Current:Home > NewsAdrian Beltré, Todd Helton and Joe Mauer elected to baseball’s Hall of Fame -PrimeFinance
Adrian Beltré, Todd Helton and Joe Mauer elected to baseball’s Hall of Fame
View
Date:2025-04-14 21:12:55
NEW YORK (AP) — Todd Helton thought back to when he was a kid being coached by his father, Jerry, a minor league catcher in the 1960s.
“When I would go 1 for 3 — and it’s a bad day when you’re young — he’d say 1 for 3 gets you into the Hall of Fame,” Helton said.
Helton, Adrián Beltré and Joe Mauer were voted into Cooperstown on Tuesday, feeling elation and relief when they were rewarded with baseball’s highest honor.
Beltré was a no-doubt, first-ballot choice after batting .286 with 477 homers, 1,707 RBIs and 3,166 hits for four teams over 21 seasons. The third baseman appeared on 366 of 385 ballots (95.1%) cast by members of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.
Helton made it on the sixth try, voters taking time to warm to statistics inflated by the thin mile-high air of Denver’s Coors Field over 17 seasons, all with the Colorado Rockies. The first baseman got 307 votes for 79.7% after falling 11 short last year when Scott Rolen was elected. Helton started at 16.5% support in 2019.
“I was the most superstitious guy in the world,” Helton said. “I hadn’t been superstitious in 10 years until today.”
Mauer (293, 76.1%) joined Johnny Bench and Iván Rodríguez as the only first-ballot picks who primarily were catchers and at 40 became the youngest living Hall of Famer. He got 293 votes (76.1%), four more than the 75% needed, after batting .306 with 143 homers and 906 RBIs in 15 years, all with Minnesota.
“Goes by way too fast,” Mauer said.
Beltré, Mauer and Helton will be inducted on July 21 along with Jim Leyland, elected last month by the contemporary era committee for managers, executives and umpires. There are 273 players among 346 people in the Hall, and just 60 of those players were elected on the first try.
Beltré becomes the fifth Dominican-born Hall of Famer after Juan Marichal, Pedro Martínez, Vladimir Guerrero and David Ortiz.
“I’m proud of the fact that I was able to play for a long time and be able to compete at the highest level,” Beltré said. “I’m honored to be in the Hall of Fame. It’s something that I never even dreamed of.”
Reliever Billy Wagner was five votes short at 284 (73.8%) but up from 68.1% last year. He will appear on the ballot for the 10th and final time in 2025, when Ichiro Suzuki and CC Sabathia are newly eligible.
Gary Sheffield got 246 votes for 63.9% in his final appearance on the BBWAA ballot, up from 55% last year and 11.7% in 2015. He is eligible for consideration by the contemporary baseball player committee, which next meets in December 2025.
Beltré, a four-time All-Star and five-time Gold Glove winner, played for the Los Angeles Dodgers (1998-2004), Seattle (2005-09), Boston (2010) and Texas (2011-18). His 2,759 games at third base are second to Brooks Robinson’s 2,870 and his 636 doubles are 11th.
Helton, a five-time All-Star first baseman and the 2000 major league batting champion, hit .345 with 200 homers and 791 RBIs at home and .287 with 142 homers and 547 RBIs on the road.
“Pitchers get hurt — they say you can’t throw in thin air. And then hitters get dinked because they play Colorado,” Helton said. “I’m not embarrassed or anything about my home and road numbers. Going on the road after hitting in Colorado is hard. The ball breaks more and it’s a huge adjustment going through the season.”
Mauer was a six-time All-Star, three-time Gold Glove winner and the 2009 AL MVP. An All-Star in six of his first 10 big league seasons and the only catcher to win three batting titles, Mauer moved to first base for his last five years following a concussion on a foul tip off the bat of the New York Mets’ Ike Davis on Aug. 19, 2013, an injury that ended Mauer’s season. Concussion symptoms returned on May 11 when he had whiplash while diving for a foul ball at Anaheim. He tried to play through it for a week but missed 25 games and retired after the season.
He also had three knee operations.
“I feel effects of some of those things like that,” he said.
Voters included an average of seven names per ballot, up from 5.86 last year, and 24.4% of the voters checked the maximum 10 candidates, an increase from 13.9%. Just 10 eligible voters failed to return ballots.
Alex Rodriguez and Manny Ramírez again lagged, hurt by suspensions for performance-enhancing drugs. Rodriguez received 34.8% and Ramírez 32.5%.
Among other first-time candidates, Chase Utley (28.8%) and David Wright (6.2%) will remain on next year’s ballot.
José Bautista, Bartolo Colon, Adrián González, Matt Holliday, Victor Martinez, Brandon Phillips, José Reyes and James Shields all were under 5% and will be dropped.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
veryGood! (27927)
Related
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Inside Clean Energy: Denmark Makes the Most of its Brief Moment at the Climate Summit
- Get a Next-Level Clean and Save 58% On This Water Flosser With 4,200+ 5-Star Amazon Reviews
- Still trying to quit that gym membership? The FTC is proposing a rule that could help
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Warming Trends: Why Walking Your Dog Can Be Bad for the Environment, Plus the Sexism of Climate Change and Taking Plants to the Office
- Are you trying to buy a home? Tell us how you're dealing with variable mortgage rates
- Elon Musk reveals new ‘X’ logo to replace Twitter’s blue bird
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Kate Spade 24-Hour Flash Deal: Get This $330 Bucket Bag for Just $89
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Still trying to quit that gym membership? The FTC is proposing a rule that could help
- New evacuations ordered in Greece as high winds and heat fuel wildfires
- A timeline of the Carlee Russell case: What happened to the Alabama woman who disappeared for 2 days?
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- 'This is Us' star Mandy Moore says she's received streaming residual checks for 1 penny
- Raging Flood Waters Driven by Climate Change Threaten the Trans-Alaska Pipeline
- Inside Clean Energy: Denmark Makes the Most of its Brief Moment at the Climate Summit
Recommendation
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
Everything You Need for a Backyard Movie Night
Get $112 Worth of Tarte Cosmetics Iconic Shape Tape Products for Just $20
New York Community Bank agrees to buy a large portion of Signature Bank
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Janet Yellen says the U.S. is ready to protect depositors at small banks if required
Why Taylor Lautner Doesn't Want a Twilight Reboot
First Republic becomes the latest bank to be rescued, this time by its rivals