC+. Arceo rarely drew walks despite his power and was below average at avoiding strikeouts. He was a savvy baserunner, but was limited by poor speed.

                        Defensively, Arceo exclusively played second base. He was a mediocre glove man, but you would tolerate it since few 2Bs ever had such a strong bat. Arceo was also an ironman at a physically demanding position, starting 138+ games each year from 2008-25. His adaptability, durability, and powerful bat made Arceo one of South America’s biggest superstars of the era.

                        Arceo moved from Bolivia to Brazil as a teenager, joining Fortaleza on a developmental contract in May 2001. He made his debut in 2006 at age 21 with 53 games and 7 starts. Arceo was made a full-timer the next year and immediately thrived with 39 home runs, .990 OPS, and 6.3 WAR in just 123 games. His 2008 effort had similar production and started an era of contention for Fortaleza. They took the top seed at 114-48, but lost in the divisional series. The Foxes had similar misfortunes the next year despite a 110-52 mark.

                        From 2008 until the end of his Fortaleza run in 2021, Arceo had 40+ home runs, and 110+ RBI each season. He also topped 6+ WAR in all but his last year, was above 1.000 OPS six times, and 100+ runs scored 11 times. Arceo’s first Silver Slugger was 2009 and was his first of nine straight 50+ home runs. He led the Southern Cone League in home runs each of these years sans 2010.

                        2009 was Arceo’s first MVP and a Triple Crown season with 54 homers, 148 RBI, and .361 average. It was his career best batting average, OBP (.390), hits (218), and WAR (10.4). It was also his first Silver Slugger, an award he’d win again in 2010, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 19.

                        Arceo repeated as MVP in 2010 and took second in 2012. Fortaleza lost in the Southern Cone Championship to Recife in 2010, then missed the playoffs in 2011. The Foxes made it back in 2012 but again were denied in the divisional series. In 2013, Fortaleza finally got over the hump as a wild card, winning Copa Sudamerica over Medellin. Arceo had an impressive playoff run, winning MVP of the LCS and divisional series. In 14 starts, Arceo had 20 hits, 11 runs, 4 doubles, 2 triples, 5 home runs, 16 RBI, and 1.167.

                        Fortaleza went 7-12 in the Baseball Grand Championship, but Arceo fared well in 19 games with 21 hits, 9 runs, 2 doubles, 8 home runs, 17 RBI, and .973 OPS. That winter, Arceo committed to an eight-year, $107,100,000 extension with the Foxes. In 2014, Arceo was third in league MVP voting and again was MVP of the LCS and divisional series. The Foxes repeated as Southern Cone champ, but lost in their Copa Sudamerica rematch with the Mutiny. In 17 playoff starts, Arceo saw 27 hits, 15 runs, 6 doubles, 8 homers, 18 RBI, and 1.238 OPS. Fortaleza went 9-10 in the 2014 BGC with Arceo posting 19 hits, 11 runs, 9 homers, 15 RBI, and .960 OPS.

                        In 2015, Arceo had his career bests in home runs (72), RBI (162), and total bases (446), becoming a three-time MVP. He became only the third in BSA history with a 70+ homer season, four short of Valor Melo’s single-season record. The RBI mark was the third-most in league history. Fortaleza narrowly got the wild card and lost in the first round.

                        The Foxes would miss the playoffs in the next three seasons, but Arceo kept rolling on. He wouldn’t top 60 homers again, but had four more 50+ seasons with Fortaleza and led the league thrice more. Arceo had 11 seasons in BSA with 50+ homers, second only to Melo’s 12. He was third in MVP voting in 2016 and 2017, then took second in 2019.

                        Fortaleza reclaimed a division title in 2019, but lost in the divisional round. They missed the playoffs in 2020, but started a six-year playoff streak in 2021. The Foxes won another Southern Cone title in 2021, falling to Valencia in Copa Sudamerica. Arceo was again strong in the playoffs with 18 hits, 9 runs, 9 homers, and 18 RBI in 17 starts. Fortaleza was 9-10 in the Baseball Grand Championship with 13 hits, 9 runs, 8 homers, 19 RBI, and .838 OPS for Arceo.

                        This was Arceo’s final season with Fortaleza, who turned 37 during the playoffs. That season had been his weakest with the Foxes, although he still was good for 4.2 WAR and 43 home runs. In 2021, Arceo had become the third to reach 800 home runs in BSA. Some thought he could chase Beisbol Sudamerica’s home run and RBI records, but he would leave the continent after his Foxes run.

                        With Fortaleza, Arceo had 2367 games, 2751 hits, 1598 runs, 405 doubles, 48 triples, 816 home runs, 1950 RBI, 443 walks, 1798 strikeouts, 201 steals, .309/.344/.640 slash, 170 wRC+, and 116.9 WAR. As of 2037, Arceo ranks 4th in homers, 4th in RBI, 41st in hits, 16th in runs, 93rd in doubles, 13th in total bases (5700), and 16th in WAR among position players. Among BSA batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Arceo ranked 11th in slugging and 29th in OPS at .983.

                        In the playoffs for Fortaleza, Arceo started 79 games with 110 hits, 60 runs, 15 doubles, 38 home runs, 78 RBI, .346/.373/.764 slash, 218 wRC+, and 5.9 WAR. Arceo is BSA’s all-time playoff leader in homers as of 2037 and ranks 3rd in RBI, 8th in hits, 7th in runs, and 2nd in total bases (243).

                        Those tallies certainly made Arceo an inner-circle level Hall of Famer. He also ranks 2nd in WAR at second base behind Niculao Semide. Arceo is the position leader in slugging, runs, hits, total bases, homers, and RBI. He was a nearly unanimous selection at 99.0% to headline Beisbol Sudamerica’s 2028 Hall of Fame class.

                        Arceo continued on elsewhere for six more years, but he through it all he represented his native Bolivia in the World Baseball Championship. From 2008-26, he played 141 games with 123 hits, 91 runs, 16 doubles, 51 home runs, 88 RBI, .242/.297/.574 slash, and 5.6 WAR. In 2019, he notably led all WBC players with a 1.294 slugging, 1.700 OPS, and 387 wRC+ over nine starts with 13 hits, 12 runs, 10 homers, and 11 RBI.

                        For 2022, the now 37-year old Arceo ended up in Arab League Baseball and Egypt, signing for three years and $33,300,000 with Giza. In his debut, Arceo led the Western Conference with 151 RBI. He had 60+ homers, 140+ RBI, and 6+ WAR in his first two seasons, winning Silver Sluggers both years. Arceo dropped a bit in 2024, but still got 48 homers, 110 RBI, and 2.8 WAR. The Goats were mid-tier, but Arceo was a successful veteran international star and helped with ticket sales.

                        For Giza, Arceo had 463 games, 506 hits, 293 runs, 101 doubles, 173 home runs, 403 RBI, .281/.315/.632 slash, 141 wRC+, and 15.6 WAR. Now 40-years old, Arceo stayed in ALB and moved to Iraq on a three-year, $46,100,000 deal with Basra. The Bulldogs were in the midst of seven-year playoff streak, although they had lost four straight years in the Eastern Conference Championship.

                        Basra won it all in 2025, denying Amman’s three-peat in the ALB Championship. Arceo had still looked respectable with 37 homers and 2.8 WAR in the regular season, plus 12 hits, 11 runs, 6 homers, and 17 RBI in the playoffs. In the Baseball Grand Championship, Arceo started 17 games with 14 hits, 9 runs, 3 doubles, 5 homers, and 11 RBI. Basra finished 8-11 in the event. In four BGCs between Fortaleza and Basra, Arceo played 73 games with 67 hits, 38 runs, 8 doubles, 30 home runs, 62 RBI, .246/.285/.607 slash, and 2.7 WAR.

