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

Collapse

Recommended Videos

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • MrNFL_FanIQ
    MVP
    • Oct 2008
    • 4984

    #2521
    For the first time since 2019, Major League Baseball didn’t add any players into the Hall of Fame. SP Rowney Simpson was the closest to the 66% induction threshold with 62.7% on his second ballot. CL Heihachiro Okasawa was next at 59.5% on his eighth try, then it was 3B Kwang-Sik Oh at 55.3% for his second go. 1B Gilbert Windemere was the only debut above 50% at 52.8%. Two other returners were above 50% with SP Luke Harrison at 51.8% for his seventh ballot and SP Storm de Ruyter at 51.1% with his fourth attempt.



    Dropped after ten failed ballots was SP Trevor Ford, who finished with a peak of 45.8% and was never below 35%. He won 2009 Pitcher of the Year with Columbus, which was his lone outstanding season or time as a league leader. In 17 seasons, Ford had a 244-210 record, 3.46 ERA, 4106 innings, 3684 strikeouts, 926 walks, 162 complete games, 100 ERA+, 90 FIP-, and 74.9 WAR.

    Ford’s longevity ranked him 57th in wins, 89th in losses, 75th in innings, and 21st in strikeouts; but he missed the top 100 for WAR among pitchers. He was also on mostly forgettable teams and had a 5.44 ERA in his six career playoff starts. Ford certainly had a commendable career, but one more suited towards the Hall of Pretty Good. No one else was dropped after ten failed ballots in the 2037 MLB voting.

    Comment

    • MrNFL_FanIQ
      MVP
      • Oct 2008
      • 4984

      #2522
      Four players were added into the Central American Baseball Association Hall of Fame for 2037, although none of them were quite “inner-circle” level guys. 1B/2B Jonas Pimentel was the headliner at 89.9% for his first ballot. 1B Ruben Cabrera was next with a first ballot 80.2%. SP Amauris Huerta on his third ballot got the big bump to 78.4% and OF/1B Raul Ibarra was a first ballot nod at 74.5%. The other guy above 50% was RF Jose Leal at 63.7% on his fifth try, just falling short of the 66% induction threshold.



      SP Yadier Trujillo was dropped after ten failed ballots, debuting at 48.3% but falling to 11.5% by the end. In 14 seasons mostly with Guadalajara, Trujillo had a 186-120 record, 3.12 ERA, 2887 innings, 2849 strikeouts, 121 ERA+, 84 FIP-, and 57.9 WAR. His pace was comparable to some lower-end inductees, but he wasn’t ever a league leader and was buried on mostly bad teams. Trujillo needed either more dominance or a few more years of accumulations to make the cut.

      LF Alva Cervantes also made it ten ballots, peaking with his 33.3% debut and ending at only 5.4%. In 16 seasons, he had one Silver Slugger, 2541 hits, 1271 runs, 391 doubles, 168 triples, 402 home runs, 1356 RBI, .305/.342/.538 slash, 137 wRC+, and 59.7 WAR. Cervantes was a tenured solid starter, but wasn’t a league leader or considered MVP level. He also needed either more dominance or longevity to have had a chance at the HOF.




      Jonas “Whitey” Pimentel – First/Second Base – Merida Mean Green – 89.9% First Ballot

      Jonas Pimentel was a 6’0’’, 195 pound switch-hitting infielder from Doctor Arroyo, Mexico; a town of around 33,000 people located between Monterrey and San Luis Potosi. Nicknamed “Whitey,” Pimentel was the traditional leadoff man known for great contact skills, speed, and gap power. He was especially dangerous on the basepaths and was the league leader in stolen bases six times.

      Relative to other CABA batters, Pimentel was average at drawing walks but above average at avoiding strikeouts. His 162 game average got you 28 doubles, 17 triples, and 11 home runs. Pimentel was notably a bit better facing right-handed pitching (.879 OPS, 137 wRC+) versus facing lefties (.769 OPS, 111 wRC+). He was one of the game’s great ironmen and never missed significant time to injury.

      75% of Pimentel’s starts came at first base, where he graded as a reliably average defender. He had starts at each other infield spot, but only really saw significant time at second base. Pimentel had poor defensive metrics away from 1B. He had an impressive work ethic, but Pimentel was very outspoken and not afraid to share his hot takes to anyone that would listen. This made him a polarizing figure, but he certainly had a large share of fans that appreciated his hubris.

      Pimentel emerged as a top prospect by the 2014 CABA Draft and was picked 11th overall by Merida. He only saw 19 games in 2015, then was rostered full-time and a part-time starter in 2016. After showing promising results, Pimentel had the full-time gig from 2017 onward. 2017 was his best season by several metrics, including hits (219), WAR (7.3), OPS (.958), and wRC+ (158).

      He led the Mexican League with career highs for runs (132), and triples (36) in 2017 and was the steals leader for the first time at 109. Pimentel was one triple short of the then CABA record and his season still ranks as fifth-best. He led in triples again the next year with 28, but wouldn’t be a league leader again outside of for steals. Pimentel settled into around 4-6 WAR per season reliably for the next decade.

      Pimentel provided excitement for Merida, who was generally a mid-to-lower tier franchise. They would earn wild cards in 2019 and 2021, but failed to win a playoff series. After the 2018 season, Pimentel signed a five-year, $44,200,000 extension with the Mean Green. In 2021, he had his career best 131 steals, breaking Tito Infante’s single-season CABA record of 126 from 1999. Pimentel remains CABA’s single-season swipes leader and it is one of only 45 seasons in all of pro baseball history of 130+ steals.

      Merida missed the playoffs at 88-74 in 2022 and Pimentel declined his contract option, becoming a free agent at age 30. For the Mean Green, Pimentel had 1131 games, 1385 hits, 693 runs, 171 doubles, 130 triples, 87 home runs, 546 RBI, 310 walks, 661 steals, .331/.378/.497 slash, 142 wRC+, and 36.1 WAR. He maintained strong fan support even after leaving and eventually got his #2 uniform retired.

      Pimentel signed a seven-year, $84,400,000 deal with Havana and spent about as many games in Cuba as he did with Merida. The Hurricanes had missed the playoffs by one game in 2022 and had been a Caribbean champ in the 2010s. Havana was above .500 in six of Pimentel’s seven seasons, but only once made the playoffs with a first round exit in 2025. Pimentel ended up with only eight playoff starts for his entire career.

      He maintained steady production with Havana, although he was less efficient than his Merida peak. Pimentel did lead in steals thrice and climbed quickly up that leaderboard, becoming the tenth CABA player with 1000 steals. He passed Mario Bueno’s 1070 for the #2 spot, but had a tall task of trying to catch Matias Esquilin’s 1606 for the CABA record.

      With Havana, Pimentel played 1088 games with 1379 hits, 740 runs, 217 doubles, 112 triples, 74 homers, 471 RBI, 325 walks, 662 steals, .320/.369/.474 slash, 123 wRC+, and 31.7 WAR. His lone Silver Sluggers came in 2024 and 2029 when he played second base. Getting the honor when he was at 1B was nearly impossible considering the many big boppers at that spot. Pimentel was also never an MVP finalist.

      He was back to free agency for 2030 at age 37 and hadn’t seen any big drop off to that point. Salvador signed Pimentel for a two-year, $26,400,000 deal. They were the CLCS runner-up the prior year, but missed the playoffs in 2030 at 89-73. Pimentel’s lone season with the Stallions had 161 hits, 86 runs, 74 steals, .823 OPS, 120 wRC+, and 2.9 WAR. That year, he did become the 25th in CABA to score 1500 career runs.

      In the offseason, Pimentel was traded straight up for SS Gideon Musungu to Aguascalientes. The Cactus were an expansion team entering only their second season. Pimentel had his weakest season with .706 OPS, 69 steals, 104 wRC+, and 1.9 WAR; but did notably become CABA’s 16th member of the 3000 hit club. Pimentel wanted to still play, but he went unsigned in 2032 and retired that winter at age 40.

      Pimentel finished with 2501 games, 3047 hits, 1584 runs, 439 doubles, 258 triples, 172 home runs, 1084 RBI, 705 walks, 1350 strikeouts, 1466 steals, 659 caught stealing, .323/.371/.479 slash, 130 wRC+, and 72.6 WAR. Pimentel ranks 54th in games, 21st in runs, 14th in hits, 71st in total bases (4518), 38th in doubles, 23rd in triples, 2nd in steals, 11th in caught stealing, and 77th in walks. He doesn’t make the top 100 for WAR among position players.

      Among all players in world history, Pimentel ranks 21st in stolen bases, proving truly elite on the basepaths. He’s also 95th in batting average for CABA batters with 3000+ plate appearances. Pimentel was never an MVP level player, but to that point, any eligible CABA player with 3000+ hits and/or 1500+ runs made the Hall of Fame. Pimentel wasn’t going to be an exception to that rule, earning 89.9% to headline a four-player 2037 class for the Central American Baseball Association.




      Ruben Cabrera – First Base/Designated Hitter – Santo Domingo Dolphins – 80.2% First Ballot

      Ruben Cabrera was a 6’1’’, 195 pound switch-hitting first baseman from San Rafael, El Salvador; a municipality of around 12,000 people. Cabrera was known for his steady and consistent power from both sides of the plate, posting a 162 game average of 37 home runs, 29 doubles, 4 triples, and 106 RBI. He was an above average contact hitter and had a strong eye for drawing walks, although he was subpar at avoiding strikeouts.

      Cabrera scored a lot of runs despite being an absolutely putrid baserunner with terrible speed. Despite that sluggishness and not being exceptionally tall, he graded as a reliably average defensive first baseman. Cabrera made around 70% of his career starts at 1B with the rest as a designated hitter. He showed very good durability over a 20-year career, playing 140+ games in all but three seasons. Cabrera was never disruptive or a troublemaker, but he was viewed as someone more motivated by his paycheck than by the team’s success.

      In January 2011, a teenaged Cabrera left El Salvador on a developmental deal with Torreon. Most don’t realize he started there, since he never played with the Tomahawks. In December 2013, Cabrera was one of three prospects traded to Mexicali for 3B Alexander Trinidad, who had a firm Hall of Pretty Good career. Cabrera debuted in 2015 at age 21 with 21 games and three starts.

      Cabrera was a full-time starter in 2016 and kept that role for the rest of his CABA run when healthy. He won 2016’s Rookie of the Year with 32 homers, .837 OPS, and 3.9 WAR. Cabrera’s first Silver Slugger came in 2018 with his career highs for home runs (52), slugging (.649), and OPS (1.053). 2019 would be his best for WAR (8.7), hits (200), and wRC+ (185). However, he was never an MVP finalist and his only times as a league leader were twice in walks.

      He didn’t get a ton of attention with Mexicali, as the Maroons were atrocious at this point, averaging 65.1 wins per season during his tenure. They definitely weren’t in a position to keep Cabrera as he became a free agent for 2022 at age 28. With Mexicali, he had 986 games, 1071 hits, 568 runs, 184 doubles, 235 homers, 618 RBI, .303/.376/.567 slash, 156 wRC+, and 34.1 WAR.


      Cabrera signed a four-year, $41,100,000 deal with Haiti and maintained his steady production in three years for the Herons. He won Silver Sluggers in 2022 and 2023 and the Herons won division titles all three years. They had little playoff luck with their deepest run a 2024 Caribbean League Championship Series defeat to Guatemala. In 17 playoff starts, Cabrera had .784 OPS, 114 wRC+, and 0.5 WAR.

      Prior to that, he had been a regular on the World Baseball Championship stage for his native El Salvador. From 2017-34, Cabrera played 178 WBC games with 117 hits, 76 runs, 25 doubles, 31 homers, 73 RBI, 86 walks, .216/.335/.445 slash, and 4.0 WAR. Cabrera has the 3rd-most games played for the Salvadoran national team and ranks 3rd in hits, 4th in runs, 3rd in doubles, 5th in homers, 4th in RBI, 2nd in walks, and 6th in WAR for position players. The small nation never earned a playoff spot despite his efforts.

      Cabrera declined the fourth-year player option with Haiti, returning to free agency for 2025 at age 31. With the Herons, he played 474 games with 547 hits, 310 runs, 95 doubles, 118 home runs, 375 RBI, 173 walks, .307/.368/.576 slash, 153 wRC+, and 17.7 WAR. Cabrera stayed on Hispaniola and signed a four-year, $56,700,000 deal with Santo Domingo. His most famous run would be with the Dolphins, who were in contention at this point.

      His first year saw Santo Domingo at 108-54, although they lost to 115-win Guatemala in the CLCS. The Dolphins were a 101-win wild card with a first round exit in 2026. Cabrera continued his steady production, but suffered his first major injury setback in July 2027 with a torn quadriceps. This ultimately kept him out for the entire fall and postseason.

      Still, Cabrera got a ring as the 98-win wild card Dolphins made a surprise run to the CABA Championship, beating Guadalajara in the final. He was back by the Baseball Grand Championship, but struggled with .504 OPS, 42 wRC+, and -0.2 WAR as Santo Domingo finished 9-10. Cabrera was healthy in 2028 and looked like his normal self. SD won the division at 107-55, but suffered a divisional round exit. The Dolphins were happy with Cabrera’s results and gave him a three-year, $51,400,000 extension that winter.

