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This season, Chris Paul’s 21st in the NBA, will be the final chapter of the future Hall of Fame point guard’s illustrious career, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania.
In the summer, Paul, 40, signed what was reported as a one-year, $3.6 million deal to reunite with the Los Angeles Clippers, with whom he had previously starred from 2011-17. After inking the contract, he called the decision to return to the Clippers a “no-brainer,” but he said he didn’t know if the 2025-26 campaign would be his last in the league.
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“I think throughout this season, at some point — guys that I know whoâ€ve retired, and all this different type of stuff — you know, and you sort of figure it out yourself,” Paul told ESPN’s Malika Andrews in late July. “It tells you. But I think more than anything, this season, I will definitely enjoy it. I donâ€t take this for granted.â€
Paul has reportedly come to his conclusion a month into the season. Following an efficient 2024-25 with the San Antonio Spurs — during which he started all 82 games — he’s averaging just 2.5 points and 3.3 assists in 13.7 minutes per game for a 4-11 Clippers team.
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“What a ride…Still so much left…GRATEFUL for this last one!!” Paul wrote on Instagram Saturday below a video filled with highlights and set to a remix of Frank Sinatra’s “My Way.”
Paul made the post ahead of the Clippers’ road game versus the Charlotte Hornets in his home state of North Carolina.
Paul has played for seven franchises and, even though an NBA championship has escaped his reÌsumeÌ, he’s collected a laundry list of accomplishments, including 11 All-NBA selections and nine NBA All-Defensive Team nods. Additionally, Paul has led the league in assists five times and steals six times.
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He started his career with the New Orleans Hornets. They selected him No. 4 overall out of Wake Forest in the 2005 draft. He won NBA Rookie of the Year in 2006, jumpstarting his six-season run with the Hornets that went through the 2010-11 season.
Since, he’s suited up for the Los Angeles Clippers (2011-17), Houston Rockets (2017-19), Oklahoma City Thunder (2019-20), Phoenix Suns (2020-23), Golden State Warriors (2023-24), Spurs (2024-25) and now the Clippers again.
Paul has averaged 16.9 points, 9.2 assists, 4.4 rebounds and 2 steals per game in his career. While those numbers have dipped over the years, his continued impact as a floor general has allowed him to play into his 40s as he cements his legacy as one of the league’s top point guards of all time.
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Bradford DoolittleNov 21, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
- MLB writer and analyst for ESPN.com
- Former NBA writer and analyst for ESPN.com
- Been with ESPN since 2013
With the release of the 2026 BBWAA Hall of Fame ballot earlier this week, we’ve officially entered Cooperstown deliberation season.
There are now two ballots up for consideration. While the writers’ process tends to soak up most of the attention, the contemporary baseball era committee ballot — announced Nov. 3 — is more urgent and intriguing. The results will be determined by a yet-to-be-named committee just before the upcoming winter meetings in Orlando, Florida, and announced on Dec. 7.
Though the writers have until the end of the year to determine their choices for the primary ballot, the era committee process will be upon us not long after the coming Thanksgiving holiday. Each of the Hall’s era committees meet every three years, and this year, the contemporary era committee is considering player candidates from 1980 on. It’s the stronger ballot; the eight candidates average 74.1 career bWAR, while the 33 candidates on the primary ballot average 41.3. Even if you just take the top eight on the main ballot, that group averages 70.4.
Much of the attention has been focused on two candidates: Don Mattingly and Dale Murphy. Heck, the Murphy constituency has its own web site, which among other things features documentaries narrated by country singer Jason Aldean and sportscaster Ernie Johnson.
I get it. Mattingly and Murphy were MVPs in the 1980s who attracted legions of fans in their time, many of whom considered one or the other their favorite player. As the captain of the New York Yankees, Mattingly had a huge following, while Murphy’s fan base was national thanks to the Atlanta Braves’ omnipresence on SuperStation WTBS, as it was known then. I have a Murphy model ballglove I got in junior high that I still use all these years later.
Still, the attention sphere around this ballot should be fixed on two other players, who might just be respectively the best hitter and best pitcher who ever played.
Let’s go to the bWAR leaderboard.
2025 ERA COMMITTEE BALLOT
Barry Bonds (162.8 bWAR)
Roger Clemens (139.2)
Gary Sheffield (60.5)
Jeff Kent (55.4)
Dale Murphy (46.5)
Carlos Delgado (44.4)
Don Mattingly (42.4)
Fernando Valenzuela (41.4)
We all know why Bonds and Clemens (and Sheffield) remain Hall candidates rather than Hall members, but that’s all the more reason that we should be on fire, right now, relitigating the issues surrounding their candidacies. It’s as if even those who support the candidacies of Bonds and Clemens in particular have slipped into numb acceptance in a “they should be in, but we all know how it is” sort of way.
The thing about this cycle is that the stakes have changed. Last year, the Hall announced a tweak to their era committee process, something they’ve done many times over the decades. As things stand now, this could be the second-to-last shot for Bonds and Clemens — ever.