                        2025 was also notable as Arceo crossed 1000 career home runs combined between BSA/ALB, becoming the fifth in pro baseball history to earn the mark. 2500 RBI was seemingly reachable as well, which four others had met before him. He ultimately fell just short of 2500 RBI, but did cross 2000 runs scored; becoming one of only 33 in world history to do so.

                        Arceo fell off significantly in 2026 as was benched, posting 17 homers, 51 RBI, .722 OPS, and -0.1 WAR over 94 games and 72 starts. He played only 13 games all of 2027, retiring that winter at age 43. For the Bulldogs, Arceo had 251 games, 216 hits, 116 runs, 39 doubles, 54 homers, 144 RBI, .797 OPS, 101 wRC+, and 2.6 WRA.

                        The combined career numbers had 3081 games, 3473 hits, 2010 runs, 545 doubles, 57 triples, 1043 home runs, 2497 RBI, 551 walks, 2459 strikeouts, 237 steals, .301/.336/.628 slash, 160 wRC+, and 135.1 WAR. As of 2037, Arceo ranks 6th in all of pro baseball history in both homers and RBI. He’s also 32nd in runs and ranks 105th in WAR among all players in baseball history. Arceo ranks 41st among all Hall of Famers in slugging percentage as well.

                        Arceo’s final ranking among the all-time greatest second basemen is tough, especially since some all-timers had split careers between 2B and shortstop. Arceo was far and away the best power hitter to ever play the position full time and went down as one of the absolute best home run hitters in all of baseball history. His raw power and his role in titles for both Fortaleza and Basra made Arceo a true immortal of the game.



                        Alex Salinas – First Base – Cordoba Chanticleers – 95.5% First Ballot

                        Alex Salinas was a 6’4’’, 195 pound left-handed hitting first baseman from Gualeguay, Argentina; a city of roughly 40,000 people not far from the border with Uruguay. Salinas was known for having steady and strong power for both home runs and the gap. His 162 game average got you 41 homers, 28 doubles, and 13 triples with close to half of his career hits going for extra bases. Not only did Salinas have power, but he had very solid speed and excellent baserunning chops.

                        Salinas was a good contact hitter against right-handed pitching, but subpar against lefties. He had a lousy career .666 OPS and 85 wRC+ facing LHP, but an excellent 1.006 OPS and 172 wRC+ against RHP. Salinas was merely okay at drawing walks and had struggles with strikeouts against both sides. The hits he got though were high value ones.

                        Defensively, Salinas played exclusively at first base with reliably excellent production, winning seven Gold Gloves. Although he had some recurring knee issues, Salinas still rarely missed time over a 24-year career. He was one of the hardest working and most dedicated men on the circuit, becoming one of Argentina’s biggest baseball superstars.

                        As a teenager, Salinas was picked 19th overall by Cordoba in the 2000 BSA Draft. He was kept primarily in the academy in 2001 with only 15 pinch-hit at-bats. Salinas was given the starting gig though in 2002 and immediately did much better than most early 20s players. Salinas had 31 homers and 3.4 WAR to take second in 2002’s Rookie of the Year voting. In his second season, he had his first of nine seasons with 40+ home runs and his first of 12 seasons worth 5+ WAR.

                        Salinas did see a setback with a torn ACL in the first week of 2005, knocking him out the rest of the year. He also dealt with a torn hamstring that cost him part of the spring of 2006. Salinas would have a run of mostly good health after that and had arguably his best season in 2007. That year had career highs in runs (113), hits (196), homers (49), average (.326), and WAR (8.1). During the season, Cordoba extended Salinas at eight years and $59,640,000.

                        The Chanticleers had been a bottom tier team for most of the 1990s and 2000s. Cordoba ended a 24-year playoff drought in 2010, but had a first round exit. They won a division title in 2011, ultimately losing in the Southern Cone Championship to Recife. These would be Salinas’s only playoff games with surprisingly terrible results with a .179/.200/.282 slash and -0.3 WAR in 11 games. The Chanticleers stayed mostly around the middle tier for the rest of the 2010s.

                        Salinas’s stats were also surprisingly underwhelming on the World Baseball Championship stage with Argentina. He was a dedicated regular though with 209 games and 197 starts from 2003-25. Salinas had 133 hits, 97 runs, 22 doubles, 43 home runs, 85 RBI, 62 walks, 62 steals, .190/.274/.406 slash, 92 wRC+, and 2.6 WAR. Argentina’s deepest runs were division titles in 2015 and 2019. Even without the big game success though, Salinas was a favorite throughout the nation.

                        He won his first Gold Gloves from 2011-14, but never won a Silver Slugger or was an MVP finalist. Of course, there’s likely no tougher position to win a Slugger than at first base in terms of competition. Salinas remained very steady and consistent into his 30s, signing a four-year, $59,400,000 extension in July 2015. He won his fifth Gold Glove in his last year with Cordoba in 2019.

                        For the Chanticleers, Salinas had 2614 games, 2703 hits, 1588 runs, 408 doubles, 217 triples, 656 home runs, 1667 RBI, 649 walks, 1098 steals, .286/.338/.584 slash, 152 wRC+, and 91.8 WAR. Salinas would be a franchise icon well into retirement and Cordoba quickly retired his #34 uniform at the end of his career. His deal expired after the 2019 campaign and he was a free agent for the first time at age 38. His production had stayed consistent to that point though, so he had multiple suitors.

                        Salinas moved to Colombia on a three-year, $26,600,000 deal with Bogota. He won Gold Gloves in 2020 and 2021 for the Bats. Salinas remained a reliable 35+ homer, 4.5+ WAR guy in his first two years in Bogota, crossing the 3000 hit and 700 home run milestones in 2021. The Bats were stuck in the lower-mid tier despite his efforts. Salinas ended up missing the final four months in 2022 with a broken hand.

                        For Bogota, Salinas had 342 games, 390 hits, 225 runs, 64 doubles, 28 triples, 93 home runs, 231 RBI, 151 steals, .306/.351/.620 slash, 145 wRC+, and 12.7 WAR. Now 41-years old, Salinas found a home in Major League Baseball with Raleigh on a one-year, $8,200,000 deal for 2023. The Raptors were heading towards their third season since joining MLB as an expansion team.

                        Salinas’s pace was good in 2023, but he lost around two months in the fall to a torn hamstring. He did good enough to get another year in Raleigh for 2024 and again was respectable, albeit now in a platoon role. For the Raptors, Salinas had 213 games, 176 starts, 156 hits, 101 runs, 18 doubles, 50 home runs, 100 RBI, .227/.293/.493 slash, 132 wRC+, and 4.7 WAR. Salinas certainly seemed good enough still for a roster spot somewhere, but 40+ players weren’t in the highest demand. He played one last WBC in 2025, but went unsigned for the season and finally retired at age 44.

                        In Beisbol Sudamerica, Salinas had 2956 games, 3093 hits, 1813 runs, 472 doubles, 245 triples, 749 home runs, 1898 RBI, 725 walks, 2986 strikeouts, 1249 stolen bases, 701 caught stealing, .289/.339/.588 slash, 151 wRC+, and 104.5 WAR. As of 2037, Salinas ranks 11th in games, 6th in runs, 16th in hits, 28th in doubles, 28th in triples, 7th in home runs, 4th in total bases (6302), 7th in RBI, 5th in steals, 31st in caught stealing, 3rd in strikeouts, and 31st in WAR among position players. His .928 OPS was 99th among batters with 3000+ plate appearances and his slugging was 64th.