      Cabrera remained remarkably consistent through 2031 for Santo Domingo. They missed the playoffs in 2029, then had back-to-back wild cards and first round exits. Cabrera’s playoff numbers in the small sample size were solid with 20 starts, 21 hits, 18 runs, 8 homers, 21 RBI, .937 OPS, 145 wRC+, and 0.9 WAR. He joined the 1500 RBI club while in the Dominican Republic, but fell just short of 1500 runs and 600 homers in CABA.

      For Santo Domingo, Cabrera had 1023 games, 1066 hits, 613 runs, 178 doubles, 226 homers, 671 RBI, 403 walks, .284/.353/.527 slash, 134 wRC+, and 26.5 WAR. He was a free agent again for 2032 at age 38, but at this point CABA teams felt they could find similar results from younger and cheaper players. Cabrera opened a worldwide search to continue his pro career, eventually finding a home with Ibadan of West African Baseball on a three-year, $21,300,000 deal.

      Cabrera had his usual 30s production in his Iguanas debut, but was middling by 2033 and benched for 2034. In 397 games, he had 364 hits, 206 runs, 77 doubles, 87 home runs, 264 RBI, .257/.325/.502 slash, 105 wRC+, and 3.1 WAR. This did get Cabrera to 3048 hits, 666 home runs, 1928 RBI, 1697 runs, 534 doubles, and 81.4 WAR for his combined pro career. After going unsigned in 2035, he retired that winter at age 42.

      In CABA, Cabrera had 2483 games, 2684 hits, 1491 runs, 457 doubles, 65 triples, 579 home runs, 1664 RBI, 987 walks, 2023 strikeouts, 5008 total bases, .296/.365/.552 slash, .917 OPS, 146 wRC+, and 78.3 WAR. Cabrera ranks 57th in games, 30th in runs, 42nd in hits, 34th in total bases, 31st in doubles, 35th in homers, 21st in RBI, 16th in walks, 44th in strikeouts, and 83rd in WAR among position players.

      Cabrera was never an MVP-level guy, but he had remarkable consistency and reliability. Many Hall of Fame voters were surprised to find how high his tallies were and found it hard to argue against a guy who was in the top 50 in all the big counting stats through more than a century of history. Cabrera received 80.2% for a first ballot nod as part of the four-player 2037 class for the Central American Baseball Association.

      Comment

      • MrNFL_FanIQ
        MVP
        • Oct 2008
        • 4984

        #2523


        Amauris “Cats” Huerta – Starting Pitcher – San Luis Potosi Potros – 78.4% Third Ballot

        Amauris Huerta was a 6’2’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Mexico City. He was nicknamed “Cats” for his love of felines and was known to bring some of his cats with him on road trips. Huerta had excellent pinpoint control, allowing him to success despite having merely above average-to-good stuff and movement. His velocity peaked in the 95-97 mph range with a fastball, change, cutter arsenal.

        Relative to other CABA aces, Huerta’s stamina was average at best. However, he had excellent durability and rarely missed a start. Huerta was excellent at holding runners, but weak defensively. The biggest knock on him was that he was considered selfish. Huerta wasn’t one to look at for leadership and his intelligence was unimpressive.

        Huerta’s pitching potential was noticed as a teenager though and he signed a developmental deal with San Luis Potosi in July 2010. The Potros were still a newer franchise at this point, having started play with the 2003 expansion. Huerta spent around five years in their academy before debuting with 133.2 innings in 2015 at age 21. He was a full-time starter after that, although didn’t settle into the ace role until 2017.

        2019 was his only season as a Pitcher of the Year finalist, placing third with Mexican League bests for wins (20-5) and quality starts (25). Huerta also had his best ERA at 2.57. San Luis Potosi was above .500 for most of the 2010s, but their only playoff trip with Huerta was a wild card round exit in 2018. By the 2020s, the Potros had plummeted to the bottom of the standings and stayed there most of the decade.

        It became clear heading into 2021 that SLP wouldn’t be able to afford the type of extension Huerta was looking for with free agency looming. Thus, the Potros traded him to Leon for three prospects. For San Luis Potosi, Huerta had a 91-56 record, 3.29 ERA, 1303.2 innings, 1143 strikeouts, 185 walks, 116 ERA+, 86 FIP-, and 25.3 WAR. He was the second player inducted in SLP colors, although Huerta really isn’t viewed as a franchise icon.

        In his one year with the Lions, he had a 14-14 record, 3.93 ERA, 233.2 innings, 177 strikeouts, 96 ERA+, and 3.3 WAR. Leon had won 105 games the prior year, but struggled in 2021 to 74-88. Huerta was now a free agent heading towards his age 28 season and signed a five-year, $48,500,000 deal with Juarez. The Jesters had been the powerhouse in Mexico with five league titles and three CABA crowns since 2012.

        Huerta was iffy in his debut with a 4.10 ERA in 2022, but posted sub-three ERAs the next three seasons. 2025 would have his career highs for wins (22-4), strikeouts (281), and WAR (6.8). Juarez’s playoff streak continued with MLCS appearances from 2022-25 and Mexican League titles in 2022 and 2025. The Jesters lost the 2022 CABA Championship and won in 2025; facing Guatemala both seasons.

        For his playoff career, Huerta had respectable innings with a 3.13 ERA in 74.2 innings, 3-3 record, 74 strikeouts, 11 walks, 117 ERA+, and 1.4 WAR. He was used for relief in the 2022 Baseball Grand Championship with a 1.80 ERA in 10 innings as the Jesters went 11-8, one of five teams tied for fourth. Huerta had an excellent run starting in the 2025 BGC with a 1.29 ERA over 28 innings with 27 Ks and 1.1 WAR. Juarez finished in the middle at 10-9, but Huerta received Best Pitcher honors for the event.

        Huerta fell off to a 4.40 ERA in 2026, the final year of Juarez’s 13-yaar playoff streak. In total, he had a 73-43 record, 3.39 ERA, 1111.2 innings, 1130 strikeouts, 141 walks, 109 ERA+ 80 FIP-, and 25.0 WAR. Now coming up on age 33, Huerta signed a two-year, $13,400,000 deal with Monterrey. The Matadors were .500 in 2027 with Huerta posting a 3.73 ERA, 178.1 innings, 151 Ks, and 2.7 WAR.

        In March 2028, Monterrey traded Huerta to Guatemala for two prospects. He got his 200th win with the Ghosts, posting a 3.42 ERA, 18-10 record, 229 innings, 219 Ks, and 4.5 WAR. Guatemala got the Caribbean League’s top seed at 108-54, but were upset in the divisional round. Huerta’s lone playoff start saw four runs allowed over an 8.2 inning no decision.

        Haiti gave Huerta a one-year, $5,700,000 deal in 2029 and split him between starting and relief. He had a 13-7 record, 19 saves, 2.99 ERA, 165.1 innings, 152 Ks, and 2.9 WAR. The Herons had a first round playoff exit, but Huerta wasn’t used in the brief postseason. Huerta seemed to still have some utility, but he decided to retire that winter at age 35.

        Huerta finished with a 221-142 record, 3.39 ERA, 3221.2 innings, 2972 strikeouts, 452 walks, 245/408 quality starts, 83 complete games, 22 shutouts, 111 ERA+, 85 FIP-, and 63.6 WAR. Huerta ranks 36th in wins, 67th in innings, 93rd in strikeouts, and 86th in WAR among pitchers. His ERA was definitely on the higher end compared to other CABA Hall of Famers, but he wasn’t completely out of place. Detractors felt Huerta simply wasn’t dominant enough to belong and was a notch short of the induction threshold.

        Traditional supporters were big on Huerta’s win total; every eligible pitcher who had 220+ wins had made it in, although not all 200+ guys did. Being part of the Juarez dynasty in his later years also gave him a bump with certain voters. Still, Huerta’s lack of overwhelming dominance made him wait. He barely missed the 66% requirement with his 2035 debut ballot. Huerta dropped to 51.8% in 2036, but saw a steep turnaround to 78.4% in 2037. With that, he was a third ballot HOF selection for the Central American Baseball Association.



        Raul Ibarra – Left Field/First Base – Tijuana Toros – 74.5% First Ballot

        Raul Ibarra was a 6’1’’, 195 pound switch-hitting outfielder and first baseman from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Ibarra was one of the most powerful home run hitters of his era and had an excellent eye for drawing walks. Despite that, he was an average-at-best contact hitter with a poor strikeout rate. You’d put up with it for 47 home runs per his 162 game average. Ibarra had four seasons of 50+ dingers and twice had 60+. He posted similar results from both sides of the plate.

        Ibarra’s power was all for dingers though, as he only got you 15 doubles and 6 triples per 162 games. 44% of his plate appearances were one of the three true outcomes. Despite the slugger profile, Ibarra was actually a fantastic baserunner with very good speed, successfully stealing on 73% of his attempts. He was one of the era’s most dangerous bats despite a middling average and high strikeout rate.

        He had just over half of his starts in left field, where he graded as a subpar but passable defender. Around 30% of the starts were at first base with the rest in center field. Ibarra graded as a good defender at 1B, but he was awful in CF. He had his share of injuries, but held up pretty well over a 19-year career. Ibarra’s personality didn’t stand out, but his talent made him one of Mexico’s most popular stars of the 21st Century.

        Ibarra went fifth in the 2012 CABA Draft to Tijuana and was a starter right away, although he struggled as a rookie with a league-worst 190 strikeouts and only 19 homers. He found his power the next year with 58 homers, 134 RBI, and a Mexican League best 9.2 WAR, winning a Silver Slugger in CF. Ibarra signed an eight-year, $87,900,000 extension with the Toros after the 2015 campaign.

        It was hard to stand out in the North Division during the Juarez dynasty, but Tijuana was above .500 each year from 2014-27. Ibarra won Silver Sluggers in LF in 2015-16 and was on pace for his best season in 2017, but his missed most of the spring with a fractured finger. Ibarra notably on July 27, 2017 had a six-hit game against Hermosillo. Tijuana ended a 17-year playoff drought in 2017, but had a wild card round exit. They won 85 games in both the next two years.

        In 2018, Ibarra won his lone MVP and fourth Slugger, leading with 60 homers, .678 slugging, and a career-best 9.5 WAR. He was second in 2020’s MVP voting and had another Slugger, posting his career bests for homers (64), RBI (141), runs (128), slugging (.709), and OPS (1.097). Tijuana went 100-62, but again had a first round exit as they fell to 112-win Juarez.

        2021 was the breakthrough for the Toros as the top seed at 103-59. They beat the Jesters to win the Mexican League title, then defeated Puerto Rico for their first CABA Championship win since their 1910s dynasty. Ibarra was a stud in the playoffs and won finals MVP. In 14 starts, he had 16 hits, 17 runs, 8 homers, 13 RBI, 1.321 OPS, 248 wRC+, and 1.2 WAR.

        In the Baseball Grand Championship, Tijuana was one of five teams tied for fourth at 11-8. Ibarra had a nice showing with 11 hits, 14 runs, 5 homers, 12 RBI, 20 walks, 1.001 OPS, and 0.9 WAR. His role in the 2021 championship cemented his status as a beloved icon for Tijuana. Ibarra’s #29 uniform would be retired at the end of his career.

        The Toros were just outside the playoffs for the next two years. Ibarra left for free agency after the 2023 campaign at age 33. For Tijuana, he had 1575 games, 1540 hits, 1124 runs, 150 doubles, 66 triples, 500 home runs, 1088 RBI, 695 walks, 1625 strikeouts, 605 steals, .275/.363/.594 slash, 165 wRC+, and 73.2 WAR. He left Mexico as the allure of Major League Baseball money was strong, signing a five-year, $91 million deal with Raleigh.

        Ibarra remained very popular with Mexican fans and returned home regularly for the World Baseball Championship. From 2015-27, Ibarra played 167 games with 104 hits, 97 runs, 15 doubles, 49 homers, 86 RBI, 68 steals, 82 walks, .200/.338/.515 slash, and 7.0 WAR. Among Mexicans in the WBC, Ibarra is 6th in batting WAR, 6th in runs, and 7th in homers. Mexico’s deepest run was his first WBC as a part-time starter, helping them to a runner-up finish. They also finished 3rd in 2018 and 2nd in 2020.

        Raleigh was one of MLB’s expansion teams from 2021. Ibarra helped bring them their first team successes with playoff trips in 2025, 26, and 28 and division titles the latter two. The Raptors never got beyond the second round, although Ibarra had a .974 OPS and 0.6 WAR in his 13 playoff starts. Ibarra didn’t win any awards in MLB, but he fared very well. He led the National Association in walks for both 2025-26 and in steals in 2024. He had 7.4 WAR in 2024 and 52 homers in 2026.

