Rupert Patrick wrote:Baines was also a compiler by this definition, but at age 40, playing in 135 games, he still banged out 25 HR, over 100 RBI's and batted .312; he aged well. Also, as a DH, there was no defensive liability.
It's true Baines aged well. Trouble is, even at his best, he was a HoVG level player. And while it's true he wasn't creating the kind of defensive havoc out there that, say, Manny Ramirez did, he didn't add anything in the field either. He also didn't add anything else of value, such as base stealing ability. He was strictly a hitter, and a good, durable one. There's a lot to be said for that, but it's not the stuff of a HoF level career.
Rupert Patrick wrote:Vizquel did play a few years too long, perhaps he was staying around for the paycheck, but I would not be surprised to see him get inducted to the HOF in time, probably thru the back door like Baines did. He was a great fielder and won 11 Gold Gloves.
Vizquel was very good with the glove, but not as otherworldly as some think. Gold Gloves are not the most reliable indicator of fielding expertise anyway (Rafael Palmiero infamously won a GG in 1999 while only appearing in 28 games at the position -- he was a DH that year for the most part). And inertia tends to play a heavy role in these selections (look at Jim Kaat, who won this 14 consecutive years, or Greg Maddox, who won this award 18 of 19 seasons in a row). It helped Vizquel that Ozzie Smith played in the NL during the earlier part of his career, allowing him to stand out among the best fielding SSs of the AL at the time.
And if you're going to hit like Vizquel, you'd better be truly amazing with the glove. WAR numbers for him and Ozzie Smith:
Ozzie: 76.9 overall WAR, 48.8 oWAR, 44.2 dWAR, 87 OPS+.
Vizquel: 45.6 overall WAR, 32.9 oWAR, 29.5 dWAR, 82 OPS+
The former is a legit HoFer because he was indeed as good as advertised in the field and hit okay relative to the position played. Vizquel not so much.
Smith's 76.9 WAR places him 6th all time at the position. He's surrounded by HoFers such as Robin Yount, Luke Appling, Arky Vaughn, Barry Larkin, Bobby Wallace, HoF cinch Derek Jeter, and criminally overlooked 19th century player Bill Dahlen.
Vizquel's 45.6 WAR places him 28th all time at the position. That's in the area for HoVG guys like Jim Fregosi, Miguel Tejada, Art Fletcher, Jimmy Rollins (who may do better than expected once he becomes eligible), Vern Stephens, Tony Fernandez, and Roger Peckinpaugh. The HoF SS closest by and above him is Dave Bancroft, widely considered a Frankie Frisch era mistake. And the only HoF SSs below him are either bad selections (Travis Jackson, Rabbit Maranville, Phil Rizzuto) or folks with a good bit of managerial credit (Hughie Jennings), combo credit (John Ward, also a solid pitcher), or 19th century pioneer status (George Wright). Jackson and Maranville are fairly close by Vizquel, actually.