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

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  • MrNFL_FanIQ
    MVP
    • Oct 2008
    • 4988

    #2176
    2029 BSA Hall of Fame




    Right fielder Vicente Cristan was the lone addition into the Beisbol Sudamerica Hall of Fame for 2029, earning first ballot honors with 78.6%. The next closest to the 66% threshold was 2B Franklin Chapman debuting at 59.2%. Three returners were above 50% with CL Samuel Andrade at 57.5% for his second ballot, 3B Pedro Gutierrez with 55.8% on his third try, and SP Rodrigo Quiroz at 55.4% on his second go. No players were removed from the ballot after ten failed attempts.



    Vicente “Cubby” Cristan – Right Field – Montevideo Venom – 78.6% First Ballot

    Vicente Cristan was a 6’1’’, 200 pound left-handed right fielder from Asuncion, the capital of Paraguay. Nicknamed “Cubby,” Cristan was an excellent contact hitter with a very good pop in his bat. While never a league leader, he got plenty of extra bases with a 162 game average of 31 doubles, 9 triples, and 34 home runs. Cristan had four seasons with 40+ homers and once topped 50. He was respectable at avoiding strikeouts, but was average at best drawing walks.

    Cristan was good against both sides, but was more dangerous facing right-handed pitching (1.003 OPS, 172 wRC+) compared to lefties (.839 OPS, 134 wRC+). While caught stealing more than he succeeded, Cristan overall had above average to good speed and baserunning skills. However, that speed didn’t translate to range in the outfield.

    He played left field in his first full season, then switched to right field for the remainder of his Beisbol Sudamerica run. Cristan had a strong arm, but his glove work and instincts were terrible and he graded quite poorly. His final seasons saw a move to designated hitter. Cristan’s durability was mostly good for a 19-year career. He had a strong ethic and stayed loyal to Montevideo, making him a true fan favorite.

    Cristan was picked young by the Venom with the sixth pick of the 2006 BSA Draft. He did officially debut in 2007 at age 19 with one game, but he spent his early years in their academy. Cristan played 51 games and started two in his first three seasons in Uruguay. He saw 117 games in 2010 and 107 in 2011, but only started 42 between them. Cristan looked solid though in the small sample size and earned the full-time gig for 2012. His earlier games meant this didn’t count as a rookie season.

    However, Cristan had one of the all-time great full-time debuts, winning 2012 MVP and a Silver Slugger in LF. He became only the third in BSA history to that point to bat above .400 and was the fourth to get 250+ hits. Cristan led the Southern Cone League with a .404/.435/.755 triple slash, 1.190 OPS, 239 wRC+, 252 hits, 143 RBI, and 471 total bases. Those would all be career highs, as would his 118 runs, 13 triples, 53 home runs, and 9.8 WAR. Cristan also hit for the cycle against his hometown Asuncion in June.

    Cristan never had a season that incredible again, but remained quite strong, posting seven more seasons with 5+ WAR and seven more with an OPS above one for Montevideo. Cristan also scored 100+ runs with 40+ homers in both 2014 and 2015, while smacking 49 dingers in 2020. He won additional Silver Sluggers in 2017, 2018, and 2020 with the Venom, who gave Cristan an eight-year, $74,700,000 extension in June 2015.

    Montevideo had been a historically mediocre franchise, although with Cristan they were generally competitive. The Venom averaged 84.6 wins per season when he was a full-time starter, but weren’t often in the playoff hunt. Montevideo did have a first round exit in 2014, followed by a franchise record 104-58 in 2015. That got them the top seed, but they were ousted in the LCS by Recife. Montevideo’s only other playoff trip with Cristan was a first round exit in 2021. In 15 playoff starts, he had a .236/.276/.582 slash, 127 wRC+, and 0.3 WAR.

    While he became a favorite in Uruguay, Cristan did return home regularly to represent Paraguay in the World Baseball Championship. From 2010-27, he played 136 games and started 120 with 131 hits, 66 runs, 30 doubles, 10 triples, 23 homers, 62 RBI, 30 steals, .274/.327/.523 slash, 145 wRC+, and 4.4 WAR. In 2025, Paraguay notably earned its second-ever division title.

    Cristan remained steady into his early 30s, but his value started to wane in his later years. His batting average was still good, but now regularly below .300. Combined with Cristan’s worsening defense and he only was worth a combined 4.2 WAR in his final three years. Montevideo was appreciative of their long-time star, but opted not to sign him after his deal expired with the 2023 season. Thus, Cristan was now a free agent for the first time at age 36. The Venom did honor him a few years later by retiring his #21 uniform.

    South American teams generally thought Cristan was cooked and he had to expand his search worldwide. He found an unlikely home in Turkey with a three-year, $13,600,000 with Bursa of the Asian Baseball Federation. The Blue Claws moved him to DH, where he found a bit of a second life. In 2025, Cristan led the league with 133 RBI, earning a Silver Slugger and a third place in MVP voting. Bursa had the West League’s top seed in 2024 at 105-57, but fell in the WLCS to Baku. The Blue Claws had a first round exit in 2025 and missed the playoffs in 2026.

    With Bursa, Cristan had 391 games, 495 hits, 259 runs, 106 doubles, 24 triples, 77 home runs, 306 RBI, .334/.371/.593 slash, 155 wRC+, and 12.9 WAR. He stayed in ABF and moved to Iran on a three-year, $37,700,000 deal with Tehran. Cristan struggled hard though in 2027 for the Tarpons with -0.9 WAR and .680 OPS over 135 games. Tehran did win the pennant and lost the ABF Championship facing Hyderabad. Cristan in 9 playoff games was terrible with .259 OPS and -0.4 WAR. He retired from the game that winter at age 40.

    For his combined pro career, Cristan had 2589 games, 2990 hits, 1506 runs, 491 doubles, 145 triples, 539 home runs, 1653 RBI, 539 walks, 533 steals, .331/.369/.597 slash, 164 wRC+, and 73.2 WAR. Just in BSA with Montevideo, Cristan had 2063 games, 2381 hits, 1188 runs, 351 doubles, 120 triples, 448 home runs, 1291 RBI, 424 walks, 942 strikeouts, 443 steals, .337/.375/.611 slash, 171 wRC+, and 61.1 WAR.

    As of 2037, Cristan ranks 46th in batting average among those with 3000+ plate appearances. He also is 63rd in on-base percentage and 27th in slugging. Cristan’s OPS of .985 places him 24th among qualifiers, a very impressive mark. However, Cristan is outside of the top 100 in all of the counting stats, which hurt him with some voters. Apart from his incredible MVP season, Cristan also wasn’t ever a BSA league leader.

    That said, he had an MVP win, four Silver Sluggers, and a .400 hitting season. The metrics showed Cristan was an elite hitter, although poor defense tanked his WAR tally. Most voters also appreciated his loyalty to Montevideo, where he was the face of the franchise for 15 years. Beisbol Sudamerica’s 2029 Hall of Fame ballot was a quiet one as well without many other impactful debuts, helping Cristan’s resume to stand out. He received 78.6% for the first ballot nod as the lone 2029 addition.

    Comment

    • MrNFL_FanIQ
      MVP
      • Oct 2008
      • 4988

      #2177
      2029 BSA Hall of Fame




      Right fielder Vicente Cristan was the lone addition into the Beisbol Sudamerica Hall of Fame for 2029, earning first ballot honors with 78.6%. The next closest to the 66% threshold was 2B Franklin Chapman debuting at 59.2%. Three returners were above 50% with CL Samuel Andrade at 57.5% for his second ballot, 3B Pedro Gutierrez with 55.8% on his third try, and SP Rodrigo Quiroz at 55.4% on his second go. No players were removed from the ballot after ten failed attempts.



      Vicente “Cubby” Cristan – Right Field – Montevideo Venom – 78.6% First Ballot

      Vicente Cristan was a 6’1’’, 200 pound left-handed right fielder from Asuncion, the capital of Paraguay. Nicknamed “Cubby,” Cristan was an excellent contact hitter with a very good pop in his bat. While never a league leader, he got plenty of extra bases with a 162 game average of 31 doubles, 9 triples, and 34 home runs. Cristan had four seasons with 40+ homers and once topped 50. He was respectable at avoiding strikeouts, but was average at best drawing walks.

      Cristan was good against both sides, but was more dangerous facing right-handed pitching (1.003 OPS, 172 wRC+) compared to lefties (.839 OPS, 134 wRC+). While caught stealing more than he succeeded, Cristan overall had above average to good speed and baserunning skills. However, that speed didn’t translate to range in the outfield.

      He played left field in his first full season, then switched to right field for the remainder of his Beisbol Sudamerica run. Cristan had a strong arm, but his glove work and instincts were terrible and he graded quite poorly. His final seasons saw a move to designated hitter. Cristan’s durability was mostly good for a 19-year career. He had a strong ethic and stayed loyal to Montevideo, making him a true fan favorite.

      Cristan was picked young by the Venom with the sixth pick of the 2006 BSA Draft. He did officially debut in 2007 at age 19 with one game, but he spent his early years in their academy. Cristan played 51 games and started two in his first three seasons in Uruguay. He saw 117 games in 2010 and 107 in 2011, but only started 42 between them. Cristan looked solid though in the small sample size and earned the full-time gig for 2012. His earlier games meant this didn’t count as a rookie season.

      However, Cristan had one of the all-time great full-time debuts, winning 2012 MVP and a Silver Slugger in LF. He became only the third in BSA history to that point to bat above .400 and was the fourth to get 250+ hits. Cristan led the Southern Cone League with a .404/.435/.755 triple slash, 1.190 OPS, 239 wRC+, 252 hits, 143 RBI, and 471 total bases. Those would all be career highs, as would his 118 runs, 13 triples, 53 home runs, and 9.8 WAR. Cristan also hit for the cycle against his hometown Asuncion in June.

      Cristan never had a season that incredible again, but remained quite strong, posting seven more seasons with 5+ WAR and seven more with an OPS above one for Montevideo. Cristan also scored 100+ runs with 40+ homers in both 2014 and 2015, while smacking 49 dingers in 2020. He won additional Silver Sluggers in 2017, 2018, and 2020 with the Venom, who gave Cristan an eight-year, $74,700,000 extension in June 2015.

      Montevideo had been a historically mediocre franchise, although with Cristan they were generally competitive. The Venom averaged 84.6 wins per season when he was a full-time starter, but weren’t often in the playoff hunt. Montevideo did have a first round exit in 2014, followed by a franchise record 104-58 in 2015. That got them the top seed, but they were ousted in the LCS by Recife. Montevideo’s only other playoff trip with Cristan was a first round exit in 2021. In 15 playoff starts, he had a .236/.276/.582 slash, 127 wRC+, and 0.3 WAR.

      While he became a favorite in Uruguay, Cristan did return home regularly to represent Paraguay in the World Baseball Championship. From 2010-27, he played 136 games and started 120 with 131 hits, 66 runs, 30 doubles, 10 triples, 23 homers, 62 RBI, 30 steals, .274/.327/.523 slash, 145 wRC+, and 4.4 WAR. In 2025, Paraguay notably earned its second-ever division title.

      Cristan remained steady into his early 30s, but his value started to wane in his later years. His batting average was still good, but now regularly below .300. Combined with Cristan’s worsening defense and he only was worth a combined 4.2 WAR in his final three years. Montevideo was appreciative of their long-time star, but opted not to sign him after his deal expired with the 2023 season. Thus, Cristan was now a free agent for the first time at age 36. The Venom did honor him a few years later by retiring his #21 uniform.

      South American teams generally thought Cristan was cooked and he had to expand his search worldwide. He found an unlikely home in Turkey with a three-year, $13,600,000 with Bursa of the Asian Baseball Federation. The Blue Claws moved him to DH, where he found a bit of a second life. In 2025, Cristan led the league with 133 RBI, earning a Silver Slugger and a third place in MVP voting. Bursa had the West League’s top seed in 2024 at 105-57, but fell in the WLCS to Baku. The Blue Claws had a first round exit in 2025 and missed the playoffs in 2026.

      With Bursa, Cristan had 391 games, 495 hits, 259 runs, 106 doubles, 24 triples, 77 home runs, 306 RBI, .334/.371/.593 slash, 155 wRC+, and 12.9 WAR. He stayed in ABF and moved to Iran on a three-year, $37,700,000 deal with Tehran. Cristan struggled hard though in 2027 for the Tarpons with -0.9 WAR and .680 OPS over 135 games. Tehran did win the pennant and lost the ABF Championship facing Hyderabad. Cristan in 9 playoff games was terrible with .259 OPS and -0.4 WAR. He retired from the game that winter at age 40.

      For his combined pro career, Cristan had 2589 games, 2990 hits, 1506 runs, 491 doubles, 145 triples, 539 home runs, 1653 RBI, 539 walks, 533 steals, .331/.369/.597 slash, 164 wRC+, and 73.2 WAR. Just in BSA with Montevideo, Cristan had 2063 games, 2381 hits, 1188 runs, 351 doubles, 120 triples, 448 home runs, 1291 RBI, 424 walks, 942 strikeouts, 443 steals, .337/.375/.611 slash, 171 wRC+, and 61.1 WAR.

      As of 2037, Cristan ranks 46th in batting average among those with 3000+ plate appearances. He also is 63rd in on-base percentage and 27th in slugging. Cristan’s OPS of .985 places him 24th among qualifiers, a very impressive mark. However, Cristan is outside of the top 100 in all of the counting stats, which hurt him with some voters. Apart from his incredible MVP season, Cristan also wasn’t ever a BSA league leader.

      That said, he had an MVP win, four Silver Sluggers, and a .400 hitting season. The metrics showed Cristan was an elite hitter, although poor defense tanked his WAR tally. Most voters also appreciated his loyalty to Montevideo, where he was the face of the franchise for 15 years. Beisbol Sudamerica’s 2029 Hall of Fame ballot was a quiet one as well without many other impactful debuts, helping Cristan’s resume to stand out. He received 78.6% for the first ballot nod as the lone 2029 addition.

      Comment

      • MrNFL_FanIQ
        MVP
        • Oct 2008
        • 4988

        #2178
        2029 EBF Hall of Fame

        Two first ballot picks were added for the European Baseball Federation’s Hall of Fame in 2029. SP Gianfranco Marinis led the way at 98.3% while OF Dominik Brozik had a rock solid 81.6%. Two third ballot guys were above 60%, but just short of the 66% requirement with LF Emilson Patino at 62.7% and RF Dylan Fitzpatrick at 61.5%. Three others were above 50% with CF Joris Kostic at 56.9% on his sixth ballot, CL Stefan Sedlak at 56.6% for his eighth try, and LF Marco Solis with a 52.5% debut.



        SP Ebbe Arvidsson got 49.9% on his tenth and final ballot. The Swedish righty generally hovered in the 30-49% range, but fell off after ten failed tries. He had a 15-year run with Athens and posted a 131-85 record, 2.91 ERA, 2164.2 innings, 2338 strikeouts, 297 walks, 132 ERA+, and 57.6 WAR. Arvidsson’s rate stats were certainly worthy, but injuries meant he only had six full seasons in his run. The accumulations were just too low and he didn’t have big awards to make up for it.

        RF Sam Connor also fell off the ballot, peaking with a 43.3% debut but ending at only 16.9%. The Irishman spent most of his 19-year career with Belfast with one Silver Slugger and no black ink. In EBF, Connor had 2636 games, 2699 hits, 1465 runs, 428 doubles, 183 triples, 506 home runs, 1504 RBI, 738 walks, 828 steals .286/.338/.530 slash, 142 wRC+, and 74.8 WAR. Connor earned impressive tallies from his steady production, but he lacked big accolades and was overlooked on some bad Brewers squads during his prime.

        SS Adam Tretyak was also worth a quick mention as he fell below 5% on his ninth ballot and was dropped. He started in EPB while did lower his final EBF accumulations over a 20 year career primarily with Budapest. Tretyak won five Silver Sluggers with 1857 games, 2399 hits, 1139 runs, 402 doubles, 170 triples, 80 home runs, 781 RBI, 524 steals, .326/.355/.460 slash, 127 wRC+, and 73.3 WAR. It is always an uphill climb though for leadoff type guys without home run power. Tretyak wasn’t exceptional enough at any one thing to get much ballot traction, peaking at 27.6% n 2022.



        Gianfranco Marinis – Starting Pitcher – Barcelona Bengals – 98.3% First Ballot

        Gianfranco Marinis was a 6’2’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Lucca, a city of around 89,000 people in central Italy. His rock solid and steady control kept Marinis passable throughout a 22-year career. His stuff and movement were generally graded as above average to occasionally gold. Marinis’ fastball did top out in the 97-99 mph range and was part of a five-pitch arsenal that included a slider, forkball, changeup, and splitter. No one pitch was overpowering, but each was a respectable option.

        Marinis’ stamina and durability were both outstanding and he never missed starts due to injuries. He also had an excellent pickoff move and was considered a good defensive pitcher. Marinis was highly adaptable and intelligent, traits that served him well. He was never overwhelmingly dominant, but his steadiness and consistency were hard to find.

        Out of college, Marinis was very highly touted and Barcelona selected him third in the 2001 EBF Draft. He struggled with limited relief use in 2002, then was a full-time starter in 2003. Marinis was split back between starting and relief in 2004, but returned to the rotation after that. 2005 would be his best season by some metrics with a conference best 21-8 record and career best 6.9 WAR. Marinis also led in wins again in 2007, but never was a Pitcher of the Year finalist. He led in complete games and shutouts twice and innings pitched once.

        After struggling to start the 21st Century, Barcelona had a three-year division title streak from 2005-07. The Bengals lost in the first round in 2005, but earned the Southern Conference pennant the latter years. Barcelona set a franchise record in 2005 at 111-51, but fell to Kyiv in the European Championship. The Bengals were 96-66 in 2007 and got revenge over the Kings in that year’s final.

        Marinis’ career playoff numbers were actually more impressive than his regular season tallies. Over the 2006-07 run, he had a 6-2 record over 73.1 innings with a 2.33 ERA, 60 strikeouts, and 1.7 WAR. After the 2006 season, Barcelona gave Marinis a six-year, $44,760,000 extension. He continued his same steady results, although the Bengals just missed the playoffs in 2008-09. They made it back with division titles in 2010 and 2011.

        Barcelona lost the 2010 conference final to Zurich, but beat Athens for the 2011 pennant. The Bengals were denied the European Championship by the fledgling Dublin dynasty, but Marinis had a 2.53 ERA over 32 innings in that run. He was excellent in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 1.29 ERA over 35 innings with 33 Ks. Despite his efforts, Barcelona struggled to 6-13 in the event. The following spring, Marinis inked a five-year, $53,900,000 extension The Bengals were stuck in the middle tier for the following three years.

        2015 saw one last gap for Barcelona, winning the conference as a wild card and falling to Antwerp in the European Championship. This was Marinis’ best playoffs yet with a 1.30 ERA and 27 Ks in 41.2 innings. He couldn’t carry that over into the BGC with a 4.34 ERA over 33.1 innings as the Bengals finished 9-10. For his playoff career with Barcelona, Marinis had a 11-6 record, 2.56 ERA, 176 innings, 145 strikeouts, 24 walks, 153 ERA+, and 3.3 WAR.

