
Kaysar Alkhasov – Starting Pitcher – Krasnodar Cossacks – 96.9% First Ballot
Kaysar Alkhasov was a 6’0’’, 200 pound right-handed starting pitcher from Taraz, Kazakhstan; a city of roughly 428,000 near the southern border with Kyrgyzstan. Alkhasov was known for having fantastic command with excellent movement and good stuff. He had a three-pitch arsenal with a 97-99 mph sinker, a changeup, and a slider. The changeup especially was considered his most potent option, but all three pitches were strong.
Alkhasov’s stamina was fairly average compared to most EPB aces, but his ironman durability meant you’d always get plenty of innings. Across a 19-year career, Alkhasov tossed 215+ innings in all but his rookie season. He had a solid pickoff move, but graded as weak defensively. Alkhasov was a great leader and beloved in the clubhouse as a legendary prankster. His sense of humor and reliability made him extremely popular with all.
After the big exodus of the Central Asian teams to the Asian Baseball Federation in 2000, most Kazakh prospects focused on ABF careers. Alkhasov was an exception as he excelled in college, opting for Eurasian Professional Baseball. He was the top prospect for some in the 2007 EPB Draft and went #2 overall to Vladivostok. The Shibas were one of four expansion teams beginning play in 2008, among the new squads designed to help fill the void of the departed teams from the exodus.
As an expansion team, Vladivostok was stuck in the lower-middle tier for roughly the franchise’s first two decades. After splitting his rookie year between starting and relief, Alkhasov was the Shibas ace through 2017. In his second season, he led the Asian League with 7.3 WAR, although he wasn’t generally in awards conversations early on. Alkhasov was a Pitcher of the Year finalist for the first time in 2012, taking third in voting.
After the 2013 season, Alkhasov signed a five-year, $29,060,000 extension with Vladivostok. While playing in Russia’s far east, Alkhasov did represent his native Kazakhstan regularly in the World Baseball Championship. From 2009-26, Alkhasov tossed 220 innings with an 11-13 record, 3.40 ERA, 230 strikeouts, 53 walks, and 4.0 WAR.
In 2015, Alkhasov won Pitcher of the Year with a 2.20 ERA, 256 strikeout, 18-8, 7.4 WAR effort. He repeated in 2016 with his lone ERA title, a career-best 1.81. Alkhasov also led in WAR for the second time with 7.3. 2016 saw Vladivostok finish 81-81, their best record thus far. However, they regressed back down to 72-90 in 2017 and didn’t seem to have an upward trajectory. Alkhasov had one year left on his deal and the Shibas traded him in January 2018 to Krasnoyarsk for three prospects and a second round draft pick.
With Vladivostok, Alkhasov had a 134-128 record, 2.73 ERA, 2328 innings, 2362 strikeouts, 357 walks, 196/276 quality starts, 104 complete games, 21 shutouts, 120 ERA+, 73 FIP-, and 59.9 WAR. He remained extremely popular with Shibas fans as the team’s first ace in their early years. Although he did pitch more games for them than Krasnoyarsk, Alkhasov would become better known for his time with the Cossacks due to their team success with him.
Krasnoyarsk also wasn’t looking at Alkhasov as a rental, giving him a five-year, $51,700,000 extension in May 2018. They had been ALCS runner-up in 2016, but below .500 in 2017. The Cossacks finished 93-69 and defeated Ufa for the Asian League pennant, then won the EPB Championship over Moscow. In his first postseason, Alkhasov had a 2.49 ERA over 25.1 innings with 29 strikeouts. He also had a strong showing in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 2.21 ERA over 36.2 innings, 40 strikeouts, 4 walks, and 1.2 WAR. Krasnoyarsk finished 9-10 in the event.
However, this started an 11-year playoff streak for Krasnoyarsk. Alkhasov was second in POTY voting in both 2019 and 2020, leading in wins in the latter. He had a 1.93 ERA in 2020 and his career-best WAR of 9.0. Alkhasov had 8+ WAR in his first three years for the Cossacks and was above 6+ WAR in his first eight seasons. His excellent control meant his game aged incredibly well, boosting his most consistent production in his mid and late 30s.
After their 2018 title, Krasnoyarsk couldn’t get over the playoff hump for the bit despite winning division titles each year after. They lost in the 2019, 2020, and 2020 ALCS despite having the top seed each year. 2020 was especially disappointing off a historic 116-46 finish. The Cossacks also had a first round exit in 2021 with the playoffs expanding with the 2020 expansion.
