Changes Expected To Hall Of Fame Voting
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Jon Lester, Brett Gardner, Kyle Seager and Ryan Zimmerman are among the other new candidates
All 30 clubs have at least one player they think should be in Cooperstown already, although some are more egregious than others.
Keep up on the latest Baseball Hall of Fame voting updates.
Players must achieve 75.0% to be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame and must receive at least 5.0% of the votes to remain on the ballot. Players can remain on the ballot for a maximum of 10 years.
Every year, baseball fans have opinions on who deserves to be in the sport's Hall of Fame. This year, we gave readers the chance to bring those opinions from social media and group chats to their own (and unofficial) Class of 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot.
Carlos Beltran and Andruw Jones are heading to Cooperstown. What else did we learn from the 2026 voting?
A few short decades ago, the idea of a pitcher with only 200 wins or a hitter with only 1,500 hits getting into the Baseball Hall of Fame would have been laughable.
Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones have changed the landscape of modern Hall voting. But there is so much more to discuss about the results.
STARK RAVING Just when it didn’t seem possible any Hall of Fame could be a bigger farce than baseball’s, the Pro Football Hall of Fame stepped up and said, “Hold my Belichick.” Bill Belichick reportedly won’t be a first-ballot Hall of Famer?