LARRY WAYNE "Chipper" JONES JR: Born April 24, 1972 in Deland, Florida. 6-foot-4, 210 pounds, batted both, tossed right. … chose in first year of qualification with 97.2 percent (410 of 422) of the vote. … drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the first round of the 1990 MLB novice draft out of the Bolles School in Jacksonville, Florida. … in 19 seasons with the Braves had 2,726 hits, 1,055 for additional bases, and batted .303 with 468 grand slams, 1,623 RBIs and 150 stolen bases. … eight-time All-Star third baseman. … was a power for the greater part of the Atlanta groups that won 14 straight division titles and one World Series. … in 1999 hit 45 homers and 41 duplicates, drove in 126 runs, scored 116 times, drew 126 strolls, and stole 20 bases to win NL MVP Award. … won NL Silver Slugger Award for third basemen in 1999-2000. … in 2006 had an additional fair hit in 14 straight amusements to tie the MLB record set in 1927 by Pittsburgh's Paul Waner. … drove MLB in hitting in 2008 with .364 normal. … just switch-hitter in MLB history with profession batting normal of no less than .300 and at least 400 homers.
Zach Britton exchanged from Orioles to Yankees
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JAMES HOWARD THOME: Born Aug. 27, 1970 in Peoria, Illinois. … 6-foot-4, 250 pounds, batted left, tossed right. … chose in first year of qualification, one of just 54 players to do as such, getting 89.8 percent of the votes. … chose by the Cleveland Indians out of Illinois Central College in the thirteenth round of the 1989 beginner draft. … batted .276, played in 2,543 amusements and had 2,328 hits, 1,583 runs, 612 grand slams and 1,699 RBIs in 22 seasons with the Indians, White Sox, Phillies, Dodgers, Twins and Orioles. … played a respectable starting point, third base and assigned hitter … had a record 13 stroll off homers and hit at least 40 homers six times. … five-time All-Star. … best season was 2002 in Cleveland when he hit a vocation high 52 grand slams with 118 RBIs and drove AL in strolls (122), slugging rate (.677) and on-base in addition to slugging (OPS) (1.122), and batted .304 with an on-base level of .445. … hit 17 homers in the postseason.
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VLADIMIR ALVINO GUERRERO: Born Feb. 9, 1975, in Don Gregorio, Dominican Republic. … 6-foot-3, 235 pounds, batted right and tossed right. .. earned votes on 92.9 percent of all BBWAA votes cast in his second year of qualification. … batted .318 with 2,590 hits, 449 grand slams, 1,496 RBIs and .553 slugging rate in 16 seasons for the Expos, Angels, Rangers and Orioles. … nine-time All-Star. … had 39 duplicates, 39 homers, 124 runs and 126 RBIs to win 2004 AL MVP Award. … eight-time Silver Slugger Award champ. … hit .300 or higher 13 times, drove in at least 100 runs 10 times, and associated for no less than 30 homers eight times. … famous free-swinging, awful ball hitter who pummeled 126 first-pitch homers and struck out only 985 times. … solid equipped outfielder who had 14 periods of twofold digit helps and 14 periods of no less than 10 mistakes and completed profession with 126 helps and 125 blunders. … went through six seasons with the Angels following eight years in Montreal and will be first player accepted with an Angels logo on his Hall plaque.
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TREVOR WILLIAM HOFFMAN: Born Oct. 13, 1967 in Bellflower, California. … 6-foot-1, 200 pounds, batted right and tossed right. … got 79.9 percent of the Hall of Fame vote in the wake of missing by just five votes a year ago. … drafted by the Cincinnati Reds on the eleventh round of the 1989 MLB beginner draft. … was a small time infielder for three seasons previously turning into an alleviation pitcher. … in 18 years primarily with the San Diego Padres showed up in 1,035 recreations, posting a 61-75 record and enlisting 601 spares, second unequaled to Mariano Rivera's 652. … 6th pitcher who served generally as a reliever to make the Hall of Fame. … in 1,089.1 innings pitched permitted 846 hits, 378 runs, struck out 1,133 and had a profession ERA of 2.87.