The new rule:
“Beginning in 2025, any candidate who appears on a ballot and does not receive votes from at least five of the 16 voters will not be eligible to be placed on the ballot within the Era Committee’s following three-year cycle. Additionally, beginning in 2025, any candidate that does not receive at least five of 16 votes in multiple appearances on Era Committee ballots will not be eligible for future ballot consideration.”
So if Bonds, Clemens or Sheffield fall short of five ballots out of the 16 that will be cast in Orlando, they won’t be eligible the next time their era group comes up in 2028. Then 2031 will be their last chance, if they are nominated.
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Most fans are firmly entrenched on this issue. To me, the idea that the Hall of Fame would not include baseball’s all-time home run king and one of the top five pitchers ever, when both are eligible and both have official playing records that are intact, means it will forever be less than what it should be. Given the new guidelines, it’s a shadow that would loom over 25 Main Street forever.
At any rate, only 16 people will comprise the committee that will deliberate over the era ballot in Orlando. We don’t yet know who they are — this will be announced in early December — but the makeup of the committee will tell you a lot about how things are likely to go. It always does, which has always been the primary problem with the various incarnations of the veterans and era committees over the years.
To move from committee to Cooperstown, all of the candidates will need to be named on at least 12 of the 16 ballots. But each member is limited to three names. All eight of the players on ballot have their advocates, so even without the looming presence of Bonds and Clemens, it’s a tough road.
There is no one right way to approach this, but over time, I’ve developed a method to working through how to deal with these ballots — whether it’s an era ballot or the writer’s ballot. These are only exercises to inform my writing about the process, as I have never cast a Hall of Fame vote.
I think of the process as a kind of flow chart consisting of three regions, which are: 1. Eligibility; 2. Objective case; 3. Deep dive.
Each region works as a kind of funnel: You filter out some players, others slip through, unless their cases become clear. At each juncture, you’re asking, “Who’s in?” and “Who’s out?” If the player falls in neither category, he slips through the funnel into the next region.
Let’s apply this approach to the current era ballot.
Region 1: Eligibility
For our purposes as voters (let’s all call ourselves that to get into the spirit), this is done for us. We can only vote for those on the ballot. Write-in votes are not permitted.
So why bother to break this out? It’s all about the character clause:
“Voting shall be based upon the player’s record, playing ability, integrity, sportsmanship, character and contributions to the team(s) on which the player played.”
Some of these things are more concrete than others. We don’t have time for a debate on moral philosophy, but for me the key is simply this: Any baseball writer, commentator, reporter, historian, player, manager, executive or anyone else who finds themselves puzzling over a Hall of Fame ballot is qualified to assess baseball. The rest, as former commissioner Faye Vincent once opined, is “hopelessly vague.”
These things can mean different things to different people, but I believe that the time for deciding whether certain transgressions eliminate a candidate from Hall consideration should fall during the pre-ballot process. You don’t want certain people in your Hall of Fame? Then don’t put them on the ballot. Once they land on the ballot, then it’s all about the baseball part of a person’s story.
The Hall does eliminate from consideration anyone on the ineligible list — those banned from the game — so there are acknowledged limitations. But if the player lands on a ballot, then for me the case moves onto the matters related to winning baseball games and accolades, things that are all a matter of the sport’s official record.
As for this era ballot, obviously the eligibility region neither anoints anyone, nor rules out anyone. So all eight move onto the next region.
Region 2: Objective case
Far more has been written about the objective judgment of Hall of Fame candidates than any other consideration. And let’s face it, this is the fun part.
I want to be clear about one thing: WAR should never be the only consideration for Hall membership. Neither should win shares or home runs or hits or win probability added, or pitcher won-loss record or career saves. You must look at a player’s career holistically and in context, using various criteria and then go from there. In fact, the Hall’s guidelines explicitly prohibit the inclusion of anyone based strictly on some predetermined objective standard.
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What we’re looking for are the outliers, both positive and negative — those who are no-brainers to get in, and those whose cases aren’t strong enough to move them into our third region. There won’t be any eliminations in this section today, but this step would help us sort out the primary ballot.
As for no-brainers, you can guess where this is headed.
Bonds: He ranks fourth all-time in bWAR (162.8), first in home runs (762), fifth in OPS (1.051), first in walks (2,558), first in runs created (2,892) … and so on. Recognition in one’s own time is a crucial indicator when looking at an era candidate, and of course Bonds has that too. His seven MVP awards are three more than anyone else and he ranks first in award shares for MVP voting.
Clemens: He ranks eighth in bWAR (139.2) and third in pitching bWAR (138.7), won 354 games, ranks third on the strikeout list (4,672) and ranks first in award shares for Cy Young voting.
Yeah, they’re in. These are the performance records of no-doubt Hall of Famers who should not be on this ballot in the first place. Either they should have been in long ago, or they should have been deemed ineligible. But here they are, and their cases remain as clear-cut as ever.
Everyone else moves onto the final region.
Region 3: Deep Dive (aka The Keltner List)
Now we’re into the gray area — candidates who might be Hall worthy or might not. Because of the presence of two no-brainers on the ballot, and the limitation of only being allowed to list three candidates, we’re down to one precious slot.