        Although he stepped up in the big games, his regular season stats had been delightfully average into his 30s. Barcelona voided the team option year of Marinis’ deal, sending him to free agency for 2017 at age 36. With the Bengals, Marinis had a 215-153 record, 3.73 ERA, 3428 innings, 2914 strikeouts, 659 walks, 104 ERA+, 89 FIP-, and 62.4 WAR. His next stop would be a three-year, $32,900,000 deal with Madrid.

        Although Marinis remained in Spain, he had been a regular for his native Italy throughout his career in the World Baseball Championship. From 2005-23, Marinis had a 14-8 record, 3.34 ERA, 207.1 innings, 207 strikeouts, 66 walks, and 2.8 WAR. The Italians were quite competitive in that era with a second place in 2005, third in 2006, second in 2012, fourth in 2019, and third in 2022.

        Madrid was a wild card throughout each of Marinis’ years there, but couldn’t get beyond the second round. In 22.2 playoff innings, he had a 3.97 ERA and 20 Ks. He stayed steady overall in his three seasons with a 39-32 record, 3.45 ERA, 665 innings, 555 strikeouts, 111 ERA+, and 9.9 WAR. In 2019, Marinis became the 8th pitcher in EBF history with 250 career wins.

        Now 39-years old and a free agent again, Marinis went north to Norway on a three-year, $28,900,000 deal with Oslo. He couldn’t maintain his usual steady stats in the first two years with the Octopi, although they did get a playoff berth in 2021. Marinis rebounded a bit in 2022, which led to a July trade to Lisbon for four prospects. With Oslo, Marinis had a 31-33 record, 4.35 ERA, 589.2 innings, 402 strikeouts, and 4.6 WAR.

        Marinis had a decent second half with Lisbon, who made the playoffs but lost in the first round. He posted a 3.53 ERA and 1.6 WAR over 97 innings. Marinis still wanted to play and was at 291 wins, now second on the EBF all-time list. The top mark was held by Jean-Luc Roch, who finished with 300 exactly. Dublin gave Marinis a one-year, $7,500,000 deal for the 2023 campaign.

        It was an okay effort as a part-time innings eater with a 3.90 ERA, 159.1 innings, 103 strikeouts, and 0 WAR. However, Marinis had a 11-4 record with the Dinos, passing Roch to become the all-time EBF leader. As of 2037, Marinis is one of only 46 pitchers in all of pro baseball history in the 300 club. The longevity also got him to 4000 strikeouts, the 10th in EBF to do so.

        Dublin was amidst another dynasty and repeated as European Champion with a 114-48 record. Marinis’ postseason contribution was one scoreless inning of relief. For his playoff career, he had a 12-9 record, 2.73 ERA, 207.2 innings, 169 strikeouts, 26 walks, 142 ERA+, and 3.3 WAR. As of 2037, Marinis is 9th in playoff wins, 10th in strikeouts, and 19th in WAR among pitchers. With nothing left to prove and probably not enough juice left to stick around, Marinis retired shortly after his 43rd birthday.

        Marinis finished with a 302-225 record, 3.77 ERA, 4939 innings, 4053 strikeouts, 939 walks, 4053 strikeouts, 347/607 quality starts, 186 complete games, 28 shutouts, 103 ERA+, 93 FIP-, and 78.4 WAR. As of 2037, Marinis is EBF’s all-time leader in wins, starts (607), innings, and hits allowed (5269). He also is 2nd in losses, 4th in complete games, 31st in shutouts, 11th in strikeouts, 11th in walks (939), and 34th in WAR among pitchers. On the world leaderboards, Marinis ranks 41st in wins and 27th in innings.

        The rate stats though grade Marinis’ production as being above average at best though. He was never a Pitcher of the Year finalist and only once finished top ten in the conference for ERA. Despite EBF’s wins leader, Marinis’ name rarely gets mentioned in the conversations for Europe’s GOAT pitcher and some wouldn’t even put him into the top ten.

        However, longevity and consistency certainly have to count for something. Plus, Marinis cemented himself as an all-time great with strong playoff stats. He was a big reason Barcelona won four pennants and a European Championship. Certainly Marinis’ candidacy wasn’t in doubt, receiving 98.3% to headline the 2029 Hall of Fame class for the European Baseball Federation.



        Dominik Brozik – Left/Center Field – Cologne Copperheads – 81.6% First Ballot

        Dominik Brozik was a 6’2’’, 200 pound left-handed outfielder from Policka, a small town of roughly 9,900 in the Czech Republic. Brozik was a well-rounded batter with good-to-great contract, eye, and power. He wasn’t amazing at any one thing, but he was at least decent across the board. His 162 game average got you 33 home runs, 24 doubles, and 11 triples for a steady dose of extra base hits.

        Brozik’s best numbers came against right-handed pitching with a career .980 OPS and 174 wRC+. Against lefties, he had a respectable .790 OPS and 124 wRC+. Brozik’s speed was above average and he had strong baserunning skills. He had the flexibility to bounce around the outfield with about 2/3 of his starts in left field, around 1/4 in center field, and sparing starts in right or at first base. Brozik didn’t have the range for CF and had lackluster results there, but he graded as reliably solid in the corners.

        Few peers or fans would have a bad word to say about Brozik as a person. He was known for his fierce loyalty, strong work ethic, and great intelligence. Brozik’s durability was mostly good over a 17-year career. Combine that with reliable and predictable production and you had one of the most popular players of the 2010s for European baseball.

        In the 2006 EBF Draft, Brozik was picked 16th overall by Cologne. The Copperheads were an expansion team in 2000 and struggled in the front end of the decade, but Brozik helped turn Cologne into a regular contender. Brozik won 2007 Rookie of the Year with his first of ten straight seasons with 6+ WAR, .300+ average, and .900+ OPS. 2007 saw a 85-77 record, the Copperheads’ first-ever winning season.

        In 2008, Cologne won a division title at 102-60 and got all the way to the Northern Conference Championship where they fell to Kyiv.
        Brozik won his first Silver Slugger (LF) and his lone MVP, leading the conference with 132 runs. That would be a career high, as would his 211 hits, 45 homers, and 116 RBI. In his first postseason, Brozik had .913 OPS and 0.3 WAR. Cologne went 90-72 in 2009 but missed the postseason narrowly.

        From 2010-17, the Copperheads rattled off an eight-year division title streak. Brozik was second in 2010’s MVP voting with a 1.050 OPS, 202 wRC+, 10.1 WAR effort. He won a Silver Slugger in 2011 (CF) and was third in MVP voting with his career best10.8 WAR and a match of his 132 runs and 211 hits from 2008. After the 2012 season, Brozik signed a seven-year, $82,740,000 extension with the Copperheads. Brozik was just outside of the awards conversations in the mid 2010s, but remained incredibly steady and productive.

        Cologne’s overall playoff success was limited. From 2010-15, they were ousted in the first or second round each year sans 2012; including despite a 110-52 record in 2011 and 107-55 mark in 2013. 2012 would be the breakthrough though, winning the European Championship against Vienna. The Copperheads were 11-8 in the Baseball Grand Championship, part of a four-way tie for sixth but one game short from the five-way tie for first at 12-7. Brozik had a strong showing in the BGC with 19 hits, 14 runs, 6 doubles, 6 homers, 9 RBI, .961 OPS, and 1.0 WAR.

        Brozik’s overall playoff stats with Cologne were surprisingly underwhelming. Over 59 starts, he had 55 hits, 36 runs, 7 doubles, 6 triples, 7 homers, 29 RBI, 19 walks, 12 steals, .243/.300/.420 slash, 104 wRC+, and 1.0 WAR. The Copperheads concluded their playoff streak with conference finals losses in both 2016 and 2017. Cologne hovered around the middle of the standings for the next few seasons.

        However, Brozik did have good numbers as a regular for the Czech Republic in the World Baseball Championship. From 2006-23, Brozik played 163 games with 135 hits, 75 runs, 27 doubles, 36 homers, 88 RBI, 42 steals, .247/.353/.501 slash, and 5.9 WAR. The Czechs’ lone division title during Brozik’s tenure came in 2021.

        A number of back and oblique injuries kept Brozik out half of 2017. He bounced back and was still rock solid in 2018, but Cologne decided to void the final year option of his deal. Brozik remained very popular and maintained a good relationship with Copperheads officials, who retired his #30 uniform at the end of his career. However, he was now to become a free agent for his age 36 season in 2019.

        With Cologne, Brozik played 1706 games with 2155 hits, 1246 runs, 244 doubles, 137 triples, 374 home runs, 1091 RBI, 615 walks, 412 steals, .336/.393/.591 slash, 177 wRC+, and 89.6 WAR. Brozik had worldwide suitors and opted for Major League Baseball on a three-year, $51,200,000 deal with Salt Lake City. He had an impressive debut in the States, winning a Silver Slugger in 2019 in CF with a 6.3 WAR campaign. The Loons were a repeat wild card team, but lost in the first round.

        Brozik looked merely decent in 2021 and missed their second round playoff exit on a late August sprained ankle. He regressed hard in 2021 with .642 OPS, 76 wRC+, and 0 WAR over 141 games. In total for SLC, Brozik had 414 games, 378 hits, 233 runs, 68 doubles, 19 triples, 66 home runs, 216 RBI, .247/.322/.445 slash, 113 wRC+, and 8.5 WAR. Brozik was back to free agency heading towards age 39 for 2022.

        It was clear his MLB tenure was done, but Brozik hoped he could still contribute back in Europe. London gave him a shot on a two-year, $15,400,000 deal. Brozik was passable in 2022, then looked good in a smaller platoon sample size in 2023. He had 201 games, 171 hits, 88 runs, 22 doubles, 32 homers, 95 RBI, .269/.342/.473 slash, 123 wRC+, and 3.6 WAR for the Monarchs.
        Brozik retired after the 2023 campaign at age 40.

        In the European Baseball Federation, Brozik had 1907 games, 2326 hits, 1334 runs, 266 doubles, 143 triples, 406 home runs, 1186 RBI, 685 walks, 1098 strikeouts, 437 steals, .330/.388/.581 slash, 173 wRC+, and 93.1 WAR. As of 2037, Brozik ranks 85th in hits, 62nd in runs, 87th in total bases (4096), and 46th in WAR among position players. Among batters with 3000+ plate appearances, his batting average is 56th, OBP is 42nd, and slugging is 92nd. Brozik’s .969 OPS is good for 55th.

        Brozik didn’t have eye-popping accumulations, but his hitting efficiency metrics were excellent. His totals when adding the MLB stats saw 2704 hits, 1567 runs, 334 doubles, 162 triples, 472 homers, 1402 RBI, 854 walks, 473 steals, .315/.376/.557 slash, 162 wRC+, and 101.7 WAR.

        He wasn’t viewed as an inner-circle level Hall of Famer, but Brozik’s resume was rock solid. He also played a huge role in turning the young Cologne franchise into a reliable contender. Brozik was the first to have his number retired by the Copperheads and joined 2028 inductee Pavel Pajitnov as those inducted in the green and gold. Brozik received 81.6% to take the second slot in the European Baseball Federation’s 2029 class.

        Comment

        • MrNFL_FanIQ
          MVP
          • Oct 2008
          • 4988

          #2179
          2029 EBF Hall of Fame

          Two first ballot picks were added for the European Baseball Federation’s Hall of Fame in 2029. SP Gianfranco Marinis led the way at 98.3% while OF Dominik Brozik had a rock solid 81.6%. Two third ballot guys were above 60%, but just short of the 66% requirement with LF Emilson Patino at 62.7% and RF Dylan Fitzpatrick at 61.5%. Three others were above 50% with CF Joris Kostic at 56.9% on his sixth ballot, CL Stefan Sedlak at 56.6% for his eighth try, and LF Marco Solis with a 52.5% debut.



          SP Ebbe Arvidsson got 49.9% on his tenth and final ballot. The Swedish righty generally hovered in the 30-49% range, but fell off after ten failed tries. He had a 15-year run with Athens and posted a 131-85 record, 2.91 ERA, 2164.2 innings, 2338 strikeouts, 297 walks, 132 ERA+, and 57.6 WAR. Arvidsson’s rate stats were certainly worthy, but injuries meant he only had six full seasons in his run. The accumulations were just too low and he didn’t have big awards to make up for it.

          RF Sam Connor also fell off the ballot, peaking with a 43.3% debut but ending at only 16.9%. The Irishman spent most of his 19-year career with Belfast with one Silver Slugger and no black ink. In EBF, Connor had 2636 games, 2699 hits, 1465 runs, 428 doubles, 183 triples, 506 home runs, 1504 RBI, 738 walks, 828 steals .286/.338/.530 slash, 142 wRC+, and 74.8 WAR. Connor earned impressive tallies from his steady production, but he lacked big accolades and was overlooked on some bad Brewers squads during his prime.

          SS Adam Tretyak was also worth a quick mention as he fell below 5% on his ninth ballot and was dropped. He started in EPB while did lower his final EBF accumulations over a 20 year career primarily with Budapest. Tretyak won five Silver Sluggers with 1857 games, 2399 hits, 1139 runs, 402 doubles, 170 triples, 80 home runs, 781 RBI, 524 steals, .326/.355/.460 slash, 127 wRC+, and 73.3 WAR. It is always an uphill climb though for leadoff type guys without home run power. Tretyak wasn’t exceptional enough at any one thing to get much ballot traction, peaking at 27.6% n 2022.



          Gianfranco Marinis – Starting Pitcher – Barcelona Bengals – 98.3% First Ballot

          Gianfranco Marinis was a 6’2’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Lucca, a city of around 89,000 people in central Italy. His rock solid and steady control kept Marinis passable throughout a 22-year career. His stuff and movement were generally graded as above average to occasionally gold. Marinis’ fastball did top out in the 97-99 mph range and was part of a five-pitch arsenal that included a slider, forkball, changeup, and splitter. No one pitch was overpowering, but each was a respectable option.

          Marinis’ stamina and durability were both outstanding and he never missed starts due to injuries. He also had an excellent pickoff move and was considered a good defensive pitcher. Marinis was highly adaptable and intelligent, traits that served him well. He was never overwhelmingly dominant, but his steadiness and consistency were hard to find.

          Out of college, Marinis was very highly touted and Barcelona selected him third in the 2001 EBF Draft. He struggled with limited relief use in 2002, then was a full-time starter in 2003. Marinis was split back between starting and relief in 2004, but returned to the rotation after that. 2005 would be his best season by some metrics with a conference best 21-8 record and career best 6.9 WAR. Marinis also led in wins again in 2007, but never was a Pitcher of the Year finalist. He led in complete games and shutouts twice and innings pitched once.

          After struggling to start the 21st Century, Barcelona had a three-year division title streak from 2005-07. The Bengals lost in the first round in 2005, but earned the Southern Conference pennant the latter years. Barcelona set a franchise record in 2005 at 111-51, but fell to Kyiv in the European Championship. The Bengals were 96-66 in 2007 and got revenge over the Kings in that year’s final.

          Marinis’ career playoff numbers were actually more impressive than his regular season tallies. Over the 2006-07 run, he had a 6-2 record over 73.1 innings with a 2.33 ERA, 60 strikeouts, and 1.7 WAR. After the 2006 season, Barcelona gave Marinis a six-year, $44,760,000 extension. He continued his same steady results, although the Bengals just missed the playoffs in 2008-09. They made it back with division titles in 2010 and 2011.

          Barcelona lost the 2010 conference final to Zurich, but beat Athens for the 2011 pennant. The Bengals were denied the European Championship by the fledgling Dublin dynasty, but Marinis had a 2.53 ERA over 32 innings in that run. He was excellent in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 1.29 ERA over 35 innings with 33 Ks. Despite his efforts, Barcelona struggled to 6-13 in the event. The following spring, Marinis inked a five-year, $53,900,000 extension The Bengals were stuck in the middle tier for the following three years.

          2015 saw one last gap for Barcelona, winning the conference as a wild card and falling to Antwerp in the European Championship. This was Marinis’ best playoffs yet with a 1.30 ERA and 27 Ks in 41.2 innings. He couldn’t carry that over into the BGC with a 4.34 ERA over 33.1 innings as the Bengals finished 9-10. For his playoff career with Barcelona, Marinis had a 11-6 record, 2.56 ERA, 176 innings, 145 strikeouts, 24 walks, 153 ERA+, and 3.3 WAR.

          Although he stepped up in the big games, his regular season stats had been delightfully average into his 30s. Barcelona voided the team option year of Marinis’ deal, sending him to free agency for 2017 at age 36. With the Bengals, Marinis had a 215-153 record, 3.73 ERA, 3428 innings, 2914 strikeouts, 659 walks, 104 ERA+, 89 FIP-, and 62.4 WAR. His next stop would be a three-year, $32,900,000 deal with Madrid.

          Although Marinis remained in Spain, he had been a regular for his native Italy throughout his career in the World Baseball Championship. From 2005-23, Marinis had a 14-8 record, 3.34 ERA, 207.1 innings, 207 strikeouts, 66 walks, and 2.8 WAR. The Italians were quite competitive in that era with a second place in 2005, third in 2006, second in 2012, fourth in 2019, and third in 2022.

          Madrid was a wild card throughout each of Marinis’ years there, but couldn’t get beyond the second round. In 22.2 playoff innings, he had a 3.97 ERA and 20 Ks. He stayed steady overall in his three seasons with a 39-32 record, 3.45 ERA, 665 innings, 555 strikeouts, 111 ERA+, and 9.9 WAR. In 2019, Marinis became the 8th pitcher in EBF history with 250 career wins.

          Now 39-years old and a free agent again, Marinis went north to Norway on a three-year, $28,900,000 deal with Oslo. He couldn’t maintain his usual steady stats in the first two years with the Octopi, although they did get a playoff berth in 2021. Marinis rebounded a bit in 2022, which led to a July trade to Lisbon for four prospects. With Oslo, Marinis had a 31-33 record, 4.35 ERA, 589.2 innings, 402 strikeouts, and 4.6 WAR.

          Marinis had a decent second half with Lisbon, who made the playoffs but lost in the first round. He posted a 3.53 ERA and 1.6 WAR over 97 innings. Marinis still wanted to play and was at 291 wins, now second on the EBF all-time list. The top mark was held by Jean-Luc Roch, who finished with 300 exactly. Dublin gave Marinis a one-year, $7,500,000 deal for the 2023 campaign.

          It was an okay effort as a part-time innings eater with a 3.90 ERA, 159.1 innings, 103 strikeouts, and 0 WAR. However, Marinis had a 11-4 record with the Dinos, passing Roch to become the all-time EBF leader. As of 2037, Marinis is one of only 46 pitchers in all of pro baseball history in the 300 club. The longevity also got him to 4000 strikeouts, the 10th in EBF to do so.

          Dublin was amidst another dynasty and repeated as European Champion with a 114-48 record. Marinis’ postseason contribution was one scoreless inning of relief. For his playoff career, he had a 12-9 record, 2.73 ERA, 207.2 innings, 169 strikeouts, 26 walks, 142 ERA+, and 3.3 WAR. As of 2037, Marinis is 9th in playoff wins, 10th in strikeouts, and 19th in WAR among pitchers. With nothing left to prove and probably not enough juice left to stick around, Marinis retired shortly after his 43rd birthday.

