Schmidt Is Voted Into Hall of Fame
Mike Schmidt, the former third baseman who combined power and grace for the Philadelphia Phillies, was elected to baseball’s Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility Monday, but 300-game winners Phil Niekro and Don Sutton fell far short again.
A three-time most valuable player in the National League, Schmidt was named on a record 444 of the record 460 ballots submitted by 10-year members of the Baseball Writers Assn. of America. Schmidt won 10 Gold Gloves for fielding superiority and hit 548 home runs, seventh on the all-time list.
His vote percentage of 96.52 was the fourth-highest, surpassed only by Tom Seaver’s 98.94, Ty Cobb’s 98.23 and Hank Aaron’s 97.83.
Schmidt is only the 10th third baseman elected to the Hall and only the 26th player elected in his first year of eligibility.
His former Philadelphia teammate, Steve Carlton, was the 25th and only player elected last year.
There were 38 eligible players, but only Schmidt surpassed the required 345 votes or 75%.
Niekro, a 318-game winner in his third year of eligibility, drew 286 votes.
Sutton, whose 324 victories in 23 seasons are more than 43 of the 53 pitchers in the Hall, received 264 votes in his second year on the ballot.
Tommy John, a 288-game winner who pitched for the Dodgers and Angels, as did Sutton, received only 98 votes in his first year of eligibility.
Former Boston Red Sox outfielder Jim Rice, also in his first year, got 137 votes, and former New York Yankee catcher Thurman Munson, in his 15th and last year, received 30.
Pete Rose, the all-time hits leader who is suspended from baseball for gambling and is ineligible for the Hall, received 14 write-in votes, which will not be listed in official results because write-in votes are not permitted.
“Pete Rose deserves to be in the Hall,” said Schmidt, a teammate of Rose on two of Philadelphia’s World Series teams in the ‘80s.
Now a resident of Jupiter, Fla., Schmidt attended a news conference at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia and said his solo election “magnified the honor immensely. I’m just now starting to get goose bumps.”
Of the nine third basemen previously enshrined, only Brooks Robinson, Eddie Mathews and Pie Traynor were elected by the writers. The others were selected by various committees.
“Brooks Robinson is the greatest defensive third baseman in history,” said Schmidt. “I would say my numbers are a little better than the other third basemen offensively.”
Schmidt had a lifetime batting average of .267.
He holds the record for home runs and runs batted in by a third baseman, 1,595, and led the National League in home runs a record eight times.
“If you could equate the amount of time and effort put in mentally and physically into succeeding on the baseball field and measured it by the dirt on your uniform . . . mine would have been black,” he said.
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Mike Schmidt’s Career Statistics
YEAR AB R H HR RBI AVG 1972 34 2 7 1 3 .206 1973 367 43 72 18 52 .196 1974 568 108 160 36 116 .282 1975 562 93 140 38 95 .249 1976 584 112 153 38 107 .262 1977 544 114 149 38 101 .274 1978 513 93 129 21 78 .251 1979 541 109 137 45 114 .253 1980 548 104 157 48 121 .286 1981 354 78 112 31 91 .316 1982 514 108 144 35 87 .280 1983 534 104 136 40 109 .255 1984 528 93 146 36 106 .277 1985 549 89 152 33 93 .277 1986 552 97 160 37 119 .290 1987 522 88 153 35 113 .293 1988 390 52 97 12 62 .249 1989 148 19 30 6 28 .203
REGULAR SEASON TOTALS
YEAR AB R H HR RBI AVG 18 Yrs 8352 1776 2234 548 1595 .267
DIVISIONAL PLAYOFF TOTALS
YEAR AB R H HR RBI AVG 1 Yr 16 3 4 1 2 .250
PLAYOFF TOTALS
YEAR AB R H HR RBI AVG 5 Yrs 83 10 20 1 7 .241
WORLD SERIES TOTALS
YEAR AB R H HR RBI AVG 2 Yrs 41 6 9 2 7 .220
MAJOR LEAGUE RECORDS SET
Most HR, third baseman, season (48)
Most HR, third baseman, career (548)
Most RBI, third baseman, career (1,595)
Most extra base hits, 3B, career (1,015).
MILESTONES
NL MVP: 1980, 1981, 1986.
Led NL in HR: 1974-76, 1980-81, 1983-84, 1986.
Four consecutive HR: April 17, 1976; July 6 and 7, 1979.
Three HR in one game: July 7, 1979; June 14, 1987.
Hit HR in all parks: 1979.
NL All-Star: 1974, 1976-77, 1979-84, 1986-88.
World Series MVP: 1980.
Gold Glove: 1976-84, 1986.
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