The Keltner List is a series of questions developed by Bill James in his seminal book on the Hall of Fame, “The Politics of Glory.” The questions are all closed-ended, so for each we land on yes or no. We’ll run through the questions and list the “yes” players for each one. Then we’ll tally it up and see where we land.
1. Was he ever regarded as the best player in baseball?
Remember, we’ve already anointed Bonds and Clemens above, so they are not subject to any of these questions. As for the rest, I give credit for this one to Mattingly and Murphy.
It’s not clear-cut, but Murphy won back-to-back MVPs and would clearly have been in any “best player” conversation during that time (1982 and 1983) and perhaps beyond. Mattingly was AL MVP in 1985, and from 1984 to 1986 he created 20 more runs than any other player in baseball and won two Glove Gloves. Many would have argued he was baseball’s best player at that time.
Yes: Mattingly, Murphy
2. Was he the best player on his team?
This is a yes for everyone except Kent, whose best seasons came as Bonds’ teammate. Kent did win NL MVP in 2000, but hitting behind Bonds (49 homers, .440 OBP) was a boost to his stat line and Bonds had a higher bWAR even in that season.
Perhaps worth mentioning is Valenzuela, who can at least stake claim to this category for his rookie season (1981) when he won the NL Cy Young Award and led the champion Los Angeles Dodgers in bWAR.
Yes: Sheffield, Murphy, Delgado, Mattingly, Valenzuela
3. Was he the best player in baseball (or in the league) at his position?
Everyone gets a yes here. Kent, Murphy and Mattingly won MVP awards. Valenzuela won a Cy Young. These are strong indicators. Sheffield was baseball’s best right fielder in 2003, at the very least. He was probably the top third baseman in 1992. Delgado was the top AL first baseman once or twice. Frankly, for a ballot like this one, this criteria is a fairly low bar.
Yes: Sheffield, Kent, Murphy, Delgado, Mattingly, Valenzuela
4. Did he have an impact on a number of pennant races?
Increasingly, because of the larger playoff formats of the recent era, I’d fold playoff appearances and performance into this question. The murky part is the “a number of” component. Murphy played on a lot of lousy teams and got into only one playoff series. Same for Mattingly, though he raked when he got there. Delgado had a huge 2006 postseason for the New York Mets but that was his only playoff appearance.
I’m giving a yes here to Valenzuela and Sheffield for coming up big for championship teams. Kent didn’t get a ring but hit well over 49 postseason games.
Yes: Valenzuela, Sheffield, Kent
5. Was he a good enough player that he could continue to play regularly after passing his prime?
This is a yes for all of them, as all played regular roles well into their 30s. Mattingly’s career was truncated because of his ongoing back trouble, but that shortened his peak more than anything. He still played until he was 34 and was the Yankees’ regular first baseman the entire time.
Yes: Sheffield, Kent, Murphy, Delgado, Mattingly, Valenzuela
6. Is he the very best player in baseball history who is not in the Hall of Fame?
As long as Bonds and Clemens are on the outside, this question probably will remain a no for everyone who becomes subject to this inquiry.
Yes: None
7. Are most players who have comparable career statistics in the Hall of Fame?
This is where we turn to Jay Jaffe’s JAWS data as it exists at baseball-reference.com. The answer for all is: No. None of our remaining six really come all that close to the average standards of existing Hall of Famers at their positions. There are some comparable Hall of Famers, but not most. This is not surprising, as an era ballot is by definition a second-chance process.
Yes: None
8. Do the players’ numbers meet Hall of Fame standards?
James’ systematized this question in an ingenious way, and we’ll lean on his standard of a score of 50 for our six hopefuls. We’re left with two players who clear that bar.
Yes: Sheffield, Kent
9. Is there evidence to suggest that the player was significantly better or worse than is suggested by his statistics?
I’m going to focus on peak value, which I’ve always weighed close to equal with career value, though with a higher bar. (Think: Sandy Koufax and his ilk of short-career greats.)
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This helps Mattingly. His peak bWAR (35.7) is still below the Hall average at first base, but it’s better than David Ortiz and Orlando Cepeda, and virtually even with Tony Perez, Fred McGriff and Frank Chance. These are all Hall of Famers. Delgado (34.5 peak bWAR) isn’t far back, so it’s really about where you want to draw the lines.
Meanwhile, Sheffield had a higher peak bWAR (38.0) than Hall of Famers Dave Winfield, Dave Parker, Enos Slaughter, Willie Keeler and Kike Cuyler, plus some other 19th century types further down the list. When you consider that Sheffield topped 500 homers (509) and has a career bWAR (60.5) that is borderline, his case is building.
Finally, Murphy gets a similar bump. His peak bWAR (41.2) ranks 18th among center fielders. He’s above quite a few Hall of Famers.
Yes: Sheffield, Mattingly, Murphy
10. Is he the best player at his position who is eligible for the Hall of Fame but not in?
No one can claim to be the best hitter or pitcher not in. Zeroing in on specific positions, using JAWS, you can’t quite get there for any of the six. Even if you discount active players and PED-associated candidates at first base, Mattingly and Delgado still have to deal with the specter of Keith Hernandez, John Olerud, Will Clark and others who, at the very least, are hard to separate. Kent is blocked in this area by Lou Whitaker and Bobby Grich, to start. None of the six clear this bar.