          Marinis finished with a 302-225 record, 3.77 ERA, 4939 innings, 4053 strikeouts, 939 walks, 4053 strikeouts, 347/607 quality starts, 186 complete games, 28 shutouts, 103 ERA+, 93 FIP-, and 78.4 WAR. As of 2037, Marinis is EBF’s all-time leader in wins, starts (607), innings, and hits allowed (5269). He also is 2nd in losses, 4th in complete games, 31st in shutouts, 11th in strikeouts, 11th in walks (939), and 34th in WAR among pitchers. On the world leaderboards, Marinis ranks 41st in wins and 27th in innings.

          The rate stats though grade Marinis’ production as being above average at best though. He was never a Pitcher of the Year finalist and only once finished top ten in the conference for ERA. Despite EBF’s wins leader, Marinis’ name rarely gets mentioned in the conversations for Europe’s GOAT pitcher and some wouldn’t even put him into the top ten.

          However, longevity and consistency certainly have to count for something. Plus, Marinis cemented himself as an all-time great with strong playoff stats. He was a big reason Barcelona won four pennants and a European Championship. Certainly Marinis’ candidacy wasn’t in doubt, receiving 98.3% to headline the 2029 Hall of Fame class for the European Baseball Federation.



          Dominik Brozik – Left/Center Field – Cologne Copperheads – 81.6% First Ballot

          Dominik Brozik was a 6’2’’, 200 pound left-handed outfielder from Policka, a small town of roughly 9,900 in the Czech Republic. Brozik was a well-rounded batter with good-to-great contract, eye, and power. He wasn’t amazing at any one thing, but he was at least decent across the board. His 162 game average got you 33 home runs, 24 doubles, and 11 triples for a steady dose of extra base hits.

          Brozik’s best numbers came against right-handed pitching with a career .980 OPS and 174 wRC+. Against lefties, he had a respectable .790 OPS and 124 wRC+. Brozik’s speed was above average and he had strong baserunning skills. He had the flexibility to bounce around the outfield with about 2/3 of his starts in left field, around 1/4 in center field, and sparing starts in right or at first base. Brozik didn’t have the range for CF and had lackluster results there, but he graded as reliably solid in the corners.

          Few peers or fans would have a bad word to say about Brozik as a person. He was known for his fierce loyalty, strong work ethic, and great intelligence. Brozik’s durability was mostly good over a 17-year career. Combine that with reliable and predictable production and you had one of the most popular players of the 2010s for European baseball.

          In the 2006 EBF Draft, Brozik was picked 16th overall by Cologne. The Copperheads were an expansion team in 2000 and struggled in the front end of the decade, but Brozik helped turn Cologne into a regular contender. Brozik won 2007 Rookie of the Year with his first of ten straight seasons with 6+ WAR, .300+ average, and .900+ OPS. 2007 saw a 85-77 record, the Copperheads’ first-ever winning season.

          In 2008, Cologne won a division title at 102-60 and got all the way to the Northern Conference Championship where they fell to Kyiv.
          Brozik won his first Silver Slugger (LF) and his lone MVP, leading the conference with 132 runs. That would be a career high, as would his 211 hits, 45 homers, and 116 RBI. In his first postseason, Brozik had .913 OPS and 0.3 WAR. Cologne went 90-72 in 2009 but missed the postseason narrowly.

          From 2010-17, the Copperheads rattled off an eight-year division title streak. Brozik was second in 2010’s MVP voting with a 1.050 OPS, 202 wRC+, 10.1 WAR effort. He won a Silver Slugger in 2011 (CF) and was third in MVP voting with his career best10.8 WAR and a match of his 132 runs and 211 hits from 2008. After the 2012 season, Brozik signed a seven-year, $82,740,000 extension with the Copperheads. Brozik was just outside of the awards conversations in the mid 2010s, but remained incredibly steady and productive.

          Cologne’s overall playoff success was limited. From 2010-15, they were ousted in the first or second round each year sans 2012; including despite a 110-52 record in 2011 and 107-55 mark in 2013. 2012 would be the breakthrough though, winning the European Championship against Vienna. The Copperheads were 11-8 in the Baseball Grand Championship, part of a four-way tie for sixth but one game short from the five-way tie for first at 12-7. Brozik had a strong showing in the BGC with 19 hits, 14 runs, 6 doubles, 6 homers, 9 RBI, .961 OPS, and 1.0 WAR.

          Brozik’s overall playoff stats with Cologne were surprisingly underwhelming. Over 59 starts, he had 55 hits, 36 runs, 7 doubles, 6 triples, 7 homers, 29 RBI, 19 walks, 12 steals, .243/.300/.420 slash, 104 wRC+, and 1.0 WAR. The Copperheads concluded their playoff streak with conference finals losses in both 2016 and 2017. Cologne hovered around the middle of the standings for the next few seasons.

          However, Brozik did have good numbers as a regular for the Czech Republic in the World Baseball Championship. From 2006-23, Brozik played 163 games with 135 hits, 75 runs, 27 doubles, 36 homers, 88 RBI, 42 steals, .247/.353/.501 slash, and 5.9 WAR. The Czechs’ lone division title during Brozik’s tenure came in 2021.

          A number of back and oblique injuries kept Brozik out half of 2017. He bounced back and was still rock solid in 2018, but Cologne decided to void the final year option of his deal. Brozik remained very popular and maintained a good relationship with Copperheads officials, who retired his #30 uniform at the end of his career. However, he was now to become a free agent for his age 36 season in 2019.

          With Cologne, Brozik played 1706 games with 2155 hits, 1246 runs, 244 doubles, 137 triples, 374 home runs, 1091 RBI, 615 walks, 412 steals, .336/.393/.591 slash, 177 wRC+, and 89.6 WAR. Brozik had worldwide suitors and opted for Major League Baseball on a three-year, $51,200,000 deal with Salt Lake City. He had an impressive debut in the States, winning a Silver Slugger in 2019 in CF with a 6.3 WAR campaign. The Loons were a repeat wild card team, but lost in the first round.

          Brozik looked merely decent in 2021 and missed their second round playoff exit on a late August sprained ankle. He regressed hard in 2021 with .642 OPS, 76 wRC+, and 0 WAR over 141 games. In total for SLC, Brozik had 414 games, 378 hits, 233 runs, 68 doubles, 19 triples, 66 home runs, 216 RBI, .247/.322/.445 slash, 113 wRC+, and 8.5 WAR. Brozik was back to free agency heading towards age 39 for 2022.

          It was clear his MLB tenure was done, but Brozik hoped he could still contribute back in Europe. London gave him a shot on a two-year, $15,400,000 deal. Brozik was passable in 2022, then looked good in a smaller platoon sample size in 2023. He had 201 games, 171 hits, 88 runs, 22 doubles, 32 homers, 95 RBI, .269/.342/.473 slash, 123 wRC+, and 3.6 WAR for the Monarchs.
          Brozik retired after the 2023 campaign at age 40.

          In the European Baseball Federation, Brozik had 1907 games, 2326 hits, 1334 runs, 266 doubles, 143 triples, 406 home runs, 1186 RBI, 685 walks, 1098 strikeouts, 437 steals, .330/.388/.581 slash, 173 wRC+, and 93.1 WAR. As of 2037, Brozik ranks 85th in hits, 62nd in runs, 87th in total bases (4096), and 46th in WAR among position players. Among batters with 3000+ plate appearances, his batting average is 56th, OBP is 42nd, and slugging is 92nd. Brozik’s .969 OPS is good for 55th.

          Brozik didn’t have eye-popping accumulations, but his hitting efficiency metrics were excellent. His totals when adding the MLB stats saw 2704 hits, 1567 runs, 334 doubles, 162 triples, 472 homers, 1402 RBI, 854 walks, 473 steals, .315/.376/.557 slash, 162 wRC+, and 101.7 WAR.

          He wasn’t viewed as an inner-circle level Hall of Famer, but Brozik’s resume was rock solid. He also played a huge role in turning the young Cologne franchise into a reliable contender. Brozik was the first to have his number retired by the Copperheads and joined 2028 inductee Pavel Pajitnov as those inducted in the green and gold. Brozik received 81.6% to take the second slot in the European Baseball Federation’s 2029 class.

          Comment

          • MrNFL_FanIQ
            MVP
            • Oct 2008
            • 4988

            #2180
            2029 EPB Hall of Fame

            The 2029 Hall of Fame ballot for Eurasian Professional Baseball was a weaker one with the best debut at a measly 32.8%. Pitcher Povilas Zdancius was the lone inductee by just crossing the 66% requirement at 67.2% in his fifth ballot. Three others were above 50% with 3B Bladyslav Chychykov (59.9%) and 1B Roman Stanchinsky (55.8%) both on their second ballot. 1B Benjamin Bodnar got 51.4% for his tenth and final chance.



            For Bodnar, he had an 18-year career almost exclusively with Yekaterinburg, helping them win four EPB titles. The Hungarian got as close at 59.0% in 2026 and was never below 44%. Bodnar won MVP honors in 2004 and had four Gold Gloves and five Silver Sluggers. His totals saw 2066 games, 2031 hits, 1023 runs, 292 doubles, 98 triples, 413 home runs, 1138 RBI, .276/.334/.510 slash, 155 wRC+, and 69.7 WAR. Injuries in his 30s greatly limited his tallies and left him in “Hall of Pretty Good” territory in the minds of many voters.



            Povilas Zdancius – Pitcher – St. Petersburg Polar Bears – 67.2% Fifth Ballot

            Povilas Zdancius was a 5’10’’, 180 pound right-handed pitcher from Vitebsk in northern Belarus, the country’s fourth-largest city with roughly 358,000 inhabitants. Zdancius had excellent control and great movement along with good stuff. His fastball peaked in the 95-97 mph range and was actually probably his weakest pitch. Zdancius’ changeup and sinker were his best offerings and he had a splitter.

            Guys with four credible pitches are almost always starters, but Zdancius’ poor stamina led to most of his career coming from the bullpen. Despite the stamina issues, Zdancius‘ durability was great and he avoided the big injuries that often plague pitchers. He was subpar at holding runners and below average defensively. However, Zdancius had an excellent work ethic and was one of the smartest guys in the game. He was also appreciated in the clubhouse as a strong leader.

            Zdancius was picked out of high school by St. Petersburg in the 1997 EPB Draft, going 108th overall in the early fourth round. He would be the second-latest picked player to earn induction for EPB’s Hall of Fame with only Class of 2011 SP Temuujin Munkhuu going later at 127. Zdancius spent his first two years in the Polar Bears’ academy before seeing part-time relief use in 2000-01.

            From 2002-04, Zdancius was a starter with strong results, leading the European League twice in quality starts. He had 6.5+ WAR each year as St. Petersburg continued a rebuild, falling just short of the playoffs in 2003 and 2004.
            Zdancius was third in 2003’s Pitcher of the Year voting with career bests in WAR (8.0), and strikeouts (299).

            Despite that momentum, Zdancius was surprisingly relegated to only 18 relief appearances in 2005 despite being seemingly healthy. The Polar Bears moved him to the closer role for the four following years, where he twice led in games pitched and once in saves. Zdancius was Reliever of the Year in 2006 with 1.22 ERA over 81.1 innings, 35 saves, and 113 strikeouts. He took third in ROTY in 2007, 08, and 09.

            St. Petersburg led the standings and got to the ELCS in 2005 and 2006, but lost both times against Moscow. The Polar Bears fell towards third place for the next few years. Zdancius’ limited playoff use saw two runs allowed in five innings and four appearances. He also saw brief World Baseball Championship use from 2001-03 for his native Belarus, but struggled to a 5.22 ERA over 29.1 innings.

            Zdancius became a free agent after the 2009 season at age 32. For St. Petersburg, he had an 84-52 record, 140 saves, 1.91 ERA, 1182 innings, 1342 strikeouts, 194 walks, 143 ERA+, and 39.4 WAR. The Polar Bears organization liked Zdancius enough to eventually retire his #28 uniform. He’d spend the next nine years in South America, starting with a three-year, $9,360,000 deal with Bogota.

            He was middle relief in 2010 for the Bats with a 2.45 ERA over 44 innings. Bogota traded Zdancius in the offseason to Cordoba, who put him back into a closer role for 2011. Zdancius was second in Reliever of the Year voting and led in games with 78 for 2011, posting a 2.45 ERA and 36 saves. The Chanticleers lost in the Southern Cone Championship with Zdancius posting a 5.23 ERA over 10.1 playoff innings.

            Zdancius was demoted to middle relief for his second year with Cordoba. After that, he signed for two years and $11,600,000 with Rosario, where he had 74.1 innings, 3.39 ERA, and 1.0 WAR. Zdancius played for Callao in 2015 with a 2.89 ERA, 11 saves, 67 strikeouts, and 0.8 WAR in 74.2 innings. He had 2.38 ERA, 56.2 innings, 1.7 WAR, and 64 Ks in 2016 with Santiago. Zdancius then struggled to a 5.02 ERA over 14.1 innings in 2017 with Sao Paulo.

            In 2018, Cordoba gave him a second shot and he had a 2.43 ERA in 33.1 innings. Zdancius had a 2.82 ERA over 165.2 innings, 162 Ks, and 2.6 WAR between the stints with the Chanticleers. For his Beisbol Sudamerica career, Zdancius had a 43-30 record, 65 saves, 2.91 ERA, 349 games, 429.2 innings, 427 strikeouts, 97 walks, 129 ERA+, and 5.9 WAR.

            Zdancius came back to EPB in 2019 with Vladivostok where he posted a 3.41 ERA over 34.1 innings. The Shibas cut him in July, but Minsk grabbed him and he finished strong with 16.2 scoreless innings over five appearances. Zdancius decided to retire that winter shortly after his 42nd birthday.

            In EPB, Zdancius ended with an 86-53 record, 142 saves, 1.93 ERA, 454 games, 102 starts, 1233 innings, 1373 strikeouts, 198 walks, 83/102 quality starts, 22 complete games, 5 shutouts, 143 ERA+, 63 FIP-, and 40.0 WAR. Among all pitchers with 1000+ career innings, Zdancius’ ERA ranks 11th. His .532 opoonents’ OPS ranks 17th while his triple slash of .203/.240/.292 ranks 47th/28th/11th.

            His accumulation stats there are obviously incredibly low for either a starter or reliever. Zdancius’ resume was a difficult one to judge as there weren’t even comparisons amongst starters or relievers. The rate stats were obviously strong, but he was also by having half his career on a different continent. Working in his favor was a generally positive reputation and pitcher-friendly voters for the Eurasian Professional Baseball Hall of Fame.

            Zdancius debuted at 64.9% in 2025, barely missing the 66% requirement. He was at 61.0%, 63.6%, and 50.4% in the next three ballots. His fifth ballot in 2029 came against a very weak field with no standout debuts. That helped Zdancius get the bump just across the line at 67.2% for a fifth ballot selection as the lone 2029 inductee. Many scholars cite Zdancius as one of the weaker additions you’ll find, but he’s in regardless.

            Comment

            • MrNFL_FanIQ
              MVP
              • Oct 2008
              • 4988

              #2181
              2029 OBA Hall of Fame (Part 1)




              The Oceania Baseball Association had a loaded four player Hall of Fame class for 2029 with each debuting at above 89%. 1B/DH Adrian Kali (97.5%), OF Suliano Nadruku (97.2%), 1B Naldo Soto (91.2%), and SP August Lantz (89.1%) made up one of the most impressive groups in league history. 3B Dale Harper notably debuted at a solid 56.5%, but was still shy of the 66% requirement. The only returner above 50% was SP George Hudson at 50.2% for his fifth ballot. No players were dropped after ten failed ballots.



              Adrian Kali – First Base/Designated Hitter – Port Moresby Mud Hens – 97.5% First Ballot

              Adrian Kali was a 6’3’’, 200 pound right-handed first baseman from Port Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea. Kali was a great contact hitter with a reliably strong bat, posting 35 home runs, 31 doubles, and 3 triples per his 162 game average. He regularly hit above .300 in the lower-scoring world of OBA and was equally potent against both sides. Kal’s ability to draw walks and avoid strikeouts were both average at best.

              Although he got on base a lot, Kali was a terrible baserunner with poor speed. He was a subpar defender at first base, but wasn’t a complete liability. Kali’s first few seasons were primarily as a designated hitter. He made just over 60% of his starts at 1B with basically all of the rest as a DH.

              Kali was a true ironman and never missed a start to injury, starting 149+ games each year from 2005-23. He was also a hard worker and incredibly selfless and dedicated. Kali was a true fan favorite who became beloved throughout the region as he later challenged for OBA’s hit king crown. He was especially beloved in his native Papua New Guinea and became one of the country’s favorite sons.

              Growing up in Port Moresby, Kali was an avid Mud Hens fan in his youth. As he progressed through the amateur ranks, his hometown team certainly kept tabs on him as a possible future star. That dream came true with the 2003 OBA Draft with Kali going fourth overall to the Mud Hens. He was mostly in their academy in 2004 with only 7 games and 2 starts. Kali was moved to a full-time starting role in 2005 and was an OBA fixture for 19 years.

              Kali won Rookie of the Year in 2005 with a 1.6 WAR campaign. From 2006-09, he led the Pacific League thrice in both hits and RBI. Kali also led in RBI again in 2011 and twice socked 40+ dingers for Port Moresby. His lone Silver Slugger came in 2011 at 1B. Kali’s steady but not flashy production didn’t lend itself to many big awards. He also was competing with some of the top sluggers in the game as a DH/1B.

              It also didn’t help that Port Moresby to that point had been mostly mediocre since the start of the 1990s. Although they became a 2020s dynasty, the Mud Hens were unremarkable despite Kali’s efforts. They averaged 76 wins per season while he was a starter, peaking with at 89-73 in 2010. In April 2008, Kali signed a five-year, $18,320,000 extension with his hometown team.

              Port Moresby was seemingly trending upwards to start the 2010s, but fell off hard with a 65-97 campaign in 2012. The Mud Hens were sellers in the offseason, which included shipping away Kali in the last year of his deal in a five-player trade with Christchurch. For Port Moresby, Kali had 1289 games, 1504 hits, 732 runs, 232 doubles, 284 home runs, 853 RBI, .300/.345/.527 slash, 147 wRC+, and 36.1 WAR.

              Although disappointed at the ending, Kali was happy to have gotten to represent his hometown for eight years and was beloved locally. His #12 uniform would later be retired and he’d be inducted in Mud Hens’ red and gold. Kali was excited to join a potential contender as Christchurch was seemingly on the cusp. 2013 started a dynasty run for the Chinooks, who went 110-52 and beat Guadalcanal in the Oceania Championship.

              Kali was a one-year rental, but lived up to his role as he won finals MVP, going 10-18 in the series with 5 doubles, 2 runs, 1 homer, and 4 RBI. He remained strong in the World Baseball Championship over 19 starts with 19 hits, 15 runs, 9 homers, 2 doubles, 17 RBI, and 1.1 WAR. The Chinooks finished 8-11 for the event. These ultimately were Kali’s only career postseason appearances. He also had a career best 122 runs in his lone Christchurch season.