Even if the team struggled in the playoffs, Alkhasov generally was rock solid. Over 175.1 playoff innings, he had a 2.41 ERA, 135 ERA+, 73 FIP-, 10-8 record, 156 strikeouts, 23 walks, and 4.9 WAR. Krasnoyarsk was the top seed again in 2023 and this time won the AL pennant, defeating Yekaterinburg in the ALCS. The Cossacks lost the EPB Championship to Volgograd. This was actually one of Alkhasov’s weaker playoff runs with a 3.86 ERA over 35 innings. Still, he had been plenty strong in the regular season and signed a new two-year, $18 million extension that winter at age 38.
Krasnoyarsk barely kept the streak alive at 87-75 in 2024, but managed to make the ALCS where they lost to the Yaks. It was a down year for Alkhasov, leading in losses at 11-17 and posting a 3+ EAR for the first time in a decade. Still, his innings helped him to 6.8 WAR and his 73 FIP- suggested some bad luck. Alkhasov looked like more his old self in 2025 with a 2.59 ERA, although his strikeouts hit a full-season career low of 206. Now 40-years old, Alkhasov’s velocity was now peaking in the 92-94 mph range, but his pinpoint control kept him effective.
At 101-61, Krasnoyarsk had EPB’s best record in 2025 and took it all the way to a championship win over Moscow. Alkhasov had an excellent playoff run, going 3-0 in four starts with a 1.69 ERA over 32 innings, no walks, 23 strikeouts, and 0.8 WAR. He was even more impressive in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 1.03 ERA over 35 innings, 32 strikeouts, and 1.1 WAR, although the Cossacks went only 8-11. That winter, Alkhasov signed another two year, $9,680,000 extension for Krasnoyarsk.
Alkhasov’s longevity had gotten him to some impressive milestones, becoming the 29th in EPB to 4000 career strikeouts in 2024 and the 11th in 250 wins in 2025. His velocity dipped a bit more in 2026 for only a 3.38 ERA, but he was still worth 4.8 WAR and 232 innings. Alkhasov had two more great playoff starts, but Krasnoyarsk lost in the 2026 ALCS to Yekaterinburg.
He reached 4500 strikeouts in 2026, a mark met by 14 EPB pitchers. The elusive 300 win club also seemed possible with his durability, but Alkhasov decided to retire that winter at age 41 instead of possibly overstaying his welcome. The Cossacks quickly retired his #58 uniform for his role in two championship wins and nine years of excellence. For the Cossacks, Alkhasov had a 151-86 record, 2.61 ERA, 2215.2 innings, 2223 strikeouts, 274 walks, 203/272 quality starts, 70 complete games, 17 shutouts, 125 ERA+, 66 FIP-, and 67.7 WAR.
Overall, Alkhasov had a 285-214 record, 2.67 ERA, 4543.2 innings, 4585 strikeouts, 631 walks, 399/548 quality starts, 174 complete games, 38 shutouts, 123 ERA+, 70 FIP-, and 127.6 WAR. As of 2037, Alkhasov ranks 7th in wins, 5th in losses, 6th in innings, 54th in complete games, 41st in shutouts, 13th in strikeouts, and 7th in pitching WAR. His 1.25 BB/9 ranks 51st among pitchers with 1000+ career innings.
The Vladivostok years had Alkhasov on a Hall of Fame pace on their own, but the Krasnoyarsk run cemented him as an inner-circle inductee. Not many guys in baseball history have two Pitcher of the Year awards, an ERA title, two championship rings, 285 wins, and 4500+ strikeouts. Alkhasov joined the loaded five-man 2032 Hall of Fame class for Eurasian Professional Baseball at 96.9% and would’ve been the obvious headliner most other years. Many argue he’s the best-ever pitcher to come out of Kazakhstan and the second-best overall Kazakh baseball star behind Nizami Aghazade.

Isak Baghoomian – Pitcher – Ufa Fiends – 68.1% First Ballot
Isak Baghoomian was a 6’3’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Kizel, Russia; a town of about 20,000 in the Perm Krai. At his peak, Baghoomian had excellent stuff along with above average movement and control. He had an outstanding 99-101 mph fastball and a strong slider, along with an okay curveball as his third pitch. The weakness of the third pitch, especially earlier in his career, limited Baghoomian initially to a bullpen role.