Yes: None
11. How many MVP-type seasons did he have? Did he ever win an MVP Award? If not, how many times was he close?
We’ll fold in Cy Young voting for Valenzuela and defer to the awards-share figures. We have award winners — Valenzuela, Mattingly, Murphy and Kent — and those are enough for a yes. Sheffield had three top-three MVP finishes and had more MVP shares than any of the three who won the award. Delgado just missed winning the AL MVP Award in 2003.
Yes: Sheffield, Kent, Murphy, Delgado, Mattingly, Valenzuela
12. How many All-Star-type seasons did he have? How many All-Star Games did he play in? Did most of the other players who played in this many go into the Hall of Fame?
Delgado played in only two All-Star Games and there aren’t many Hall of Famers with only two ASG appearances. Everyone else played in many All-Star Games and land in peer groups comprising quite a few Hall of Famers.
Yes: Sheffield, Kent, Murphy, Mattingly, Valenzuela
13. If this man were the best player on his team, would it be likely that the team could win the pennant?
Yes: Sheffield, Kent, Murphy, Delgado, Mattingly, Valenzuela
14. What impact did the player have on baseball history? Was he responsible for any rule changes? Did he introduce any new equipment? Did he change the game in any way?
All of these players were historic in different ways, not all of them good. But I’m going to stay positive here and award one yes in a category that I view as extra credit. That goes to Valenzuela, whose impact in Latin America in general and Mexico in particular was immense, and it was pretty significant in Southern California as well.
Yes: Valenzuela
15. Did the player uphold the standards of sportsmanship and character that the Hall of Fame, in its written guidelines, instructs us to consider?
And so we come back, at the end, where many want to begin the discussion. And here, I’m OK with getting into traits such as clubhouse leadership and things like the Roberto Clemente Award and other areas of community impact. When you are comparing similar candidates, those are separating qualities and, I would argue, are germane to the primary task of baseball careers: winning games, pennants, and championships, but also establishing an identity in conjunction with the teams on which you play.
Even so, I’m loath to judge these players in these areas for the most part, so I will seek hard evidence. There, we find that Mattingly was a Yankees team captain. Murphy and Delgado were Clemente Award recipients.
Yes: Mattingly, Murphy, Delgado
So who gets the nod?
Dale Murphy’s Cooperstown case is solid. Will he get the nod this year? Owen C. Shaw/Getty Images
The Keltner List is meant to help you arrive at a thumbs-up or thumbs-down for each candidate put through that ringer. But here I’m taking a different approach. We’ve got three spots. Two of those were claimed early on by Bonds and Clemens, leaving me with one slot.
Well, the Keltner List left three players that landed nine yes votes among the 15 questions: Sheffield, Murphy and Mattingly. All of them are worthy Hall of Famers. But we have to whittle it down, so it comes down to picking one.
My pick: Murphy
Murphy had the highest peak value of the trio and had a stint in the conversation as the best player in the sport. He was an all-around player, as his five Gold Gloves will attest. His reputation in the sport, while not the top-line consideration for me, is something I very much honor.
I wish it didn’t have to be only three and I will always believe that all Hall votes shouldn’t be space-limited by rule. Either someone is a Hall of Famer, or they aren’t. But for now, we have only so many lines to fill in and I’d fill mine with Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Dale Murphy.
Whether you agree with this approach probably comes down to your stance on the character clause. For me, this is the simple, direct way to approach the murkiest and most glorious of all baseball debates — whether a player’s career merits Hall of Fame induction.
Roger Federer will become the first member of the ‘Big Three’ of tennis to be inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
Federer, 44, retired in 2022 having won 103 ATP-level titles, second only to Jimmy Connors (109) during the Open era.
The Swiss great was the first man to win 20 Grand Slam singles titles – a total since surpassed by ‘Big Three’ rivals Novak Djokovic (24) and Rafael Nadal (22).
Federer, one of only eight men to achieve a career Grand Slam, received the news at Swiss Tennis, where he played in his youth, as he was welcomed by some of the current 270 Hall of Fame members in a video call.
“It’s a tremendous honour to be inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame and to stand alongside so many of the game’s great champions,” Federer said.
“Throughout my career, I’ve always valued the history of tennis and the example set by those who came before me.
“To be recognised in this way by the sport and by my peers is deeply humbling. I look forward to visiting Newport next August to celebrate this special moment with the tennis community.”
Federer will be inducted over the weekend of 27-29 August next year, when ceremonies will take place in Newport, Rhode Island, in the United States.
Among his 20 major triumphs, Federer won a record eight men’s singles titles at Wimbledon.
He held the world number one ranking for a total of 310 weeks – including a record 237 consecutive weeks.
Broadcaster and journalist Mary Carillo has also been elected in the Contributor Category.
Fred Perry and Virginia Wade are among the famous British names already in the Hall of Fame.