        Ibarra’s numbers dipped somewhat in his final two seasons as he dealt with plantar fasciitis in 2027 and a torn quad in 2028. In five seasons for Raleigh, he had 710 games, 595 hits, 488 runs, 59 doubles, 207 homers, 408 RBI, 419 walks, 180 steals, .246/.372/.535 slash, 155 wRC+, and 26.6 WAR. The deal was certainly considered a success and Ibarra was very popular in North Carolina.

        Now 38-years old, Ibarra returned to the Mexican League on a two-year, $28 million deal with Ecatepec and ended up extended for a third season. His stats were well down from his prime, but Ibarra was still a respectable starter with 398 games, 357 hits, 257 runs, 44 doubles, 66 homers, 173 RBI, 184 walks, 194 steals, .262/.357/.467 slash, 137 wRC+, and 10.4 WAR.

        In 2029, Ecatepec was a 100-62 wild card and upset defending champ Leon in the MLCS. The Explosion then toppled reigning CABA champ Honduras in the final for the franchise’s ninth CABA ring. Ibarra had another strong playoff run with a .963 OPS and 0.7 WAR in nine games. In the Baseball Grand Championship, he had .915 OPS, 150 wRC+, and 0.7 WAR in 14 games; although Ecatepec finished at 9-12.

        The Explosion had a division title but first round exit in 2030. They would win the Mexican League crown again in 2031, but lost to Haiti in the CABA Championship. Ibarra unfortunately missed the entire playoff run with a broken kneecap suffered on August 20. It was a major injury, but he was originally expected to be able to return by the start of 2032. Puebla gave him a one-year, $3,920,000 deal, but Ibarra never took the field for the Pumas. He suffered a setback in recovery in March 2032 and was told by doctors to retire. Ibarra officially filed the papers that winter at age 42.

        For his combined pro career, Ibarra had 2683 games, 2492 hits, 1869 runs, 253 doubles, 95 triples, 773 home runs, 1669 RBI, 1298 walks, 2766 strikeouts, 979 steals, .266/.365/.560 slash, 158 wRC+, and 110.0 WAR. For his CABA run, Ibarra had 1973 games, 1897 hits, 1381 runs, 194 doubles, 85 triples, 566 home runs, 1261 RBI, 879 walks, 2043 strikeouts, 799 steals, .273/.362/.569 slash, 159 wRC+, and 83.6 WAR.

        Ibarra ranks 48th in runs, 39th in homers, 33rd in walks, 50th in steals, 41st in strikeouts, and 68th in WAR for position players. His .931 OPS ranks 93rd among CABA batters with 3000+ plate appearances. Still, Ibarra did lose positioning on the CABA leaderboards since he had the five-year gap to Raleigh. There were a few voters who felt his raw tallies weren’t quite high enough.

        Far more Hall of Fame voters remembered Ibarra as a premier slugger and as a critical piece for Tijuana’s 2021 championship. The rings at the end with Ecatepec gave him an extra boost as well, plus he was incredibly well-liked by fans. Ibarra’s 74.5% was the lowest of the four inductees in 2037, but he earned a first ballot spot and a deserved place among the legends of the Central American Baseball Association.

        Comment

        • MrNFL_FanIQ
          MVP
          • Oct 2008
          • 4984

          #2524





          Two starting pitchers entered the East Asia Baseball Hall of Fame in 2037 with Nobuyoshi Yamauchi the clear headliner at 98.7%. Hiroshi Yama****a got a big bump up on his third ballot to join him with 80.6%. The only other guy above 50% was SP Naotake Nishisawa at 51.6% on his second try. No players were dropped after ten failed ballots.



          Nobuyoshi Yamauchi – Starting Pitcher – Osaka Orange Sox – 98.7% First Ballot

          Nobuyoshi Yamauchi was a 6’3’’, 185 pound left-handed pitcher from Funabashi, Japan; a city of around 645,000 inhabitants in the Chiba Prefecture. Yamauchi had excellent stuff with average movement. His control was good for his prime years and got better with age even as his stuff faltered. Yamauchi’s velocity peaked in the 96-98 mph range with a four-pitch arsenal of fastball, slider, changeup, cutter; each pitch was equally potent.

          Yamauchi was especially dominant facing left-handed batters with a 2.24 ERA, 149 ERA+, and 60 FIP-. He was plenty good though with a 2.48 ERA, 134 ERA+, and 76 FIP- against righties. Yamauchi’s stamina was merely decent compared to most EAB aces, but he had ironman durability and was good for 200+ innings each year from 2012-29. He was excellent at holding runners and was solid at fielding the position.

          By the 2008 EAB Draft, Yamauchi was a highly ranked prospect from Yukiya High School in Tokyo. Chiba picked him with the 11th overall pick, but they couldn’t come to terms and Yamauchi opted to attend Kyushu International University. Yamauchi was next eligible for the 2011 EAB Draft and went third overall to Osaka, where he became one of the Orange Sox’s most popular players ever.

          Yamauchi was a full-time starter immediately and won 2012 Rookie of the Year with a 2.52 ERA, 4.2 WAR effort. His sophomore season saw a Japan League best 302 strikeouts, taking second in Pitcher of the Year voting. Yamauchi signed a five-year, $41,500,000 extension with Osaka after the 2013 campaign. In 2014, he threw his lone no-hitter on May 15 with 14 Ks and 1 walk facing Niigata.

          In 2015, Yamauchi won his first Pitcher of the Year with a league and career best 314 strikeouts and 28 quality starts. It was his only time as the WARlord at 7.5 and it was one of three seasons with an ERA below two. Yamauchi was at 1.89 in 2015, then 1.90 in 2016. He was third in 2016’s POTY voting, then won again in 2017. That year had league-bests for wins (23-7) and Ks (301).

          With Yamauchi as the ace, Osaka became a contender again with six straight playoff trips from 2015-20. After first round exits in 2015-16, the Orange Sox began a dynasty. They won the Japan League title in 2017, 2018, and 2020. Osaka fell to Changwon in the 2017 EAB Championship, then beat Seongnam for the 2018 crown. In 2020, they had their best record of the run at 102-60 and topped Hamhung for the EAB crown.

          Yamauchi was steady in the playoffs with 122.1 innings, 2.87 ERA, 7-6 record, 144 Ks, 19 walks, 116 ERA+, 77 FIP-, and 3.2 WAR. He was a mixed bag in the Baseball Grand Championship, posting an impressive 1.29 ERA in 2018 over 28 innings, but a 4.97 ERA in 2017 and 3.41 in 2020. Osaka was 5-14 in 2017, then was one of four tied for fourth in 2018 at 11-8. The Orange Sox finished 7-12 in 2020. Yamauchi finished with 82.1 BGC innings , 3.17 ERA, 6-4 record, 87 strikeouts, 31 walks, and 1.0 WAR.

          He also pitched from 2013-17 and from 2022-26 for Japan in the World Baseball Championship. Yamauchi’s stats were unremarkable there with a 3.43 ERA in 57.2 innings, 3-6 record, 92 strikeouts, 23 walks, and 1.5 WAR. It was a rare down period for a normally strong Japanese team, who didn’t have any playoff berths with Yamauchi on roster.

          In May 2018, Yamauchi signed a seven-year, $133 million extension with Osaka. The Orange Sox remained above .500 through 2027, but the dynasty ended with the 2020 title. They wouldn’t make the playoffs again with Yamauchi there. He continued to thrive generally, including a career-best 8.7 WAR in 2022 and an ERA title in 2024 at 2.05. 2024 also had his best WHIP at 0.81 and he was third in POTY voting for both 2022 and 2024.

          In 2024, Yamauchi also crossed the 200 win and 3500 strikeout milestones. Despite being very popular and still successful, Osaka surprised many by trading the 34-year old Yamauchi in March 2025 to Kobe for three prospects. One of them, 1B Takahide Sagara, would be a good starter through 2030 for the Orange Sox and won 2026’s Rookie of the Year.

          With Osaka, Yamauchi had a 206-94 record, 2.37 ERA, 2896.2 innings, 3627 strikeouts, 517 walks, 140 ERA+, 70 FIP-, and 79.0 WAR. His #35 uniform would later be retired by the Orange Sox. The trade to Kobe was especially surprising since the Blaze were the top divisional rival. 2022 started a playoff streak for Kobe that carried through 2032.

          In his Kobe debut, Yamauchi won his third Pitcher of the Year by leading in WHIP, quality starts, and shutouts. He also won a Silver Slugger as he hit .325 that year. By pitcher standards, Yamauchi was a decent batter with a career .216/.224/.251 slash. Kobe gave him a four-year, $96,800,000 extension after the 2025 season. Yamauchi wouldn’t be a POTY finalist again, but he remained very good through 2029, including his career-best 1.88 ERA in 2028.

          Although the Blaze had an impressive playoff streak, they didn’t have any postseason success. Their deepest runs with Yamauchi were JLCS defeats in 2025 and 2029. The 2029 exit against Niigata was especially frustrating, as Kobe was the top seed at 109-53. Yamauchi’s playoff stats saw a 2.73 ERA in 62.2 innings, 1-3 record, 78 strikeouts, 0 walks, 120 ERA+, 59 FIP-, and 2.1 WAR. In his later years, he relied more on control as his velocity was starting to dip.

          In total, Yamauchi had 185 playoff innings with a 2.82 ERA, 8-9 record, 222 strikeouts, 19 walks, 117 ERA+, 71 FIP-, and 5.3 WAR. He ranks 4th in WAR among pitchers and 5th in innings. For nearly his entire run, Yamauchi was part of successful teams in contention.

          By 2030, Yamauchi’s velocity was peaking in the 91-93 mph range and he started to struggle for the first time. He was reduced to a relief role with a 3.36 ERA over 112.2 innings, 106 Ks, and 1.3 WAR. With Kobe, Yamauchi had a 93-42 record, 2.38 ERA, 1275 innings, 1422 strikeouts, 207 walks, 139 ERA+, 74 FIP-, and 31.8 WAR. While there, he became only the 2nd in EAB history with 5000 strikeouts, although he wouldn’t catch Sang-Hun Joon’s 5694.

          Yamauchi also finished the Kobe run at 299 wins, one away from being the 5th in EAB to the 300 club. He wanted to get there and Nagoya signed him to a two-year, $25,600,000 deal. Yamauchi got the 300th win in early April, but struggled in limited use for the Nightowls in 2031 with a 4.67 ERA over 81 innings, 58 Ks, and 0.3 WAR. Yamauchi retired that winter just after his 41st birthday.

          In total, Yamauchi had a 302-145 record, 2.42 ERA, 4252.2 innings, 5107 strikeouts, 740 walks, 378/534 quality starts, 71 complete games, 26 shutouts, 138 ERA+, 72 FIP-, and 111.1 WAR. Yamauchi ranks tied for 4th in wins, 12th in innings, 55th in shutouts, 2nd in strikeouts, and 8th in pitching WAR.

          Among EAB pitchers with 1000+ innings, Yamauchi is 44th in ERA and his 0.94 WHIP is 37th. His 6.92 H/9 is 54th, his 10.81 K/9 is 49th, and his .582 opponent’s OPS is 53rd. Yamauchi’s .212/.252/.330 triple slash ranks 49th/49th/72nd. On the world leaderboard for all pitchers ever, Yamauchi ranks 41st in wins and 35th in strikeouts, although he misses the top 50 for WAR.

          Yamauchi is an obvious inner-circle Hall of Famer, although there is a fierce debate when ranking East Asia Baseball’s best-ever pitchers. He makes the majority of top ten lists and some put him into the top five. Yamauchi isn’t usually placed in the #1 spot, but EAB doesn’t have an undisputed GOAT like some other leagues. He’s one of the game’s immortals in any case and was a big part of a dynasty run for Osaka. Yamauchi headlined the 2037 HOF ballot at 98.7%.



          Hiroshi Yamashita – Starting Pitcher – Changwon Crabs – 80.6% Third Ballot

          Hiroshi Yamashɨia was a 6’2’’, 200 pound right-handed starting pitcher from Sakaide, Japan; a small city of about 49,000 people in the Kagawa Prefecture. Yama****a was known for great control and above average movement, allowing him to succeed despite merely average stuff. His velocity peaked in the 92-94 mph range with an arsenal of fastball, changeup, splitter, and curveball.

          Yama****a
          had excellent stamina and great durability for most of his career, tossing 220+ innings each year from 2013-28. He did struggle defensively and was below average at holding runners. Yama****a was known in the clubhouse as a huge prankster, although he didn’t always understand when it was appropriate to joke around and when not to.

          He attended Akashi Shogyo High School and earned plenty of attention from scouts. Yama****a
          went 16th to Kawasaki in the 2009 EAB Draft, although his time in the Killer Whales organization was brief. In June 2010, he was one of three prospects traded to Changwon for reliever Seung-Min Song. Yama****a debuted in 2012 with 45.2 relief innings for the Crabs, although he struggled initially at age 20.

          Changwon made him a full-time starter after that, but he did have mixed results especially early on. Yama****a
          settled into giving reliable innings, but his results were never exceptional. 2015 had his highest single-season WAR at 5.2. He was usually good for 3-4 WAR per year with the Crabs, but he never had an ERA below three.