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JOHN SCOTT MORRIS: Born: May 16, 1955, in St. Paul, Minnesota. … 6-foot-3, 195 pounds, batted right and tossed right. … chose last December by a veterans council. … drafted by the Detroit Tigers on the fifth round of the 1976 MLB novice draft out of Brigham Young University. … in 18 years with Detroit, Minnesota, Toronto and Cleveland pitched 3,824 innings and posted a 254-186 record with 2,478 strikeouts. … had 175 finish recreations and a vocation ERA of 3.90, the most astounding of any pitcher in the Hall of Fame. … five-time All-Star. … played on four World Series champions, Detroit (1984), Minnesota (1991), and Toronto (1992-93). … one of six players in MLB history to win successive World Series titles on various groups. … was 7-4 with five finish recreations in 13 postseason begins. … ran 4-2 with an ERA of 2.96 of every six World Series begins, finishing three. … began the most recreations (332), pitched the most innings (2,443.2), and had the most wins (162) of any pitcher in the 1980s. … resigned after the 1994 season and showed up on the Hall of Fame poll without precedent for 2000. … has filled in as a telecaster for the Blue Jays, Twins, and Tigers since resigning.
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ALAN STUART TRAMMELL: Born Feb. 21, 1958 in Garden Grove, California. … 6 foot, 165 pounds, batted right and tossed right. … chose last December by a veterans panel. … drafted by the Detroit Tigers on the second round of the 1976 MLB beginner draft. … steady all-around maker at shortstop from 1977-96, playing in 2,293 recreations for the Tigers. … had 2,365 hits, 185 homers, 1,003 RBIs, 1,231 runs, and 236 stolen bases. … six-time All-Star. … earned four Gold Glove Awards and three Silver Slugger Awards. … hit two grand slams in a single amusement and batted .450 to win MVP respects in Detroit's five-diversion triumph over the San Diego Padres in 1984 World Series. … in 1987 completed second in AL MVP voting subsequent to hitting .343 with 28 homers and 105 RBIs while batting cleanup. … seven-time .300 hitter with a .285 profession batting normal. … his .977 handling rate positions 6th among shortstops with no less than 2,000 amusements played. … one of just 52 Hall of Famers who went through their whole professions with one group.
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A gander at the Baseball Hall of Fame grant victors to be revered on Saturday:
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ROBERT QUINLAN COSTAS: Born March 22, 1952 in Queens, New York, and experienced childhood in Commack on Long Island. … victor of the Hall of Fame's Ford C. Frick Award for supporters. … selected at Syracuse University to consider communicate news coverage and graduated in 1974. … while in school filled in as a host for the Syracuse Blazers small time hockey group. … after graduation started calling amusements for the American Basketball Association's Spirits of St. Louis on KMOX. … took care of local NBA and NFL recreations for CBS before moving to NBC Sports in 1980. … in 1983, 1985, 1987 and 1989 played by-play of the ALCS and pregame obligations at the All-Star Game those same years and also pregame assignments at the World Series in 1982, 1984, 1986 and 1988. … worked the 1994 All-Star Game and the 1995 ALDS, ALCS and World Series for TBN. … called the World Series for NBC in 1997 and 1999, the 1998 and 2000 ALCS, the 1999 NLCS and 2000 All-Star Game. … in 2009 joined MLB Network and calls amusements and hosts a meeting show called Studio 42. … prime-time host of 12 Olympic Games from 1992-2016. … moored NBC scope of NFL communicates amid the 1980s and mid 1990s and returned in 2006 to have the system's new Sunday Night Football broadcasts. … champ of 28 Emmy Awards and the main individual in TV history to have won Emmys for games, news and diversion.
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SHELDON OCKER: Born in Akron, Ohio, in 1943. … victor of the J.G. Taylor Spink Award for commendable commitments to baseball composing. … went to Buchtel High School, graduating in 1960. … earned a degree in political science from Ohio State in 1964. … labored for multi year at the Sandusky Register. … was enlisted by the Akron Beacon Journal in 1967, where he secured secondary school sports for a long time, the Cleveland Cavaliers for 10 years, and the Cleveland Indians for a long time, from 1981-2013, preceding resigning in January 2014. … filled in as leader of the Baseball Writers' Association of America in 1985.
Zach Britton exchanged from Orioles to Yankees