Nov 19, 2025, 05:56 AM ET
Well, this will come as no surprise to anyone who’s paid any attention over the past quarter-century: Roger Federer was elected to the International Tennis Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility, the Rhode Island-based Hall announced Wednesday.
The first man to win 20 Grand Slam singles titles, and part of an era of unprecedented greatness with rivals Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic — during what Federer termed “a golden time for tennis” — he was the only candidate to receive enough support in the player category for the Hall’s class of 2026. The Hall does not reveal voting results.
TV announcer and journalist Mary Carillo, who also was a player, was elected in the contributor category. The induction ceremony is in August.
Roger Federer was the first man to win 20 Grand Slam singles titles, a total later surpassed by his rivals Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic. His last match came at Wimbledon in 2021. Photo by TPN/Getty Images
“I’ve always valued the history of tennis and the example set by those who came before me,” Federer said. “To be recognized in this way by the sport and by my peers is deeply humbling.”
He is one of eight men with a career Grand Slam, collecting eight championships at Wimbledon, six at the Australian Open, five at the US Open and one at the French Open.
“I didn’t predict I was going to have this many majors,” Federer once said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I was hoping to maybe have one, to be quite honest, at the very beginning of my career.”
Federer’s first Slam title came at the All England Club in 2003, and he broke Pete Sampras’ then-record for a male of 14 major titles by winning Wimbledon in 2009, defeating Andy Roddick 16-14 in the fifth set of the final. Federer claimed his 20th at the 2018 Australian Open.
“I don’t really feel like I’m playing for the records,” Federer once told the AP. “I play this game because I love it.”
His Grand Slam count eventually was surpassed by Nadal, who got to 22 before retiring last year at age 38, and Djokovic, who has 24 and is still active at 38.
With a terrific forehand and serve, an attacking, all-court style and footwork that made everything seem so effortless, Federer won 103 tournaments and 1,251 matches in singles, totals eclipsed in the men’s game only by Jimmy Connors in the Open era, which began in 1968.
Federer finished five years at No. 1 in the ATP rankings, spent a record 237 consecutive weeks and a total of 310 in the top spot, led Switzerland to the 2014 Davis Cup title and teamed with Stan Wawrinka for a doubles gold medal at the 2008 Olympics.
An ambassador for the game who often answered questions in English, French and Swiss German at news conferences, Federer played his last match at Wimbledon in 2021. He was a month shy of 40 at the time.
His retirement announcement came the following year; he bid farewell by playing doubles alongside Nadal at the Laver Cup, an event Federer’s management company founded.
Along the way, Federer established himself as a model for younger athletes such as Carlos Alcaraz, 22, the current No. 1 who owns six Slam trophies.
“The elegance he has shown on court, off the court — how he treated people, everyone; a really humble guy — everything he does, he does with elegance,” Alcaraz said. “I appreciate that. He took the game to another level … that’s what I admire the most.”
At the height of his powers, Federer reached a record 10 consecutive Grand Slam finals from 2005-07, winning eight. That dominance extended to appearing in 18 of 19 Slam finals; he also put together streaks of 23 semifinals and 36 quarterfinals at majors.
Djokovic has called those “results that didn’t seem human.”
According to the Hall, Carillo was the first woman to regularly commentate on tennis broadcasts and was a correspondent for HBO’s “Real Sports.” She won six Emmy Awards and three Peabody Awards and was inducted into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame in 2018.
“I’ve been privileged to spend my career sharing the stories of this magnificent game,” Carillo said, “and if I’ve opened any doors along the way, it will make this day in August even more meaningful.”
Next year’s ballot will include holdovers Juan Martin del Potro and Svetlana Kuznetsova in the player category, while Serena Williams and Ashleigh Barty, who both played their last matches in 2022, will be eligible for the Hall for the first time.
Nov 17, 2025, 12:33 PM ET
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Cole Hamels, Ryan Braun and Matt Kemp are among 12 newcomers on the Baseball Hall of Fame ballot released Monday, and Carlos Beltrán heads 15 holdovers after falling 19 votes shy in 2025 balloting.
Howie Kendrick, Daniel Murphy and Rick Porcello also are among the first-time eligibles, joined by Shin-Soo Choo, Edwin Encarnación, Gio González, Alex Gordon, Nick Markakis and Hunter Pence.
Cole Hamels — who threw a no-hitter in 2015 against the Cubs — along with Ryan Braun and Matt Kemp are among 12 newcomers on the Baseball Hall of Fame ballot. Carlos Beltrán heads 15 holdovers after falling 19 votes shy in 2025 balloting. Jeff Chiu/AP
Beltrán received 277 of 394 votes for 70.3% in the 2025 balloting, when Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner were elected.
A nine-time All-Star, Beltrán hit .279 with 435 homers and 1,587 RBIs over 20 seasons with Kansas City (1999-2004), Houston (2004, 2017), the New York Mets (2005-11), San Francisco (2011), St. Louis (2012-13), the New York Yankees (2014-16) and Texas (2016).
He received 46.5% support in his first ballot appearance in 2023, then rose to 57.1% in his second.