              Coming up on age 30, Kali was a free agent for the first time heading into 2014. The finals MVP helped earn him a seven-year, $71,400,000 deal with Gold Coast. He ultimately played six years for the Kangaroos as a regular all-star, although they were stuck near the bottom of the standings. Kali led the Australasia League with a career best 40 doubles in 2017. He also had his career best triple slash (.337/.382/.620), OPS (1.003), wRC+ (169), and WAR (6.7) in 2016.

              In total, Kali played 938 games for Gold Coast with 1068 hits, 503 runs, 188 doubles, 204 home runs, 607 RBI, .304/.354/.544 slash, 142 wRC+, and 27.9 WAR. With one year left on his contract, the 36-year old Kali was traded in the offseason for prospects to Brisbane. His one year with the Black Bears saw 3.2 WAR, 30 homers, and .859 OPS.

              Kali joined Guadalcanal in 2021 on a two-year, $12,400,000 deal and quickly became the third member of the 3000 hit club. He ended the season at 3129 hits, passing Junia Lava for OBA’s top spot. Kali also became the fifth to reach 1500 runs scored and the 11th to 600 home runs, hitting all three marks in 2021. That year, he also led the PL with 112 RBI and hit 40 home runs. The Green Jackets finished 100-62, two games behind Vanuatu for the top spot.

              Guadalcanal again was two games out of first in 2022, although Kali’s power dipped notably. He finished over two seasons with 351 hits, 179 runs, 55 doubles, 65 home runs, 201 RBI, .297/.335/.516 slash, and 8.1 WAR. Kali signed with Melbourne for 2023 on a two-year, $9,520,000 deal. With his longevity, the records for both runs scored and RBI were in reach.

              Kali had his weakest year since his rookie campaign with 1.9 WAR, .758 OPS, and 24 homers. He did pass Arjita Gabeja (1683) for the runs scored record, although Roe Kaupa passed Kali the next year. He finished 10 RBI shy of Lava’s top mark of 1989, another mark Kaupa also eclipsed. Kali also got to 574 doubles, 22 away from the top mark held by fellow 2023 retiree Dale Harper of 596. Kali decided to retire after the 2023 campaign at age 39.

              The final stats saw 2999 games, 3467 hits, 1704 runs, 574 doubles, 62 triples, 650 home runs, 1979 RBI, 805 walks, 2354 strikeouts, .300/.346/.529 slash, 143 wRC+, and 83.7 WAR. As of 2037, Kali remains OBA’s all-time hit king and is ranked 5th in games, 3rd in runs, 2nd in total bases (6115), 2nd in doubles (574), 7th in home runs, 3rd in RBI, 20th in walks, 13th in strikeouts, and 24th in WAR for position players.

              Kali‘s .875 OPS ranks 49th among batters with 3000+ plate appearances. His triple slash of .300/.346/.529 ranks 46th/58th/58th. Despite inner-circle totals, Kali was never an MVP finalist and generally wasn’t considered a top five player in his prime. Some scholars would leave him off top five or even top ten position player lists for OBA despite being so high in the final leaderboards. Playing on a lot of bad teams also didn’t help his cause there.

              That said, Kali was beloved for his role as the consistent ironman and there’s something to be said for that longevity. Retiring as your league’s hit king is a remarkable accomplishment, even if he was overshadowed in his era by fellow Papuan Roe Kaupa. Kali received 97.5%, the highest percentage of the four strong inductees into the 2029 Hall of Fame class for the Oceania Baseball Association.



              Suliano “Moby Dick” Nadruku – Left/Center Field – Port Moresby Mud Hens – 97.2% First Ballot

              Suliano Nadruku was a 6’2’’, 200 pound left-handed outfielder from Capiata, Fiji; a city of 198,000 people. Nadruku in his prime was an excellent contact hitter with a decent strikeout rate, although he didn’t draw too many walks. His gap power was rock solid and he got you plenty of extra base hits with a 162 game average of 31 doubles, 15 triples, and 28 home runs. Nadruku was better facing right-handed pitching (.918 OPS, 158 wRC+) but was capable facing lefties too (.791 OPS, 124 wRC+).

              Nadruku was also one of the faster and more skilled baserunners and base stealers of his era. He played center field at the start of his career, but struggled there as his baserunning speed didn’t translate to range. Left field would prove a perfect fit with Nadruku making 75% of his starts there. He graded as a reliable good-to-great defender and won four Gold Gloves in left.

              His durability was generally strong as he started 120+ games in all 16 of his professional seasons. Nadruku was adaptable, worked hard, and was a major fan favorite. His career took him to four different countries, but he endeared himself to fans and peers at every stop. Nadruku would be the third player born in Fiji to earn his way into OBA’s Hall of Fame.

              Nadruku’s pro career began in Papua New Guinea as he was selected fifth overall by Port Moresby in the 2007 OBA Draft. He was only there six years, although this would be his longest tenure and possibly his most impressive. As mentioned with his HOF classmate Adrian Kali, the Mud Hens were mostly hot garbage in the 2000s and 2010s. Still, Nadruku made an impact right away, taking third in Rookie of the Year voting. In his second season, he won a Silver Slugger in CF.

              In 2010, Nadruku won Pacific League MVP and a LF Silver Sugger with league bests in hits (224), average (.367), OBP (.402), OPS (1.035), wRC+ (184), and WAR (9.5). The hit tally, AVG, OBP, and WAR would be career highs as were his 89 stolen bases. Nadruku was second in 2011’s MVP voting and won another Slugger, leading in hits (212), doubles (40), and WAR (9.5). The doubles were a career high as were his 113 RBI, 1.043 OPS, and 201 wRC+. 2011 also was the first of three consecutive Gold Gloves.

              Those years were the closest Port Moresby came to contending in some time with an 89-73 record in 2010 and 83-79 in 2011. They plummeted down to 65-97 in 2012 and stayed there for the next few years. Nadruku had a good 2012, but struggled to meet his previous standards in 2013 with a .770 OPS and 3.7 WAR. Apart from his first and final season, that was Nadruku’s worst OPS. It was bad timing as it was a contract year as well.

              Port Moresby was worried Nadruku was going to be expensive and possibly would never return to form, thus they let him leave for free agency after the 2013 season. With the Mud Hens, Nadruku had 919 games, 1088 hits, 541 runs, 166 doubles, 79 triples, 163 home runs, 525 RBI, 384 steals, .310/.343/.541 slash, 149 wRC+, and 36.1 WAR. Coming up on his age 29 season, Nadruku found that Perth still had great interest as they signed him at six years and $60 million.

              Nadruku spent five years with the Penguins and was above 7 WAR in three of those seasons. In 2016, he led the Australasia League with 220 hits and posted 8.4 WAR. In 2017, he led in hits (209), WAR (8.1), and led with a career high 121 runs. That effort earned a third place in MVP voting. Perth was in the upper half of the standings of Nadruku’s’ tenure, but ultimately couldn’t compete with the dynasty run of Christchurch. Perth’s best season was second place at 97-65 in 2016, which was paltry compared to the Chinooks world-record 126-36 mark that same year.

              For Perth, Nadruku had 754 games, 964 hits, 516 runs, 169 doubles, 75 triples, 124 home runs, 463 RBI, 395 steals, .325/.353/.557 slash, 151 wRC+, and 34.0 WAR. He declined the sixth-year contract option and entered free agency again for the 2019 season at age 33. Nadruku’s next stop was Hawaii on a five-year, $61 million deal with Honolulu.

              The investment immediately paid off for the Honu as Nadruku won 2019 MVP honors, leading the Pacific League with 368 total bases. Honolulu won the PL at 99-63 for their first pennant since 1996, although they fell to Sydney in the Oceania Championship in a seven-game classic. In his lone playoff series, Nadruku went 8-27 with 4 runs, 3 homers, 6 RBI, and 2 steals. It was a one-off for the Honu, although they did remain above .500 the next two seasons.

              Nadruku won his fourth Gold Glove and fourth Silver Slugger in 2020 and led in hits for the fifth time. He couldn’t maintain that production, but was still a solid starter for two more years with Honolulu. For the Honu, Nadruku had 593 games, 713 hits, 337 runs, 96 doubles, 58 triples, 108 home runs, 358 RBI, 233 steals, .312/.345/.547 slash, 157 wRC+, and 22.5 WAR.

              Honolulu fell to 72-88 in 2022 and started a rebuild plan. Nadruku was traded in the offseason to Tahiti for two prospects. Nadruku struggled in his one year with the Tropics, posting -0.1 WAR and .711 OPS over 140 games. He did reach the 400 home run milestone, but came up short of the 3000 hit, 1500 run, and 1500 RBI thresholds that had seemed achievable a few years earlier. Nadruku retired that winter at age 38.

              Nadruku finished with 2406 games, 2899 hits, 1461 runs, 457 doubles, 223 triples, 409 home runs, 1391 RBI, 445 walks, 1322 strikeouts, 1054 stolen bases, 625 caught stealing, .312/.345/.541 slash, 149 wRC+, and 92.5 WAR. As of 2037, Nadruku ranks 29th in games, 9th in hits, 11th in runs, 11th in doubles, 18th in triples, 51st in homers, 24th in RBI, 12th in total bases (5029), and 13th in WAR among position players. Among OBA batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Nadruku’s triple slash ranks 27th/63rd/38th. His .885 OPS sits 35th.

              Depending on how strict your definition of “inner-circle” is, Nadruku might make the cut. He was universally liked, but does slide down some of the all-time rankings due to lack of team success and/or big home run numbers. Nadruku’s status as a Hall of Fame lock though was undisputed. At 97.2%, he ranked second of four in the loaded 2029 class for the Oceania Baseball Association.

              Comment

              • MrNFL_FanIQ
                MVP
                • Oct 2008
                • 4988

                #2182
                2029 OBA Hall of Fame (Part 2)




                Naldo “Train” Soto – First Base – Christchurch Chinooks – 91.2% First Ballot

                Naldo Soto was a 6’4’’, 200 pound right-handed first baseman from Manila, the capital of the Philippines. Nicknamed “the Train,” Soto was a great contact hitter against both sides with a rock solid pop in his bat. His gap power was especially impressive, leading the league seven times in doubles. Soto gave you 38 doubles and 4 triples per his 162 game average. His home run power was respectable too with 28 per 162 and three seasons with 40+ homers.

                Soto was better than most in OBA at avoiding strikeouts, but below average at drawing walks. His speed and baserunning skills were both poor. Despite that, Soto was a reliably above average to good defender at first base. He briefly played right field in the middle of his career and was terrible there. Soto’s durability was generally strong as he played 125+ games in all 16 of his pro seasons.

                Most Filipino players play in Austronesia Professional Baseball, but Soto declared his intentions for the Oceania Baseball Association after an impressive amateur career. The Philippines was outside of the regional requirements for the OBA Draft’s first three rounds, meaning Soto wasn’t eligible until round four. In 2007, Soto was the fourth pick of the fourth round, 67th overall, by Vanuatu. The Wizards were still a new expansion franchise that had started play in only 2006.

                Soto was a full-time starter right away, but was terrible as a rookie with .581 OPS and -1.4 WAR. He looked decent in his sophomore campaign, then was solid by year three as he led in doubles for the first time. Soto’s lone Gold Glove came in 2012. In 2013, he flashed home run power for the first time with 40 dingers and a Pacific League best 114 RBI. That was also his best Vanuatu season by WAR at 6.3.

                The Wizards still had little luck contending in those early years, finally getting their first winning campaign in 2014. Soto was gone for free agency though after the 2013 season at age 28. With Vanuatu, he had 939 games, 1049 hits, 394 runs, 180 doubles, 122 home runs, 487 RBI, 222 walks, .296/.340/.457 slash, 129 wRC+, and 20.8 WAR. Soto was generally popular though for a solid effort in the Wizards’ formative years.

                Soto’s most famous tenure began in 2014 on a five-year, $58,900,000 deal with Christchurch. Although his biggest successes came in New Zealand, around this time Soto also represented his native Philippines in the World Baseball Championship. From 2013-23, he played 72 games with 41 hits, 20 runs, 9 doubles, 11 homers, 26 RBI, .220/.319/.446 slash, and 1.0 WAR. Soto struggled in a backup role in 2015, but was part of the Filipino World Champion team that year.

                Christchurch was the reigning Oceania Champion when they signed Soto and he helped them establish an Australasia League dynasty. He led in doubles from 2014-16, although his first year saw a big dip in homers down to 17. Soto rebounded with a career best 48 homers and 129 RBI by 2016. That year also saw a second place in MVP voting and Soto’s career bests in runs (117), OPS (1.070), wRC+ (189), and WAR (8.4). Soto was third in 2015’s MVP voting and second in 2016, winning Silver Sluggers both years at 1B.

                The Chinooks went 105-57 and repeated as OBA champs in 2014, besting Tahiti in the finale. Christchurch repeated as AL champs in 2015, but lost their finals rematch to the Tropics. Soto’s playoff numbers were unremarkable these two years going 8-36 with 5 runs, 2 homers, 6 RBI, and 0 WAR. He fared better in the 2014 World Baseball Championship but only played 14 games and started 6 with 0.3 WAR and 1.003 OPS. The Chinooks took third in the event at 13-6.

                2016 was a historic 126-36 season for Christchurch, tying the world record for wins in a season. However, they suffered a shocking 4-3 defeat in the Oceania Championship to Guam. This was Soto’s best postseason effort going 11-28 with 4 runs, 4 doubles, 2 homers, 6 RBI, 1.164 OPS, and 0.5 WAR. The Chinooks qualified for the 2016 BGC and finished 11-8 in a five-way tie for fifth. Incidentally, the same Golden Eagles that took the OBA title from Christchurch went on to win the Grand Championship. Soto in the event had 18 hits, 13 runs, 4 doubles, 3 homers, 11 RBI, .829 OPS, and 0.5 WAR.

                Christchurch was one win behind Brisbane for the 2017 pennant. They stayed above .500 but out of the hunt for 2018 and 2019. Soto remained strong and took second in MVP voting for both 2017 and 2018. He won a Silver Slugger in 2017 at RF with league bests in batting average (.350), OBP (.397), OPS (1.030), and wRC+ (175). He won another batting title in 2018 at .359. Soto’s home run power dipped in 2019, but he made up for it by setting the OBA single-season doubles record with 56. This remains OBA’s top doubles mark as of 2037.

                Certainly Soto had lived up to his original deal and signed a five-year, $73,500,000 extension with Christchurch in May 2018. He led in doubles twice more and in 2022 led the AL in OPS (1.040) and wRC+ (180). That year at age 36, Soto had his career bests in hits (213), average (.369), and OBP (.408).

                Christchurch returned to the Australasia League perch to start the new decade, taking the pennant in 2020, 2021, and 2023. They were unable to add another OBA title to the mantle, falling to Guam, Vanuatu, and Port Moresby chronologically. Soto’s career playoff numbers weren’t bad, but they weren’t outstanding. In 35 games, he had 39 hits, 13 runs, 6 doubles, 5 homers, 21 RBI, .300/.324/.477 slash, 124 wRC+, and 0.6 WAR.

                As his career progressed, Soto battled with his Hall of Fame classmate Adrian Kali and Dale Harper for the OBA career doubles record. The group each passed the old high of 510 by Henry Bell, who had been the only one to reach 500 over OBA’s first 50 seasons. All three finished their careers in 2023 but Soto would be third at 570 behind Harper’s 596 and Kali’s 574. Soto was also hoping to join both in the 3000 hit club, although he failed to reach that mark.

                Soto wasn’t quite ready to retire when he did though. 2023 was the last year of the Christchurch deal and he still posted 2.9 WAR, although his .473 slugging was his lowest power output in more than a decade. Soto was a free agent for 2024 with no one signing him all year. He eventually retired that winter at age 39 and the Chinooks quickly honored him and retired his #2 uniform. With Christchurch, Soto had 1486 games, 1872 hits, 918 runs, 390 doubles, 297 home runs, 996 RBI, .333/.370/.577 slash, 158 wRC+, and 56.1 WAR.

                The final stats had 2425 games, 2921 hits, 1312 runs, 570 doubles, 58 triples, 419 home runs, 1483 RBI, 524 walks, .319/.358/.531 slash 147 wRC+, and 76.9 WAR. As of 2037, Soto is 27th in games, 8th in hits, 23rd in runs, 17th in total bases (4864), 3rd in doubles, 47th in home runs, 15th in runs, and 29th in WAR for position players. Among batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Soto’s triple slash ranks 14th/25th/56th and his .889 OPS is 28th.

                Soto probably falls just short of the “inner-circle” level of Hall of Fame inductees. Still, his tallies were plenty impressive and he was in the MVP conversation at his peak. Soto was also a big part of six Australasia League pennants, two OBA titles, and a 126-win season for Christchurch. He received 91.2% for a firm first ballot selection, making Soto the third of four inductees in the loaded 2029 class for the Oceania Baseball Association.



                August Lantz – Starting Pitcher – Guadalcanal Green Jackets – 89.1% First Ballot

                August Lantz was a 6’2’’, 200 pound right-handed pitcher from Perth, the largest city in Western Australia. Lantz was known for pinpoint control, although his stuff was solid despite not being overpowering. His movement did grade as below average, leading to occasional issues allowing home runs and an extreme flyball tendency.

                Lantz’s fastball peaked in the 93-95 mph range, but he had a deadly changeup that garnered many whiffs. He had a five-pitch arsenal that also included a knuckle curve, splitter, and forkball. Each option was respectable and Lantz knew how to alternative between his options. His stamina was very good, but he’d lose a few starts to injuries in multiple seasons. His defense and pickoff move were both subpar.

                Few players were more respected and admired amongst their peers. Lantz was a team captain and known for his leadership, work ethic, and loyalty. He was considered one of the highest character men of the Pacific League. Lantz spent his entire career in the PL despite growing up in Australia. In July 1999, a teenaged Lantz signed a developmental deal with Guadalcanal. He spent just over six years in the academy on the Solomon Islands before debuting in 2005 at age 21.

                Lantz was passable as a part-time starter as a rookie, earning a full-time rotation spot after that. His production was average in his first two full seasons, followed by struggles in 2008 that were exasperated by a sprained ankle and shoulder bursitis. Lantz bounced back with a good 2009, followed by his finest season in 2010. He took second in Pitcher of the Year voting with a league and career best 27-4 record. Lantz also posted his career high WAR (9.4), FIP- (58), and posted his first of four straight 300+ strikeout seasons.

                This helped Guadalcanal emerge as a contender after being generally mediocre since the 1980s. The Green Jackets ended a 32-year pennant drought and set a franchise record at 113-49. They would be defeated in the Oceania Championship by Melbourne’s dynasty, who also won 113 games in 2010. Lantz posted a 4.76 over 11.1 innings and two starts. The season performance though earned him a seven-year, $33,880,000 extension with Guadalcanal signed in April 2011.

                Lantz was never a Pitcher of the Year finalist again, but he posted 6+ WAR in each of the next four seasons. Guadalcanal was second in the Pacific League in 2011, then won back-to-back pennants in 2012-13. The Green Jackets were 103-59 in 2012 and got revenge over the Mets for the OBA title. Guadalcanal broke their franchise record in 2013 at 115-47, but fell in the finale to Christchurch.

