1958 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting
New inductees | 0 |
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Total inductees | 83 |
Elections to the Baseball Hall of Fame for 1958 followed a system established after the 1956 election. The Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) voted by mail to select from recent major league players; they elected no one.[1] The BBWAA was voting only in even-number years, with the Veterans Committee meeting only in odd-numbered years to consider older major league players as well as managers, umpires, and executives. For the first time since 1950, the induction ceremonies in Cooperstown, New York, were canceled because there was no one to induct,[2] the second such occurrence in Hall of Fame history.
BBWAA election
[edit]Several elements of the current procedure were put into effect. There was a printed list of eligible candidates, all of whom had played in at least ten major league seasons. Only 10-year members of the BBWAA were eligible to vote, and they were instructed to vote for up to ten candidates rather than ten.[3] The latter revision resulted from complaints by many writers in 1956 that there were no longer many viable candidates, a situation which had been caused partly by changes governing candidate eligibility.
The BBWAA was authorized to elect players active in 1928 or later but not after 1952, a 25-year span of major league finales. (In a change, they were permitted to be active in non-playing roles.) The Hall of Fame would induct any candidate who received at least 75% support, as always, which was 200 votes on 266 ballots returned. A total of 2,400 individual votes were cast, an average of 9.02 per ballot.
There were about 400 players on the new ballot and about 154 received at least one vote.[4] A dagger (†) marks candidates who last played in 1951 or 1952. Under the new rules they would have been on the ballot for the first time, alone among the candidates who received votes, but this was the first ballot with a list of players. Candidates who have been inducted subsequently are named in italics.
With many strong candidates but none who particularly stood out, many players received support but none were elected; while 27 players received between 10% and 40%, only two received more than 40%.[5] Max Carey's 51.1% remains the lowest percentage for a top vote getter in a BBWAA election.
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Notes
[edit]- ^ While Vander Meer was eligible for the first time in this election, he had received votes in 1945 (while inactive due to military service) and 1956.
- ^ McCarthy received two votes, despite having been inducted to the Hall of Fame the previous summer; also, he was ineligible to be elected as a player, having never appeared in a major league game.
- ^ Spahn received a vote despite still being an active player.
References
[edit]- ^ "Voting Fails to Enlarge Hall of Fame". Chicago Tribune. AP. February 5, 1958. p. 4-1. Retrieved October 23, 2019 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ "1958 Hall of Fame Voting". baseball-reference.com. Sports-Reference, LLC. Retrieved 5 August 2024.
- ^ Ken Smith, Baseball's Hall of Fame, Ninth edition, 1979, New York: Grosset & Dunlap, page 67.
- ^ "1958 Hall of Fame Voting | Baseball-Reference.com". Baseball-Reference.com.
- ^ "1958 Hall of Fame Voting". baseball-reference.com. Sports-Reference, LLC. Retrieved 15 August 2024.
External links
[edit]- 1958 Hall of Fame Voting, Baseball Reference. Confirmed 2010-09-12.
- BBWAA Results by Year: 1958, National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Confirmed 2010-09-12. — The list is truncated at George Case, the sixth of 41 candidates who received one vote.
- Bill Deane, "Award and Honors: Hall of Fame Elections: History", in every edition of Total Baseball edited by John Thorn and Pete Palmer. Third edition, 1993, New York: HarperCollins, pages 297–309.