David Ortiz, Alex Rodriguez New To Baseball Hall Of Fame Ballot
NEW YORK (AP/CBS) — David Ortiz, Ryan Howard, Tim Lincecum and Alex Rodriguez are among 13 first-time candidates on the Hall of Fame ballot of the Baseball Writers' Association of America, joining 17 holdovers.
Steroids-tainted stars Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens make their 10th and final appearance on the BBWAA ballot along with Curt Schilling, who fell 16 votes shy of the necessary 75 percent in last year's balloting. Schilling appeared on 71.1 percent of ballots, Bonds 61.8 percent and Clemens 61.6 percent.
Justin Morneau, Jimmy Rollins and Jake Peavy also are new to the ballot along with Carl Crawford, Prince Fielder, Joe Nathan, Jonathan Papelbon, A.J. Pierzynski and Mark Teixeira, the Hall and BBWAA said Monday.
Holdovers include Bobby Abreu, Mark Buehrle, Todd Helton, Tim Hudson, Torii Hunter, Andruw Jones, Jeff Kent, Andy Pettitte, Manny Ramirez, Gary Sheffield, Sammy Sosa, Omar Vizquel and Billy Wagner.
Sosa also will be on the ballot for the final time after receiving 17 percent last year.
BBWAA members with 10 or more consecutive years of membership are eligible to vote. Ballots must be postmarked by Dec. 31 and results will be announced Jan. 25.
Any players elected will be inducted into the Hall at Cooperstown on July 24 along with anyone elected by the Golden Days Era and Early Baseball Era committees, which are scheduled to meet on Dec. 5.
No was elected by the BBWAA in last year's vote, and Schilling asked after the vote that the Hall remove him from the ballot.
"It's all right, the game doesn't owe me anything," he said during a live video stream on his Twitter account.
Clemens has denied using performance-enhancing drugs and Bonds has denied knowingly using them. Bonds also has been accused of domestic violence and Clemens of maintaining a decade long relationship with a singer who was 15 when they met.
Rodriguez was suspended for the 2014 season for violating MLB's drug policy and collective bargaining agreement, and Ortiz's name was alleged to have appeared on a list of players who tested positive during 2003 survey testing.
Ortiz certainly put together a Hall of Fame resume during his 20-year career, clubbing 541 home runs while earning 10 All-Star nods and seven Silver Slugger awards. Ortiz did most of his damage with the Red Sox, mashing 483 homers over his 14 seasons in Boston while leading the team to three World Series titles. Ortiz was the MVP of Boston's 2004 ALCS victory over the New York Yankees, and was MVP of the 2013 World Series when he hit .688 in Boston's six-game series win over the St. Louis Cardinals.
For his postseason career, Ortiz hit 17 homers, 22 doubles and drove in 61 runs over 85 games, slashing .289/.404/.543.
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