                Overall, Lantz had good playoff numbers in those runs and finished with a career 3.07 ERA over 44 innings, 2-1 record, 48 strikeouts, and 1.2 WAR. Guadalcanal made the Baseball Grand Championship both years and finished 12-7 both times. In 2012, that put them in a five-way tie for the top spot, officially taking second after the tiebreakers were sorted. In 2013, the Green Jackets were one of three tied for third, officially placing fourth. Lantz had an iffy 4.60 ERA and 48 Ks over 31.1 innings in 2012. He fared better in 2013 with a 3.48 ERA over 31 innings and 45 strikeouts.

                Lantz was also a regular for his native Australia in the World Baseball Championship, although his stats were underwhelming. He had 36 appearances from 2008-21 with an 11-9 record, 4.22 ERA, 213.1 innings, 235 strikeouts, 56 walks, and 1.6 WAR. The Australians notably took fourth in 2012 and also earned a division title in 2017.

                Guadalcanal remained in the top half of the standings for the rest of the decade, but weren’t able to take the top spot again. Lantz remained largely steady, although he lost some time in 2015 to a strained hamstring and a strained oblique in 2017. Now 35-years old, Lantz signed a two-year, $5,920,000 extension in October 2018. After the 2019 campaign though, Lantz was traded to Honolulu for three prospects and a draft pick.

                For the Green Jackets, Lantz had a 233-164 record, 3.37 ERA, 3698 innings, 3805 strikeouts, 503 walks, 108 ERA+, and 80.1 WAR. For his 15 years of service and important role in three titles, Lantz’s #27 uniform would later be retired. Honolulu was the defending Pacific League champ and hoped Lantz could give them some pitching depth. They ultimately dropped to 83-79 in 2020, although Lantz gave them his standard production with a 3.56 ERA over 272.2 innings and 5.4 WAR. With the Honu, he became the 11th in OBA history to reach 4000 strikeouts.

                A free agent for the first time at age 37, Lantz signed a three-year, $24,300,000 deal with Guam, who had replaced Honolulu atop the PL in 2020. He was decent with a 3.27 ERA over 55 innings, but missed most of the 2021 campaign to shoulder inflammation. Lantz then lost the entire 2022 season with a damaged elbow ligament at the end of spring training. He was let go by the Golden Eagles for 2023.

                Lantz still wanted to play and Tahiti gave him a shot for 2023 on a one-year, $4,400,000 deal. He suffered a partially torn labrum in late March, keeping him out until the summer. Lantz made it back for two starts, allowing one run over six innings. However, elbow inflammation kept him out for the rest of the season. Lantz opted to retire that winter at age 40.

                The final stats for Lantz had a 252-183 record, 3.38 ERA, 4031.2 innings, 4126 strikeouts, 541 walks, 316/539 quality starts, 141 complete games, 18 shutouts, 107 ERA+, 84 FIP-, and 86.1 WAR. As of 2037, Lantz ranks 7th in wins, 8th in innings, 14th in strikeouts, and 17th in pitching WAR. His 1.21 BB/9 is 26th among all pitchers with 1000+ career innings. However, Lantz falls outside of the top 100 for the other rate stats.

                Lantz was never overwhelmingly dominant and wasn’t generally viewed as a top three pitcher in his prime. He was incredibly consistent though and racked up accumulations that certainly placed him among the greats. Lantz’s leadership couldn’t be overstated either, playing a big role in three Pacific League pennants and one OBA title for Guadalcanal. Lantz received 89.1% for the first ballot induction, the fourth member of a loaded 2029 Hall of Fame class for the Oceania Baseball Association.

                Comment

                • MrNFL_FanIQ
                  MVP
                  • Oct 2008
                  • 4988

                  #2183
                  2029 APB Hall of Fame

                  Austronesia Professional Baseball didn’t add anyone into the Hall of Fame in 2029, the first empty class since 2014. Two returners were above 60%, but short of the 66% induction requirement. 3B Nicky Abizar led all players with 61.7% on his third ballot, closely followed by SP Bagus Ranga at 61.1% in his eighth try. SP Anto Astuti was the best debut at 51.9%. CL Meng-Hsien Wu on his second ballot got to 50.1%.



                  SP I Komang Ainaga was dropped after ten failed ballots, peaking at 52.4% in 2023 and ending at 24.2%. In 12 seasons,, he had a 166-108 record, 2.15 ERA, 2635 innings, 2571 strikeouts, 268 walks, 126 ERA+, and 58.1 WAR. The rate stats were strong for Ainaga, but he didn’t have the awards, black ink, or longevity to stand out amongst the many great pitchers in APB.

                  LF Hector Constanza also fell off with a peak of 36.1% in his debut and finish at only 7.5%. He had a 17-year career and won six Silver Sluggers, posting 2230 hits, 1273 runs, 331 doubles, 152 triples, 305 home runs, 886 RBI, 892 walks, 1292 stolen bases, .235/.304/.399 slash, 127 wRC+, and 84.6 WAR. Hitters had a tough time generally with voters in the low-scoring APB, but it was even tougher as a guy without bigger power numbers.

                  Constanza notably led the league four times in runs scored and thrice in steals. As of 2037, he ranks 10th in runs scored, 36th in hits, 3rd in steals, and 37th in WAR among position players. Constanza was even a part of Zamboanga’s pennants in the early 2000s. For whatever reason, that resume didn’t resonate with voters and he was banished to the Hall of Pretty Good.

                  Comment

                  • MrNFL_FanIQ
                    MVP
                    • Oct 2008
                    • 4988

                    #2184
                    2029 CLB Hall of Fame




                    CF Zhen Zhang stood alone for induction at 92.5% for the 2029 Chinese League Baseball Hall of Fame class. SS Jiyu Liu barely missed joining him with 64% on his fourth ballot, two percent shy of the cut line. SP Rouzi Dilyar debuted at 57.8% and 1B Xugang Zheng had 56.5% for his second ballot. No one else was above 50% and no players were removed from the ballot after ten failed tries.



                    Zhen Zhang – Center Field – Foshan Flyers – 92.5% First Ballot

                    Zhen Zhang was a 6’4’’, 200 pound right-handed center fielder from Xi’an, China; the capital of the Shaanxi province with 12.95 million people. Zhang was a rock solid hitter against both sides with good-to-great contact and power skills. He was better than most in CLB at drawing walks and his strikeout rate was middling.

                    Zhang had a knack for extra base hits with 33 home runs, 24 doubles, and 10 triples per his 162 game average. He thrice had 40+ home run seasons in CLB, which was a difficult feat in the very low scoring league. Zhang’s speed was also quite good and he often could leg out an extra bag. He wasn’t the best at getting stolen bases and was caught more often than he succeeded.

                    Defensively, Zhang played exclusively in center field and was a reliably great glove man. Although he only won a single Gold Glove, Zhang leads all CLB CFs in career zone rating (212.8), putouts (5957), total chances (6159), double plays (32), and starts (2265). Zhang showed remarkable durability at a very physically demanding spot, starting 145+ games in all 15 of his full seasons in China. He also had an impressive work ethic and was very intelligent. Zhang’s combination of skills and reliability made him one of CLB’s most valuable and popular players ever.

                    Zhang had plenty of hype entering the 2007 CLB Draft and was picked second overall by Foshan. The Flyers kept him in their academy for most of 2008, only playing 23 games and starting eight. Zhang got the full-time gig in 2009 and held it through 2023 for Foshan. All 15 of his seasons saw 6.5+ WAR with 11 of them going for 9+ WAR and six reaching double-digits.

                    Despite his efforts, Foshan was mostly forgettable in the early 2010s. They earned a semifinal appearance in 2010, but wouldn’t make the playoffs again until 2018. In 2012, Zhang won his lone Gold Glove and took third in MVP voting with his first 10+ WAR season. 2013 was his first Silver Slugger and a second in MVP voting, leading the league in total bases (324), OBP (.359), slugging (.561), OPS (.929), and wRC+ (219). Zhang also posted 12.0 WAR.

                    Zhang was third in 2014’s MVP voting at 11.3 WAR, then finally won the top honor in 2015 and his second Silver Slugger on a league-best 12.9 WAR. To that point, he hadn’t led in the big counting stats, earning a lot of his value though his defense. Even though Foshan wasn’t winning, Zhang was a superstar and beloved by the fans. In February 2016, the Flyers ponied up and signed Zhang to an eight-year, $152 million deal, putting him at the top of the league’s earners.

                    He certainly justified the big deal, winning another Silver Slugger in 2017 with a third in MVP voting. Zhang won his second MVP and a Slugger in 2018 with his finest campaign, leading and posting career highs in runs (102), homers (51), total bases (388), slugging (.640), OPS (.987), and WAR (13.4). As of 2037, this ranks as the 10th-best WAR mark by a CLB position player.

                    This also ended Foshan’s playoff drought and started a six-year streak. Five of those seasons were as a wild card, but they earned semifinal trips from 2018-20 and 2022. The Flyers couldn’t get to the China Series, but you couldn’t blame Zhang. In 71 playoff starts, he had 89 hits, 45 runs, 25 doubles, 5 triples, 19 home runs, 51 RBI, .314/.352/.640 slash, 223 wRC+, and 5.2 WAR. Although Foshan came up short, it was the longest sustained success in franchise history thanks to Zhang.

                    He won additional Silver Sluggers from 2019-23 and earned his third MVP in 2020, leading that year in runs (99), total bases (369), slugging (.625), OPS (.979), wRC+ (22), and WAR (12.9). Zhang declined the final year contract option, opting for free agency at age 36. He wanted to try his hand at Major League Baseball and receive the payday that came with that. That appealed to Zhang more than trying to chase CLB leaderboard spots. Had he stayed, he certainly had a shot at the #1 spot for a couple big stats.

                    Foshan fans were sad to see him go, but cheered their beloved hero from afar. Zhang’s #3 uniform would get retired a few years ago and remains a very common wardrobe choice decades later. In total, Zhang had 2404 games, 2396 hits, 1159 runs, 346 doubles, 152 triples, 474 home runs, 1212 RBI, 706 walks, 497 steals, 594 caught stealing, .273/.327/.509 slash, 178 wRC+, and 151.1 WAR.

                    As of 2037, Zhang ranks 4th in games, 5th in runs, 4th in hits, 2nd in total bases (4468), 11th in doubles, 53rd in triples, 8th in home runs, 7th in RBI, 71st in steals, and 26th in walks. Zhang is narrowly second in WAR among position players, just behind Junjie Hsiung at 152.6. Two-way legend Chuchuan Cao has them both beat at 158.3.

                    Zhang’s .837 OPS ranks 75th among all batters with 3000+ plate appearances. He also ranks 60th in slugging, but misses the top 100 for average and OBP. Among center fielders, Zhang is the leader in games, runs, hits, total bases, doubles, homers, RBI, walks, and WAR. He’s usually cited as CLB’s best-ever CF, although Libo Li is close competition.

                    Cao was typically given the title of China’s best-ever baseball talent, but Zhang definitely had a case to be in the top five. He was beloved widely and respected for his efforts in trying to raise Foshan into a contender. Just about any top ten position player list for Chinese League Baseball has Zhang listed prominently. He was a fitting player to stand alone for Hall of Fame induction in 2029 at 92.5%.

                    Even while in the United States, Zhang would come home for the World Baseball Championship. He represented China from 2017-25 with 89 games, 87 hits, 60 runs, 20 doubles, 26 home runs 50 RBI, .263/.312/.559 slash, 153 wRC+, and 3.4 WAR. It was a relatively down period for the Chinese in the WBC with their lone division title coming in 2022.

                    Zhang’s MLB career began at age 36 in 2024 on a three-year, $84 million deal with Philadelphia. He thrived immediately with a Silver Slugger in 2024, posting 6.7 WAR and 49 home runs. The Phillies ended a four-year playoff drought and had the National Association’s top seed at 99-63, but they were upset in the second round. Philadelphia would be in the mid-tier for the next two years.

                    In 2025, Zhang was still good with 4.0 WAR, 35 homers, and .889 OPS. He had a poor start to 2026 though and only played 35 games with 15 starts with 0 WAR and .764 OPS. Philadelphia cut Zhang in July, putting his MLB stats at 337 games, 308 hits, 176 runs, 49 doubles, 12 triples, 88 homers, 199 RBI, .272/.320/.569 slash, 154 wRC+, and 10.7 WAR. Zhang finished 2026 in the African Second League with Comoros and retired that winter at age 38.

                    Combining his MLB/CLB stats, Zhang had 2741 games, 2704 hits, 1335 runs, 395 doubles, 164 triples, 562 home runs, 1411 RBI, 532 steals, 783 walks, .273/.327/.515 slash, and 161.8 WAR. As of 2037, Zhang ranks 16th among all position players in baseball history for WAR. He also sits 23rd in WAR among all players and has the second-most of anyone born in China.

                    It is of course hard to accurate compare across leagues and eras. CLB’s incredibly low-scoring environment makes Zhang’s counting stats look small compared to many of the others in a similar WAR space. Defensive value counts for a lot with Zhang and it is very difficult to weigh how much glove work matters relative to hitting and pitching. Regardless of where Zhang might slot when scholars debate, he’s certainly one of baseball’s true immortals and one of the top center fielders to ever do it.

                    Comment

                    • MrNFL_FanIQ
                      MVP
                      • Oct 2008
                      • 4988

                      #2185
                      2029 WAB Hall of Fame (Part 1)




                      West African Baseball had a three-player Hall of Fame class for 2029, easily captained by 1B/DH Lawrence Nassif at a nearly unanimous 99.4%. DH/OF Moses Ajaero also made it with his debut at 73.7%. 2B Kevin Ge got in at 69.8% on his fourth ballot, just passing the 66% requirement. The next closest was 3B Joey Agboola debuting at 58.0%. Two returners cracked 50% with CL Francis Koomson at 52.9% on his ninth try and SP Isaac Appiah with 52.6% for his fifth go. No one was dropped after ten failed ballots.



                      Lawrence Nassif – First Base/Designated Hitter – Conakry Coyotes – 99.4% First Ballot

                      Lawrence Nassif was a 6’3’’, 205 pound right-handed first baseman from Bafoussam, the largest city in Cameroon’s West Region with around 347,000 inhabitants. Nassif was an excellent contact hitter with a very strong bat. He wasn’t one to post gaudy totals, but his production was remarkably consistent. Nassif’s 162 game average got you 42 home runs and 131 RBI, posting 14 seasons with 40+ homers and 17 straight with 100+ RBI.

                      Nassif’s gap power was also quite good with 40 doubles and 4 triples per his 162 game average. His ability to draw walks and avoid strikeouts were both fairly average, but getting many quality hits easily made up for that. Nassif’s baserunning instincts were pretty good, but he could only do so much as his speed was abysmal.

                      While his swing was silky smooth, Nassif’s glove work was laughably poor. He split his career starts evenly between first base and designated hitter. Nassif was an ironman who started 145+ games in 18 consecutive seasons. He was also one of the highest character men in baseball and was an excellent team captain. Nassif’s incredible bat, leadership, work ethic, intelligence, and adaptability made him one of West Africa’s most beloved baseball icons ever.

                      Nassif moved from Cameroon to Nigeria by signing a developmental deal in April 2001 with Kano. Most people don’t realize he started with the Condors since he never played a game for them. He spent the better part of four years in their academy, but was traded to Ouagadougou in December 2004 in a three-player swap. Nassif debuted in 2005 with 43 games and 23 starts for the Osprey at age 20.

                      2006 began an 18-year run as a regular WAB fixture. Nassif had a respectable rookie campaign, but really found his power in his second full year. Nassif won a Silver Slugger as a DH and was third in 2007’s MVP voting, leading the Eastern League in runs (115), and RBI (129). This was also his first of eight seasons worth 6+ and first of ten seasons with an OPS above one. It also gave Ouagadougou only their second-ever 100 win season, although they were upset by Ibadan in the playoffs.

                      The Osprey had sustained success with Nassif, earning playoff berths from 2007-09 and from 2011-12. Ouagadougou led the standings in 2009 and 2012, setting a franchise-best 111-51 in the former. However, the Osprey couldn’t make it beyond the ELCS with defeats there in 2009, 2011, and 2012. Nassif’s playoff stats were surprisingly pedestrian over 21 games with 21 hits, 7 runs, 4 doubles, 4 home runs, 12 RBI, .269/.314/.474 slash, 108 wRC+, and 0.5 WAR.

                      Nassif’s stellar power was a big reason they got that far though. He won another Silver Slugger as a DH in 2008 and took third in MVP voting in 2008 and 2009, along with a second place in 2011. Nassif’s lone time as the WARlord came in 2009 with 7.5 along with his lone batting title with a career best .368. His best WAR (7.8), wRC+ (190), and OPS (1.077) all came in 2011; which also had his first 50 home run season. Nassif also led in runs and OPS in 2012.

                      Ouagadougou had given Nassif a five-year, $13,180,000 extension in May 2008. He declined the option year after the 2012 campaign and opted for free agency at age 28. With the Osprey, Nassif had 1138 games, 1449 hits, 762 runs, 294 doubles, 30 triples, 294 home runs, 842 RBI, .333/.371/.617 slash, 168 wRC+, and 45.6 WAR. By some metrics, it was his most productive run, although Nassif would be best remembered for his second stop. Still, Ouagadougou fans liked to claim him even if Nassif was inducted in Conakry’s black and orange instead of the blue and red.

                      The Coyotes backed up the Brinks truck, signing Nassif for an eight-year, $114,400,000 deal. It was a bold move for Conakry, who had finished a last place 62-100 in 2012. They improved slightly, but would still be below .500 from 2013-16. Nassif was third in 2013 and 2017’s MVP voting and won another Slugger in 2017. He led the Western League in home runs in both 2013 (43) and with a career high 51 in 2016.

                      Conakry made it to .500 in 2017 with another Slugger and third place in MVP voting for Nassif. 2018 would start a five-year playoff streak for the Coyotes with Nassif again winning a Slugger and taking third in MVP voting. In 2019, Nassif had a career best 159 RBI. The Coyotes lost in the second round in 2018 and the WLCS in 2019.

                      In 2020, Conakry broke through at 107-55 and defeated Yaounde for the West African Championship.
                      Nassif’s playoff stats were poor the prior two years, but he stepped up in 2020 in eight starts with 10 hits, 6 runs, 3 doubles, 2 homers, 4 RBI, .954 OPS, and 0.4 WAR. The Coyotes then surprised on the world stage by finishing 14-5 in the Baseball Grand Championship, second only to Denver. In 19 starts, Nassif had 19 hits, 12 runs, 5 doubles, 5 homers, 18 RBI, .253/.309/.520, 166 wRC+, and 0.9 WAR.

                      It was a heck of a way to end an eight-year run for Conakry as Nassif cemented his spot in the hearts in the Guinean capital. For the Coyotes, Nassif had 1270 games, 1726 hits, 883 runs, 307 doubles, 338 home runs, 1101 RBI, .341/.384/.612 slash, 151 wRC+, and 41.1 WAR. Conakry would go onto retire Nassif’s #19 uniform for his efforts.

                      Nassif had also risen up the leaderboards with his consistent numbers. In 2020, he joined Darwin Morris as WAB’s only 3000 hit club members.
                      Nassif also joined Morris and Ahamad Mathew as the only players at 600 home runs. He also had a chance to join Morris in the 2000 run and 2000 RBI clubs. Nassif’s production was slightly down from his Ouagadougou peaks, but he was still looking quite solid in his mid 30s. With his impeccable durability, Nassif seemed primed to make a run at some of Morris’s tallies.