                        Some voters and fans were actually stunned to find how high up the leaderboards Salinas was, since he was never an MVP candidate or Silver Slugger winner. His lack of team/playoff success with Cordoba also caused him to be perhaps overlooked in his time. The numbers though didn’t lie and Salinas was genuinely around that inner circle level.

                        Combining his MLB stats, Salinas had 3169 games, 3249 hits, 1914 runs, 490 doubles, 252 triples, 799 home runs, 1998 RBI, 788 walks, 3237 strikeouts, 1277 steals, .285/.337/.583 slash, 150 wRC+, and 109.2 WAR. He ranks 46th in steals among all world players as of 2037 and cracks the top 100 in runs, homers, and RBI. Salinas was a clear Hall of Famer and would be a headliner in most other years. At 95.5%, he was just behind Antonio Arceo in a rock solid 2028 class for Beisbol Sudamerica.

                        Comment

                        • MrNFL_FanIQ
                          MVP
                          • Oct 2008
                          • 4984

                          #2142
                          2028 EBF Hall of Fame

                          The European Baseball Federation’s Hall of Fame added two guys on very different paths in 2028. 1B Pavel Pajitnov led the way as a first ballot pick at 84.5%, while 3B Kyle Evrard got the big bump up to 79.1% on his tenth and final try. SP Johannes Jol fell painfully short of the 66% requirement at 65.9% in his last shot. Two second ballot guys also cracked 50% with RF Dylan Fitzpatrick at 55.6% and SP Lorenzo Rotella at 52.1%.



                          For Jol, he also got incredibly close the prior year at 64.6%, slowly climbing after starting at only 37.7%. He pitched 15 years between Luxembourg and Athens and won Pitcher of the Year in 2004. Jol had a 180-152 record, 3.39 ERA, 3076 innings, 2658 strikeouts, 110 ERA+, and 49.4 WAR. He generally lacked black ink or crazy dominance and needed maybe another year or two to make it just on accumulations. It was painful though to come up a mere 0.1% short of making it in.

                          Also falling after ten failed ballots was CL Zachary Berg, who peaked in his final ballot at 38.1%. He led in saves thrice with Amsterdam and once won Reliever of the Year, but his EBF totals were hurt by MLB excursions in his 30s. In EBF, Berg had 325 saves and 250 shutdowns, 2.81 ERA, 829 innings, 935 strikeouts, 134 ERA+, and 24.4 WAR.

                          Berg’s combined pro totals saw 465 saves, 544 shutdowns, 2.56 ERA, 1110 games, 1376.2 innings, 1424 strikeouts, and 34.7 WAR. As a function of longevity, Berg ranks 11th in games, 25th in saves, and 30th in shutdowns in world history as of 2037. If that was all in one league, he probably makes it in. But he was far less dominant than the other famous closers, putting his resume in a tough spot.

                          SP Lucio de Jesus also made it ten ballots, ending at only 3.4% after peaking at 24.4%. He was an odd one as his first seven years were split between CABA and MLB with mixed results. He came to Munich in 2006 at age 31 and won two Pitcher of the Year awards and two ERA titles. De Jesus’s EBF run was only eight years with a 102-49 record, 2.70 ERA, 1583.1 innings, 1601 strikeouts, 143 ERA+, and 41.0 WAR.

                          That’s an excellent stretch, especially in your 30s, but it wasn’t long enough tenure to get much attention even with the POTY wins. The combined pro totals for de Jesus had a 214-136 record, 2.96 ERA, 3394.1 innings, 3380 strikeouts, 766 walks, 126 ERA+ and 75.5 WAR. Those stats all in one league probably get him across the line. Even though he fell short though, Munich fans will still remember the 6’7’’ lefty from Mexico.



                          Pavel Pajitnov – First Base – Cologne Copperheads – 84.5% First Ballot

                          Pavel Pajitnov was a 6’3’’, 190 pound switch-hitting first baseman from Azov, Russia; a city of around 82,000 near the Black Sea. Pajitnov was known for his reliably strong home run power, topping 40+ in seven seasons and 50+ in four campaigns. Against right-handed pitching, he was a very good contact hitter and had a career .997 OPS and 180 wRC+. Pajitnov’s results were middling against lefties with .720 OPS and 102 wRC+.

                          Pajitnov was decent at drawing walks, but below average at avoiding strikeouts. His gap power was nice with 23 doubles and 9 triples per his 162 game average. Pajitnov’s speed was average, but his baserunning skills were abysmal and he’d get himself in trouble with poor decision making. His durability was outstanding, playing 150+ games each year from 2010-22.

                          Defensively, Pajitnov played first base almost exclusively with reliably average production. He did randomly play left field in 2019 and a bit at the start of his career, but was terrible there. Independent of his strengths and flaws, Pajitnov was a scrappy sparkplug type. His work ethic and adaptability were both world class, allowing Pajitnov to overachieve throughout his run.

                          Even for the ones wanting to branch out, it was rare for Russian prospects to get much attention beyond Eurasian Professional Baseball. Pajitnov was an exception and was noticed by Cologne, who brought him to Germany in February 2004 on a developmental deal. Pajitnov debuted officially with four games in 2007 at age 21. He only played 27 games in his first two years, then was a regular pinch hitter in 2009 with 111 games and 29 starts. With some promising results, Pajitnov was moved into a full-time starting role from 2010 onward.

                          From 2010-15 with the Copperheads, Pajitnov was good each year for 5+ WAR, 35+ home runs, and OPS above .950. He won Silver Sluggers in 2012 and 2013, leading the Northern Conference in the former with a career high 219 hits. Pajitnov’s 2011 had his career bests in runs (121), RBI (140), OPS (1.031), and WAR (8.1). He was also good for 8+ WAR and 1.012 in 2013. In 2010, Pajitnov hit for the cycle in a game against Stockholm.

                          Pajitnov was an important fixture in the middle of the lineup as Cologne began what would become an eight-year playoff streak in 2010. They had back-to-back second round exits to start, even despite a 110-52 record in 2011. The Copperheads went 107-55 in 2012 and broke through for their first European Championship, defeating Vienna in the final. Pajitnov was excellent in that run over 14 starts with 18 hits, 12 runs, 3 doubles, 3 triples, 4 homers, 14 RBI, and 1.084 OPS. He was decent in the Baseball Grand Championship with 17 hits, 10 runs, 8 homers, 18 RBI, and .792 OPS over 19 starts. Cologne finished 11-8 in a four-way tie for sixth, but only one win short of the log jam for first.

                          Cologne again was 107-55 in 2013, but lost in the first round. They had a second round exit in 2014 and first round loss in 2015, never able to recapture 2012’s magic. Pajitnov’s overall playoff numbers were good with 40 games, 45 hits, 23 runs, 5 doubles, 5 triples, 10 home runs, 31 RBI, .308/.331/.616 slash, 169 wRC+, and 1.8 WAR. His time in Germany ended after the 2015 campaign as they couldn’t come to terms for an extension, sending Pajitnov to free agency at age 30.

                          With the Copperheads, Pajitnov played 1084 games with 1244 hits, 695 runs, 170 doubles, 67 triples, 272 home runs, 772 RBI, .326/.369/.619 slash, 182 wRC+, and 45.5 WAR. It was certainly his most impactful run, although he would play roughly the same number of games in his Thessaloniki run. Pajitnov was rightly inducted in Cologne’s green and gold and would later see his #21 uniform retired by the Copperheads.