Beltrán was the only player cited by name in baseball commissioner Rob Manfred’s 2020 report concluding the Astros used electronics in violation of rules to steal signs during Houston’s run to the 2017 World Series title and again in the 2018 season. Three days after the report was issued, the Mets said Beltrán was out as their manager, just 2½ months after he was hired.
Other holdovers include steroids-tainted stars Alex Rodriguez (146 votes, 37.1%) and Manny Ramirez (135, 34.3%), along with Andruw Jones (261, 66.2%), Chase Utley (157, 39.8%), Andy Pettitte (110, 27.9%), Félix Hernández (81, 20.6%), Bobby Abreu (77, 19.5%), Jimmy Rollins (71, 18%), Omar Vizquel (70, 17.8%), Dustin Pedroia (47, 11.9%), Mark Buehrle (45, 11.4%), Francisco RodrÃguez (40, 10.2%), David Wright (32, 8.1%) and Torii Hunter (20, 5.1%).
Pettitte is on the ballot for the eighth time after doubling support from 13.5% in 2024. A player can appear on the ballot up to 10 times.
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BBWAA members with 10 or more consecutive years of membership are eligible to vote. Ballots must be postmarked by Dec. 31, and results will be announced Jan. 20. Anyone elected will be inducted July 26 along with anyone chosen Dec. 7 by the hall’s contemporary baseball era committee ballot considering eight players whose greatest contributions to the sport were from 1980 on.
Hamels, a four-time All-Star, was 163-122 with a 3.43 ERA for Philadelphia (2006-15), Texas (2015-18), the Chicago Cubs (2018-19) and Atlanta (2020), pitching a no-hitter for the Phillies against the Cubs on July 25, 2015. He was MVP of the 2008 NL Championship Series and World Series as Philadelphia won its second title, its first since 1980.
Braun, the 2011 MVP and a six-time All-Star, hit .296 with 352 homers and 1,154 RBIs for Milwaukee from 2007 to 2020. He was suspended for the final 65 games of the 2013 season for violations of baseball’s drug program and labor contract. A 50-game suspension for an alleged positive test in 2011 was overturned after Braun challenged the chain of custody of the urine sample.
Kemp, a three-time All-Star, batted .284 with 287 homers and 1,031 RBIs for the Los Angeles Dodgers (2006-14, 2018), San Diego (2015-16), Atlanta (2016-17), Cincinnati (2019) and Colorado (2020).
Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Don Mattingly and Dale Murphy are being considered by the contemporary era committee, along with Carlos Delgado, Jeff Kent, Gary Sheffield and Fernando Valenzuela.

SPOTLIGHTED PODCAST ALERT (YOUR ARTICLE BEGINS A FEW INCHES DOWN)…
SHOW SUMMARY:ÂToday we jump back five years to an episode of The Deep Dive with Rich Fann from Nov. 14, 2020. Chris Maitland returned to talk with Rich about the Wrestling Observer Hall of Fame inductions of Jun Akiyama and Kenny Omega – particularly against the field of other Japanese candidates, his issues with the process, and how transparency could help some of the questions listed.
Additionally, the pair have a chat about the recent AEW Brandi Rhodes promo, which leads to a run-in from Melissa, and her thoughts on two black women code switching on television, the Kenny Omega Jordan tribute and Melissaâ€s feelings as a Duke alum and former cheerleader, and Melissaâ€s view on how the book “The Namesake†could tie into professional wrestling, particularly with the realm of language brokering as a tool of linguistics.
Rich returns and Chris finishes talking about wrestlers that he feels should have a higher profile, including Ted Turner, Don Owen, Caristico, Junkyard Dog, and Kerry Von Erich, and finish with newer inductees in 2021 that bear watching.
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The National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., is where the sport’s legends live forever.
But how do those legends make it to Cooperstown in the first place? There are two ways:
Players can be elected to the Hall of Fame via the Baseball Writers’ Association of America ballot or via an Era Committee ballot.
With the 2026 BBWAA Hall of Fame ballot set to be released Monday, here is everything you need to know about Hall of Fame voting.
Who is eligible to cast a BBWAA ballot?
Only active and honorary members of the Baseball Writers†Association of America who have been active baseball writers for at least 10 years are eligible to vote. They must have been active as baseball writers and members of the BBWAA for at least 10 years before the date of the election in which they are voting.
In 2024, 394 BBWAA members cast a Hall of Fame ballot.
How often does the BBWAA vote on Hall of Fame candidates?
The BBWAA, which has been electing players to the Hall of Fame since 1936, has been voting on each new class of candidates annually since 1966.
Which players are eligible for the BBWAA ballot?
Any player who played in at least 10 Major League seasons and ended their MLB playing career at least five calendar years before the next election is eligible to be placed on that year’s ballot.
For example, pitcher Cole Hamels made his big league debut in 2006 and participated in 15 seasons, last playing in 2020. Thus, he is an eligible first-year candidate for the 2026 BBWAA ballot.
Who decides which players make the final ballot?
The most recent BBWAA ballots have included 25-30 players, so not every player who had a 10-plus-year career and has been retired for at least five years can be put on the ballot. The final say lies with a BBWAA-appointed screening committee consisting of baseball writers. It’s a six-member committee, and an eligible first-time candidate makes it on the ballot if they are nominated by any two of the six members.