                      The 36-year old Nassif moved to Cotonou on a three-year, $24,600,000 deal. The Copperheads would be mid-tier in his run, but Nassif stayed steady and won a Silver Slugger in 2022. That was his fifth overall and only one playing first base. Despite his power, Nassif also never won MVP, hurt by being a DH. He crossed 2000 RBI in July 2021, but did fall short of the 2000 run milestone.

                      With 215 hits in 2021, Nassif passed Morris’s 3288 to become WAB’s new hit king. He held the title only briefly as the eventual world leader Fares Belaid had him beat in 2024. Nassif did usurp Morris’s 2129 RBI for the top spot and did hold that one for a decade before finally being caught. He fell 51 homers short of Morris for the top spot, but notably passed him for the most total bases. Nassif also became the WAB doubles king and the first to 700, although that was also quickly ceded to Belaid.

                      With Cotonou, Nassif had 473 games, 591 hits, 314 runs, 103 doubles, 123 homers, 395 RBI, .324/.368/.592 slash, 140 wRC+, and 12.2 WAR. He had still been a strong hitter with 39 homers and 3.1 WAR in his last year, however his batting average was sub .300 and OPS sub .900 for the first time since his rookie year. Nassif wanted to still play, but couldn’t find any suitors after a poor showing in the 2024 World Baseball Championship with Cameroon. Only two years prior, he had posted 1.248 OPS over 11 WBC games. He opted for retirement in winter 2024 at age 40.

                      Nassif finished with 2881 games, 3766 hits, 1959 runs, 704 doubles, 65 triples, 755 home runs, 2338 RBI, 729 walks, 1926 strikeouts, 165 steals, .335/.376/.611 slash, 156 wRC+, and 98.9 WAR. As of 2037, Nassif ranks 7th in games, 3rd in hits, 7th in runs, 5th in total bases (6865), 4th in doubles, 7th in home runs, 3rd in RBI, 32nd in walks, 68th in strikeouts, and 9th in WAR among position players. Among batters with 3000+ plate appearances in WAB, Nassif’s .987 OPS is 24th and his triple slash ranks 39th/56th/27th.

                      The tallies also reach the leaderboards for all of pro baseball history as of 2037 as Nassif ranks 18th in hits, 46th in runs, 16th in doubles, and 13th in RBI. Among Hall of Famers across all leagues, Nassif also ranks 44th in batting average. He did lose WAR points though largely because half of his starts were as a DH and he played putrid defense at first base.

                      Still, Nassif’s hitting ability put him among the inner-circle of Hall of Famers for West African Baseball. He likely is on the shortlist for the best batters to never win MVP, although he came close several times. At 99.4%, Nassif was a nearly unanimous headliner for a strong three-player 2029 class.

                      Comment

                      • MrNFL_FanIQ
                        MVP
                        • Oct 2008
                        • 4988

                        #2186
                        2029 WAB Hall of Fame (Part 2)




                        Moses Ajaero – Designated Hitter/Right Field – Dakar Dukes – 73.7% First Ballot

                        Moses Ajaero was a 6’1’’, 195 pound left-handed hitter and outfielder from Kano, Nigeria’s second-largest city with more than four million citizens. Ajaero was a solid contact hitter overall who had a good pop in his bat especially against right-handed pitching. He had a career .959 OPS and 142 wRC+ against RHP compared to .760 OPS and 97 wRC+ against lefties. Ajaero’s ability to get walks and avoid strikeouts were both below average at best.

                        Ajaero was skilled at getting extra base hits with a 162 game average of 29 doubles, 17 triples, and 31 home runs. He often could leg out an extra base as he had rock solid speed. Ajaero was also one of the craftier base stealers who stole successfully nearly 75% of the time. His speed didn’t translate into range though and his arm and glove work were both mediocre. Ajaero made about 60% of his starts as a designated hitter. Most of the rest came in right field where he graded as a lousy defender.

                        Wherever you placed him, Ajaero was almost always going to be ready to go. His excellent durability gave him 150+ starts each year from 2009-21. Few were going to outwork Ajaero and he was one of the smartest guys in the game. He wasn’t going to take on an active leadership role, but you knew you’d always get Ajaero’s absolute best effort on the diamond.

                        Although he grew up in Kano, it would be rival Port Harcourt who snagged Ajaero as a teenage amateur in April 2004. His time with the Hillcats was limited with 62 games and 15 starts from 2007-08. Ajaero’s time there ended thanks to the 2008 expansion draft, as he was picked in the seventh round, 26th overall, by Yaounde. He was a full-time starter in his three seasons with the Yellow Birds, leading the Eastern League with 25 triples in 2011.

                        For Yaounde, Ajaero had 470 games, 537 hits, 252 runs, 89 doubles, 60 triples, 66 home runs, 269 RBI, .309/.351/.544 slash, 137 wRC+, and 10.6 WAR. In January 2012, the Yellow Birds traded Ajaero to Dakar for prospects RF Shafiu Hassan and P Cledilson Henrique. Both teams won in the deal as Hassan would become a 16-year starter and MVP winner for Yaounde who most expect will get his own Hall of Fame induction once eligible. Henrique was never amazing, but he had his own 14-year career as a journeyman pitcher.

                        Ajaero’s most famous run came with Dakar, who was in “win now” mode. The Dukes had ended a 16-year playoff drought the prior year and were hoping to become a regular contender. Ajaero helped them achieve that goal as their playoff streak extended through 2017. In his 2012 debut, Ajaero won a Silver Slugger at DH and led the Western League in homers (36) and total bases (358). He also hit for the cycle in September against Banjul.

                        In the playoffs, Ajaero made his presence especially known, winning Western League Championship Series MVP in Dakar’s upset of top-seed Abidjan. The Dukes did fall in the WAB Championship to Lome. Ajaero’s playoff stats saw 15 starts, 21 hits, 9 runs, 4 doubles, 5 homers, 14 RBI, 1.079 OPS, and 0.9 WAR. Dakar was happy with their acquisition and the next spring gave the soon-to-be 26-year old Ajaero a four-year, $23,580,000 extension. He won his second Silver Slugger in 2013 and was reliably productive after that, although he wasn’t a league leader or awards winner.

                        Dakar took the top seed in 2013 and won the WL pennant again, falling to Cotonou in the WAB Championship. The Dukes were denied in the 2014 and 2015 WLCS. In 2016, Dakar set a franchise record at 112-50 and finally won it all for the first time, besting Libreville in the final. The Dukes would take last at 4-15 in that year’s Baseball Grand Championship. A second round exit in 2017 was the final playoff berth of the run.

                        Ajaero’s playoff stats were strong in his first three runs, but weak in the latter three. On the whole he was good with 47 starts, 55 hits, 29 runs, 11 doubles, 4 triples, 13 home runs, 38 RBI, .296/.321/.608 slash, 130 wRC+, and 1.5 WAR. In the BGC, Ajaero posted 20 hits, 11 runs, 6 doubles, 4 homers, 16 RBI, .282/.316/.535 slash, 157 wRC+, and 0.7 WAR over 19 starts. His efforts in Dakar’s 2010s success led to Ajaero’s #27 uniform later getting retired.

                        In 2015, Ajaero joined the short list to hit for the cycle twice in a career, doing it against Freetown in September. He also had a 27-game hit streak that ended in late April 2016. 2015 had Ajaero’s career highs in WAR (6.9), homers (42), triple slash (.360/.399/.709), and OPS (1.108). He had 42 homers again in 2016 with a career best 125 runs and 137 RBI. Ajaero scored 125 again in 2017 and 119 in 2018. After the 2016 season, Dakar signed the still only 29-year old Ajaero to a seven-year, $88,600,000 extension.

                        Dakar missed the playoffs by one game in 2018, then collapsed hard and spent the next five years below 70 wins. Ajaero continued to do his job admirably until regressing significantly in 2022 to a -0.8 WAR season. He was reduced to a backup role for 2023 and retired that winter at age 36. With Dakar, Ajaero had 1779 games, 2043 hits, 1198 runs, 313 doubles, 183 triples, 377 home runs, 1165 RBI, 709 steals, .302/.343/.570 slash, 129 wRC+, and 40.1 WAR.

                        Ajaero ended with 2311 games, 2608 hits, 1468 runs, 408 doubles, 243 triples, 448 home runs, 1449 RBI, 471 walks, 1850 strikeouts, 884 steals, .303/.344/.563 slash, 130 wRC+, and 50.8 WAR. As of 2037, Ajaero ranks 33rd in games, 34th in hits, 27th in runs, 27th in total bases (4846), 12th in triples, 43rd in homers, and 37th in RBI. In part due to being a primary DH, Ajaero ranks only 93rd in WAR among position players.

                        His numbers were good, but not overwhelming. It was also hard to stand out considering the many great DHs of the era, including his Hall of Fame classmate Lawrence Nassif. What put Ajaero over the top for most voters were solid playoff stats. He was a key starter in a Western League dynasty run for Dakar and helped them to their first WAB title. Ajaero’s 73.7% didn’t cross the 66% requirement by a lot, but it earned a first ballot induction for West African Baseball’s 2029 class.



                        Kevin “Cushion” Ge – Second Base/Designated Hitter – Monrovia Diplomats – 69.8% Fourth Ballot

                        Kevin Ge was a 6’3’’, 200 pound switch-hitting second baseman from Praia, the capital of Cape Verde. Ge wasn’t amazing at any one thing, but was generally above average to good in terms of contact, power, and eye. His 162 game average got you 38 doubles, 8 triples, and 28 home runs.
                        Ge’s strikeout rate was subpar, but had enough high quality hits to make up for it. He was stronger facing lefties (.926 OPS, 143 wRC+) over righties (.858 OPS, 127 wRC+).

                        Baserunning was one of Ge’s few skills where he was truly great, although his speed was merely good. Like his Hall of Fame classmates, Ge spent a lot of time as a designated hitter. Just over half of his starts came as a second baseman and he graded as a decent defender. Ge’s knees and back did cost him a lot of starts, although his strong work ethic pushed him to an 18-year career regardless.

                        Ge moved to Niger as a teenager after getting signed to a developmental deal in May 1997 with Niamey. He spent the better part of six years in their academy, officially debuting with three plate appearances in 2002 at age 22. Ge saw part-time use over the following two years before becoming a full-time starter in 2005. That year, he earned an all-star selection and had 4.1 WAR.

                        However, he was surprised in February 2006 when Niamey traded him to Monrovia straight up for pitcher Ndala Baba. The Diplomats wanted hitting depth fresh off their 2005 pennant win. Ge would be best known for his run with Monrovia, debuting with a Silver Slugger (2B) and third place in MVP voting. 2006 had Ge’s career highs in WAR (7.2) and stolen bases (63).

                        Monrovia dominated in 2006, winning the WAB Championship over Niamey with a 111-51 record. Ge’s playoff debut was awful with a .459 OPS in nine games, but his overall production earned him an eight-year, $24,500,000 extension that winter. The Diplomats ended up winning the WL pennant again in 2007 and 2008. They lost in a rematch with the Atomics in 2007, then earned their second title over Lagos in 2008. Monrovia had the top seed in 2009 but was upset in the WLCS by Abidjan. The Diplomats made the playoffs again in 2010 and 2011, but lost both times in the second round.

                        Ge fared better in his later postseason trips, winning WLCS MVP in 2007. In 42 playoff starts for Monrovia, he had 52 hits, 34 runs, 10 doubles, 4 triples, 8 home runs, 32 RBI, 22 steals, .297/.317/.537 slash, 132 wRC+, and 1.9 WAR. He won his second Silver Slugger in 2010, but was never a league leader or in awards conversations beyond that.

                        Injuries also began to bother Ge more in his later years with the Diplomats. A knee sprain cost him six weeks in mid 2011. Later that year, Ge suffered a ruptured MCL that kept him out for a major chunk of 2012. Once back from that, Ge’s overall production was noticeably down from his prior standard. Monrovia didn’t re-sign him after his contract expired with the 2014 season, sending Ge to free agency for his age 35 season.

                        With Monrovia, Ge had 1178 games, 1371 hits, 722 runs, 266 doubles, 54 triples, 202 home runs, 731 RBI, 383 steals, .302/.349/.518 slash, 134 wRC+, and 37.7 WAR. It was a strong nine year run to help the Diplomats go on a dynasty run. Ge remains very popular in Liberia years later and his #14 uniform would later be retired by Monrovia.

                        Ge ended up back where his career started by signing with Niamey at $29,200,000 over four years. He returned to form in 2015 and posted career highs in homers (40), RBI (135), runs (118), triple slash .356/.387/.656), and OPS (1.043). A fractured hand cost Ge part of 2016, but he again was solid in 2017. Torn ankle ligaments cost him most of 2018. Niamey was mostly rebuilding then with a lone first round playoff exit in 2017.

                        Between stints for the Atomics, Ge had 787 games, 896 this, 477 runs, 195 doubles, 45 triples, 144 home runs, 511 RBI, 228 steals, .314/.353/.566 slash, 137 wRC+, and 20.1 WAR. Coming up on age 39, Ge signed a two-year, $12,200,000 deal with Lome. They were happy to have a veteran as the Lasers were rebuilding after their own early 2010s successes.

                        Ge was a decent starter in 2019, then was reduced to a part-time role with mediocre 2020 results. Over 275 games, Ge had 291 hits, 131 runs, 59 doubles, 14 triples, 36 homers, 148 RBI, 76 steals, .286/.326/.477 slash, 104 wRC+, and 1.3 WAR.
                        Ge wanted to play in 2021, but didn’t have enough to offer other teams. He finally retired at age 41 after going unsigned.

                        The final tallies for Ge had 2240 games, 2558 hits, 1330 runs, 520 doubles, 113 triples, 382 home runs, 1390 RBI, 535 walks, 2053 strikeouts, 687 steals, .304/.347/.529 slash, 131 wRC+, and 59.0 WAR. As of 2037, Ge ranks 43rd in games, 36th in hits, 40th in runs, 44th in total bases (4450), 38th in doubles, 79th in homers, 43rd in RBI, and 59th in WAR among position players.

                        His totals were good, but definitely a bit on the borderline. Ge also didn’t have any black ink and limited personal accolades, along with the “DH penalty.” Working in his favor was a starting role in a dynasty run for Monrovia. Being a key contributor during a team’s reign of dominance often could make the difference when compared to a similar player who instead was on middling teams.

                        Ge debuted on the 2026 ballot at 58.6%. He just missed the 66% cut in 2027 at 63.8%, then dropped back to 57.8% in 2028. In a way, the 2029 Hall of Fame ballot having other DHs might have helped Ge also get over that stigma. His resume was comparable to Moses Ajaero and many voters figured if one belonged, both did. Ge bumped across the line at 69.8% for a fourth ballot selection to cap off West African Baseball’s 2029 crew.

                        Comment

                        • MrNFL_FanIQ
                          MVP
                          • Oct 2008
                          • 4988

                          #2187
                          2029 SAB Hall of Fame

                          South Asia Baseball saw two slam dunk Hall of Fame inductees for 2029 with two-way star Huynh Pham at 98.5% and SP Tamim Hasan at 982%. The best returner was SP Siddhant Shakya at 56.2% on his second try, followed by CF Chris Saandeep at 50.5% on his fourth ballot. No one else was above 50%.



                          Quoc Pham fell off the ballot after ten failed tries as perhaps another victim of the anti-catcher bias of voters. He had an 18-year career with Dhaka, winning nine Gold Gloves, five Silver Sluggers, and an SAB title in 2011. Pham played 2052 games with 1942 hits, 945 runs, 439 doubles, 376 home runs, 1167 RBI, .257/.300/.471 slash, 116 wRC+, and 64.0 WAR.

                          Pham’s hitting wasn’t amazing and had the double penalty of the low accumulations that result simply from being a catcher. As of 2037, he ranks third in WAR among SAB catchers, but couldn’t become the third catcher to make SAB’s HOF. Pham came close with a 57.6% debut, but only went down after with a finish of only 24.0%.

                          Trung Lai was another catcher dropped in 2029 after ten failed ballots, peaking at 54.8% in 2022 and ending with 16.4%. He had a 19-year career with six teams with one Gold Glove, two Silver Sluggers, and five championship rings (four with Ho Chi Minh City, one with Hanoi). Lai ranks sixth in WAR among catchers as of 2037 with 60.0 WAR, 2153 hits, 2102 games, 824 runs, 381 doubles, 144 home runs, 966 RBI, .294/.339/.414 slash, and 116 wRC+.

                          Also dropped was LF Tommy Toe, who won five Gold Gloves and was finals MVP in Dhaka’s 2011 SAB Championship win. He peaked at 42.4% in his 2020 debut and fell to 4.6% at the end. Toe had 2100 games, 2214 hits, 1164 runs, 367 doubles, 100 triples, 472 home runs, 1346 RBI, .283/.331/.536 slash, 141 wRC+, and 72.7 WAR. With the many powerful outfielders of the era, Toe’s lack of black ink made him forgettable by comparison.

                          Lastly SP Ba Phan ended his tenth ballot at 3.0% after debuting with 41.2%. The 2010 Pitcher of the Year with Hanoi, major injuries in his early 30s ended his run prematurely. Phan had a 142-108 record, 3.52 ERA, 2342.2 innings, 2723 strikeouts, 715 walks, 111 ERA+, and 40.7 WAR. He might have had a chance with a few more years of tallies, but alas the Baseball Gods can be ruthless towards pitcher’s elbows.



                          Huynh Pham – Pitcher/First Base – Vientiane Vampires – 98.5% First Ballot

                          Huynh Pham was a 6’0’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher and first baseman from Hong Gai, a ward of Ha Long city in Vietnam. The city has around 270,000 people in the country’s northeast. Pham is often cited as the best-ever two-way player to come out of South Asia Baseball. His pitching was his biggest strength with great stuff and solid movement, although his control was subpar.

                          Pham’s fastball peaked in the 95-97 mph range and was good, but his most dangerous pitches were his curveball and changeup. He also had a slider as a fourth option. Pham’s stamina was excellent and he had excellent durability despite the intense wear and tear of a two-way schedule. His pickoff move and ability to hold runners was excellent and his defense on the mound was solid.

                          Offensively, Pham was a well-rounded bat with great contact skills and a low strikeout rate, although he was below average at drawing walks. He had a rock solid pop in his bat with 37 doubles, 3 triples, and 28 home runs per his 162 game average. Pham’s biggest offensive flaw was abysmal baserunning and speed. He played first base when not pitching and graded as passable defensively.

                          On top of this unique skillset, Pham was one of the game’s great captains. He was known by peers and fans for his leadership, loyalty, work ethic, and selflessness. Unsurprisingly, Pham became one of the region’s great baseball superstars. He was one of Vietnam’s best-ever players and became beloved in his home country despite his pro career being elsewhere.

                          Pham did regularly represent Vietnam in the World Baseball Championship, although his numbers on the world stage were surprisingly underwhelming. From 2010-23 on the mound, Pham had a 5-15 record, 3.95 ERA, 198.1 innings, 270 strikeouts, and 1.2 WAR. His hitting was limited to 28 starts and 38 games with 0.8 WAR. Vietnam notably had a division title with Pham in 2010, his rookie year.