                          Pajitnov went to Greece next on a seven-year, $121,600,000 deal with Thessaloniki. He had career lows to that point in his Tritons debut, but bounced back and led the Southern Conference in home runs thrice from 2017-20. Pajitnov’s overall hitting was less efficient with Thessaloniki, but he was still a very solid slugger for the Tritons, who were a contender in the late 2010s.

                          Thessaloniki won the conference crown in 2017, but fell to Brussels in the European Championship. Pajitnov was conference finals MVP and had 18 hits, 10 runs, 3 doubles, 6 homers, 11 RBI, and 1.071 OPS over 14 playoff starts. He was even stronger in the Baseball Grand Championship with 19 starts, 19 hits, 17 runs, 12 homers, 15 RBI, 1.193 OPS, and 1.4 WAR. The Tritons were 11-8 in a five-way tie for fourth, but only one win short of the top spot. During this era, Pajitnov did also make some appearances for his native Russia in the World Baseball Champion ship, although he had limited success there.

                          Both 2018 and 2019 had division titles and second round exits for Thessaloniki. The following two years saw the Tritons in the middle of the standings. On the whole, Pajitnov had strong playoff stats in his career with 66 total games, 78 hits, 43 runs, 10 doubles, 6 triples, 22 home runs, 54 RBI, .310/.331/.659 slash, 181 wRC+, and 3.5 WAR.

                          Thessaloniki collapsed in 2022 and ultimately was relegated after a 59-103 finish. With Pajitnov in his final year of his contract, the Tritons traded the 36-year old at the deadline to Zurich for prospects. With Thessaloniki, Pajitnov finished with 1058 games, 1074 hits, 622 runs, 139 doubles, 61 triples, 293 home runs, 724 RBI, .272/.326/.562 slash, 146 wRC+, and 29.5 WAR.

                          Pajitnov was iffy in the second half for the Mountaineers with .774 OPS and 0.6 WAR over 50 games. Zurich finished 90-72, just short of the playoffs to end a six-year streak. Pajitnov was a free agent again at age 37 and received limited interest from European teams. He ultimately left EBF and ended up in Australia on a two-year, $11,200,000 deal with Brisbane of the Oceania Baseball Association.

                          He was used as a part-time starter in 2023 with okay results, then was used only 75 games with 40 starts in 2024. For the Black Bears, Pajitnov had 184 games with 116 hits, 60 runs, 19 doubles, 30 home runs, 77 RBI, .242/.278/.498 slash, 114 wRC+, and 1.4 WAR. Pajitnov hoped to play somewhere in 2025, but had little left to offer. After going unsigned, he retired at age 39.

                          In EBF, Pajitnov had 2192 games, 2360 hits, 1339 runs, 313 doubles, 129 triples, 578 home runs, 1529 RBI, 615 walks, 1618 strikeouts, .297/.346/.588 slash, 162 wRC, and 75.6 WAR. As of 2037, Pajitnov ranks 78th in hits, 60th in runs, 31st in home runs, 46th in total bases (4665), and 34th in RBI. He narrowly doesn’t crack the top 100 in WAR for position players. Pajitnov does rank 75th in slugging among EBF batters with 3000+ plate appearances.

                          Pajitnov wasn’t one with tons of awards and wasn’t ever an MVP finalist. However, he was one of the most reliable power hitters of his time with 550+ homers and 1500+ RBI getting the attention of most Hall of Fame voters. Pajitnov also had great playoff stats and played an important role in pennants for both Cologne and Thessaloniki. That won over most voters to get Pajitnov to 84.5% for a first ballot induction as part of the European Baseball Federation’s 2028 class.



                          Kyle “Boo” Evrard – Third Base – Malta Marvels – 79.1% Tenth Ballot

                          Kyle Evrard was a 6’1’’, 200 pound right-handed third baseman from Amilly, a town of around 13,000 people in north-central France. Evrard was a leadoff man who was a great contact hitter with a nice eye for walks and a strong knack for avoiding strikeouts. He was also one of the fastest and most skilled baserunners of his era. The nickname “Boo” came from how often Evrard would spook opposing pitchers with his threats to steal.

                          Evrard had nice gap power and wasn’t a mere singles slap hitter, posting 25 doubles, 14 triples, and 13 home runs per his 162 game average. He was a career third baseman, but did grade as a mediocre defender overall. Recurring back problems did also cost him some games as points. Evrard was generally a steady presence and was usually liked at his various stops.

                          In September 1993, Evrard signed a developmental deal with Malta. He spent much of the next five years in their academy, but he did see occasional action with 90 games and one start from 1996-98. Evrard had 106 games and 15 starts in 1999 at age 23, then earned a full-time starting job after that. From 2000-04, Evrard had four seasons worth 8+ WAR and led in stolen bases thrice, peaking with 119 in 2003. As of 2037, that ranks as the 14th-best single-season in EBF history.

                          Evrard won a Silver Slugger in 2004, but otherwise didn’t get much awards consideration since those were usually reserved for big power hitters. He did notably lead the Southern Conference with 128 runs in 2003 and had his career best 8.8 WAR in 2000. It was also hard to get attention broadly in Malta, as the Marvels were a perennial loser. Their best season during his run was 77-85 in 2001.

                          Many of the other greats who started in Malta were quick to leave for free agency, but Evrard signed a five-year, $22,680,000 extension after the 2002 season. However, he also got the itch to leave and opted out of his deal after the 2004 campaign. For the Marvels, Evrard had 962 games, 1055 hits, 575 runs, 154 doubles, 79 triples, 80 home runs, 347 RBI, 297 walks, 517 steals, .343/.403/.522 slash, 157 wRC+, and 39.8 WAR.

                          Evrard never played for a French team in his pro career, but he was a regular for his country from 2000-12 in the World Baseball Championship. He had 118 games with 107 hits, 80 runs, 17 doubles, 6 triples, 11 homers, 36 RBI, 47 walks, 81 steals, .248/.343/.391 slash, 119 wRC+, and 4.5 WAR. France earned division titles with Evrard in 2000, 2004, and 2011.

                          The second stop of Evrard’s pro career was Germany as the now 29-year old joined Munich at $53,700,000 over seven years for 2005. Injuries limited him at points with the Mavericks, including a fractured fibula in 2006 and fractured foot in 2008. Still, Evrard had four seasons above 5 WAR for Munich and led the conference in on-base percentage in 2007 at .427. He also had a career high 1.005 OPS in the injury shortened 2008 campaign.

                          Munich was in the midst of a playoff streak when Evrard joined which lasted through 2010. The Mavericks were denied in the 2005 and 2006 Southern Conference Championship and wouldn’t get beyond the second round in the later tries. Evrard’s playoff starts were good with 43 games, 56 hits, 22 runs, 6 doubles, 4 triples, 19 RBI, 18 walks, 26 steals, .381/.446/.476 slash, 157 wRC+, and 1.5 WAR.

                          Evrard declined the contract option seventh year and entered free agency for 2011 at age 35. With Munich, he had 707 games, 836 hits, 430 runs, 114 doubles, 69 triples, 64 homers, 369 RBI, 278 walks, 406 steals, .344/.412/.527 slash, 155 wRC+, and 29.0 WAR. Evrard next signed a four-year, $40,400,00 deal with Kyiv and had a nice 2011 with 4.5 WAR over 150 games. However, the Kings struggled and were relegated with Evrard opting out to avoid the European Second League.

                          He joined Thessaloniki for 2012 at $27,400,000 over three years. Evrard was moved to a part-time role, but still looked good in 2012 with 3.3 WAR and .870 OPS over 119 games and 61 starts. Evrard struggled though in 2013 and was benched, ultimately posting -0.4 WAR over 63 games and 6 starts. He retired that winter shortly after his 38th birthday.