          After eight straight losing seasons, Changwon rebounded to 83-79 in 2015. Then they stunned the Korea League with back-to-back championships in 2016-17. In 2016, the Crabs went 92-70, beat Seoul in the KLCS, then dethroned reigning champ Yokohama in the EAB Championship. Changwon was better at 100-62 in 2017 and again beat the Seahawks for the KL pennant, followed by a victory over Osaka in the East Asian Championship.

          Changwon had limited luck in the Baseball Grand Championship, going 6-13 in 2016 and 8-11 in 2017. Yama****a
          had a 3.58 ERA over 32.2 innings in the former and a 2.28 ERA over 27.2 innings in the latter. His playoff stats were a mixed bag as well with a 3.94 ERA over 32 innings in 2016 and a 4.76 ERA in 34 innings for 2017. Still, the Crabs were pleased with their dynasty run and gave Yama****a a three-year, $33,300,000 extension in March 2018.

          2018 saw a franchise best record of 110-52 for Changwon, but they were upset in the first round by Seongnam. The Crabs got the #1 seed again in 2019 at 97-65, but yet again were one-and-done. They then missed the playoffs via a tiebreaker in 2020 at 92-70. Yama****a
          kept on chugging along as Changwon bounced back with a 100-62 wild card in 2021. They upset 109-win Busan in the KLCS, but fell to Kyoto in the EAB Championship. The Crabs were 6-13 in the BGC with Yama****a struggling to a 6.75 ERA in 25.1 innings.

          For his playoff career with Changwon, Yama****a
          had a 5-6 record in 18 starts, 3.97 ERA, 127 innings, 97 strikeouts, 15 walks, 93 ERA+, 108 FIP-, and 1.3 WAR. Even if he wasn’t exceptional, he was appreciated for his role in their dynasty run. The Crabs eventually retired Yamashita’s #6 uniform. He wouldn’t be re-signed though after the 2021 season, entering free agency at age 30. For Changwon, Yamashita had a 138-121 record, 3.84 ERA, 2232.1 innings, 1838 strikeouts, 418 walks, 81 complete games, 13 shutouts, 97 ERA+, 98 FIP-, and 30.6 WAR.

          Yama****
          a signed a five-year, $60,500,000 deal with Chiba. From 2023-25, he led the Japan League in innings pitched, peaking with 274 in 2025. That year also had his career best ERA of 2.73. Yama****a led in win for the only time at 19-8 in 2023 and had his high for strikeouts with 227 in 2022. Still, he was never a Pitcher of the Year finalist. But with the Comets, he reliably ate innings just as he had with Changwon.

          Chiba had a breakout 97-65 season in 2023 and got to the JLCS as the top seed, but was defeated by reigning champ Fukuoka. They were a one-and-done wild card in 2025 and just missed with 90 and 91 wins in 2024 and 2026. The Comets were the top seed again in 2027 at 100-62, but fell in the divisional series. Yama****
          a was 0-2 in his four playoff starts for Chiba, but had a 3.03 ERA in 29.2 innings with 23 Ks and 0.3 WAR. He missed the 2027 playoff run because of a ruptured disc in August, the only big injury of his career.

          With the Comets, Yamashi
          ta had a 112-69 record, 3.26 ERA, 1672 innings, 1386 strikeouts, 291 walks, 56 complete games, 10 shutouts, 104 ERA+, 93 FIP-, and 26.0 WAR. On July 4, 2028, Yama****a became only the 16th in EAB history with 250 career wins. Three days later, he was traded to Sapporo for two prospects. The Swordfish used him mostly in relief to close the year with a 4.50 ERA in 36 innings. They made the playoffs, but had a wild card round exit.

          Now 37-years old, Yamash
          ita signed a one-year, $6 million deal with Niigata. He had a limited role with a 4.09 ERA over 101.1 innings, 84 Ks, and 0.1 WAR. Although he wasn’t used in the playoffs, Yama****a got a ring as the Green Dragons won the EAB title. He wasn’t expected to be used for that winter’s Baseball Grand Championship, so Yama****a retired after the championship win at age 38.

          Yama****a
          had a 258-197 record, 3.61 ERA, 4041.2 innings, 3348 strikeouts, 741 walks, 305/507 quality starts, 137 complete games, 28 shutouts, 99 ERA+, 96 FIP-, and 57.1 WAR. He ranks 13th in wins, 18th in losses, 16th in innings, 70th in strikeouts, and 38th in complete games. Yama****a doesn’t make the top 100 for pitching WAR and his ERA was higher than all previous EAB Hall of Famers. The only one who was above 3.50 was Sang-Hun Joon at 3.51, but he also had 346 wins.

          Traditionalists pointed to wins and innings as the big selling point for Yama****a
          . Being in the top 15 in wins in a league with more than a century of history was plenty for some voters. Yama****a also had the rings with Changwon and was remembered for being a part of their dynasty run. Those who looked at Sabermetrics felt Yama****a was the ultimate compiler. He was almost certainly the only HOFer in the world with an ERA+ below 100; a 100 grade suggests league average.

          Yama****a
          was also never a Pitcher of the Year finalist and wasn’t considered a top five level guy at any point in his run. Those who favored exceptional peaks over longevity were loudly against Yama****a’s candidacy. For the majority, 250 wins and the rings couldn’t be ignored. He debuted in 2035 at 63.9%, just missing the 66% requirement. Yama****a dropped to 55.9% in 2036, but got a huge bump up to 80.6% in 2037. He’s a polarizing pick between old school and new school voters, but Yama****a regardless joined the East Asia Baseball HOF on his third ballot.

          Comment

          • MrNFL_FanIQ
            MVP
            • Oct 2008
            • 4984

            #2525
            Beisbol Sudamerica had a big four-man Hall of Fame class for 2037, each earning the first ballot nod. 1B Juan Carlos Rivera and SS/1B Eddy Corunha were the no-doubters, co-headlining at 99.0% and 97.9%, respectively. 1B/3B Elijah Reuter was next at 78.0% and CL Ronaldo Navarette breached the 66% requirement at 71.1%. No one else was above 50%.



            Dropped after ten ballots included SP Rodrigo Quiroz, who got as high as 55.4% in 2029 before ending at a low of 34.1%. In 14 years with Medellin, Quiroz had a 168-113 record, 88 saves, 3.57 ERA, 2205 innings, 2367 strikeouts, 113 ERA+, 76 FIP-, and 55.5 WAR. Injuries forced him out of the rotation in his early 30s and out of baseball by age 35. Quiroz was a Pitcher of the Year finalist thrice in his prime, but he wasn’t successful long enough to have the necessary numbers. Still, he played an important role in back-to-back Bolivar League titles in 2013-14 for the Mutiny with a Copa Sudamerica win in 2014.

            Closer Samuel Andrade also dropped after ten ballots, getting as close at 57.5% in 2029 before closing at only 15.0%. He was hurt by bouncing between different leagues and teams in his later years. In BSA, Andrade had 368 saves, 87-83 record, 2.39 ERA, 1012.2 innings, 1360 strikeouts, 265 walks, 154 ERA+, 55 FIP-, and 39.3 WAR.

            Andrade won Reliever of the Year twice and helped Brasilia to a Copa Sudamerica win in 2002. He ranks 16th in saves and 57th in ERA among pitchers with 1000+ innings. Andrade’s resume is comparable to some of the lower-end inducted relievers, but he wasn’t quite dominant enough to stand out enough to receive the nod.




            Juan Carlos Rivera – First Base – Fortaleza Foxes – 99.0% First Ballot

            Juan Carlos Rivera was a 6’2’’, 195 pound left-handed first baseman from the capital of Paraguay, Asuncion. In his prime, Rivera was an incredibly efficient batter with good-to-great grades for contact, power, and eye overall. He absolutely raked against right-handed pitching with a career 1.100 OPS and 205 wRC+. Rivera was by no means bad against lefties with a .889 OPS and 153 wRC+. He was also better than most in BSA at avoiding strikeouts.

            Rivera’s power wasn’t prolific, but he got a solid dose of extra base hits with 34 home runs, 24 doubles, and 9 triples per his 162 game average. His speed was also quite good and he was one of the craftier baserunners and thieves in the game. Rivera led the Southern Cone League five times in runs scored, regularly making the most of his times on base.

            His value definitely came from his offense, as he graded as a terrible defender as a career first baseman. Although Rivera had a 19-year career, injuries limited him at various points. He was a very quiet and humble man, perhaps not always advocating for himself when he could have. Rivera’s fierce loyalty and talent though made him a very popular player both in Brazi where he spent his prime and back home in Paraguay.

            From 2014-31, Rivera did regularly return to Paraguay to represent his country in the World Baseball Championship. He played 126 games with 119 hits, 78 runs, 14 doubles, 31 homers, 63 RBI, 83 walks, 50 steals, .275/.390/.528 slash, and 5.9 WAR. He did help Paraguay to its second-ever playoff trip in 2025.

            Rivera’s pro career started in Uruguay, picked 23rd by Montevideo in the 2009 BSA Draft. He was a very late bloomer though and rarely saw the field during his six years employed by the Venom. From 2010-15, Rivera played 244 games and started only 19 with 83 hits, 46 runs, 13 doubles, 4 triples, 9 homers, 47 RBI, .854 OPS, 123 wRC+, and 1.6 WAR. He also went 4-10 as a playoff pinch hitter. Montevideo notably was the top seed in 2015 at 104-58, but lost in the LCS to Recife.

            It seemed clear that they didn’t see much in Rivera. In January 2016, he was traded straight up to Fortaleza for SP Jose Innocenti, a back-end pitcher. The Foxes had kept an eye on him and though he had tons of potential, making Rivera a full-time starter immediately in 2016. They were rewarded quickly as he had an OPS above one and 5.5+ WAR each year from 2016-26 with Fortaleza.

            In Rivera’s second year with the Foxes, he won his first Silver Slugger and was second in MVP voting. He led the league with career highs for runs (132), and RBI (136) and had his best home run total of 52. Rivera also led in slugging (.711), OPS (1.114), and wRC+ (220). He would again lead in those three starts in 2020, 22, 23, and 25. Rivera won Silver Sluggers each of those years and in 2021.

            In June 2019, Fortaleza extended Rivera for seven years and $55,200,000. Two days after putting ink to paper, he hit for the cycle against Manaus. The Foxes had won titles before he got there in 2013-14, but had a brief lull in the middle of the decade. Fortaleza returned to the playoffs in 2019 at 102-60, but fell in the divisional round. They would drop to 80-82 in 2020 and miss the playoffs.

            Rivera was third in MVP voting for 2021 and was the All-Star Game MVP, leading the league with 123 runs. The Foxes got a wild card at 95-67 and got hot, winning the Southern Cone League Championship over reigning champ Santiago. Rivera was series MVP and had 20 hits, 15 runs, 5 doubles, 4 homers, 10 RBI, 1.095 OPS, and 0.9 WAR over 17 playoff starts. Fortaleza was ultimately denied in Copa Sudamerica by Valencia. They finished 9-10 in the Baseball Grand Championship with Rivera posting 19 hits, 13 runs, 4 homers, 10 RBI, .931 OPS, 158 wRC+, and 1.0 WAR.

            In 2022, Rivera was again third in MVP voting and led in runs, walks, OBP, slugging, OPS, and wRC+. Fortaleza won the division at 95-67 and upset 103-win Santiago in an LCS rematch for repeat pennants. They fell to 114-win Caracas, the eventual Grand Champion, in Copa Sudamerica. Rivera had a .873 OPS and 0.5 WAR in the playoffs. The Foxes finished 8-11 in the BGC despite a dominant run for Rivera with 22 hits, 16 runs, 8 homers, 1.233 OPS, 264 wRC+, and 2.0 WAR. His WAR is one of only 27 times in BGC history at or above two for a position player.

            A fractured hand kept Rivera out for the start of the season and limited him to 128 games, but he still was second in MVP voting with by far his most efficient season. He had league and career bests for triple slash (.380/.476/.805), OPS (1.281), wRC+ (256), and WAR (9.8). At the time, this set BSA single-season records for both OBP and OPS. At induction among qualifying seasons, Rivera’s OBP ranks 5th, slugging 3rd, and OPS 2nd in BSA. On the world leaderboard, it ranks 14th in OBP, 32nd in slugging, and 16th in OPS.

            Fortaleza finished 101-61, but had a divisional round upset loss. They barely got a wild card at 86-76 the next year, but got to the 2024 LCS where they lost to Sao Paulo. Rivera lost part of the summer in 2024 to a strained abdominal muscle as injuries started to become a concern. He was third in 2025’s MVP voting, leading again in OPS. A torn labrum in September kept Rivera out for the entire postseason run. Without him, Fortaleza won another pennant, but lost Copa Sudamerica to Barranquilla. They finished 10-9 in the BGC.

            A torn quad cost Rivera some games in 2026, but he led in runs once more and was third in MVP voting. Even with the recent injuries and Rivera ‘s 37th birthday coming in December, the Foxes gave him a three-year, $33,700,000 extension. This was the last gasp for Fortaleza’s six-year playoff streak, winning the division title at 97-65 but falling in the divisional round. The Foxes fell to 78-84 the next year and wouldn’t be back above .500 until 2034.

