For the 1956 Major League Baseball Hall of Fame class, three players earned induction. Pitcher Angelo Leblanc led the class at 89.4% with a first ballot pick. The other two were both fifth ballot players who finally got over the 66% threshold. Catcher Hernan Ortega made it at 71.6% and CF Luke Murray barely crossed the line at 66.9%. 1B Eliot Cote, SP Jacob Gosselin, SP Roy Cole, and SP Patrick Iannazzo each were above 59% with solid but just short efforts.

Getting dropped after his 10th attempt was catcher Elijah Weston. In 17 years primarily with Jacksonville or San Diego, he had five Silver Sluggers, 2133 hits, 945 runs, 282 home runs, 1151 RBI, a .304 average, and 58.4 WAR. But with the general anti-catcher bias the HOF voting tends to have due to lower accumulations by default, he was left out despite never finishing lower than 46%. Weston peaked at 54.0% on his fourth ballot. Also dropped after a 10th try was pitcher Kadoor Saleem. A 18-year veteran from Pakistan, he played with Louisville, Montreal, and Cleveland and won 1929 Pitcher of the Year. Saleem had 211-194 record, 3.38 ERA, 3043 strikeouts in 3889.2 innings, and 81.7 WAR. Unfortunately for him, he was thought of as a “Hall of Very Good” type, peaking at 27.7% on his debut ballot.

Angelo “Cannon” Leblanc – Starting Pitcher – Vancouver Volcanoes -89.4% First Ballot
Angelo Leblanc was a 5’11’’, 200 pound right-handed starting pitcher from Surrey, British Columbia; part of metro Vancouver. Known for his incredible durability, Leblanc had 96-98 mph velocity and very good movement split between his five pitches; a fastball, slider, curveball, changeup, and splitter. Although never dominant, he was as reliable as they come, making 19 straight seasons with 33+ starts.
After heading to Auburn to play college baseball, he returned home when picked 43rd overall by Vancouver in the 1929 MLB Draft. For 12 seasons, Leblanc was a fixture in the Volcanoes rotation, posting a 187-173 record for the mid-tier franchise with a 3.69 ERA, 3256.2 innings, 2179 strikeouts, and 54.2 War. After a 26-year playoff drought, Vancouver broke through in 1939 to win the American Association title; the only playoff action Leblanc saw with the team. Still, his longevity meant his #42 uniform would be retired when he career ended. He was the first person to have his jersey retired by the team and would be one of only two as of 2037.
The run ended for the hometown kid as Vancouver traded Leblanc for the 1942 season to Omaha. He remained steady in six years with the Hawks in his mid 30s with a 74-95 record, but 3.66 ERA, 1130 strikeouts, and 32.6 WAR. At age 39, he signed with Albuquerque for the 1948 season and had a bit of a career resurgence. That year, he finished third in Pitcher of the Year voting; the only time in his career he made the top three. The Isotopes won the AA title that year and made it to the AACS in 1949. Leblanc seemed primed to keep going, but in his first start of 1950, he suffered a torn rotator cuff to end his career. He also got to pitch in the first three editions of the World Baseball Championship for Team Canada.
The final line for Leblanc: 301-291, 3.66 ERA, 687 starts, 5316.2 innings, 3669 strikeouts, 382 quality starts, 277 complete games, and 98.2 WAR. His longevity helped make him the third MLB pitcher to 300 wins, but also made him the all-time loser at 291, a record that holds into present day. 687 starts were the most anyone had made and would only get passed once in the coming years. Some were down on his as a compiler who was never more than good, but 20 seasons of reliability is worth something for sure. Thus, Leblanc not only was inducted, but made it on the first ballot at 89.4%.