                          Evrard ended with 2001 games, 2171 hits, 1143 runs, 303 doubles, 167 triples, 161 home runs, 808 RBI, 649 walks, 670 strikeouts, 1033 steals, .337/.400/.511 slash, 152 wRC+, and 76.1 WAR. As of 2037, Evrard ranks 14th in stolen bases, but misses the top 100 in all of the other counting stats. His batting average does rank 36th among all hitters with 3000+ plate appearances and his on-base percentage sits 18th. Evrard is one of only 38 world Hall of Famers as of 2037 with an OBP above .400 and ranks 39th in that group in batting average.

                          Most agreed he was one of the better leadoff guys of his era, but they always have some trouble with Hall of Fame voters due to the lack of home runs and RBI. Evrard also didn’t have the longevity to rack up the big hit/run totals many of the great leadoff guys got. His best years being on forgettable Malta teams didn’t help his case either, making his candidacy a tough one.

                          Evrard debuted at only 40.7% in 2019, but never fell lower. He came very close to the 66% threshold in 2020 (61.5%), 2024 (62.3%), and 2026 (65.7%). 2028 was his tenth and final chance and many voters reevaluated Evrard’s case. Many felt he was better than the raw tallies might indicate, giving Evrard a big boost up to 79.1%. With that, he made it into the European Baseball Federation’s 2028 HOF class and became the fifth in EBF history to get in on their tenth ballot.

                          Comment

                          • MrNFL_FanIQ
                            MVP
                            • Oct 2008
                            • 4984

                            #2143
                            2028 EPB Hall of Fame

                            Pitcher Kamil Domanski stood alone for induction in Eurasian Professional Baseball’s 2028 Hall of Fame class with a 92.3% first ballot nod. Five others cracked 50%, but fell short of the 66% requirement. 3B Vladyslav Chychykov (57.7%) and 1B Roman Stanchinsky (53.8%) were the closest, both on their debuts. SP Artur Woloshyn got 53.1% in his fifth ballot, 1B Benjamin Bodnar saw 51.9% for his ninth try, and CL Povilas Zdancius had 50.4% on his fourth attempt.



                            Among the players dropped after ten ballots was catcher Eduard Melnychenko, who peaked in his debut at 44.3% and ended at 15.4%. He was another that was doomed by the general anti-catcher bias of HOF voters. Melnychenko had eight Silver Sluggers, three Gold Gloves, and was a 15-time all-star between Krasnoyarsk and Minsk. He was twice ALCS MVP and won a title with the Miners in 2011.

                            However, as a catcher, his raw batting tallies were naturally lower than other candidates. Melnychenko played 1930 games with 1886 hits, 665 runs, 399 doubles, 171 homers, 824 RBI, .275/.309/.418 slash, 118 wRC+, and 70.0 WAR. As of 2037, he ranks second in WAR among EPB catchers. However, there still hasn’t been a single catcher added into EPB’s HOF with the bar seemingly unreachable.

                            Closer Delgerdelai Otgonbaatar also fell after ten ballots, peaking at 31.1% in 2020 and ending with 8.5%. Over 14 years, he had 331 saves, 387 shutdowns, 2.56 ERA, 1158.1 innings, 867 strikeouts, 122 ERA+, and 21.4 WAR. 300+ saves gets you some attention, but he was never dominant like typical HOF closers. Otgonbaatar was dismissed by most voters as a compiler.

                            SP/OF Nikita Trudov also fell off, peaking at 32.2% in 2020 and ending with 7.3%. He had good value over 13 years as a two-way guy, but was generally viewed as above average at best in either role. As a hitter, Trudov had 1301 games, 1067 hits, 525 runs, 207 doubles, 227 homers, 577 RBI, .232/.288/.435 slash, 129 wRC+, and 41.1 WAR. As a pitcher, he had a 153-131 record, 2.90 ERA, 2691 innings, 2014 strikeouts, 104 ERA+, and 40.8 WAR. The combined 80.9 WAR made Trudov worthy of a look, but most voters agreed being merely decent both ways wasn’t enough.



                            Kamil Domanski – Starting Pitcher – Irkutsk Ice Cats – 92.3% First Ballot

                            Kamil Domanski was a 6’1’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Warsaw, the capital of Poland. Domanski had strong stuff, excellent control, and good movement. His fastball peaked in the 97-99 mph range, but it was his changeup that was his most deadly pitch. Domanski also had a rock solid curveball and a decent slider in the arsenal. He overall had an extreme groundball tendency.

                            Compared to the other great aces in EPB, Domanski’s stamina was merely decent. However, his durability was good in the first decade of his run. He was excellent at holding runners, but had weak glove work. Domanski was a team captain and was considered a high character individual amongst friends and foes alike. His leadership, loyalty, and work ethic pushed him to a 14-year career.

                            By the 2000s, most Polish amateurs ended up in the European Baseball Federation sphere. Russian teams would still try to recruit some prospects, especially in major metros like Warsaw. Yekaterinburg was one of these teams and secured Domanski to a developmental deal in April 2005. He spent three years in the Yaks academy, but never played for them.

                            On New Year’s Day 2008, Domanski was involved in a six-player trade with Irkutsk that included three eventual Hall of Famers. The Ice Cats also received veteran OF Yakov Rhyzhikov in the deal, while Yekaterinburg got LF Aram Sargsyan. Domanski spent one year in Irkutsk’s developmental system. He made his debut in 2009 at age 22 with 34 very strong innings in relief. Domanski earned a full-time rotation spot after that.

                            In 2010, Domanski was second in Rookie of the Year voting and third in Pitcher of the Year voting. From 2011-15, Domanski was a top-tier ace who led the Asian League four times in both strikeouts and WAR during that stretch. He also led all five years in FIP, four times in K/BB, twice in WHIP, and once in ERA. Domanski’s 2013 had an ERA title at 1.94 and his career bests in strikeouts (342), and WAR (9.3), winning his first POTY. He was third in both 2011 and 2014’s voting.

                            Irkutsk had been a powerhouse in the 1990s and was decent in the 2000s. By the 2010s, they were firmly in the mid-tier, although they were rarely outright bad. Despite Domanski’s efforts, the Ice Cats never made the playoffs in his run. 2015 was their best effort at 91-71. He stayed loyal and steady though and signed a five-year, $47,500,000 extension in May 2016. Domanski’s production fell off slightly that year, but he bounced back with three more 7+ WAR seasons after that.

                            Domanski’s second Pitcher of the Year was in 2017 with his second ERA title and career best mark at 1.92. In 2018, he tossed his lone no-hitter on June 1 with 11 strikeouts and one walk against Yekaterinburg. Although he never got to play in the EPB playoffs, Domanski was a regular for his native Poland in the Baseball Grand Championship. His results were merely okay from 2010-20 with an 11-7 record, 3.75 ERA, 160.2 innings, 204 strikeouts, 97 ERA+, and 2.6 WAR. Domanski did toss 32 innings with 51 Ks and a 3.38 ERA in the 2018 world championship run by the Poles.

                            In 2018, Domanski was third in Pitcher of the Year voting, his final time as a finalist. He was strong again in 2019, but fell off towards more average stats in 2020. That year saw shoulder inflammation that cost him seven weeks in the summer. In mid April 2021, Domanski suffered a torn labrum that ended his season and ultimately his tenure with Irkutsk. His deal was up and he became a free agent heading towards age 35 with an uncertain future.