            In his playoff career, Rivera finished with 67 games, 57 starts, 61 hits, 38 runs, 13 doubles, 4 triples, 10 homers, 30 RBI, 36 walks, .296/.404/.544 slash, 160 wRC+, and 2.2 WAR. He was certainly one of the key reasons Fortaleza won three pennants in the 2020s and his #28 uniform would later be retired.
            Rivera still had a good pace in 2027, but strained abdominal muscles kept him out almost half of the year.

            2028 was his final full season starting, leading in OBP for the fifth time. His power had dropped significantly, but he was still good for .916 OPS, 163 wRC+, and 4.6 WAR. Out of respect, Fortaleza gave him another three-year, $33,700,000 extension that winter. Rivera’s bat declined sharply, especially against lefties. He was mostly a pinch hitter in his final three years with 292 games, but only 66 starts. Rivera retired after the 2031 season just after his 42nd birthday.

            Rivera finished with 2368 games, 2440 hits, 1473 runs, 357 doubles, 135 triples, 492 home runs, 1329 RBI, 955 walks, 1129 strikeouts, 749 steals, .340/.417/.634 slash, 1.051 OPS, 193 wRC+, and 94.6 WAR. Between being a late bloomer and later injuries, Rivera’s accumulations weren’t exceptional. He ranks 32nd in runs, 77th in total bases (4543), 76th in homers, 84th in RBI, 67th in steals, 23rd in walks, and 48th in WAR among position players.

            Among BSA batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Rivera’s triple slash ranks 36th/5th/13th and his OPS is 5th. Among world Hall of Famers and retired locks, his triple slash is 27th/5th/32nd and his OPS is 11th. In that same group, Rivera’s wRC+ is tied for 17th best. There is no doubt that he was one of the most efficient hitters to ever swing a bat.

            Even voters that were stingy about accumulations knew Rivera was well deserving of joining Beisbol Sudamerica’s enshrined greats. He never won MVP, but was a regular finalist in his prime and a huge part of a dynasty run for Fortaleza. The humble Rivera received a near unanimous 99.0% to co-headline the four-player 2037 class.




            Eddy “Matchbox” Corunha – Shortstop/First Base – Brasilia Bearcats – 97.9% First Ballot

            Eddy Corunha was a 6’4’’, 200 pound switch-hitting infielder from Sao Leopoldo, Brazil; a city with about 239,000 inhabitants in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul. Nicknamed “Matchbox,” Corunha was known for being a solid contact hitter with excellent home run power especially facing right-handed pitching. He had a career 1.004 OPS and 180 wRC+. On the downside, Corunha was very middling against lefties with a .790 OPS and 99 wRC+.

            Even with his LHP issues, Corunha was good for 45 homers, 21 doubles, and 8 triples per 162 games. His strikeout rate and ability to draw walks were merely okay. In his prime, Corunha was a dangerous baserunner with rock solid speed. He did run into some injuries, but still managed to hold up fairly well over an 18-year career.

            About 60% of Corunha’s starts came at shortstop, but he was a poor defender there. His bigger frame fit much better at first base where he had great defensive grades and most of his other starts. Corunha was definitely far better than most shortstops in terms of bat and Brasilia was often willing to put up with bad defense to get great offense. His personality was a bit enigmatic with high marks for loyalty and intelligence, but low marks for work ethic, adaptability, and greed.

            Corunha was picked eighth by Brasilia in the 2017 BSA Draft and spent his entire South American career there. He was immediately popular and immediately successful, winning 2018 Rookie of the Year honors with a 1.029 OPS, 6.5 WAR debut. Corunha’s second year was his finest, winning his lone MVP and first Silver Slugger (at 1B). He led the Southern Cone League in runs (120), homers (58), total bases (430), slugging (.708), OPS (1.112), wRC+ (210), and WAR (10.6). Those were all career highs, as was his 213 hits, 132 RBI, and .404 OBP.

            He never had a year quite that good again and only sporadically was a league leader, but Corunha was a reliably strong starter. He had ten more seasons with 40+ homers and three with an OPS above one. Corunha wasn’t an MVP candidate again, but won Silver Sluggers at SS from 2023-31. He led with 117 runs in 2030 and with both 46 homers and a .669 slugging in 2027. Corunha also hit for the cycle in 2022 against Rosario.

            When Corunha arrived, Brasilia had only made the playoffs once since 2005. The worst of these seasons was a 56-106 debacle in 2025. The Bearcats bounced back as a surprise 95-win wild card in 2026, although they didn’t get beyond the divisional series. Brasilia signed Corunha to a five-year, $95 million extension in April 2027 with the hopes that they’d become a contender.

            They fell two wins short of a wild card in 2027, then posted 111, 107, and 102 win seasons from 2028-30 with three division titles. Frustratingly, Brasilia lost in the divisional round all three years and again as a wild card in 2031. In his 16 career playoff starts, Corunha was unremarkable with a .230/.277/.475 slash, 98 wRC+, and 0.2 WAR.

            Corunha was 37-years old after the 2031 season and still playing at his usual strong pace. He decided not to re-sign with Brasilia and wanted to seek out the MLB bag. Corunha remained very popular with Bearcats fans even after leaving and his #50 uniform would later get retired. He got the big paycheck on a three-year, $96 million deal with San Francisco. His previous best annual salary was $19.4 million; he’d get $32 million per year with the Gold Rush.

            With San Francisco, Corunha was a decent starter, but wasn’t exceptional. He also started to miss some time with more consistent back issues. SF was in a rebuilding period and wouldn’t make the playoffs with Corunha. He played 356 games with 341 hits, 185 runs, 42 doubles, 13 triples, 77 home runs, 209 RBI, .258/.303/.484 slash, 104 wRC+, and 5.1 WAR.

            Big league teams generally felt Corunha was cooked, but he wasn’t willing to call it quits yet. He eventually had to settle for Katowice of European Tier Three for a measly $940,000. He played 101 games with a .726 OPS, 114 wRC+, and 1.3 WAR. No one signed Corunha for 2036 and he eventually retired in the winter shortly after his 42nd birthday.

            With Brasilia, Corunha had 2021 games, 2325 hits, 1340 runs, 226 doubles, 109 triples, 599 home runs, 1408 RBI, 479 walks, 1554 strikeouts, 735 steals, .308/.350/.611 slash, 171 wRC+, and 89.7 WAR. Corunha ranks 62nd in runs, 72nd in total bases (4606), 25th in homers, 60th in RBI, and 58th in WAR for position players. His .962 OPS is 53rd among BSA batters with 3000+ plate appearances and his slugging is 26th.

            Corunha’s impressive power and dominance specifically against right-handed pitching made him stand out to Hall of Fame voters. He was regularly viewed as the top hitting shortstop in the league for his prime and did help turn Brasilia around, even if they had no playoff luck. Corunha was a slam dunk inductee at 97.7%, co-headlining a four-player 2037 class for Beisbol Sudamerica.

            Comment

            • MrNFL_FanIQ
              MVP
              • Oct 2008
              • 4984

              #2526




              Elijah “Chick” Reuter – First/Third Base – Barquisimeto Black Cats – 78.0% First Ballot

              Elijah Reuter was a 6’3’’, 195 pound right-handed corner infielder from Rio Tercero, Argentina; a small city of 53,000 people in the Cordoba Province. Nicknamed “Chick,” Reuter was known as an excellent contact hitter equally against both sides. His power was more focused on the gap but he still went yard a decent amount, posting a 162 game average of 21 home runs, 26 doubles, and 12 triples. Reuter was better than most at avoiding strikeouts, but middling at drawing walks.

              Reuter was a highly skilled baserunner and had much better speed than you’d expect from a corner infielder with his build. Around half of his career starts came at first base with most of the rest at third and occasional use as a designated hitter. Reuter graded as a rock solid defender at 1B, but was terrible at 3B. He was popular with fans, but did sometimes annoy coaches with low grades for intelligence, work ethic, and adaptability. Reuter did have ironman durability though and never missed any significant time to injury.

              In September 2005, Reuter left Argentina for Venezuela on a developmental deal with Barquisimeto. He proved to be a very late bloomer and spent the better part of nine years in their system. Reuter debuted in 2011 at age 21, but only saw 48 plate appearances from 2011-13. Barquisimeto was also a playoff regular at this point, so openings at the corners were limited.

              Reuter was on the roster more regularly with 203 games from 2014-15, although he only started 27. He finally earned the full-time gig in 2016 at age 26 and remained a starter for the rest of his career. It marked the end of the Black Cats’ time as a playoff contender with a final wild card and first round exit that year. They wouldn’t be back above .500 again until 2029.

              You couldn’t blame Reuter for their woes with Silver Sluggers in 2017, 19, 20, and 21; all at third base. He had a six-hit game on May 28, 2021 against Barranquilla. Reuter led in hits (231) and batting average (.371) in 2016, both career bests. He wouldn’t be a league leader again with Barquisimeto, but he reliably hit above .300 and was usually around 3-6 WAR.

              Things got especially bleak for Barquisimeto in 2022 as they finished 35-127; the worst record in Beisbol Sudamerica history by a healthy margin and one of the worst in any league ever. They were 48-114 in 2023, Reuter’s last year with the squad. Unsurprisingly, he wasn’t looking to stick around, becoming a free agent for the first time at age 34. This was a very late age though for someone who never was extended to enter the market.

              For the Black Cats, Reuter played 1515 games with 1712 hits, 772 runs, 240 doubles, 121 triples, 192 home runs, 797 RBI, 540 steals, 284 walks, .339/.371/.548 slash, 139 wRC+, and 37.5 WAR. He was often the only redeeming thing on some bad teams and was popular, later getting his #27 uniform retired. Reuter went home to Argentina next as he signed for $27 million over four years with Buenos Aires.

              Even while in Venezuela, Reuter did represent Argentina regularly in the World Baseball Championship, although often as a reserve. From 2017-31, he played 91 games and started 53 with 62 hits, 31 runs, 15 doubles, 4 triples, 9 homers, 39 RBI, .262/.313/.473 slash, and 1.8 WAR.

              When he arrived back in the capital, Buenos Aires was coming off back-to-back first round exits. They struggled with losing records in Reuter’s first two seasons, but he maintained his usual production and led with 212 hits in 2024. The Atlantics bounced back in 2026 as a 92-70 wild card and made an unexpected run, upsetting Sao Paulo for their first Southern Cone League titles since the early 1980s. Buenos Aires then denied Barranquilla’s repeat bid and won Copa Sudamerica.

              Reuter was LCS MVP and had 30 hits, 16 runs, 2 doubles, 3 triples, 6 RBI, 9 steals, .906 OPS, 164 wRC+, and 1.0 WAR over 19 playoff starts. It is one of only five times that a player had 30+ hits in the BSA playoffs. Buenos Aries tied for ninth in the Baseball Grand Championship at 11-8, although Reuter struggled in that run with -0.3 WAR and .499 OPS.

              The next two years were Reuter’s best for WAR, getting 6.4 both times with Silver Sluggers at first base both years. Buenos Aires was one win short of the playoffs in 2027, which was Reuter’s final year under contract. Coming off a strong season, he went back to free agency at age 38. With the Atlantics, Reuter had 618 games, 819 hits, 375 runs, 107 doubles, 44 triples, 91 home runs, 324 RBI, 251 steals, .343/.378/.539 slash, 163 wRC+, and 19.9 WAR. He’s remembered fondly though for his role in the 2026 championship.

              Reuter signed a two-year, $21,600,000 deal with Brasilia. He was third in 2028’s MVP voting, his only time as a finalist. Reuter led with 225 hits in 2028 and had his career bests for runs (107), homers (28), and wRC+ (187). The Bearcats got the league’s top seed at 111-51, but were upset in the divisional round.

              Despite having a career year, Reuter’s advanced age meant that Brasilia didn’t protect him for the expansion draft in December 2028. Maracay picked him with the #1 pick and he was lackluster in 2029 with 129 games, 9 homers, .825 OPS, 118 wRC+, and 1.9 WAR. The Misfits didn’t re-sign him and he returned to free agency, now at age 40.

              Belo Horizonte hoped to recapture some of the magic with a three-year, $38,300,000 deal. The Hogs had been a surprise Copa Sudamerica winner in 2029 and wanted to become a reliable contender. Reuter had two rock solid seasons with the Hogs and became the 19th member of BSA’s 3000 hit club. However, Belo Horizonte fell just short of the playoffs both years. In 316 games, Reuter had 387 hits, 179 runs, 53 doubles, 27 triples, 40 homers, 175 RBI, 103 steals, .320/.341/.507 slash, 143 wRC+ , and 7.9 WAR. He retired after the 2031 season at age 42.

              Reuter finished with 2736 games, 3305 hits, 1483 runs, 445 doubles, 208 triples, 360 home runs, 1461 RBI, 514 walks, 1410 strikeouts, 1004 steals, 913 caught stealing, .339/.370/.538 slash, 147 wRC+, and 73.5 WAR. Reuter ranks 25th in games, 7th in hits, 30th in runs, 22nd in total bases (5246), 47th in doubles, 56th in triples, 50th in RBI, 19th in steals, and 3rd in caught stealing. He does notably miss the top 100 for WAR among position players.