Those ballot newcomers are joined by any player who received a vote on at least 5% of ballots cast in the previous election.
What are the voting procedures?
Ballots are mailed to each BBWAA elector during the latter half of November. An elector can vote for as few as zero and as many as 10 players on their ballot. Each elector must then sign their ballot and return it by Dec. 31 for it to be counted. The voting results of the BBWAA ballot for the Class of 2026 will be announced Jan. 20 on MLB Network.
How many votes are required for a player to be elected to the Hall of Fame or remain on the ballot?
Players who didn’t receive the amount of votes necessary for election must receive at least 5% of the vote in order to remain on the ballot. Any player who receives a vote on fewer than 5% ballots cast will no longer be considered by the BBWAA for the Hall of Fame.
How long can players remain on the BBWAA ballot?
Players can remain on the ballot for 10 years, assuming they receive at least 5% of the vote each year. If a player isn’t elected after 10 years on the ballot, they will no longer be considered by the BBWAA for the Hall of Fame.
How many players have been elected to the Hall of Fame via the BBWAA ballot?
The BBWAA has elected 137 players to the Hall, as of 2025.
Which player received the highest percentage of votes on the BBWAA ballot?
ERA COMMITTEE BALLOT VOTING
What are the Era Committees?
Formerly known as the Veterans Committee, the Era Committees consider retired Major League players who are no longer eligible for Hall of Fame election by the BBWAA, along with managers, umpires and executives.
There are three Era Committee ballots:
There are 16 members on each committee, consisting of Hall of Famers, current and former MLB executives, media members and historians. The committee members change each year.
How often does an Era Committee vote on Hall of Fame Candidates?
The Era Committees rotate on a three-year cycle, with one ballot being considered each year.
Who decides which players make the final ballot?
The Historical Overview Committee, which is appointed by the BBWAA, serves as the screening committee, consisting of 10-12 representatives. It identifies eight candidates for each year’s Era Committee ballot.
Who is on this year’s Era Committee Ballot?
The Contemporary Baseball Era Committee player ballot is up for consideration this year. The eight Hall candidates on the ballot are Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Carlos Delgado, Jeff Kent, Don Mattingly, Dale Murphy, Gary Sheffield and Fernando Valenzuela.
What are the voting procedures?
For 2025, the Contemporary Era Committee will meet on Dec. 7 at baseballâ€s Winter Meetings in Orlando to consider this year’s eight candidates. Each committee member may vote for as few as zero and as many as three of the eight candidates on the ballot. The voting results will be announced live that night on MLB Network at 7:30 ET.
How many votes are required for a player to be elected to the Hall of Fame or remain on the ballot?
Candidates who receive a vote on 12 of the 16 ballots cast (75%) are elected to the Hall of Fame and are included in the following year’s induction ceremony in Cooperstown. Per a 2025 rule change, any candidate on an Era Committee ballot who does not receive at least five votes from the 16-member committee will not be eligible to be placed back on that ballot in its next three-year cycle. But a candidate can return to an Era Committee ballot after skipping one cycle.
For example, if one of the candidates on the 2025 Contemporary Baseball Era Committee player ballot receives fewer than 5 votes, they wouldn’t be eligible for the next such ballot in 2028. However, they would be eligible to be placed back on that ballot in 2031.
Any candidate who receives fewer than five votes on multiple Era Committee ballots will no longer be eligible for future consideration.
How many players have been elected to the Hall of Fame via an Era Committee ballot?
ATLANTA — Andruw Jones has watched each of the past eight Baseball Hall of Fame election results shows while sitting at the same sushi bar in Buckhead. Each of the past few years, he has rolled out of the establishment feeling more optimistic.
In fact, thereâ€s reason for Jones to believe this might finally be the year he gains baseballâ€s greatest honor. But instead of getting overly excited, the former Braves great will attempt to maintain the poise he showed back in 1996, when — at the age of 19 — he homered in his first two career World Series plate appearances.
“You just never know what the vote is going to be or what is going to happen,†Jones said. “The first few years I was [on the ballot], I didnâ€t really put much mind to it. I would watch and congratulate who got in. But when you get closer, you friends and family start asking a lot of questions, like, ‘Do you think this is going to be the year?’â€
Jones and the baseball world will learn this on Jan. 20, when the 2026 Hall of Fame election results are announced on MLB Network. This is the ninth time the elite outfielder has appeared on the HOF ballot. Candidates are removed from the ballot if they do not receive the necessary 75 percent of the votes within their first 10 years of eligibility.
“I look forward to the announcement,†Jones said. “I do every year. But I just donâ€t build up too much hope until it happens.â€
Jones hopes to extend a recent trend that has seen the elections of players who received little support during their earliest years on the ballot. Billy Wagner was elected during his 10th and final year on the ballot last year. The former closer received less than 11 percent of the votes during his first year of eligibility and didnâ€t receive more than 20 percent during any of his first four years. But his vote totals over his final three years of eligibility jumped from 68.1 (in 2023) to 73.8 (in 2024) to 82.5 (in 2025).