                            Kazan gave Domanski a chance on a two-year, $7,440,000 deal. Unfortunately, Domanski was terrible over 155 innings in 2022 for the Crusaders with 4.76 ERA and -0.3 WAR. He retired after the season at age 35. Irkutsk immediately brought him back in to retire his #4 uniform. Domanski had been one of the few redeeming things in an overall forgettable decade for Ice Cats fans.

                            Domanski finished with a 176-131 record, 2.53 ERA, 2824.2 innings, 3319 strikeouts, 375 walks, 245/343 quality starts, 119 complete games, 24 shutouts, 128 ERA+, 67 FIP-, and 85.4 WAR. As of 2037, Domanski ranks 81st in strikeouts and 46th in WAR among pitchers despite not breaching the top 100 in any other counting stat.

                            He didn’t have the longevity to be among the true inner-circle, but Domanski was clearly a top five level arm in the AL for a decade. His 67 FIP- was especially elite, leading some to argue his traditional stats were deflated from being on weaker Irkutsk teams. 3000+ Ks and two Pitcher of the Year awards was plenty for most voters, especially with an overall quiet 2028 ballot. At 92.3%, Domanski stood alone for induction into the Eurasian Professional Baseball Hall of Fame in 2028.

                            Comment

                            • MrNFL_FanIQ
                              MVP
                              • Oct 2008
                              • 4984

                              #2144
                              2028 OBA Hall of Fame (Part 1)

                              The 2028 Hall of Fame class for the Oceania Baseball Association was an impressive one with three players added upon their debut. Slugger Merlin Megson and SP Nathan Henderson were co-headliners with 98.8% and 97.6%, respectively. OF Clifford James joined them at a rock solid 84.7%. The best returner was LF Samson Gould at 61.0%, five points short of the 66% requirement on his third ballot. SP Raj Marple was also on his third try and got 54.4%.



                              On his tenth and final chance, RP Nolan Gilmoon finished short at 51.1%. The Micronesian lefty never got higher than 52%, but was never below 41%. Gilmoon was hurt by bouncing around between MLB teams in the second half of his career. His seven year run with Fiji though was impressive with two Reliever of the Year wins. Gilmoon also led thrice in saves and four times in games pitched. His OBA numbers saw 241 saves, 2.12 ERA, 466 games, 615.2 innings, 848 strikeouts, 172 ERA+, and 27.4 WAR. The pace was certainly there, but he didn’t have the tenure.



                              Merlin Megson – Right Field/First Base/Designated Hitter – Canberra Centurions – 98.8% First Ballot

                              Merlin Megson was a 6’0’’, 200 pound left-handed slugger from Locks Heath, a village of 7,000 in South East England. Megson was one of the all-time great home run hitters, topping 50+ in ten different seasons. His gap power was also impressive for a 162 game average of 23 doubles, 17 triples, and 48 home runs. Megson was also an excellent contact hitter in his prime with a decent strikeout rate, although he drew fewer walks than you would expect.

                              Megson especially tormented right-handed pitching with a career 1.077 OPS and 187 wRC+. Facing lefties, he still had a respectable .793 OPS and 121 wRC+. Megson had average-at-best speed, but he was a very crafty base stealer and positive value baserunner overall. Despite having fairly good athleticism and hand-eye coordination offensively, that didn’t translate to defensive value.

                              Close to half of Megson’s career starts came in right field. He had around 1/5 of his starts at first base and saw very limited use in left field. In any spot, Megson was a terrible defender. Around ¼ of his starts came as a designated hitter. Megson’s ironman durability meant he was ready to go anywhere you wanted to put him, playing 138+ games in all but his final season.

                              After growing up in England, Megson’s family moved to Australia in his teenage years. He thrived in the country’s amateur circuit and soared up the prospect ranks by the 2005 OBA Draft. Megson was picked #1 overall by expansion Canberra, who was set for their inaugural season in 2006. The Centurions let Megson set and watch in 2006, then brought him up as a starter in 2007 at age 21. He took third in Rookie of the Year voting with decent production.

                              2008 started a six-year streak for Megson as the Australasia League leader in total bases, as well as an eight year streak with 40+ homers and 100+ RBI. The Centurions quickly gave him an eight-year, $36,780,000 extension after the 2009 season. With Canberra, Megson won MVP honors in 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, and 2015. He also won Silver Sluggers in right field from 2009-12 and 2014, plus wins in 2013-14 at first base.

                              During that stretch, Megson led the AL in WAR four times, OPS five times, wRC+ five times, slugging six times, OBP thrice, average four times, total bases seven times, homers four times, RBI four times, hits four times, and runs twice. Megson’s finest year was 2013 as he posted the eighth Triple Crown hitting season in OBA history with 63 homers, 145 RBI, and a .370 average. The average was the second-best in OBA history to that point and fell only six homers and 12 RBI short of the league records.

                              On top of the Triple Crown. Megson set single-season OBA records for slugging (.801), OPS (1.209), and total bases (472) that still stand as of 2037.
                              2013 also had Megson’s career highs in runs (133), hits (218), triples (23), homers (63), total bases (472), OBP (.407), wRC+ (230), and WAR (11.6). As of 2037, the WAR mark ranks as the 12th-best single season for an OBA position player.

                              Things were slow going for expansion Canberra, but Megson helped them to their first successes. The Centurions had their first winning season in 2010 at 85-75, then had three straight 90+ win seasons. However, they were stuck up against the end of Melbourne’s dynasty and the start of a four-year reign by Christchurch. Canberra’s best finish with Megson was second in 2012 at 97-65, five back on the Mets. They fell to 73-89 in 2014, but bounced back to 94-68 for a third place finish only four games back.

                              Canberra fell back below .500 in 2016 and Megson struggled. Granted, a “bad” year for him was still 4.7 WAR, .971 OPS, and 39 homers; but he had his lowest output since his rookie year. Megson had one year left on his deal, but opted to decline the contract option, entering free agency at age 30. The Centurions were sad to see their first superstar leave, but he had made them a growing concern. When his career had ended, Megson’s #16 was the first to be retired by Canberra and he was their first Hall of Famer.

                              For the Centurions, Megson played 1547 games with 1910 hits, 1060 runs, 231 doubles, 184 triples, 482 home runs, 1179 RBI, 322 steals, .328/.369/.680 slash, 184 wRC+, and 72.5 WAR. Even off a weaker year, Megson had no shortage of big money offers across OBA. He ended up signing with Brisbane at six years and $78,400,000.

                              From 2017-19 with the Black Bears, Megson led the AL each year in homers, RBI, and total bases. He won MVPs in 2017 and 2019 and Silver Sluggers all three years (LF in 2017, DH in 2018, RF in 2019). Megson became the fourth in OBA history to win seven MVPs and ended up with ten Sluggers. His arrival helped Brisbane dethrone Christchurch by one game for the 2017 pennant, ending a 14-year title drought.

                              Megson’s lone trip to the Oceania Championship saw Brisbane swept by Guam, although he did great in four games going 7-17 with 2 homers, 2 triples, 4 runs, and 6 RBI. The Black Bears won 90+ the next two seasons, but couldn’t get past Sydney. In 2019, Megson crossed the 600 career home run and 1500 RBI thresholds, impressively getting to both by age 33. Many thought it was a mere matter of time before Megson ascended to the top spots on the OBA leaderboards.
                              However, 2019 was the end of his OBA run, opting out of his Brisbane deal and leaving for Major League Baseball.

                              With Brisbane, Megson had 470 games, 578 hits, 322 runs, 70 doubles, 59 triples, 155 home runs, 393 RBI, .316/.356/.673 slash, 173 wRC+, and 20.1 WAR. He was starting to get teams from across the globe interested in his services, drawing attention both from his OBA dominance and his recent successes in the World Baseball Championship.