              Among BSA batters with 3000+ plate appearances, Reuter is 40th in batting average and 89th in OBP. Among world Hall of Famers and retired locks, Reuter is 31st in batting average. On the downside, he’s also 7th in world history for times caught stealing; although Beisbol Sudamerica’s play style does lead to a lower success rate compared to most other leagues.

              Most voters felt his high average and hit totals got Reuter across the line, as well as his role in Buenos Aires’ championship. There were some Sabermetric-minded voters who felt he was over-rated, pointing to the lower WAR total particularly. Being on some truly terrible Barquisimeto teams and having limited home run power as a 1B/3B marked him down as well. Still, Reuter had enough juice for a first ballot selection at 78.0% as part of BSA’s four-man crew for 2037.




              Ronaldo Navarette – Closer – Cali Cyclones – 71.1% First Ballot

              Ronaldo Navarette was a 6’0’’, 190 pound right-handed relief pitcher from the capital of Colombia, Bogota. Navarette was known for strong stuff, rock solid control, and above average-to-good movement. His one-two punch was fastball/slider with a 96-98 mph peak velocity range.

              Navarette’s stamina was excellent compared to most relievers and he avoided the big injuries that ruin many pitchers. He was a good defensive pitcher with a nice pickoff move. Navarette was very well liked in the clubhouse for a strong work ethic and a team-first attitude.

              In the 2016 BSA Draft, Navarette was a mid second round pick, 62nd overall to Cali. He spent 2017 in developmental, then debuted as the full-time closer; a role he held nine years with the Cyclones. Navarette won Reliever of the Year in both 2022 and 2023, leading in saves both times. 2023 saw his high for WAR at 3.6. Navarette had a 40 save streak from 7/20/22 to 6/29/23.

              Navarette’s peak seasons saw wild cards for Cali from 2022-24. Their deepest run saw Bolivar League Championship Series defeats in 2022-23 to the Caracas dynasty. Navarette had one good playoff run in 2023 and terrible outings the other years, finishing with a 5.40 ERA over 26.2 innings, 6 saves, 2-4 record, 26 Ks, and -0.1 WAR.

              He had better luck on the big stage of the World Baseball Championship, pitching from 2019-31 for Colombia. Navarette had 43 games and 7 starts with 102 innings, 2.47 ERA, 6-7 record, 17 saves, 159 strikeouts, 33 walks, 145 ERA+, 74 FIP-, and 2.6 WAR. It was a down period for the Colombians though with no playoff berths during Navarette’s years.

              Navarette wasn’t a Reliever of the Year finalist after his repeat, although he still did have some good years. Cali retreated to the lower-mid tier for the rest of his run there. He had his best ERA of 1.68 in 2024, but was terrible the next year at 5.43. Navarette get league and career bests for saves (46) and games (78) in 2026. For his efforts, Cali later retired his #38 uniform.

              With the Cyclones, Navarette had 310 saves and 334 shutdowns, 83-70 record, 2.61 ERA, 730 innings, 917 strikeouts, 164 walks, 155 ERA+, 66 FIP-, and 24.8 WAR. He was 31-years old as he became a free agent for 2028 and signed a three-year, $17,600,000 deal with Santiago. In his one year with the Saints, he was effective in mid-relief with a 1.91 ERA in 42.1 innings. Navarette got rocked in his two playoff outings though as Santiago had a first round exit.

              In the 2028 expansion draft, Navarette went in the tenth round, 56th overall, to Cochabamba. In his one year with the Bashers, he led in games (64) and had 33 saves, 2.81 ERA, 92 Ks, and 2.6 WAR. They traded him after the 2029 season to Brasilia for three prospects. The Bearcats ultimately gave Navarette a two-year, $10,600,000 extension.

              Navarette had a nice 2030 with 40 saves, 2.39 ERA, 90.1 innings, 3.3 WAR, and a career best 123 Ks. The Bearcats were 102-60, but he was again horrible in the playoffs as they lost in the divisional round. Although a small sample size, Navarette had lousy postseason stats with a career 6.48 ERA over 20 appearances and 33.1 innings.

              He had hoped to chase the 400 save milestone, but his velocity was notably down by 2031. Brasilia moved him to the back of the bullpen with a 3.55 ERA, 45.2 innings, and -0.2 WAR. Navarette was under contract for all of 2032, but didn’t see the field. He had 40 saves, 2.78 ERA, 136 innings, 167 Ks, 129 ERA+, and 3.2 WAR with the Bearcats. Navarette retired after shortly before his 35th birthday.

              Navarette ended with 384 saves and 417 shutdowns, 99-92 record, 2.62 ERA, 827 games, 998 innings, 1225 strikeouts, 220 walks, 150 ERA+, 66 FIP-, and 31.5 WAR. He ranks 15th in saves and 18th in games and just misses the threshold to qualify for rate stats.

              Navarette’s ERA was notably the weakest compared to the other Besibol Sudamerica Hall of Fame closers, although he notably played in a higher-scoring era. His WAR was comparable to some of those on the lower end. 350+ saves hadn’t been a lock number, but everyone in BSA with 375+ eligible had made it. Navarette wasn’t an exception, just crossing the 66% threshold at 71.1% for a first ballot nod, capping off a four-man 2037 class.

              Comment

              • MrNFL_FanIQ
                MVP
                • Oct 2008
                • 4984

                #2527


                Two entered the European Baseball Federation’s Hall of Fame for 2037. SP Pasquale Barola was a first ballot pick at 85.1%, while 2B Oliver Bjerkli got a big bump on his sixth ballot up to 70.0%. SS Nicolo Giotto almost joined him on his sixth try, but barely missed the 66% cutoff at 64.7%. 3B Albert de Jong narrowly missed with a 62.0% debut.

                Four other returners were above 50%. RF Zeljko Siladjdzic saw 61.1% on his second try, SP Isak Alsaker saw 55.9% for his second ballot, LF Marco Solis got 50.8% with his ninth and penultimate chance, and RF Ostoja Milic received 50.5% with his second attempt. No players were dropped after ten failed ballots.




                Pasquale “The Hammer” Barola – Starting Pitcher – Rotterdam Ravens – 85.1% First Ballot

                Pasquale Barola was a 6’3’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Rome, Italy. He had the nickname “The Hammer” due to his impressive 98-100 mph fastball. Barola had overpowering stuff that made up for having merely decent movement and above average control. He also had a changeup, splitter, and knuckle curve in the arsenal; but the fastball was the star.

                Barola had solid stamina compared to most European aces, but his career would be shortened by major injuries. He had a strong pickoff move and graded as a strong defensive pitcher. Barola was a humble guy who kept his head down and always did his best for his team.

                By the 2018 EBF Draft, Barola was one of Italy’s highest-ranked prospects and Milan took notice, grabbing him 19th overall. His control was terrible in his earliest years and he saw limited use in his first two seasons. Barola sorted that out for 2021, but had his first major injury setback in July 2022 with a torn flexor tendon in his elbow.

                Barola came back strong from the injury with 7.3 WAR in 2023, then led the Southern Conference in strikeouts (299) and complete games (16) in 2024. Around this point, Milan was firmly wedged with wins in the 70s each year. They didn’t expect Barola to stay around once he could hit free agency, so he was traded in July 2025 to Rotterdam for three prospects. For the Maulers, Barola had a 78-55 record, 3.44 ERA, 1203.2 innings, 1282 strikeouts, 281 walks, 111 ERA+, 83 FIP-, and 25.6 WAR.


                The Ravens had posted three straight 100+ win seasons, but hadn’t been able to get beyond the Northern Conference Championship. Barola was a key piece to begin an epic dynasty run, becoming the first-ever three-peat European Champions from 2025-27. Rotterdam beat Zurich in the 2025 finals, Munich in 2026, and Zagreb in 2027.

                His split 2025 had his career best for WAR (7.5) and strikeouts (313). Barola had a 2.81 ERA in 25.2 playoff innings, followed by a 2.70 ERA over 30 innings with 54 strikeouts in the Baseball Grand Championship. Rotterdam was 11-8, tied for sixth in their first of three BGC trips.

                Barola threw a no-hitter on August 26, 2026 with 8 Ks and 2 walks against Cologne. That year, he was third in Pitcher of the Year voting with a conference and career-best 305 Ks. The Ravens gave him a four-year, $62,200,000 extension in the offseason. In the 2026 playoff run, Barola had a 3.19 ERA over 31 innings. He then won Best Pitcher in the BGC, going 4-0 with a 1.07 ERA in 33.2 innings and 41 strikeouts. Rotterdam was one of six teams at 12-7, officially fourth after tiebreakers.

                In 2027, Barola was second in POTY voting with his career bests for wins (24-6) and ERA (2.47). He led with 292 strikeouts, but was third in ERA falling 0.38 short of the Triple Crown. Barola had his best EBF playoff run by ERA (2.15) over 29.1 innings to cap off the three-peat. It was his weakest BGC though with a 4.88 ERA over 27.2 innings. Rotterdam was one of three teams at 13-6, one win short of the top spot, but they were fourth place officially via tiebreaker.

                He had an impressive BGC career with a 2.76 ERA, 8-2 record, 91.1 innings, 124 strikeouts, 24 walks, and 3.3 WAR. Barola did see World Baseball Championship outings from 2022-27 with Italy with a 4-4 record, 3.40 ERA, 90 innings, 134 Ks, 27 walks, and 1.1 WAR.

                Barola led in wins and Ks again in 2028, taking third in Pitcher of the Year voting. He had a poor postseason with a 7.27 ERA as Rotterdam was stopped in the second round. The Ravens again fell in the second round in 2029 with Barola having a 3.38 ERA in two starts. For his playoff career, Barola had a 7-4 record, 3.17 ERA, 108 innings, 109 strikeouts, 25 walks, 126 ERA+, 77 FIP-, and 2.8 WAR. He was certainly a critical piece to one of Europe’s best-ever dynasties.

                In 2030, Barola started to falter with his worst full-season ERA of 4.03. Rotterdam finished 88-74 and their playoff streak ended at nine seasons. While they were certainly grateful, the Ravens didn’t re-sign the soon-to-be 34 Barola. In five-and-a-half seasons in the Netherlands, Barola had a 102-35 record, 2.86 ERA, 1250.1 innings, 1441 strikeouts, 245 walks, 138 ERA+, 76 FIP-, and 31.7 WAR.

                By 2031, Barola’s velocity was now peaking in the low 90 mph range; a hammer no more. He returned home to Italy as Turin gave him a one-year deal. Barola had a 4.39 ERA in 26.2 innings and suffered his second flexor tear during his fifth appearance, knocking him out 10 months. Barola attempted to make a comeback for 2032, but he was clearly cooked and wasn’t signed. He retired that winter at age 35.

                Barola finished with a 181-92 record, 3.16 ERA, 2480.2 innings, 2740 strikeouts, 531 walks, 192/311 quality starts, 87 complete games, 20 shutouts, 123 ERA+, 80 FIP-, and 57.3 WAR. Barola ranks 84th in wins, 99th in strikeouts, and 100th in WAR among pitchers. His 9.94 K/9 is 84th among those with 1000+ innings. Injuries certainly prevented him from getting higher on the accumulations list.

                His rate stats were solid, but weren’t exceptional or generally in the top 100. On pure numbers, you could argue Barola’s case was borderline. But he was regularly a top three pitcher while with Rotterdam when the posted the European Baseball Federation’s only three-peat. Barola’s explosive stint with the Ravens dynasty was plenty for most Hall of Fame voters, getting 85.1% for a first ballot induction in 2037.




                Oliver Bjerkli – Second Base – Amsterdam Anacondas – 79.0% Sixth Ballot

                Oliver Bjerkli was a 5’10’’, 185 pound right-handed second baseman from the capital of Norway, Oslo. Bjerkli was a rock solid contact hitter against both sides who was known for his gap power, leading the Northern Conference four times in doubles. His 162 game average had 42 doubles, 5 triples, and 18 home runs. Unlike most leadoff guys, Bjerkli had poor speed and wouldn’t get you many extra bags with his legs. Bjerkli was merely decent at drawing walks and avoiding strikeouts.

                Bjerkli was a career second baseman with an excellent glove, winning three Gold Glove awards. His zone rating would finish as the 7th-best at 2B in EBF history. Bjerkli’s durability was impressive, playing 140+ games each year from 2013-25. He became a popular figure both at home in Norway and in Amsterdam, where he spent his entire pro career. Bjerkli was a late first round pick in 2012 to the Anacondas, going 59th overall.

                While in the Netherlands, he still made time to play for Norway in the World Baseball Championship. From 2013-26, Bjerkli played 113 games with 99 hits, 42 runs, 22 doubles, 13 home runs, 38 RBI, .246/.311/.408 slash, and 2.0 WAR. The Norwegians wouldn’t earn any playoff trips during his years in the WBC.

