Rating the 2010 Hall of Fame Candidates Based on Win Shares
December 21, 2009 by Bill Gilbert · 6 Comments
One of the first items of business in baseball each year is the announcement of players elected to the Hall of Fame. This leads to lots of speculation and a little analysis prior to the announcement which is scheduled for January 6, 2010.
Many systems exist for evaluating player performance. One such system, the Win Shares method, developed by Bill James in 2002, is a complex method for evaluating players which includes all aspects of performance – offense, defense and pitching. James has stated that, “Historically, 400 Win Shares means absolute enshrinement in the Hall of Fame and 300 Win Shares makes a player more likely than not to be a Hall of Famer. However, future standards may be different. Players with 300-350 Win Shares in the past have generally gone into the Hall of Fame. In the future, they more often will notâ€.
The 2010 class of Hall of Fame candidates is a strong one. It consists of 11 holdovers and 15 players eligible for the first time. Seven holdovers have over 300 Win Shares, Tim Raines with 390, Mark McGwire with 342, Andre Dawson, 340, Bert Blyleven, 339, Dave Parker, 327, Alan Trammell 318 and Harold Baines with 307. Four newcomers also have over 300 Win Shares, Roberto Alomar 375, Barry Larkin 347, Fred McGriff 326 and Edgar Martinez 305.
In 2009, Rickey Henderson was elected with 94.8% of the votes in his first appearance on the ballot and Jim Rice was elected with 76.4% of the vote. Tommy John (31.7%) was unsuccessful in his last (15th) year and is not on the 2010 ballot. No newcomers, other than Henderson, received enough votes to remain on the ballot.
None of the holdovers experienced a significant increase in votes in 2009. The two holdovers with the most votes, Andre Dawson (up 3 votes) and Bert Blyleven (down 2 votes) remained virtually the same. Blyleven’s last year on the ballot is 2012 so he needs to start moving up if he is going to make it.
Tim Raines and Mark McGwire both lost votes and received less than 25% of the total. McGwire is a special case. He has the numbers to be elected but remains tainted with the steroid cloud. Voters are likely to wait until more is known about the extent of steroid usage before giving McGwire a pass. He lost ground in 2009, receiving only 21.9% of the vote so it is likely to be a slow process.
Raines would appear to have the credentials for election but also lost ground in 2009 receiving only 22.6% of the vote. He should begin gaining but has a long way to go. Several newcomers on the 2010 ballot should receive enough votes to remain on the ballot.
Following is a list of Win Shares for the 26 players on the ballot. Players on the ballot for the first time are shown in bold. Voting results for 2007, 2008 and 2009 are shown for the holdovers.
| Player | Win Shares | 2007 Votes | 2007 % | 2008 Votes | 2008 % | 2009 Votes | 2009 % | 
| Tim Raines | 390 | 132 | 24.3 | 122 | 22.6 | ||
| Roberto Alomar | 375 | ||||||
| Barry Larkin | 347 | ||||||
| Mark McGwire | 342 | 128 | 23.5 | 128 | 23.6 | 118 | 21.9 | 
| Andre Dawson | 340 | 309 | 56.7 | 358 | 65.9 | 361 | 67.0 | 
| Bert Blyleven | 339 | 260 | 47.7 | 336 | 61.9 | 338 | 62.7 | 
| Dave Parker | 327 | 62 | 11.4 | 82 | 15.1 | 81 | 15.0 | 
| Fred McGriff | 326 | ||||||
| Alan Trammell | 318 | 73 | 13.4 | 99 | 18.2 | 94 | 17.4 | 
| Harold Baines | 307 | 29 | 5.3 | 28 | 5.2 | 32 | 5.9 | 
| Edgar Martinez | 305 | ||||||
| Dale Murphy | 294 | 50 | 9.2 | 75 | 13.8 | 62 | 11.5 | 
| Robin Ventura | 272 | ||||||
| Don Mattingly | 263 | 54 | 9.9 | 86 | 15.8 | 64 | 11.9 | 
| Ellis Burks | 260 | ||||||
| Andres Galarraga | 251 | ||||||
| Jack Morris | 225 | 202 | 37.1 | 233 | 42.9 | 237 | 44.0 | 
| Ray Lankford | 223 | ||||||
| Todd Zeile | 221 | ||||||
| Lee Smith | 198 | 234 | 45.0 | 217 | 39.8 | 235 | 43.3 | 
| Kevin Appier | 189 | ||||||
| Eric Karros | 183 | ||||||
| David Segui | 130 | ||||||
| Pat Hentgen | 126 | ||||||
| Shane Reynolds | 94 | ||||||
| Mike Jackson | 92 | 
The last 15 players elected by the Baseball Writers have averaged 353 Win Shares, a figure exceeded by only Raines and Alomar on the ballot this year.