                              Megson had started playing for his native England in 2015 and kept playing through 2025. He played 104 games and started 78 with 88 hits, 57 runs, 11 doubles, 4 triples, 30 home runs, 70 RBI, .273/.324/.616 slash, 166 wRC+, and 4.4 WAR. In 2019, Megson had 14 hits, 13 runs, 8 homers, and 17 RBI over 16 games and 11 starts, helping England to a World Championship. That run especially got him on the radar of MLB teams who learned that he was possibly soon available with his opt-out clause.

                              In OBA, Megson finished with 2017 games, 2488 hits, 1382 runs, 301 doubles, 243 triples, 637 home runs, 1572 RBI, 422 walks, 1214 strikeouts, 363 steals, .325/.366/.678 slash, 1.044 OPS, 182 wRC+, and 92.6 WAR. As of 2037, Megson is OBA’s career leader in both slugging and OPS, minimum 3000 plate appearances required. He also ranks 7th in batting average and 12th in OBP.

                              Even with a shortened OBA run, Megson also ranks 10th in home runs, 10th in RBI, 29th in hits, 17th in runs, 15th in triples, 10th in total bases (5186), and 12th in WAR among position players. He had compiled an inner-circle level Hall of Fame career before his 34th birthday. Some wonder if Megson could’ve been in GOAT consideration had his entire career been in the Oceania Baseball Association. Either way, he was a slam dunk to co-headline OBA’s 2028 HOF class at 98.8%.

                              As for his MLB tenure, Megson signed for 2020 with Atlanta at $81,800,000 over four years. He delivered right away with a Silver Slugger (at 1B) and a third place in 2020’s MVP voting, leading the American Association in triples. Megson dropped off a good deal with only 1.8 WAR in 2021, but bounced back with two more very solid seasons for the Aces. Atlanta made the playoffs thrice, but didn’t get beyond the second round. Megson’s stats were underwhelming with .731 OPS and 0.2 WAR over 12 games.

                              The Atlanta run had strong tallies overall though with 624 games, 705 hits, 400 runs, 99 doubles, 61 triples, 153 home runs, 437 RBI, .296/.343/.581 slash, 148 wRC+, and 19.0 WAR. Megson was a free agent again heading towards age 38 for 2024 and joined San Diego at $74,200,000 over three years. The Seals were fresh off a World Series defeat to Cincinnati.

                              Megson had a fantastic debut with San Diego, leading the AA in both home runs (58) and RBI (141). He was merely decent in the playoffs though as the Seals lost in the first round. San Diego missed the playoffs in 2025 and Megson regressed significantly. He still had 36 homers, but posted 104 wRC+ and 0.9 WAR. Megson finished with 317 games, 306 hits, 204 runs, 25 doubles, 19 triples, 94 homers, 239 RBI, .262/.315/.557 slash, 133 wRC+, and 6.4 WAR in two seasons.

                              After a weak 2026 spring training, Megson was cut by San Diego. He was unsigned until June when Edmonton picked him up, playing 67 games with 0.8 WAR. The run did allow him to cross 2000 runs and 3500 hits for his combined pro career. Megson had hoped to also get to 900 home runs, but ended up five short. He was unsigned in 2027 apart from a brief fall run with minor league Regina. Megson retired that winter at age 41.

                              In MLB, Megson played 1008 games with 1072 hits, 630 runs, 131 doubles, 81 triples, 258 home runs, 714 RBI, .283/.334/.566 slash, 141 wRC+, and 26.2 WAR. That’s a very respectable run for a guy who debuted there at age 34. For his combined pro career, Megson played 3025 games with 3560 hits, 2012 runs, 432 doubles, 324 triples, 895 home runs, 2286 RBI, 673 walks, 434 steals, .311/.355/.641 slash, 168 wRC+, and 118.8 WAR.

                              On the world leaderboards as of 2037, Megson ranks 26th in homers, 17th in RBI, 51st in hits, and 30th in runs scored. He’s the only player in world history to reach 2000+ runs, 3500+ hits, 300+ triples, 800+ homers, and 2000+ RBI. Among world Hall of Famers, Megson also ranks 21st in slugging and his .996 OPS just misses the top 50. Those tallies plus seven MVPs show that few hitters in the world were more impressive during Megson’s era.

                              Comment

                              • MrNFL_FanIQ
                                MVP
                                • Oct 2008
                                • 4984

                                #2145
                                2028 OBA Hall of Fame (Part 2)




                                Nathan “The Bird” Henderson – Christchurch Chinooks – 97.6% First Ballot

                                Nathan Henderson was a 6’6’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Melbourne, Australia. Nicknamed “The Bird,” Henderson had great control along with good movement, although his raw stuff was average at best. His velocity peaked only around 92-94 mph with an arsenal of slider, sinker, splitter, and changeup.

                                Henderson’s stamina graded as respectable compared to other OBA aces and he had excellent durability across his 14 year career. He was strong at holding runners and above average with his glove. Henderson wasn’t going to take charge and lead the team, but he worked hard and gave his best each outing.

                                In May 2003, Henderson moved to New Zealand and signed a developmental contract with Christchurch. He officially debuted in 2008 at age 21 with one relief appearance. Henderson saw 31.2 innings in 2009, then was moved into a full-time rotation slot from 2010 onward. He gave you reliable innings, but mostly average production in his first two seasons in the rotation.

                                Henderson broke through in 2013, leading the Australasia League in wins (25), quality starts (31), and WAR (9.9). It was his career best WAR and earned his lone Pitcher of the Year award. It was also a breakthrough for Christchurch, who finished 110-52 and ended Melbourne’s decade-long hold on the pennant. The Chinooks win the Oceania Championship over Guadalcanal with Henderson allowing only two runs over 15.2 innings with 14 strikeouts. In the Baseball Grand Championship, Henderson had a 2.81 ERA over 32 innings, 3-2 record, 34 strikeouts, and 0.8 WAR. The Chinooks would finish 8-11 in the event.

                                Shortly thereafter, Christchurch gave Henderson a six-year, $65,400,000 extension. He remained rock solid as the Chinooks began a dynasty run, winning four straight AL pennants from 2013-16. They defeated Tahiti in the 2014 OBA Championship, then lost in a rematch in 2015. In 2014, Christchurch took third in the BGC at 13-6 with Henderson posting a 3.50 ERA over 36 innings with 36 strikeouts.

                                In 2017, Henderson was third in Pitcher of the Year voting as Christchurch had an incredible 126-36 season. This tied Ho Chi Minh City’s 1993 South Asia Baseball campaign for the winningest season in pro baseball history. Like the Hedgehogs, the Chinooks were denied the championship as Christchurch was upset by Guam. They still qualified for the Baseball Grand Championship and finished 11-8 in a five-way tie for fifth. In that BGC, Henderson had a 1.96 ERA over five starts with 36.2 innings and 35 strikeouts.

                                Henderson made his name in the Oceania Championship for Christchurch, going 6-0 in nine appearances with a 1.90 ERA, 61.2 innings, 49 strikeouts, 5 walks, 199 ERA+, and 1.9 WAR. His role in this dynasty run helped get his #8 uniform eventually retired. The Chinooks missed the 2017 pennant by one game, then fell to fifth place in 2018. They were just above .500 in 2019 and Henderson’s production fell to 3.8 WAR, his lowest full season tally.