                Bjerkli was a full-time starter right away with good results for Amsterdam, taking third in 2013 Rookie of the Year voting. From 2014-24, he was worth 6+ WAR each season with his defense playing a big role. His offensive numbers got him Silver Sluggers in 2015 and 2018. Ivan Marchenko kept him from Gold Gloves in the 2010s, but Bjerkli got three from 2022-24.

                His only times as a conference leader were in doubles in 2018, 19, 21, and 24. Bjerkli peaked with 52 in 2018, which is tied for the 4th-best single-season in EBF. That year also saw his best triple slash of .351/.389/.555 with 161 wRC+ and 8.8 WAR. Bjerkli also had 8.8 WAR in 2022 and had four seasons of 8+ WAR, although he was never an MVP finalist. He also hit for the cycle in 2018 against Hanover. Amsterdam was quite happy with the results and signed him to an eight-year, $97,940,000 extension after the 2017 season.

                Other teams kept them from a division title, but from 2013-24, Amsterdam made the playoffs nine times. They didn’t have a ton of luck, only getting to the Northern Conference Championship twice. They won it in 2016 over Cologne, but lost to Zurich in the European Championship. The Anacondas fell to Dublin in the 2020 conference final.

                Bjerkli’s career player numbers were remarkably average. In 57 starts, he had 61 hits, 22 runs, 15 doubles, 1 triple, 2 homers, 19 RBI, .272/.329/.375 slash, 97 wRC+, and 0.7 WAR. Bjerkli did fare quite well in the 2016 Baseball Grand Championship, as Amsterdam finished 10-9 in a tie for tenth. Bjerkli had 20 hits, 10 runs, 4 doubles, 3 homers, 9 RBI, .878 OPS, 164 wRC+, and 1.0 WAR.

                He was very popular across his run and his #7 uniform would later be retired by Amsterdam. Bjerkli signed a three-year, $59 million extension after the 2025 season, despite that year being his weakest for WAR at 4.3. He was relegated to a bench role with only 47 games and five starts in 2026. The Anacondas were still above .500, but it was the end of their success with an eventual relegation after the 2029 season. Bjerkli retired after the 2026 campaign at age 36.

                Bjerkli finished with 2047 games, 2447 hits, 1060 runs, 527 doubles, 68 triples, 233 home runs, 1087 RBI, 453 walks, 1172 strikeouts, 15 steals, .323/.360/.503 slash, 140 wRC+, and 91.7 WAR. Bjerkli ranks 48th in WAR for position players, 58th in hits, and 7th in doubles. However, he’s outside of the top 100 for all other counting stats, which made his Hall of Fame candidacy a tough sell for some voters.

                It was always an uphill climb for guys without home run power and for second basemen. Bjerkli’s WAR certainly suggested he belonged, but his more traditional metrics were underwhelming. Those who favored WAR and valued defense championed Bjerkli’s cause, but others thought he was more of a Hall of Pretty Good type. Bjerkli’s popularity and spending his whole run with Amsterdam while they were a playoff regular boosted his profile.

                Bjerkli was never below 50%, but he fell short of the 66% requirement in his first five ballots. He started at 55.1% and slowly climbed to 58.2%, 60.7%, and 63.2%. After a drop to 60.8% in 2036, Bjerkli got a big push for his sixth ballot in 2037. He was also helped by a relatively quiet list of debuts, seeing the boost up to 79.0%. With that, Bjerkli capped off the two-man 2037 class for the European Baseball Federation.
                Last edited by MrNFL_FanIQ; 10-18-2025, 06:05 AM.

                Comment

                • MrNFL_FanIQ
                  MVP
                  • Oct 2008
                  • 4984

                  #2528
                  Eurasian Professional Baseball added three starting pitchers into the Hall of Fame for 2037 with each nearly making it in unanimously. Ivan Nikolin had the highest percentage at 99.4% while both Svyvatoslav Tyahnybok and Yevgeni Lyubimov received 98.8%. 2B Gleb Korelin was the only other player above 50%, getting 54.4% for his second try.



                  1B Roman Stanchinsky fell off the ballot after ten failed tries, getting as close as 58.1% in 2030 before finishing at only 34.6%. He won six Silver Sluggers and an MVP over a 16-year career between Volgograd and Omsk with 1885 games, 2053 hits, 1004 runs, 370 doubles, 421 home runs, 1119 RBI, 462 walks, .286/.330/.523 slash, 154 wRC+, and 65.3 WAR. Unfortunately for Stanchinsky, multiple major knee injuries limited him to about 11 seasons worth of games, keeping his totals just low enough to thwart his candidacy.

                  SP Ambrosiy Nahornyj also made it ten ballots, but peaked at only 24.0% in 2029 and spent the last four ballots above 5% but below 6%. He had a 169-144 record, 2.84 ERA, 2880.2 innings, 2648 strikeouts, 592 walks, 116 ERA+, 83 FIP- and 60.8 WAR. Nahornyj regressed quickly and was unemployed after his age 33 season, keeping him from hitting the accumulation benchmarks. He never had enough dominance or accolades to make up for that, although he was on a nice pace.

                  RF Boris Beridze was also worth a mention, falling below 5% on his ninth ballot with a peak at 37.8%. He won four Silver Sluggers in a 16-year run with Voronezh and had 2384 games, 2483 hits, 1145 runs, 336 doubles, 489 home runs, 1349 RBI, .286/.327/.506 slash, 145 wRC+, and 72.4 WAR. Beridze ranks 75th in WAR among position players, but he lacked black ink or any big dominant seasons.




                  Ivan Nikolin – Starting Pitcher – Samara Steelers – 99.4% First Ballot

                  Ivan Nikolin was a 5’11’’, 180 pound right-handed pitcher from Pervomayskiy, Russia; a small settlement of about 10,000 in the Tula Oblast bordering Moscow. Excellent stuff and great control gave Nikolin success despite having mediocre movement that made him vulnerable to the long ball. His velocity peaked in the 96-98 mph range, but it was an exceptional circle change that led the way. Scholars rate it as one of the best circle changeups in baseball history.

                  Nikolin’s fastball, cutter, and slider were rock solid too and he had a rarely used standard changeup. The extreme flyball tendency made him somewhat boom-or-bust, but his ability to change speed and spot his pitches made him dangerous. Nikolin’s stamina was average relative to other EPB aces, but great durability meant you’d get plenty of innings. He avoided any significant injuries over a 16-year run. Nikolin graded as a strong defensive pitcher, but he was mediocre at holding runners.

                  In February 2012, a teenaged Nikolin was signed to a developmental deal by Samara. The Steelers were one of the expansion teams founded in 2000 to backfill for the teams that left EPB in the exodus to EBF and ABF. They had never made the playoffs when Nikolin joined the system, but had started to hover in the 80s win range in the 2010s. After four years in the academy, Nikolin debuted in 2016 with iffy results, posting a 4.40 ERA over 141 innings.

                  Samara made him a full-time starter in 2017 and he led the European League in strikeouts with 323 (that’s good!) but also in losses at 10-20 (that’s bad!). The Steelers would stay below 80 wins from 2016-22. Nikolin did his job though and was good for 300+ strikeouts each year from 2017-29; leading the EL five times in his career. Nikolin was first a Pitcher of the Year finalist taking third in 2019 and 2021. It was 2020 that had his career best WAR of 8.9, his only time leading in that stat.

                  After the 2020 campaign, Nikolin signed a six-year, $40,880,000 extension with Samara. He led in Ks from 2023-25 and won his lone Pitcher of the Year in 2024. Nikolin had only the 15th pitching Triple Crown in EPB history, a mark his two Hall of Fame classmates had hit earlier in the decade. It was Nikolin’s lone ERA title at 2.18 with a career best 21-8 wins along with 343 strikeouts.

                  In 2023, Samara ended their run of losing seasons at 87-75. In 2024, the Steelers earned their first-ever playoff berth as an 89-73 wild card. They upset top seed and defending champ Volgograd in the divisional round, but fell to Nizhny Novgorod in the ELCS. Nikolin’s first postseason action had three quality starts, but three no decisions with a 2.70 ERA over 20 innings.

                  Nikolin had pitched on the World Baseball Championship stage prior to this, representing Russia from 2018-31. His WBC stats were average with a 7-9 record, 3.47 ERA, 114 innings, 165 strikeouts, 37 walks, 102 ERA+, 90 FIP-, and 2.0 WAR. It was a down period for the Russian national team with their lone playoff berth coming in 2023.

                  Samara hovered around .500 the next two years but Nikolin stayed consistent. After the 2025 season, the Steelers gave Nikolin a six-year, $92,400,000 extension. 2026 had his career highs for ERA (2.06), strikeouts (374), and quality starts (28) with a league-best 0.77 WHIP, but he was third in Pitcher of the Year voting. Nikolin finished third once more in 2028, which had a career and league-best 0.75 WHIP.

                  In 2027, the Steelers won their first-ever division title at 91-71 and got back to the ELCS, although they fell to top seed Minsk. Samara started a five-year playoff streak with the next four appearances as a wild card. They only once got out of the first round, an ELCS defeat in 2029 to Volgograd. Nikolin’s playoff efforts were solid with a 2.43 ERA over 66.2 innings, 3-1 record, 82 strikeouts, 13 walks, 127 ERA+, 58 FIP-, and 2.3 WAR.

                  Nikolin remained remarkably consistent through 2028, but the cracks started to show after that. In 2030, he allowed a league-worst 43 home runs and dropped below 300 Ks for the first time in a full season (albeit still at 293). Nikolin also had his ERA spike to 3.77 and WAR drop to 2.9. He was relegated to a part-time role in 2031 after posting a 4.67 ERA in 142.2 innings, falling just short of the vaunted 5000 career strikeout milestone. Nikolin didn’t try chasing it as a roster spot wasn’t a guarantee for 2032, retiring after the 2031 campaign at age 36. Samara immediately retired his #2 uniform for his 16 seasons of steady service.

                  In total, Nikolin had a 229-184 record, 2.74 ERA, 3861.2 innings, 4962 strikeouts, 486 walks, 333/462 quality starts, 190 complete games, 45 shutouts, 117 ERA+, 77 FIP-, and 93.0 WAR. Nikolin ranks 26th in wins, 8th in strikeouts, 19th in innings, 26th in losses, 40th in complete games, 23rd in shutouts, and 31st in pitching WAR. On the downside, his 452 homers allowed ranks 6th.

                  Among pitchers with 1000+ innings, Nikolin’s 1.13 BB/9 is 22nd and his 11.56 K/9 is 25th. Nikolin’s 0.91 WHIP also sits 39th, although he’s out of the top 100 for ERA or opponent’s OPS. His 4962 Ks clock in at 49th among all pitchers in baseball history. In his time, Nikolin was perhaps overshadowed with several great contemporaries and by being on forgettable Samara teams in his 20s. While not considered a top ten all-time ace, Nikolin’s Hall of Fame candidacy wasn’t in question. He received 99.4% as part of the stellar three-pitcher 2037 class for Eurasian Professional Baseball.

                  Comment

                  • MrNFL_FanIQ
                    MVP
                    • Oct 2008
                    • 4984

                    #2529




                    Svyatoslav “Rumble” Tyanhybok – Starting Pitcher – Volgograd Voyagers – 98.8% First Ballot

                    Svyatoslav Tyahnybok was a 6’4’’, 205 pound right-handed pitcher from Hlukhiv, Ukraine, a small city of around 32,000 people in the country’s northeast. Nicknamed “Rumble,” Tyahnybok had very strong stuff and control along with good movement. His velocity peaked in the 99-101 mph range with a fastball, slider, forkball, changeup arsenal.

                    Tyahnybok had nice stamina and great durability, avoiding the major arm issues that ruin many pitchers. He had an excellent pickoff move and graded as one of the stronger defensive pitchers in the league. Tyahnybok wasn’t a vocal leader, but he was adaptable and quickly became extremely popular throughout the entire league. He was especially beloved by Volgograd, where he spent his entire 16 year pro career.

                    By the 21st Century, Ukrainian prospects were far more likely to opt for the European Baseball Federation. Tyahnybok opted for EPB though and soared up the prospect ranks, getting picked #1 overall in the 2015 draft by the Voyagers. Volgograd was one of the 2000 expansion teams and had been largely mid-grade to that point, apart from a European League Championship Series loss in 2007. The Voyagers were in the 80+ win range but outside of the playoffs for most of the 2010s, apart from bottoming out in the middle to get the #1 pick.

                    Tyahnybok was third in 2016 Rookie of the Year voting, debuting as a closer with 35 saves and a 1.99 ERA. He was a full-time starter for the rest of his career, but didn’t become an elite ace until his fourth season. Tyahnybok’s breakout 2019 earned him Pitcher of the Year with league bests in wins (21-6), ERA (2.12), complete games (15), and shutouts (6). It was his first of nine straight 300+ strikeout seasons, missing a Triple Crown by only 9 Ks. 2019 also had Tyahnybok’s lone no-hitter with nine Ks and one walk on September 11 against Samara.