                          It was clear by the 2009 SAB Draft that Pham was the top rated prospect. Vientiane had the #1 overall pick and grabbed Pham, making him a full-time starting pitcher right away. His debut season saw a league-worst 91 walks, but also 303 strikeouts, 3.30 ERA, and 6.3 WAR to earn Rookie of the Year honors. Pham began playing both ways regularly in his sophomore season and continued that role for the rest of his Vampires tenure.

                          In 2012, Pham became the first in SAB history to win MVP and Pitcher of the Year in the same season. On the mound, he had Southeast Asia League and career bests for wins (21-5), strikeouts (347), and pitching WAR (8.0). His 2.35 ERA missed the Triple Crown by only five points. He also started a six-year streak of 300 K seasons. On top of that, Pham had 96 games, 3.9 WAR, and .933 OPS with his bat.

                          Vientiane had been generally terrible since the mid 1990s, but Pham’s efforts turned them into a sustained contender. It was hard to compete with Yangon’s eventual world record breaking playoff streak and the back end of Hanoi’s dynasty run. The Vampires were typically a wild card with berths from 2012-14 and from 2016-20.

                          Pham repeated as Pitcher of the Year in 2013 and was second in MVP voting, posting a league and career best 1.70 ERA. This was his best offensive season as well by hits (135), RBI (64), and WAR (5.4). Pham’s combined 12.8 WAR would be his single-season peak and was the second-best by an SAB two-way guy behind Sikander Harija’s 14.2 in 2000. That winter, Vientiane gave Pham a five-year, $27,900,000 extension.

                          2013 also was Pham’s best playoff effort with Vientiane, going 3-0 with an 0.75 ERA over 24 innings and 31 strikeouts. The Vampires got to the SEAL Championship, but fell to Hanoi. They had first round exits in 2012 and 2014, then missed the playoffs in 2015. Pham kept rolling, winning his second MVP in 2014 while finishing second in Pitcher of the Year voting.

                          Vientiane won their first-ever division title in 2016 and had SEAL’s top seed at 100-62, although they were again thwarted by Hanoi in the LCS. Pham won his third Pitcher of the Year and was second in MVP voting, leading in wins, innings, and strikeouts. Pham repeated as POTY in 2017 with an ERA title (2.55) and the lead in strikeouts (331), and WAR (7.7). Vientiane was a wild card and lost to Yangon in the first round.

                          For his playoff career with Vientiane, Pham had a 5-4 record, 3.07 ERA, 67.1 innings, 81 strikeouts, 124 ERA+, and 1.2 WAR on the mound. At the plate, he had 19 games, 20 hits, 8 runs, 6 doubles, 4 home runs, 10 RBI, .294/.324/.559 slash, 149 wRC+, and 0.6 WAR. Although they had yet to win it all, Vientiane was finally a contender and Pham was beloved in the Laotian capital. It would devastate Vampires fans to see Pham go, but they would at least get their first pennant in 2019.

                          With Vientiane on the mound, Pham had a 140-75 record, 2.73 ERA, 1925.1 innings, 2554 strikeouts, 509 walks, 140 ERA+, and 52.5 WAR. At the plate, Pham had 693 games, 802 hits, 390 runs, 174 doubles, 125 homers, 430 RBI, .325/.368/.561 slash, 154 wRC+, and 25.1 WAR. Pham remained beloved despite the sting of him leaving for a rival and his #12 uniform would eventually be retired by the Vampires.

                          Pham’s Vientiane exit was a confusing one. He declined his contract option on October 17, 2017; then signed a new six-year, $54 million extension with the Vampires eight days later. Less than a month after that, Vientiane traded Pham to rival Yangon for prospects RF Jaivira Kanjam and SP Noor Choudhari. Kanjam was then traded in a separate deal shortly after and never played for the Vampires, while Choudhari ended up being a back-end starter for a few years.

                          Even though Vientiane still was competitive for the next few years and won a pennant in 2019, the deal was a baffling one on their end. It certainly made sense though for the Green Dragons, the defending SAB Champion in the 23rd year of their record-breaking playoff streak. The streak continued on through Pham’s six-year tenure in Yangon.

                          Interestingly enough, the trade occurred after the SAB season, but before that year’s Baseball Grand Championship had concluded. Thus, Pham made his first Green Dragons appearance with a quality start in the BGC, giving up two runs over seven innings.

                          The Green Dragons had Pham focus on just pitching in 2018, which paid off for his fifth Pitcher of the Year award and third ERA title at 1.85. He was back to two-way work in 2019 and was third in MVP voting, posting 4.2 WAR offensively and 5.4 WAR pitching. Pham only saw sporadic use offensively in the following three seasons. In 2021, he won his sixth and final Pitcher of the Year, joining Zainal bin Aziz (8) as the only SAB aces to win the award six times.

                          Yangon had the top seed in both 2018 and 2019, but lost in the first round both times. They were a wild card in 2020, but went on a surprise run to the Southeast Asia League pennant, eventually falling to Delhi in the SAB Championship. Pham had a strong playoff run with a 1.97 ERA and 43 strikeouts over 32 innings. The Green Dragons had another first round exit in 2021.

                          In 2022, the now 35-year old Pham had his first major injury setback with a partially torn labrum, keeping him out the first three months. Yangon won their fifth and final SAB Championship of their historic streak, besting Mumbai in the final. Pham struggled in the playoffs with a 6.04 ERA over 25.1 innings. Elbow inflammation limited him to one poor Baseball Grand Championship start, giving up seven runs in 4.2 innings. Yangon finished 11-8 in the event in a five-way tie for fourth.

                          Pham’s pitching never returned to form after the labrum tear, struggling to a 4.40 ERA over 153.1 innings in 2023. They put him back into the field that year and he could still hit, posting 1.012 OPS and 2.8 WAR in only 62 games. Yangon fell in the first round and Pham wasn’t used in the playoffs. With his deal expiring, Pham seemed cooked as a pitcher and didn’t want to convert full-time to first base. He retired that winter at age 36.

                          With Yangon, Pham on the mound had an 82-40 record, 3.00 ERA, 1165.1 innings, 1382 strikeouts, 373 walks, 133 ERA+, and 27.6 WAR. At the plate, Pham saw 281 games, 273 hits, 118 runs, 51 doubles, 41 homers, 132 RBI, .361/.388/.597 slash, 168 wRC+, and 10.5 WAR.

                          Pham’s final pitching numbers had a 222-115 record, 2.83 ERA, 3090.2 innings, 3936 strikeouts, 882 walks, 277/410 quality starts, 86 complete games, 28 shutouts, 138 ERA+, 76 FIP-, and 80.1 WAR. As of 2037, Pham ranks 9th in wins, 18th in innings, 18th in complete games, 5th in shutouts, 10th in strikeouts, 2nd in walks, and 12th in pitching WAR. His ERA is 64th among all pitchers with 1000+ innings and his .615 opponent’s OPS ranks 64th.

                          Most agree that Pham was a first ballot Hall of Famer on his pitching alone. At the plate, he added 974 games, 1075 hits, 508 runs, 225 doubles, 166 home runs, 562 RBI, 181 walks, .333/.373/.569 slash, 157 wRC+, and 35.6 WAR. Pham reached the 3000+ plate appearances to qualify for the rate leaderboards and his .942 OPS ranks 43rd. His triple slash also ranks 11th/39th/58th, showing his hitting efficiency. Pham likely had the talent to be at or near HOF level offensively had he dedicated his full efforts there.

                          Pham finished with 115.7 combined WAR, which ranks 11th among all world two-way stars as of 2037 and first among SAB ones. He ranks 17th in WAR amongst all SAB players. Pham certainly goes down as an inner-circle level player and is generally cited as SAB’s best-ever two-way star. At 98.5%, Pham co-headlined an impressive two-player 2029 class for South Asia Baseball. He’s also often cited as a top five player to ever come out of Vietnam.



                          Tamim Hasan – Starting Pitcher – Nagpur Patriots – 98.2% First Ballot

                          Tamim Hasan was a 6’6’’, 195 pound right-handed pitcher from Chittagong, Bangladesh’s second-largest city with 9.2 million people within the district. Hasan was well-rounded with good-to-great stuff, movement, and control. His 99-101 mph fastball was solid, but Hasan confounded batters with a six-pitch arsenal. He also had a cutter, splitter, forkball, slider, and changeup; an arsenal that led to an extreme groundball tendency.

                          Hasan’s stamina was good and his durability was fantastic, tossing 200+ innings in all but one year from 2008-22. He did struggle holding runners and had poor glove work. Hasan wasn’t going to take a leadership role, but he certainly wasn’t going to cause problems. He was generally liked by teammates and fans across four teams and 17 seasons.

                          In September 2002, Hasan left Bangladesh for India by signing a developmental deal with Jaipur. After four full years in their academy, Hasan debuted for the Jokers in 2007 at age 20 with 10 solid starts. He also tossed a three-hit shutout in the playoffs, although Jaipur lost in the first round despite having the top seed. The Jokers moved Hasan into the full-time rotation from 2008 onward.

                          Hasan’s numbers were merely decent in his first few seasons. Jaipur lost in the 2008 ILCS to Mumbai, then won the pennant in 2009 over Kolkata. They would be defeated by Ho Chi Minh City in the SAB Championship. Hasan struggled in his later playoff starts for the Jokers, finishing with a 4.39ERA over 41 innings and 54 Ks. Jaipur began a rebuild and was below .500 from 2010-15.

                          He started to look more like an ace with sub-three ERA and 6+ WAR seasons in 2011-12. Hasan also struck out 333 in 2011, his career high. The rebuilding Jokers gave him a three-year, $11,800,000 extension in April 2012. However, Hasan regressed somewhat in 2013 and Jaipur explored trade options. In January 2014, he was traded to Yangon for three prospects.

                          With Jaipur, Hasan had a 79-70 record, 3.31 ERA, 1399.2 innings, 1783 strikeouts, 342 walks, 109 ERA+, and 29.7 WAR. He was 27 and joined a Green Dragons squad that was 19 years deep into a world record 29 season playoff streak. Hasan proved a good short-term investment, leading the Southeast Asia League in wins in both 2014 and 2015. He also led in WAR in 2014 at 6.7 and strikeouts in 2015 at 320. 2015 also had his best WAR to that point at 8.0, although Hasan wasn’t a Pitcher of the Year finalist.

                          Yangon repeated as SEAL champ in 2014-15. They lost the 2014 SAB Championship to Kolkata with Hasan posting a 2.59 ERA over 31.1 playoff innings with 49 strikeouts. In 2015, the Green Dragons went 111-51 and bested Mumbai in the SAB Championship. Hasan struggled in that postseason run to a 6.07 ERA over 29.2 innings. He was merely okay in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 4.45 ERA over 30.1 innings with 27 Ks. Yangon was near the bottom of the standings at 6-13.

                          In two seasons, Hasan had a 40-15 record, 3.11 ERA, 474.1 innings, 619 strikeouts, 85 walks, 123 ERA+, and 14.6 WAR. They couldn’t come to terms on a long-term deal, sending Hasan to free agency for the first time at age 29. He ended up signing with Nagpur at $38 million over four years. The Patriots were a 2004 expansion team still looking for their first-ever success, although they had gotten above .500 a few times in the early 2010s.

                          Hasan returned to India and spent the majority of his career there, but he did regularly represent his native Bangladesh in the World Baseball Championship. From 2009-23, Hasan had a 12-12 record, 3.61 ERA, 236.2 innings, 303 strikeouts, and 4.5 WAR. The Bangladeshis notably earned their second-ever WBC division title in 2018.

                          Nagpur would see their first playoff appearances with Hasan, who posted his most efficient seasons. He led in WAR in both 2019-20, strikeouts in 2019 and 2021, wins in 2020, and innings in 2019, 21, and 22. Hasan was second in Pitcher of the Year voting in 2018 and 2019 with a third place in 2021. His lone POTY win came in 2020, which had his career best ERA (2.44) and record (22-5). 2019 was his peak ERA at 8.5.

                          The Patriots had a four-year playoff streak from 2018-21, peaking with a SAB Championship win in 2020. Hasan was an absolute beast in that run with a 0.92 ERA, 39 innings, 3-2 record, 36 strikeouts, and two shutouts. He had a solid showing in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 3.05 ERA over 38.1 innings and 37 strikeouts. Nagpur finished 10-9 in the event, tying for eighth.

                          Hasan was subpar in his other playoff starts with Nagpur, but is remembered fondly for his role in their first championship. The Patriots lost in the first round in 2018-19 and fell in the ILCS for 2021. In 11 playoff starts, Hasan was 7-4 with a 2.85 ERA, 79 innings, 81 strikeouts, 5 walks, 130 ERA+, and 2.2 WAR. For his entire career, Hasan had a 13-9 playoff record, 3.68 ERA, 181 innings, 223 Ks, and 4.2 WAR. As of 2037, he ranks 3rd in wins, 5th in strikeouts, and 7th in WAR.

                          In May 2019, Hasan signed a four-year, $42,600,000 extension with Nagpur. In 2021, he became the fourth in SAB history with 4000 strikeouts. The Patriots’ playoff streak ended in 2022, although they were still 86-76. They voided the team option for Hasan despite still looking strong that year at 6.2 WAR. For Nagpur, Hasan had a 116-72 record, 2.77 ERA, 1632 innings, 2082 strikeouts, 280 walks, 133 ERA+, and 47.6 WAR. He’d be the first Hall of Famer inducted representing the Patriots

                          Hasan had still looked strong to end his run and many thought he could chase SAB’s top marks for wins and strikeouts. Vientiane signed the 36-year old for two years and $28 million. However, Hasan shockingly stunk and got quickly removed from the rotation, posting an abysmal 6.08 ERA over 124.1 innings with 74 Ks and -0.1 WAR. He did become the second to reach 4500 strikeouts, but his cliff came abruptly. Hasan retired that winter at age 37.

                          The final tallies had a 239-164 record, 3.14 ERA, 3630.1 innings, 4558 strikeouts, 718 walks, 293/462 quality starts, 97 complete games, 26 shutouts, 118 ERA+, 75 FIP-, and 91.8 WAR. As of 2037, Hasan ranks 5th in wins, 11th in losses, 4th in innings, 9th in complete games, 7th in shutouts, 2nd in strikeouts, and 5th in pitching WAR. He doesn’t crack the top 100 for ERA and only ranks 96th in opponent’s OPS (.631) among qualifiers. Hasan also is 80th in K/9 at 11.30.

                          Hasan didn’t have the raw dominance to challenge Zainal bin Aziz for South Asia Baseball’s GOAT pitcher slot, but his longevity put him into the top ten and top five conversations. Hasan also played a big role in Nagpur’s first SAB Championship and two pennants with Yangon’s dynasty. He easily earned 98.2% to co-headline SAB’s 2029 Hall of Fame class.

                          Comment

                          • MrNFL_FanIQ
                            MVP
                            • Oct 2008
                            • 4988

                            #2188
                            2029 ABF Hall of Fame




                            The Asian Baseball Federation had a two-player Hall of Fame class for 2029 co-headlined by slam dunk picks with SP Hossein Hatami at 98.5% and OF Shadi Alam at 96.1%. CL Ananthakrishnan Khan barely missed the 66% cut to join then with a debut at 65.0%. SP Hamat Soomro had a nice debut at 54.9%. Two second ballot returners were above 50% with SP Ozgur Ermalci at 53.7% and SP Amgad al-Jal at 51.6%. SP Yhlas Batyrow was also just above 50% with a 50.1% debut. No players were dropped following ten failed ballots.



                            Hossein Hatami – Starting Pitcher – Shiraz Suns – 98.5% First Ballot

                            Hossein Hatami was a 6’5’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Mashhad, Iran’s second-most populous city with around 3,400,000 people in the country’s northeast. Hatami had filthy stuff that graded as 9/10 from scouts in his peak. He also had rock solid control, but his movement was below average. Hatami’s fastball regularly hit the 98-100 mph range. He also had a slider and changeup with all three as equally potent options.

                            Hatami’s stamina was merely average relative to other ABF aces. However, he avoided big injuries until late in his career and regularly gave you a full slate of starts. Hatami was good at holding runners, but was mediocre defensively otherwise. He was very intelligent and loyal, traits that served him well over a 16-year pro career.

                            After growing up in Northeastern Iran, Hatami moved to the country’s south by inking a developmental deal with Shiraz in May 2003. He spent around six years in their academy, debuting in 2008 at age 21 with 13 relief appearances. Hatami was split between the bullpen and starting in 2009, then secured a full-time rotation spot in 2010.

                            In 2010, Shiraz was defeated in the West League Championship Series by Baku. Hatami’s first playoff stats saw a 3.15 ERA and 26 strikeouts over 20 innings. The Suns would be outside the playoffs the next four seasons, but were still decent. Hatami’s production continued to improve, getting his first of nine straight 300+ strikeout seasons in 2013. He led the WL for the first time with 337 in 2014.

                            In April 2015, Shiraz signed Hatami to a five-year, $45 million extension. 2015 had Hatami’s career best ERA at 1.79 and best WAR at 8.6, placing second in Pitcher of the Year voting. The Suns were a 94-68 wild card, but upset 115-win Tehran en route to a pennant. Shiraz fell to Dushanbe in the ABF Championship with Hatami posting a 2.45 ERA over 33 playoff innings with 51 strikeouts.

                            Hatami wouldn’t be a Pitcher of the Year finalist again, but he’d lead in strikeouts thrice more for Shiraz. He had a career best 398 strikeouts in 2016, but also set a bad league record by allowing 46 home runs that year. Hatami had a quality start in the 2016 playoffs with the Suns as they lost in the first round. Shiraz missed the cut by one game in 2017, then spent the next five years below .500.

                            2020 was the last year under his Shiraz deal and the Suns were in rebuild mode. In the offseason, the 33-year old Hatami was traded to Multan for three prospects. For Shiraz, Hatami had a 156-116 record, 2.83 ERA, 2489.2 innings, 3524 strikeouts, 442 walks, 118 ERA+, and 58.3 WAR. The Suns retired his #7 uniform at the end of his career for his 12 years of service.

                            Although he was traded to a team in Pakistan, Hatami continued to return to Iran for the World Baseball Championship. He pitched from 2010-22 for the Iranian team and primarily was used as a reliever. Over 104.2 innings, Hatami had a 7-5 record, 12 saves, 179 strikeouts, 32 walks, 97 ERA+, and 1.7 WAR. Iran had its best-ever finish in 2018, taking runner-up to Poland.

                            Hatami led in strikeouts and WHIP in his first two seasons with Multan, who fell just short in the wild card race. They were happy with Hatami’s production and gave him a five-year, $44 million extension in July 2020. In 2021, he became the eighth to reach 4000 career strikeouts. At that point, it felt like Hatami could make a legit run at Hasan Afshin’s record of 5151.

                            After great durability in his career, Hatami suffered a damaged elbow ligament in June 2022. He made it back in summer 2023, but saw his strikeout numbers and production dip. It did allow Hatami to cross 4500 Ks and 200 wins. He decided to retire that winter at age 36. With the Mighty Cocks, Hatami had a 48-30 record, 2.56 ERA, 732.2 innings, 1042 strikeouts, 90 walks, 130 ERA+, and 17.3 WAR.