| Player | Year | Win Shares | 
| Dave Winfield | 2001 | 415 | 
| Kirby Puckett | 2001 | 281 | 
| Ozzie Smith | 2002 | 325 | 
| Gary Carter | 2003 | 337 | 
| Eddie Murray | 2003 | 437 | 
| Paul Molitor | 2004 | 414 | 
| Dennis Eckersley | 2004 | 301 | 
| Wade Boggs | 2005 | 394 | 
| Ryne Sandberg | 2005 | 346 | 
| Bruce Sutter | 2006 | 168 | 
| Cal Ripken Jr. | 2007 | 427 | 
| Tony Gwynn | 2007 | 398 | 
| Goose Gossage | 2008 | 223 | 
| Rickey Henderson | 2009 | 535 | 
| Jim Rice | 2009 | 282 | 
| Average | 353 | 
Win Shares are fundamentally a quantitative measure of a player’s accomplishments. A measure of the quality of a player’s offensive performance is OPS+ which compares his OPS (on-base percentage plus slugging average) with the league average during his career. An OPS+ of 120 suggests that his performance is 20% better than that of a league average player. A similar approach (ERA+) can be used to compare a pitcher’s ERA against the league average during his career.
Following is a rank order of OPS+ and ERA+ for the 26 candidates on the 2010 ballot:
| Batters | OPS+ | Pitchers | ERA+ | |
| Mark McGwire | 162 | Lee Smith | 131 | |
| Edgar Martinez | 147 | Mike Jackson | 125 | |
| Fred McGriff | 134 | Kevin Appier | 121 | |
| Don Mattingly | 127 | Bert Blyleven | 118 | |
| Ellis Burks | 126 | Pat Hentgen | 108 | |
| Tim Raines | 123 | Jack Morris | 105 | |
| Ray Lankford | 122 | Shane Reynolds | 103 | |
| Dale Murphy | 121 | |||
| Dave Parker | 121 | |||
| Harold Baines | 120 | |||
| Andre Dawson | 119 | |||
| Andres Galarraga | 118 | |||
| Roberto Alomar | 116 | |||
| Barry Larkin | 116 | |||
| Robin Ventura | 114 | |||
| Alan Trammell | 110 | |||
| Diego Segui | 110 | |||
| Eric Karros | 107 | |||
| Todd Zeile | 103 | 
The Win Shares system favors players with long productive careers like Raines, Dawson and Blyleven while OPS+ rewards strong offensive players who had shorter, more dominant careers like Martinez, Mattingly and Burks. ERA+ favors relief pitchers since their ERAs are generally lower because they are not charged with runs scored by inherited runners.
Conclusions:
1. Roberto Alomar and Barry Larkin will be elected in 2010.
2. None of the holdovers will be elected in 2010 although Dawson and Blyleven should pick up a few votes.
3 Mark McGwire will not come close but should gain some ground and could get elected in the future. He is the only eligible player with over 500 home runs not in the Hall.
4. Edgar Martinez, Fred McGriff and Andres Galarraga should receive enough votes to remain on the ballot.
5. There will not be a groundswell of support for Todd Zeile and Mike Jackson.
If I had a ballot, I would cast votes for Alomar, Larkin, Raines, Blyleven, McGwire and Trammell.












Love this analysis.
I’m interested in why you’d vote for Trammell. I feel like he’s just short of HOF.
I agree that Trammell is a borderline candidate and he obviously is not going to be elected by the BBWAA. He was a favorite of mine, especially in the 1984 World Series and I think a caes can be made that he is among the top dozen shortstops
Do you know how Trammell and Larkin compare as defensive players, by Win Shares or by any other method? Thanks.
I don’t want to step on Bill’s toes, but the information I have has Larkin rated slightly ahead of Trammell. Bill James gave Larkin an “A” on defense and Trammell a “B-.” According to James’ book, Trammell had 92.59 fielding Win Shares in 20 seasons, while Larkin had 92.09 in 19, which comes out to averages of 4.63 per season for Trammell and 4.85 per season for Larkin.
I agree that Trammell was a good player. But I don’t support him for the HOF. One question I always ask on this issue is this: why did his DP partner Lou Whitaker not even get the 5% vote required to stay on the ballot? Is Trammell’s resume that much better than Whitaker’s? They are both middle infielders, played during almost exactly the same years, and even on the same team. Is Trammell really that much better than Whitaker? Do Trammell supporters just draw a very marginal line of HOF-worthiness that happens to cut between these two players? Or do Trammell supporters also support Whitaker and consider his being dropped so early a travesty?
The article gives total Win Shares for inductees since 2000 but none of them are starting pitchers. How does Blyleven’s 339 Win Shares compare to the starting pitchers in the Hall of Fame? Anyone have a brief list? Thanks.