                                With one year left on his deal, Henderson was traded by Christchurch in January 2020 to Guam for three prospects. For the Chinooks, Henderson had a 192-107 record, 3.23 ERA, 2909.2 innings, 2574 strikeouts, 491 walks, 119 ERA+, and 71.1 WAR. The trade fired Henderson up and he won his lone ERA title with a career best 2.16 in 2020 for the Golden Eagles, taking second in Pitcher of the Year voting.

                                Guam won the Oceania Championship incidentally against Christchurch, although Henderson struggled against his former team in the series with a 4.85 ERA over 13 innings. He stepped up big with his best Baseball Grand Championship performance with a 1.53 ERA over 35.1 innings and 33 strikeouts, pushing the Golden Eagles to fourth place at 12-7.

                                In four BGCs, Henderson finished with an 11-6 record, 2.44 ERA, 140 innings, 138 strikeouts, and 3.9 WAR. He’s one of only ten pitchers with 10+ career wins in the BGC as of 2037. For his OBA playoff career, Henderson had a 6-0 record, 2.41 ERA, 74.2 innings, 55 strikeouts, 6 walks, 154 ERA+, and 1.8 WAR. As of 2037, Henderson is 4th in wins, 18th in strikeouts, and 9th in pitching WAR. Henderson also pitched for Australia from 2014-15 and from 2019-22 in the World Baseball Championship with a 2.19 ERA over 24.2 innings, 3-1 record, and 30 strikeouts.

                                Henderson’s stock was high as he entered free agency for the first time heading towards his age 34 season. He returned to his home city Melbourne on a four-year, $56,500,000 deal. Henderson couldn’t reach his previous peaks though, giving the Mets two seasons with a 3.69 ERA, 36-22 record, 524.1 innings, 339 strikeouts, 109 ERA+, and 8.5 WAR. He had missed a few starts in 2022 due to his performance and decided to retire that winter at age 35.

                                The final tallies saw a 252-134 record, 3.21 ERA, 3726 innings, 3185 strikeouts, 589 walks, 316/499 quality starts, 96 complete games, 19 shutouts, 120 ERA+, 80 FIP-, and 87.9 WAR. As of 2037, Henderson ranks 7th in wins, 17th in innings, 68th in complete games, 41st in strikeouts, and 16th in WAR among pitchers. Henderson didn’t have the big strikeout dominance needed to earn more attention on the all-time rankings, but he was as rock solid as they come.

                                Most importantly, Henderson stepped up in the big games and was a huge reason for title runs by both Christchurch and Guam. He might be borderline for the inner-circle level, but Henderson’s Hall of Fame candidacy wasn’t at all in doubt. At 97.6%, he co-headlined the 2028 class for the Oceania Baseball Association.



                                Clifford James – Left/Right Field – New Caledonia Colonels – 84.7% First Ballot

                                Clifford James was a 6’0’’, 200 pound right-handed hitting corner outfielder from Port Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea. James had a powerful bat and was excellent at drawing walks. His 162 game average got you 39 home runs, 20 doubles, and 8 triples. Unlike typical power hitters, James had good speed and was an outstanding baserunner. The downside was James was a below average contact hitter who struck out a ton.

                                James career was split almost evenly between left field and right field, alternating between the spots during his run. The metrics graded him as above average in right and below average in left. James’ durability was outstanding, playing 140+ games in all but his final season. He was a true captain and garnered immense respect among peers for his character, work ethic, and leadership.

                                He was one of the strongest prospects to come from Papua New Guinea in some time and was high on most boards for the 2004 OBA Draft. James was picked third overall by New Caledonia and was a full-time starter right away. He had 30 home runs in his rookie year, but also led the Pacific League with 214 strikeouts. James still earned third in Rookie of the Year voting and cleaned up his hitting enough to be worth 4+ WAR each of the next 10 years.

                                In 2006, James led the PL with 45 home runs. It was his only season as the league leader, although he topped that mark twice more. For the Colonels, James topped 40+ homers thrice. He helped New Caledonia have brief life after being a bottom-tier team in recent memory. 2006 saw a 90-72 finish, their first winning campaign since 1991. They also went 89-73 in 2008, but peaked there and couldn’t hang with the top tier of the Pacific League.

                                New Caledonia quickly collapsed to 69-93 in 2009 and 59-103 in 2010. With no contention expected anytime soon, James opted to leave for free agency at age 28. For the Colonels, he had 933 games, 832 hits, 524 runs, 119 doubles, 241 homers, 558 RBI, 376 walks, 213 steals, .249/.331/.524 slash, 137 wRC+, and 26.2 WAR. It was his longest stint anywhere and James was inducted in NC blue and white. Despite being so well respected across the game, James never stayed in one place all that long.

                                His second team was his most impactful, signing with Honolulu at $28,420,000 over six years. James spent five years with the Honu, winning Silver Sluggers in 2011 and 2012 in right field and in 2013 in left. He also was second in 2013’s MVP voting, his only time as a finalist. That year James led the PL in slugging and had a career best triple slash of .287/.384/.616 for 1.000 OPS. He also had his highs in WAR (8.3) and wRC+ (179). James’ best home run mark was the year before with 50 dingers.

                                Honolulu took second at 96-66 in James’ second year, but fell towards .500 the next two years. The Honu then fell to 64-98 in 2015 and began to rebuild. They were sellers and moved James with one year left in an offseason trade with Melbourne for three prospects. With Honolulu, James had 779 games, 702 hits, 482 runs, 98 doubles, 44 triples, 206 home runs, 491 RBI, 356 walks, 196 steals, .255/.346/.548 slash, 155 wRC+, and 29.9 WAR.

                                James’ one year with the Mets saw him lead in walks for the first time with 93, although his power dipped a bit with 34 homers, .828 OPS, and 3.6 WAR. Melbourne had missed the pennant the prior three years, but were still competitive in the immediate aftermath of their dynasty. The wheels fell off in 2016 at 59-103 with James again stuck on a flailing squad at no fault of his own. He returned to free agency that winter at age 34.

                                Auckland snagged James on a four-year, $37,600,000 deal. He led in walks thrice more and won a Silver Slugger in RF in 2018 with a 7.0 WAR season, the second-best of his career. James had good steady production overall for the Avengers, who posted their first 90+ win seasons of the decade with him. They ultimately couldn’t secure the pennant though and James would never see a postseason game.

                                For Auckland, James played 625 games with 499 hits, 387 runs, 69 doubles, 35 triples, 139 home runs, 139 RBI, 352 walks, 199 steals, .232/.350/.490 slash, 124 wRC+, and 19.6 WAR. For 2021, James signed a three-year, $28,100,000 deal with Guadalcanal. He had a decent debut season, but struggled in 2022 and was reduced to a bench role. For the Green Jackets, James had 204 games, 2.7 WAR, .739 OPS, and 111 wRC+. James retired after the 2022 season at age 40.

                                James finished with 2696 games, 2299 hits, 1584 runs, 333 doubles, 131 triples, 655 home runs, 1567 RBI, 1262 walks, 3020 strikeouts, 704 steals, .243/.339/.514 slash, 136 wRC+, and 81.9 WAR. As of 2037, James ranks 8th in games, 43rd in hits, 6th in runs, 76th in doubles, 84th in triples, 6th in home runs, 11th in RBI, 29th in steals, 3rd in walks, 2nd in strikeouts, and 25th in WAR among position players. On the bad side, James is one of only 29 players in pro baseball history with 3000+ career strikeouts.

                                There was a lot of good though for his run and any career that makes the top 10 in runs and homers was an impressive one. James was perhaps an underappreciated great in his time since he was stuck on a lot of bad teams. He still did plenty to earn a first ballot induction at 84.7%, capping off the three-player 2028 Hall of Fame class for the Oceania Baseball Association.

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