                            Hatami finished with a 204-146 record, 2.77 ERA, 3222.1 innings, 4566 strikeouts, 532 walks, 302/417 quality starts, 51 complete games, 10 shutouts, 120 ERA+, 78 FIP-, and 75.8 WAR. As of 2037, Hatami ranks 18th in wins, 22nd in innings, 8th in strikeouts, 9th in home runs allowed (362), and 12th in WAR among pitchers. Among those with 1000+ innings, Hatami’s ERA ranks 79th and his .613 opponent’s OPS is 91st. He also ranks 12th in K/9 (12.75) and 56th in BB/9 (1.49).

                            Although he never won Pitcher of the Year and was only a finalist once, Hatami put up impressive tallies. Few pitchers in any league can say they led their league six times in strikeouts. Hatami received 98.5% to co-headline the 2029 Hall of Fame class for the Asian Baseball Federation.



                            Shadi “Skull” Alam – Outfield – Tabriz Tiger Sharks – 96.1% First Ballot

                            Shadi Alam was a 6’2’’, 190 pound left-handed outfielder from Tabriz in northwestern Iran, the country’s sixth-largest city with about 1.7 million people. Nicknamed “Skull,” Alam had reliably steady contact and power skills. He was also solid at drawing walks, but did have a subpar strikeout rate. Alam’s power wasn’t prolific, but it was consistent with a 162 game average of 36 home runs, 32 doubles, and 7 triples.

                            Alam was notably better facing right-handed pitching (.945 OPS, 165 wRC+) but was still potent facing lefties (.795 OPS, 131 wRC+). He was a very skilled base stealer with good speed. Alam bounced around the outfield in his career and graded as rock solid defensively in the corners. His speed wasn’t good enough for the range needed in center field, grading as mediocre there. Alam had around 40% of his starts in left field, around 33% in center, and the rest in right.

                            By the end of his 16-year career, Alam was one of the most universally beloved players to come out of Iran. He was viewed as an ironman, playing 150+ games in all but his rookie season. Alam was also a team captain and his character was beyond reproach. He was a great leader, loyal, intelligent, adaptable, and hard working. Fans, friends, and foes alike had nothing but admiration for Alam.

                            It was clear as Alam rose through the amateur ranks that he was destined for greatness. It worked out that his hometown team Tabriz had the #1 overall pick for the 2007 ABF Draft. The Tiger Sharks picked their local star, who had fallen in love with baseball having gone to Tabriz games as a kid. Alam was a part-time starter in 2008 with mixed results as a rookie. He was a full-time starter after that and an elite one, posting a nice 6.9 WAR or better from 2009-20.

                            In 2010, Tabriz had only their second-ever playoff berth with the previous one being in their inaugural 1985 season. They would be roughly around .500 for the following five years. 2010 started an eight-year streak of Silver Sluggers for Alam. He won in CF from 2010-12, in RF from 2013-15, in LF for 2016, and back in RF for 2017. Alam was determined to make his hometown team a contender for the first time and signed an eight-year, $79,900,000 extension with Tabriz after the 2012 season.

                            Alam was third in 2010’s MVP voting. In 2014, he had his lone batting title (.320), his first season of 1.000 OPS, and a career and league best 122 RBI. In 2016, Alam had his finest season and won MVP, posting a league and career best 10.4 WAR. He also had his person highs for home runs (45), and wRC+ (205). This also marked the beginning of a nine-year playoff streak for Tabriz. Alam was third in MVP voting in both 2017 and 2020, winning his final Silver Slugger in the latter campaign.

                            Tabriz lost in the first round in 2016-2017. They took the West League’s top seed in 2018 at 103-59, but were upset by Asgabat in the WLCS. The Tiger Sharks bested that record at 107-55 in 2019 and won their first-ever ABF Championship, topping Dushanbe in the finale. Alam won finals MVP, although statistically he had better postseasons.

                            The big shock came in the 2019 Baseball Grand Championship as Tabriz took the top team honor at 15-4, becoming the first ABF team to win the Grand Championship. In 18 starts, Alam had 18 hits, 12 runs, 4 doubles, 6 home runs, 9 RBI, .281/.373/.625 slash, 196 wRC+, and 1.0 WAR. Alam achieved something very few in baseball history have accomplished; he turned his hometown team from a bottom feeder into the best in the world.

                            Alam was beloved in Tabriz, but also was a favorite for all Iranian fans. He was a regular in the World Baseball Championship from 2010-22, playing 140 games with 125 hits, 79 runs, 27 doubles, 38 home runs, 88 RBI, 31 stolen bases, .239/.344/.521 slash, and 5.6 WAR. In 2018, the Iranians made it to the World Championship for the first time, falling 4-1 to Poland. Iran also earned a division title in 2015.

                            After the 2019 triumph, the soon-to-be 35-year old Alam signed a four-year, $46,400,000 extension with Tabriz. The Tiger Sharks were the top seed again from 2020-22, but couldn’t get back to the ABF Championship. They were 109-53 in 2020, but lost to Bursa in the WLCS. Tabriz again was 109-53 in 2021, but lost in round one to Mashhad. They were 103-59 in 2022 and dropped the WLCS to Baku.

                            Alam started to wind down with his WAR dropping to 4.1 in 2021 and 4.3 in 2022. In 2023, he had his worst full season tallies, although was still a passable starter with 2.3 WAR and .774 OPS. Alam’s leadership was still quite important as a 92-70 wild card Tabriz went on a surprise run to their second ABF Championship, upsetting Bishkek in the final,

                            For his playoff career, Alam had 76 games, 84 hits, 45 runs, 18 doubles, 17 home runs, 32 RBI, 15 steals, .291/.343/.550, 150 wRC+, and 3.5 WAR. In his last run though, he had -0.1 WAR and .526 OPS. Alam opted to retire with that age 38 and didn’t play in the Baseball Grand Championship. The Tiger Sharks quickly retired the #20 uniform of their hometown hero.

                            Alam finished with 2451 games, 2491 hits, 1491 runs, 485 doubles, 109 triples, 548 home runs, 1397 RBI, 940 walks, 546 steals, .282/.356/.548 slash, 156 wRC+, and 109.9 WAR. As of 2037, Alam ranks 19th in games, 21st in hits, 6th in runs, 33rd in doubles, 60th in triples, 16th in home runs, 23rd in RBI, 13th in total bases (4838), 10th in walks, 17th in strikeouts (2462), and 9th in WAR among position players. Among batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Alam’s .905 OPS ranks 42nd. He also ranks 60th in OBP and 51st in slugging.

                            He wasn’t overwhelmingly dominant, so many scholars leave Alam just outside of their top ten lists. He makes almost all top 20 lists for Asian Baseball Federation history and generally is viewed as a top ten player to come from Iran. Alam’s story was truly romantic, not many get to spend their whole career with their hometown team. Even fewer win two league titles and fewer yet win the Baseball Grand Championship. Alam was a Hall of Fame lock at 96.1% to co-headline ABF’s 2029 class.

                            Comment

                            • MrNFL_FanIQ
                              MVP
                              • Oct 2008
                              • 4988

                              #2189
                              2029 ALB Hall of Fame




                              1B Ali Jassem was the lone inductee for Arab League Baseball’s 2029 Hall of Fame voting with a near unanimous 98.5%. LF Abduwali Suleiman came very close on his ninth ballot at 62.4%, just missing the 66% requirement. The only other player above 50% was 1B Faqi Al-Thakur at 57.5%. No one was removed after ten failed ballots.

                              Oddly, Suleiman wasn’t on the ballot in 2030 for a tenth and final shot. He had started at only 34.2% and had grown from there. He was hurt by spending his final seasons in MLB and A2L with little luck. In ALB with Abu Dhabi in 11 seasons, Suleiman had one Gold Glove, a league title, 1863 hits, 1018 runs, 448 doubles, 95 triples, 320 home runs, 973 RBI, 714 steals, .309/.359/.574 slash, 152 wRC+, and 70.2 WAR. Suleiman ended up relegated to the Hall of Pretty Good.



                              Ali “Happy” Jassem – First Base – Khartoum Cottonmouths – 98.5% First Ballot

                              Ali Jassem was a 6’1’’, 200 pound left-handed first baseman from as-Suaybah, Kuwait; a port town of around 27,000 people. Jassem was known for socking dingers at a remarkable rate, hitting 45+ home runs each year from 2011-22. He had 60+ in eight of those seasons, vaulting Jassem to superstardom through the Arab world. He was also good for 30 doubles per his 162 game average.

                              He had good contact numbers, but struggled with strikeouts and drew far fewer walks than you’d expect from a big slugger. When Jassem made contact though, it was going to be hit hard with 1/3 of his career hits being homers. His power was far more pronounced against right-handed pitching with a career 1.008 OPS and 168 wRC+. Jassem was no pushover though against lefties with .843 OPS and 131 wRC+.

                              Jassem’s speed and baserunning were absolutely abysmal, but he scored plenty of runs on dingers alone. Despite that clumsiness, he graded as a serviceable defender as a career first baseman. Jassem showed excellent durability, starting 150+ games each year from 2010-22. He was also known as one of the smarter guys in the clubhouse. Jassem was a true fan favorite and was both the first major superstar and first Hall of Famer from Kuwait. The nickname “Happy” came from Jassem simply being a happy and likeable guy.

                              He’d be best known for his time in Sudan, but Jassem’s professional career actually started in Morocco. Few know that Casablanca inked him to his first developmental contract in February 2004. Jassem spent five years in the Bruins’ academy, but never played for them. After the 2008 season, he was sent to Khartoum in a three-player trade. The 21-year old Jassem played 12 games and started two in 2009, then became a starter in 2010.

                              Jassem was merely okay as a rookie, but still got third in Rookie of the Year voting. He found his power in year two with a Western Conference leading 65 home runs. With the Cottonmouths, he led in homers in 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, and 2018; smacking 60+ each of those seasons. Jassem smacked 70 in 2014 and 2018, falling just short of the league record. With Khartoum, he also led thrice in RBI, four times in total bases, twice in runs, twice in OPS, twice in slugging, and twice in WAR.

                              2013 saw Jassem win MVP as a DH with 66 homers, 142 RBI, 1.028 OPS, and 7.5 WAR. He repeated in 2014 back at first base with career bests in triple slash (.343/.385/.764), OPS (1.149), wRC+ (219), and WAR (10.2). Jassem won Silver Sluggers for Khartoum in 2011-14 and 2016-18. After the 2015 season, Khartoum gave Jassem an eight-year, $74,600,000 extension. He took second in 2016’s MVP voting and third in 2018.

                              Despite Jassem’s efforts, Khartoum never made the playoffs in his run. They were generally mid-tier, averaging 81.8 wins per season during his run. It was hard to compete in the Nile Division in that era, especially with Alexandria winning two pennants then. After a nine-year run, Jassem surprised many by opting out of his contract and leaving for free agency at age 31.

                              Khartoum still loved Jassem and his #25 uniform would be retired at the end of his career. With the Cottonmouths, Jassem had 1446 games, 1603 hits, 941 runs, 255 doubles, 539 home runs, 1139 RBI, .288/.329/.632 slash, 165 wRC+, and 55.9 WAR. He had a surprising second team, signing with Oran at six years and $87,600,000. The Rattlesnakes were a 2016 expansion team still trying to find their footing. They were a bottom-tier team during Jassem’s brief run.

                              Jassem was still impactful, leading in homers and RBI in both Oran seasons. He won a Silver Slugger in 2019 and was second in 2020’s MVP voting despite becoming ALB’s new single-season home run king with 76. As of 2037, Jassem’s mark is tied for fifth in ALB history and his 163 RBI ranks ninth. He also became only the fourth player in world baseball history to that point with three 70+ homer seasons.

                              With Oran, Jassem had 373 hits, 225 runs, 68 doubles, 140 homers, 311 RBI, .314/.362/.728 slash, 170 wRC+, and 14.4 WAR. He opted out again of his contract and at 33-years old signed a new five-year, $73 million deal with Damascus. Jassem quickly reached 700 career homers and 1500 RBI with the Dusters, making some wonder if he’d be able to make a run at Nordine Soule for ALB’s power records.

                              Unfortunately, the decline came quick for Jassem. He had a nice debut with Damascus, but started starting out even more with only 1.7 WAR and .861 OPS in 2022. Jassem was moved to a part-time role in 2023 and got only 32 homers and 1.1 WAR. That did allow him to join the 800 home run club, only the third in ALB history to that point.

                              The Dusters were decent during his tenure, but Jassem would never get to participate in the playoffs in his career. With Damascus, Jassem had 445 games, 442 hits, 257 runs, 87 doubles, 134 home runs, 311 RBI, .271/.306/.578 slash, 124 wRC+, and 7.1 WAR. He retired after the 2023 season shortly after his 36th birthday.

                              Jassem ended with 2203 games, 2418 hits, 1423 runs, 410 doubles, 813 home runs, 1761 RBI, 393 walks, 2592 strikeouts, 5325 total bases, .288/.329/.635 slash, 158 wRC+, and 77.3 WAR. As of 2037, Jassem ranks 46th in games, 47th in hits, 31st in runs, 17th in total bases, 6th in home runs, 14th in RBI, 14th in strikeouts, and 23rd in WAR among position players. Jassem ranks 19th in slugging among those with 3000+ plate appearances and his .965 OPS is 37th.

                              On the world home run list as of 2037, Jassem sits 47th. Among world Hall of Famers, Jassem’s slugging ranks 28th. When you think of the best pure power hitters in the game’s history, Jassem has a seat at the table. He wasn’t well-rounded enough though to make Arab League Baseball’s true inner-circle. Still, few guys in Jassem’s era were more fun for many fans knowing how often he sent balls into orbit. At 98.5%, he was an easy Hall of Fame headliner and stood alone for ALB’s 2029 class.

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                              • MrNFL_FanIQ
                                MVP
                                • Oct 2008
                                • 4988

                                #2190
                                2029 AAB Hall of Fame




                                The African Association of Baseball’s 2029 Hall of Fame voting was wide open as no debuting players cracked 50%. Five finished above 60%, but only SP Natnael Seyoum crossed the 66% requirement for induction with 70.2% on his third ballot. RF Anthony Chongo was the closest miss at 63.2% on his seventh try. SP Valentine Hategekimana saw 62.5% for his fifth ballot, CL Deon Westerveld got 61.3% on his fourth go, and 1B Lifa Moyo received 61.0% in his third shot. No one was dropped after ten failed ballots.



                                Natnael “Nimrod” Seyoum – Starting Pitcher – Maputo Piranhas – 70.2% Third Ballot

                                Natnael Seyoum was a 6’2’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from the capital of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa. Despite his talent, he got the nickname “Nimrod” as Seyoum was a bit dumb and at times lazy. Still, he had great movement along with good-to-great stuff and movement.

                                Seyoum’s velocity peaked at 96-98 mph with a sinker as his best pitch. He also had a splitter, slider, and curveball which were each solid in their own right. Seyoum’s stamina was strong early in his career, but tanked after some significant injuries. He was good at holding runners, but weak defensively otherwise.

                                Scouts rated Seyoum highly ahead of the 2008 AAB Draft and he was picked first overall by Maputo. He was split between starting and relief as a rookie and took third in 2009’s Rookie of the Year voting. Seyoum emerged as an ace by his third year and won back-to-back Pitcher of the Year awards in 2011-12. Both seasons saw Seyoum atop the conference in strikeouts, WAR, and quality starts.

                                2012 was Seyoum’s finest effort with career bests in ERA (2.38), strikeouts (263), WHIP (1.00), and WAR (8.5). In 2011, he had his lone career no-hitter with seven strikeouts and three walks facing Lilongwe in April. These efforts also sent Maputo to the playoffs for the first time in franchise history, taking wild cards both years.

                                In 2011, the Piranhas upset Lusaka for their first Southern Conference Championship, falling in the Arica Series to Seyoum’s hometown Addis Ababa amidst their dynasty run. Seyoum had a 2.28 ERA and 18 Ks over 23.2 playoff innings. Maputo lost in a conference finals rematch in 2012 with the Lake Monsters with Seyoum posting a 3.60 ERA in 15 innings.

                                Also his pro career thrived in Mozambique, Seyoum did return home to Ethiopia regularly for the World Baseball Championship. From 2010-21, he tossed 148.2 innings with an 8-13 record, 3.57 ERA, 158 strikeouts, 42 walks, 102 ERA+, and 3.0 WAR. In 2013, the Ethiopians had their strongest-ever WBC finish with a third place finish.

                                An elbow strain kept Seyoum out around half of 2013. He bounced back to take third in 2016’s Pitcher of the Year voting and second in 2017. Maputo missed the playoffs from 2013-15, but got back in 2016-17. The Piranhas lost in the 2016 conference final, but won it in 2017 and finished first in the standings for the first time. Maputo would again be denied their first Africa Series win, this time because of Brazzaville.

                                For his playoff career, Seyoum had a 3-4 record, 2.61 ERA, 69 innings, 64 strikeouts, 20 walks, 158 ERA+, and 2.0 WAR. He was a big reason the Piranhas had their first-ever pennants and Seyoum’s #35 uniform would later be retired. However, he opted to leave for free agency after the 2017 season at age 32. With Maputo, Seyoum had a 121-71 record, 2.94 ERA, 1874.2 innings, 1909 strikeouts, 142 ERA+, and 55.5 WAR.

                                Seyoum secured the bag on a six-year, $67,900,000 deal with Harare, who was a bottom-tier team at that point. He had a weak debut season with a 10-16 record, 3.76 ERA, and 3.9 WAR. Disaster then struck in June 2019 with a torn flexor tendon, putting Seyoum on the shelf for more than a calendar year.

                                He made it back in late 2020, but struggled in a relief role. Seyoum looked only marginally better in 2021 and retired that winter at age 35. He was a bust with Harare, finishing with a 20-31 record, 3.62 ERA, 380.1 innings, 375 strikeouts, 104 walks, 108 ERA+, and 8.1 WAR.

                                Seyoum finished with a 141-102 record, 3.06 ERA, 2255 innings, 2284 strikeouts, 598 walks, 194/290 quality starts, 45 complete games, 13 shutouts, 135 ERA+, and 63.6 WAR. As of 2037, Seyoum ranks 37th in wins, 39th in innings, 39th in strikeouts, but 13th in WAR among pitchers. His .660 opponent’s OPS ranks 23rd among pitchers with 1000+ innings. Seyoum also ranks 11th in ERA despite never winning an ERA title.

                                The rate stats certainly paint Seyoum as elite, but many voters thought his tallies were simply too low. Supporters gave him some grace for having the injury derail his run, although Seyoum looked to be declining even before then. He had two big things in his favor; two Pitcher of the Year awards, and his playoff success. Seyoum had stepped up in big games and was a big reason Maputo won their first pennants.

                                Seyoum missed the Hall of Fame cut in his 2027 debut at 56.1%. He didn’t get much better in 2028 at 57.7%. The African Association of Baseball’s 2029 group lacked impactful debuts and Seyoum’s resume popped a bit more among the returners. He got across the 66% requirement at 70.2% for a third ballot selection as AAB’s lone 2029 inductee.

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