                    While his entire pro career took place in Russia, Tyahnybok did regularly return home to Ukraine for the World Baseball Championship. He had decent results from 2017-31 with 224.1 innings, a 14-10 record, 3.49 ERA, 288 strikeouts, and 2.5 WAR. The Ukrainians were generally competitive with playoff berths in 2018, 20, 25, and 28. The deepest run with Tyahnybok was a third place finish in 2025.

                    Tyahnybok’s ascension to ace status helped begin what would become a dynasty run in the 2020s for Volgograd. He repeated as Pitcher of the Year in 2020 to end the Voyagers’ 12-year playoff drought. They set a franchise record at 106-56, but had to settle for a wild card finishing one back of Voronezh in the South Division. Volgograd had the last laugh by sweeping the Zephyrs in the ELCS to claim their first pennant. The Voyagers would be denied in the EPB Championship as Chelyabinsk earned a repeat in six games.

                    In his first postseason, Tyahnybok was shockingly poor with a 5.46 ERA over 31.1 innings. He fared better in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 2.58 ERA over 38.1 innings with 47 Ks. Volgograd earned the at-large spot for the event and finished 9-10. Tyahnybok would generally have solid playoff stats for the next few seasons as the Voyagers established an European League dynasty.

                    Tyahnybok three-peated as Pitcher of the Year in 2021 with EPB’s 13th pitching Triple Crown with a 24-6 record, 1.59 ERA, 332 strikeouts, 0.73 WHIP, 37 FIP-, and 10.7 WAR. It was his first time as the WARlord and would be career bests for wins, ERA, WHIP, and FIP-. Volgograd got the top seed at 109-53, but suffered a stunning first round exit to Nizhny Novgorod. You couldn’t blame Tyahnybok, who had a 1.72 ERA over 15.2 playoff innings with 28 Ks in his two starts.

                    2022 was arguably Tyahnybok’s best season with career and league bests for strikeouts (378), and WAR (11.2), but he was denied a fourth-straight Pitcher of the Year by Nehor Pomerantz. Tyahnybok was second in POTY voting and third for MVP. Volgograd won the division at 100-62 and beat St. Petersburg in the ELCS for their second pennant. They would be denied their first EPB crown by Omsk in six games. Tyahnybok had a 3.03 ERA and 49 Ks in 38.2 playoff innings.

                    Now 29-years old, Tyahnybok signed a signed a six-year, $57,300,000 extension to stay with Volgograd. His 2023 was weaker by advanced metrics than his last few seasons, but Tyahnybok led with 22 wins and got his fourth Pitcher of the Year; one of only eight in EPB history to win 4+. The Voyagers won the division at 102-60 and beat 103-win Minsk to earn repeat EL titles. Volgograd then finally earned that first EPB title by knocking off Krasnoyarsk.

                    In 40 playoff innings, Tyahnybok had a 2.92 ERA with 59 strikeouts and a 3-1 record. He was subpar in the 2023 Baseball Grand Championship with a 3.71 ERA over 26.2 innings as Volgograd finished 7-12. The Voyagers would win the South Division each of the next three years, but couldn’t win a playoff series. Tyahnybok was third in 2024’s Pitcher of the Year voting and second in 2025.

                    Some thought the good times might be over as Volgograd finished 75-87 in 2027, ending a seven-year playoff streak. The now 34-year old Tyahnybok still was doing well and the Voyagers gave him a four-year, $72,800,000 extension. His stuff started to wane with fewer innings and strikeouts, but he remained a solid starter as Volgograd quickly bounced back.

                    The Voyagers earned the top seed in for 2028-29 and repeated as European League champs with 92 and 97 win seasons. Both seasons, they faced Vladivostok in the EPB Championship with a defeat in 2028 to the Shibas, but a victory in 2029. Tyahnybok was used in an opener role in his later playoff runs with lousy results. He also gave up nine runs in 7.2 innings in the 2029 BGC as Volgograd finished 10-11.

                    For his playoff career, Tyahnybok had a 3.43 ERA over 189 innings, 8-13 record, 242 strikeouts, 40 walks, 6 complete games, 95 ERA+, 75 FIP-, and 5.2 WAR. The FIP- and WAR totals suggest he performed better than the ERA and record might suggest. Regardless, Tyahnybok was beloved for his role in Volgograd’s 2020s success and saw his #21 uniform later retired by the squad.

                    2030 saw a new franchise-best at 113-49 for Volgograd, but the season ended in failure with an ELCS upset loss to 86-win Moscow. The Voyagers fell to 76-86 in 2031, Tyahnybok’s last season. He was still a decent innings-eater at that point, but his contract was up and Volgograd wasn’t inclined to give him a new big contract. Instead of testing free agency, Tyahnybok retired that winter at age 38.

                    Tyahnybok finished with a 274-142 record, 2.56 ERA, 3721.2 innings, 4371 strikeouts, 502 walks, 306/468 quality starts, 199 complete games, 46 shutouts, 128 ERA+, 70 FIP-, and 104.4 WAR. Tyahnybok ranks 9th in wins, 30th in innings, 32nd in complete games, 21st in shutouts, 23rd in strikeouts, and 18th in pitching WAR. Among those with 1000+ innings, Tyahnybok’s 10.57 K/9 is 67th.

                    Like his 2037 Hall of Fame classmates, Tyahnybok falls short of being a top-five level ace all-time against the loaded pitching greats in Eurasian Professional Baseball. Tyahnybok makes some top ten lists with his four POTY wins and Volgograd’s team success, but it is a crowded field. Like Ivan Nikolin and Yevgeni Lyubimov, Tyahnybok’s HOF credentials were iron clad, joining the three-pitcher crew with 98.8%.




                    Yevgeni “Hoot” Lyubimov – Starting Pitcher – Krasnoyarsk Cossacks – 98.8% First Ballot

                    Yevgeni Lyubimov was a 6’2’’, 200 pound left-handed pitcher from Grodno, Belarus; a city 364,000 people near the borders of Poland and Lithuania. Nicknamed “Hoot,” Lyubimov had strong stuff with good control and above average movement. He had 97-99 mph peak velocity with a three-pitch arsenal of fastball, slider, and splitter. Each option was quite good, but the slider was usually considered Lyubimov’s best offering.

                    Relative to other EPB aces, Lyubimov’s stamina was average with fewer complete games than many of his elite contemporaries. His durability was above reproach and he never missed a single day to injury. Lyubimov’s defense and ability to hold runners both graded as rock solid. He had an impressive work ethic and was considered quite adapatable.

                    Lyubimov was picked fifth by Krasnoyarsk in the 2014 EPB Draft. He only had 26.1 innings as a rookie with poor results on a 4.78 ERA. Lyubimov became a part-time starter the next two years with mixed results. The Cossacks had an impressive turnaround from 68 wins in 2015 to 91 in 2016. Krasnoyarsk made the Asian League Championship Series as a wild card, falling to defending champ Ufa. The Cossacks dropped to 76-86 in 2017, but found their footing with an 11-year playoff streak starting in 2018.

                    It was the 2018 playoff run which cemented Lyubimov as a beloved favorite for Krasnoyarsk fans. They were a wild card at 93-69, but only one game behind top seed Ufa. The Cossacks survived a seven-game classic with the Fiends, then knocked off Krasnodar 4-2 to claim their first EPB Championship since 2005.
                    Lyubimov won his three playoff starts with a 1.04 ERA and 24 strikeouts with two complete games. He was subpar in the Baseball Grand Championship with a 4.13 ERA in 28.1 innings as Krasnoyarsk finished 9-10.

                    Lyubimov was merely decent in 2019 and lost his one playoff start as the Cossacks had the top seed at 90-72, but lost the ALCS to Chelyabinsk. In 2020, he finally emerged as a true ace with a Pitcher of the Year win and a second place in MVP voting. Lyubimov earned the Triple Crown with a 22-6 record and career bests for ERA (1.46), strikeouts (355), WHIP (0.79), quality starts (28), shutouts (5), and WAR (11.6). The ERA was one of only 35 qualifying seasons in EPB history below 1.50.

                    Krasnoyarsk had one of EPB’s best-ever regular seasons at 116-46, but suffered an upset loss to Chelyabinsk in the ALCS. The Cossacks would win 102 games in 2021 and 106 in 2022, but suffer a first round loss in the former and ALCS upset loss to 86-win Omsk in the latter. Both years, Lyubimov was third in Pitcher of the Year voting with 9+ WAR. On August 30, 2022, Lyubimov tossed only the 33rd perfect game in EPB history with 12 Ks facing Ufa.

                    After the 2022 season, Krasnoyarsk gave Lyubimov a five-year, $45,200,000 extension. He was the WARlord in 2023 and 2024 and was second in 2024’s POTY voting. The Cossacks again had the top seed in 2023 at 103-59 and this time avoided the playoff disappointment. They beat Yekaterinburg to win the AL pennant, but fell to Volgograd in the EPB Championship. Krasnoyarsk won a weak division at 87-75 in 2024, losing to the top-seeded Yaks in the ALCS.

                    Lyubimov was second in 2025’s Pitcher of the Year voting as the Cossacks got the top seed at 101-61 and their seventh straight East Division crown. They won the ALCS against Perm, then topped Moscow to claim their second EPB title of Lyubimov’s tenure. It was a strong playoff run for him with a 1.20 ERA over 30 innings and 35 Ks. Lyubimov carried on with a 1.91 ERA over 33 innings in the 2025 BGC, although the Cossacks were 8-11.

                    In 2026, Lyubimov won his second Pitcher of the Year by leading in Ks (351) and WAR (9.8). He was the WARlord again in 2027, leading five times in his career, although he didn’t get awards consideration. Krasnoyarsk had an ALCS loss in 2026 and first round exit in 2027, both courtesy of Yekaterinburg.

                    On the whole, Lyubimov was lauded for having excellent playoff results during Krasnoyarsk’s streak. In 232.1 innings, he had a 2.29 ERA, 15-9 record, 279 strikeouts, 51 walks, 144 ERA+, 60 FIP-, and 8.1 WAR. Lyubimov remained beloved by Cossacks fans and his #11 uniform would later be retired. However, they let him go into free agency after the 2027 season at age 34. Overall for Krasnoyarsk, Lyubimov had an 184-80 record, 2.39 ERA, 2608 innings, 3300 strikeouts, 482 walks, 63 complete games, 24 shutouts, 137 ERA+, 57 FIP-, and 93.8 WAR.

                    Lyubimov returned to his native Belarus on a four-year, $83,200,000 deal with Minsk, the defending EPB champs. They would be a one-and-done wild card in 2028, then fell into the abyss for the next four years. Lyubimov led in wins and was second in Pitcher of the Year voting in his 2028 debut and was solid the following two years. In three seasons for the Miners, Lyubimov had a 51-32 record, 2.47 ERA, 775.1 innings, 855 strikeouts, 105 walks, 136 ERA+, 69 FIP-, and 22.3 WAR.

                    With Minsk’s struggles to start the 2030s, they had a fire sale and traded Lyubimov to Samara for two infield prospects. He had a fine 2031 for the Steelers with a 2.57 ERA, 256 innings, 13-13 record, 254 strikeouts, 138 ERA+, 77 FIP-, and 6.4 WAR. The Steelers got a wild card with a first round exit with Lyubimov giving up six runs in 6.2 innings in his lone playoff start.

                    For his playoff career, Lyubimov had a 16-10 record, 2.44 ERA, 247 innings, 291 strikeouts, 54 walks, 135 ERA+, 64 FIP-, and 8.2 WAR. He ranks 7th in playoff wins, 5th in innings, 4th in strikeouts, and 3rd in pitching WAR. Apart from that bad playoff start, Lyubimov was still putting up strong stats to that point as he was due free agency following the 2031 campaign. He would’ve had suitors, but Lyubimov surprised many by announcing his retirement at age 38.

                    Lyubimov finished with a 248-125 record, 2.42 ERA, 3639.1 innings, 4409 strikeouts, 618 walks, 326/476 quality starts, 109 complete games, 33 shutouts, 137 ERA+, 61 FIP-, and 122.4 WAR. Lyubimov ranks 14th in wins, 37th in innings, 60th in shutouts, 20th in strikeouts, and 8th in pitching WAR. Among those with 1000+ innings, Lyubimov is 91st in ERA, 49th in K/9 (10.90), 80th in WHIP (0.95), and 79th in opponent’s OPS (.578).

                    When looking at Sabermetrics and rate stats, Lyubimov jumps out as the strongest of the three 2037 Hall of Fame inductees by a solid margin. Still, some more traditionalist types might rate Svyatoslav Tyahnybok higher because of wins and more Pitcher of the Year awards. Meanwhile, Ivan Nikolin has the most strikeouts of the three and his backers argue he would’ve had the best numbers if not for being on far weaker clubs than the other two.

                    By WAR, Lyubimov comes closest to being a true “inner-circle” inductee of the three and his great playoff numbers also vault him into some of the top ten pitcher lists. As mentioned before, there’s been a lot of great aces and tough competition in Eurasian Professional Baseball history. By the HOF metrics, Lyubimov is arguably the top talent to come out of Belarus. He received 98.8% as part of the three-ace 2037 class for EPB.

                    Comment

                    Working...