The Hall of Fame never has done anything like that. And as zambonir noted, there is no criminal charge (yet).
Cepeda’s conviction happened before he was inducted; so the Hall could have included something on his plaque had they wanted to. I’m ok with that as Cepeda reportedly turned his life around after he served his time.
What Cepeda did was nothing close to this.
Not saying it was. Just noting that there is no precedent so far for the Hall of Fame noting off-field crimes (conviction or not) on plaques or their web site. I'm not saying I agree with it, only that the Hall doesn't do it.
And it would be a good time for MLB to rethink things (and other sports for that matter).
Start a new precedent. If MLB is going to ban players for positive marijuana tests and let things like this slide, then MLB is likely a joke.
MLB doesn't run the Hall, and especially doesn't decide who is in or how it is curated.
To me this just shows that conduct and morals should not be considered, period. It all gets too fuzzy. Great player is much easier to determine than great person
So Barry Bonds is a HoFer? Oh wait.
You obviously meant conduct outside of the game. Which is completely wrong.
He's definitely a Hall of Famer in my book, and probably was even if he'd retired in 1999. But that debate at least involves baseball to some extent, in that the ethical transgressions also affected on-field performance (of course the pitchers and defenders were using too).
Really bad behavior by the Commisioner's office. When they claim it was discussed, I wonder with whom and whether these individuals/teams went into the season with a more than marginal advantage. It's insane that everyone in an organization, from owner to GM to manager to coaches to players don't know about a significant rule change. It's B.S. to say the rule wasn't changed if the Commissioner's office working through umpire evaluators and the umpires union effectively shrunk the grey zone by half. Why was this done in secret? Who was informed of the change?
If the strike zone is smaller and the April weather was colder than usual, we could be headed for an offensive explosion in the next few months. That article sees little change in the offense from 2024 to 2025, but what if 2025 weather is worse and with the smaller zone we will go back to something closer to a .250 average the rest of the way.
There are many variables to offense besides immediate rule changes.
Are there less errors on average than other seasons resulting in more hits? Probably not enough to make a .002 overall difference though
what a weird stat... wonder who thought to look at this
… but it is still really nice. Anything with the Meta losing is pleasant.
No idea where it stands in terms of the the most lopsided extra inning games in ML history, but the Giants scored nine in the 11th to be beat the Cubs.
Of course, one of those was a 'ghost runner'.
What a contrast with Harper, Schwarber, Stott, Bohm,
Glad he's not our problem.