He became a starter later in his career and was noted for having very good stamina. Unfortunately, recurring back troubles and a few major arm injuries limited Baghoomian’s inning count overall. He did have a fantastic pickoff move and was a solid defensive pitcher. Baghoomian went about his business the best he could over a 16-year EPB career exclusively with Ufa.
In October 2006, a teenaged Baghoomian signed a developmental deal with the Fiends and spent most of five years in their academy. He debuted with 36.2 innings in 2011 at age 21 with mixed results. Baghoomian earned the closer role in 2012 and led the Asian League with 70 games pitched, finishing second in Reliever of the Year voting. Baghoomian had a huge setback though in May 2013 with a partially torn UCL knocking him out seven months.
Baghoomian returned with a vengeance in 2014, winning Reliever of the Year with league bests in saves (39) and games (71). Ufa earned only their second playoff trip of the 21st Century, although they fell to Omsk in the ALCS. It was another setback for Baghoomian though with bone chips in his elbow in 2015. He only had four appearances and missed the entire EPB postseason.
Despite his absence, Baghoomian earned a ring as Ufa beat Moscow for their first-ever EPB Championship. He was healed up enough for the Baseball Grand Championship, allowing three runs over 8.2 innings in six appearances. The Fiends finished 8-11 for the event. Baghoomian also pitched for Russia from 2014-20 in the World Baseball Championship, splitting between relief and starting. There he had a 2.83 ERA over 70 innings, 3-3 record, 6 saves, 90 strikeouts, and 1.3 WAR.
Baghoomian stayed healthy for the 2016 regular season and won his second Reliever of the Year with a full-season career best 1.33 ERA. Unfortunately in late September, he suffered shoulder tendinitis that kept him out of the playoff run. Ufa repeated as AL champ at 105-57, but was upset in a finals rematch with Moscow.
That was Baghoomian’s last year in the closer role, as the Fiends moved him into the rotation for the next decade. Baghoomian was second in Pitcher of the Year voting in 2017, then pulled off both POTY and MVP in 2018. That year had career and league-bests in wins (23-9), innings (272.1), strikeouts (315), complete games (20), shutouts (9), and WAR (10.3). Baghoomian’s 1.82 ERA was only 0.13 points short of a Triple Crown.
Ufa narrowly missed the playoffs in 2017, then lost in the 2018 ALCS to Krasnoyarsk. Baghoomian was surprisingly used in a relief role in the 2018 playoffs, allowing one run with 11 strikeouts over four appearances and six innings. That was his last shot at the playoffs, as Ufa ultimately spent the next decade in the lower-middle tier.
Baghoomian stayed loyal and signed a seven-year, $90,800,000 extension in January 2020. He led in ERA at 1.74 in 2023, but wasn’t a POTY finalist due to a lower inning count. Baghoomian didn’t reach 200+ innings in a season after 2022 with various shoulder injuries knocking him out usually a month or two. He was still generally effective though when healthy in his early 30s.
In 2025, Baghoomian suffered a torn triceps in July that tanked his control. His velocity had dipped some too, leading to a 4.03 ERA over 109.1 innings that year. Ufa voided the team option year of the contract and Baghoomian retired that winter at age 36. For his 16 seasons, the Fiends retired his #45 uniform.
Baghoomian finished with a 158-123 record, 151 saves, 2.31 ERA, 2240.1 innings, 2629 strikeouts, 475 walks, 151/233 quality starts, 120 complete games, 30 shutouts, 139 ERA+, 69 FIP-, and 63.7 WAR. Between his early days in relief and injuries, Baghoomian’s accumulations are much lower than most Hall of Fame starters and the only top 100 list he makes as of 2037 is being 81st in shutouts. Among pitchers with 1000+ innings, Baghoomian does rank 54th in ERA
His resume is a tough one to judge since he doesn’t have the counting stats most voters wanted for either a starter or reliever. The biggest thing Baghoomian had going for him was an MVP, Pitcher of the Year, and two Reliever of the Year awards. He’s believed to be the only player ever to win each of those honors. When he was healthy, Baghoomian’s rate stats certainly look comparable to other inductees.
Many voters gave him some grace for losing numbers to injury and didn’t hold that against him. The awards and pitching with only one team also helped him across the line. Baghoomian only barely breached the 66% requirement, but made it on his first ballot at 68.1%. He’s definitely the weakest in a stacked five-player 2032 Hall of Fame class for Eurasian Professional Baseball, but Baghoomian has secured his spot regardless.
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