The third and fourth Hall of Famers for the Oceania Baseball Association were added in the 1983 class. SP Hugo Georgakoupoulou secured a first ballot selection with 93.2%. His was joined by fellow pitcher Te Paoro Rangi, who on his sixth try finally got the boost he needed to get in with 79.4%. No other player was above 50%.

For the first time, a player was dropped after ten ballots. SS Fineasi Hausia ended at 9.7% after peaking at 37.3% in his fifth ballot. The beloved Tongan was hurt by leaving for MLB in his final six seasons. Still, in nine years with Adelaide, he won two MVPs and seven Gold Gloves with 1343 hits, 502 runs, 200 doubles, 68 home runs, 473 RBI, a .276/.308/.386 slash and 63.7 WAR. The lack of accumulations and power stats sunk him in the eyes of enough voters to leave Hausia on the outside.

Hugo “Junkyard” Georgakoupoulou – Starting Pitcher – Gold Coast Kangaroos – 93.2% First Ballot
Hugo Georgakoupoulou was a 5’7’’, 195 pound left-handed starting pitcher from Melbourne, Australia. Nicknamed “Junkyard,” the stocky left was known for having excellent stuff along with above average movement and control. His fastball only peaked at 93-95 mph, but he mixed it expertly along with a devastating curveball. Georgakoupoulou also had a forkball and changeup in his repertoire. His stamina was considered weak compared to many of his contemporaries and he had some injury issues in the four-man rotation world of OBA. But Georgakoupoulou was an important force in the clubhouse as a team captain, renowned by teammates for his leadership, loyalty, and work ethic.
Georgakoupoulou had an impressive amateur career in Australia which earned him the second overall pick in the 1963 Oceania Baseball Association Draft by Gold Coast. He was used as a part-time starter in his first two seasons, then became a full-time member of the rotation beyond that. Georgakoupoulou posted eight seasons worth 6+ WAR, although he was rarely a league leader. He was the WHIP leader in 1966 and the 1969 WARlord with 10.2, earning his lone Pitcher of the Year in 1969. Georgakoupoulou was also a finalist with a second place in 1974.
For the Australian national team, Georgakoupoulou pitched in 11 editions of the World Baseball Championship from 1966-76. He was mostly used as a reliever with a 3.41 ERA over 58 innings with 96 strikeouts. Gold Coast was middling in his earliest seasons, but emerged as a dynasty with three straight Australasia League titles from 1971-73. The Kangaroos were the overall OBA champ as well in 1971 and 72. While Georgakoupoulou certainly helped them get there, his 0-4 record and 4.13 ERA in 28.1 innings was surprisingly poor. Elbow inflammation kept him out of the 1972 postseason run. Still, Georgakoupoulou helped them to two OBA rings and would see his #14 uniform retired by Gold Coast at the end of his career.
Georgakoupoulou remained fairly steady into his 30s, but saw his numbers drop a bit in 1976, his last season with the Kangaroos. He became a free agent for the first time at age 36 and signed with his hometown team Melbourne. Georgakoupoulou was average at best though and the Mets traded him in June to Adelaide. He was a decent back-end starter for the Aardvarks, who had won the OBA title twice in the prior three seasons. Adelaide capped off the 1977 season with another ring, although Georgakoupoulou only made one relief appearance in the final. He decided to end his career there at age 36.
Georgakoupoulou’s final stats: 208-136 record, 2.51 ERA, 3294.2 innings, 3744 strikeouts to 711 walks, 325/457 quality starts, 74 FIP- and 83.8 WAR. His numbers would be more towards the top third of the leaderboard among eventual OBA Hall of Famers, not at the top but certainly not out of place as the years went by. He picked up the firm first ballot induction with 93.2% of the vote.

Te Paoro Rangi – Starting Pitcher – Auckland Avengers - 79.4% Sixth Ballot
Te Paoro Rangi was a 5’9’’, 190 pound right-handed pitcher from Manukau, New Zealand; a small suburb of South Auckland. His biggest strength was having excellent pinpoint control, making up for the fact that he had merely average stuff and above average movement. Rangi’s peak velocity was 93-95 mph with a mix of fastball, slider, curveball, and splitter. For most his career, Rangi was considered quite durable, although he wasn’t one to throw a ton of complete games. The biggest knock on his was despite his intelligence, he was considered to have a poor work ethic, no loyalty, and no leadership. Rangi wasn’t the most liked by teammates, which led him to bounce around in his career.
The timing was such that Rangi had just begun his professional career when the Oceania Baseball Association was formed for the 1960 season. This allowed him to sign as a 22-year old free agent to a four-year, $151,200 deal with Auckland. Rangi was immediately successful with 8.1 WAR in his debut, earning Rookie of the Year. He’d have four straight seasons worth 6+ WAR to start his career and regularly posted quality starts. On April 28, 1963, he struck out 11 against Gold Coast in OBA’s second perfect game. In five seasons with Auckland, Rangi had a 90-64 record, 2.85 ERA, 1293 strikeouts in 1472.1 innings, and 35.1 WAR. He also pitched 81.1 innings for New Zealand’s national team from 1963-70. In the World Baseball Championship, he had a 3.98 ERA over 81.1 innings.
Auckland hadn’t found success yet and Rangi made it clear he wanted to leave. Before the 1965 season, the Avengers traded him to Tahiti for three prospects. His one season with the Tropics would be his best and his lone Pitcher of the Year season with career bests in wins (24-11), quality starts (33), and WAR (8.5). The Tropics won the Pacific League for the first time and beat Rangi’s former team Auckland in the OBA Championship. He allowed five earned runs over 16 playoff innings. Rangi figured his stock was at an all-time high and he entered free agency at age 28.
Adelaide was the buyer and signed him to a six-year, $648,000 deal. Rangi had a strong debut season and helped the Aardvarks to the 1966 Australasia League title, although he stunk in the postseason and they fell in the OBA Championship to Guadalcanal. Adelaide remained good, but would fall just short in the playoffs in the next few years to Melbourne’s dynasty. Rangi never quite lived up to the strong production of his first season again, although he was still deserving of the spot in the rotation.
1967 was a notable year with a no hitter on April 17 against Brisbane with nine strikeouts and one walk. Then on June 7, he threw his second perfect game, joining East Asia Baseball Hall of Famer Moon Kim as the only pro pitchers to have thrown two perfect games at that point in history. In total with Adelaide, Rangi had a 79-68 record over 1438.1 innings with a 2.84 ERA, 1112 strikeouts, and 22.3 WAR. In early 1971, Rangi suffered a torn labrum, which essentially ended his career. He’d attempt a comeback in 1972 with New Caledonia, but would only pitch 2.2 innings before retiring that offseason at age 35.
Rangi’s final stats had a 193-143 record, 2.81 ERA, 3214 innings, 2657 strikeouts to 414 walks, 320/442 quality starts, 85 FIP, and 65.9 WAR. They were respectable stats with two rings as well, but a combination of an earlier retirement, bouncing between teams, and being a jerk kept Rangi waiting with some voters not wanting him to be one of the first Hall of Famers. He debuted at 48.3% and slowly climbed over the next few years, including a narrow miss at 65.8% on his fifth ballot. In 1983, the sixth ballot was the one to put Rangi into the Hall of Fame with 79.4%.
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