Hernan Ortega – Catcher – Ottawa Elks – 71.6% Fifth Ballot
Hernan Ortega was a 5’7’’, 180 pound right-handed catcher from the Puerto Rican capital San Juan. Ortega was an excellent contact hitter, especially for a catcher. He was good at avoiding strikeouts and decent at drawing walks. His power was below average at best and he was a slow baserunner. He was considered a great leader behind home plate and spent his entire career as a catcher. Defensively, Ortega was thought of as reliable and solid. He was also very durable at a demanding position.
Ortega came stateside and played college baseball at Ole Miss. He wasn’t eligible in the first three rounds of the 1928 MLB Draft due to the regional requirements, but was the first pick of the fourth round by Dallas when he was available. Ortega had an excellent debut, winning his first of four Silver Sluggers as a rookie and finishing second in Rookie of the Year voting. He earned the batting title with a .347 average in 1931. He won two more Silver Sluggers in 1933 and 1934 with the Dalmatians. In six seasons in Dallas, he had 909 hits, 366 runs, a .314 average, and 25.8 WAR.
Before the 1935 season, the 26-year old Ortega was traded to Ottawa to begin his signature run. He added his fourth Silver Slugger in 1938 with the Elks and spent the final 12 years of his career in Canada’s capital. In total, he had 1233 starts, 1534 hits, 560 runs, 103 home runs, a .298 average, and 37.8 WAR with the Elks.
He was the man behind the plate in the final seven years of Ottawa’s 10-year postseason streak. After early exits initially, the Elks finally broke through with National Association titles in 1938 and 1940, plus the World Series ring in 1940. Ortega made 60 starts with Ottawa in the postseason and posted 62 hits, 25 runs, 21 RBI, and .286 batting average. In the 1940 championship season, he had 21 hits and 15 runs with a 368 average in 16 games. For his role in their run, Ortega’s #19 uniform was retired at the end of his career. After a solid decade as a starter, he began to wind down and retired after the 1946 season at age 38.
The final stats for Ortega: 2443 hits, 926 runs, 433 doubles, 175 home runs, 1084 RBI, .304/.356/.428 slash and 63.6 WAR. Among catchers, he retired second all-time in WAR and hits behind Gary Nodine. Unfortunately, the Hall of Fame voters tend to be very biased against catchers as the demands of the position mean the overall hitting numbers aren’t as impressive as other sluggers. It took Ortega five tries to get in even with his resume, crossing the line on his fifth try at 71.6%. This makes him the second catcher in the MLB HOF and the first Puerto Rican to get in.

Luke Murray – Centerfielder – Kansas City Cougars – 66.9% Fifth Ballot
Luke Murray was a 5’11’’, 200 pound left-handed center fielder from Canton, South Dakota; a small town 20 minutes south of Sioux Falls. He played his entire career in center and was known as an excellent defender and a team captain. He was an average to above average contact and power hitter with solid speed. Murray was adept at drawing walks, but did strike out more than the average hitter. With his leadership skills and personality, Murray was an extremely popular player of the 1930s and 40s.
He played college baseball at LSU and helped the Tigers to the 1928 National Championship. Murray won the College World Series MVP and was a Silver Slugger winner in center. With those accolades, he earned the seventh overall draft pick by Kansas City in the 1929 MLB Draft. Murray was an immediate success as the 1930 Rookie of the Year and getting his first of eight Silver Sluggers. He spent 11 seasons with the Cougars, winning four of his five Gold Gloves and seven of his eight Silver Sluggers. He finished third in MVP voting in 1935, 1937, and 1939. He had reliable production, but apart from leading with 9.5 WAR in his second year, he never was a league leader in any stats.
Unfortunately for Murray, the Cougars were generally a bottom-tier team in his run. They made the playoffs once, breaking through as a wild card in 1937 that won the National Association title. Murray had a solid run in 14 games, hitting five home runs with 11 RBI, 18 hits, 13 runs, and 0.9 WAR. Other than his final season with Milwaukee, this would be his only playoff appearance. In total with Kansas City, Murray had 1686 hits, 1027 runs, 276 hom eruns, 912 RBI, a .294 average, and 85.8 WAR.
Murray left for free agency and signed with Houston in 1941 at age 31. He won his final Silver Slugger and Gold Glove in his Hornets debut. He wasn’t elite after that, but was still a solid starter from 1942-1944. He regressed hard offensively in 1945. Houston let him go and Murray played one more season in 1946 with Milwaukee, retiring at the age of 37.
The final stats: 2497 hits, 1548 runs, 411 doubles, 125 triples, 394 home runs, 1307 RBI, 1146 walks, 570 stolen bases, .276/.358/.480 slash, and 106.4 WAR. He has the most WAR accumulated of any player at CF at retirement and at retirement, was one of only 13 hitters with 100+ career WAR. Despite this resume, he wasn’t given much love by the Hall of Fame voters as great defense and drawing walks wasn’t exciting. His first four times on the ballot, he finished around the 60% mark. Finally on his fifth try, he got enough to get in barely at 66.9%.
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