Jones†vote percentage over the past three years has risen from 58.1 to 61.6 to 66.2. His support among the Baseball Writers’ Association of America voters has significantly grown since he received less than 8% of the vote during his first two years on the ballot.
Scott Rolen experienced a similar trajectory in the few years leading up to his 2023 election, receiving 10.2% in 2018, 17.2% in ‘19, 35.3% in ‘20, 52.9% in ‘21, 63.2% in ‘22 and 76.3% in ’23.
With Cole Hamels and Ryan Braun the top newcomers on next yearâ€s ballot, thereâ€s a definite chance Jones could draw 10 percent more of the votes and join former Braves teammates Chipper Jones, Tom Glavine and John Smoltz in the Hall of Fame. His former Atlanta manager Bobby Cox and general manager John Schuerholz have also been inducted.
How crazy is it that Andruw has had to wait so long to be elected?
“Itâ€s really crazy,†Chipper Jones said. “During a 10-year stretch, he won 10 Gold Gloves, averaged 30 homers a year and Iâ€m sure he had around a thousand RBIs. Anybody with those numbers and credentials is in the Hall of Fame. The best defenders at their positions are in. Andruw was one of the top two or three, the best in my opinion, to ever play center field.â€
Jones, Ichiro Suzuki and four current Hall of Famers — Willie Mays, Roberto Clemente, Al Kaline and Ken Griffey Jr. — are the only outfielders to ever win 10 Gold Glove Awards.
While winning those 10 consecutive Gold Gloves with Atlanta from 1998-2007, Jones ranked third among all MLB players with a 57.6 bWAR, behind only Alex Rodriguez (80) and Barry Bonds (71). Chipper Jones, Todd Helton and Albert Pujols each produced a 54.9 mark during this decade-long stretch.
Andruw Jones had seven 30-homer seasons, including an MLB-best 51-homer campaign in 2005. But what truly set him apart was the defensive excellence that has led many to continue to consider him to be the best center fielder the game has ever seen.
Jones had a 24.2 defensive WAR from 1998-2007. The next closest players were Hall of Famers Rolen (15.1) and Ivan “Pudge†Rodriguez (13.5).
Yeah, there was a steep decline late in Jones†career. He had just a 95 OPS+ as he played for the Dodgers, White Sox, Rangers and Yankees during his final five seasons (2008-12). That means he wasnâ€t even an average offensive player (100 OPS+) as he progressed through his early 30s.
But Jones captured the baseball worldâ€s attention at age 19 and spent the next decade proving to be elite. If leeway is given to a player who debuts at 23 and then starts to decline in their mid-30s, then shouldnâ€t the same grace be given to Jones, who was elite offensively and defensively for an entire decade?
Dâ€Lo Brown wants to see the Nation of Domination in the WWE Hall of Fame.
The Attitude Era featured many stables, but few achieved what The Nation did for The Rockâ€s career. After an underwhelming first run as the smiling babyface Rocky Maivia, Vince McMahon turned Dwayne Johnson heel by making him a member of the Nation of Domination.
The alliance proved instrumental in Maiviaâ€s transformation into the wildly popular Rock persona at the height of the Attitude Era. The Nation eventually disbanded. With each member going solo or forming new tag teams. Such as Faarooq teaming with Bradshaw (aka JBL) to form the APA. The Nation remains an important part of WWEâ€s faction history.
Dâ€Lo Brown says The Nation of Domination belongs in the WWE Hall of Fame
During a recent appearance on The Velvet Ropes with SoCal Val, former Nation member Dâ€Lo Brown said the iconic Attitude Era faction deserves to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. Explaining his reasoning, Dâ€Lo said:
“Hereâ€s my thing. I believe, not just because Iâ€m part of the Nation. If I wasnâ€t part of the Nation, I would say the Nation deserves being a Hall of Fame,†Dâ€Lo Brown said. “If you look at what a faction does, usually, a faction is to elevate one person out of the group, i.e. Flair with the Horsemen. The thing with the Nation was every member, and we think about the core unit of Rocky, Mark, Godfather, Ron and myself… every one of us got better after being in the Nation.
“So that shows what kind of foundation the Nation gave all of us. And it lifted us all up. And then for the fact that the Nation should be in the Hall of Fame, because 30 years later, anytime you put a faction of two or three black guys together, people are already calling it the new Nation. That tells you its footprint in wrestling. And just for that mere fact alone, it should be represented in the Hall of Fame with the other great acts of the last 100 years.†[H/T: WrestlingNews.co]
READ MORE: The Godfather Believes This Is The Reason Vince McMahon Put Owen Hart In The Nation Of Domination
Carlos Beltranreceived the call earlier this week.
The Mets announced on Thursday evening that the outfielder will be inducted into the team Hall of Fame next season, along with Bobby Valentine and Lee Mazzilli as part of their first class since 2023.
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SNYâ€s Chelsea Sherrod met up with Beltran in an exclusive one-on-one interview to discuss the honor prior to Saturday night’s Dominican Republic vs. Puerto Rico Showdown at Citi Field.
“First of all, Iâ€m super,†he said. “I feel that itâ€s a confirmation of all the effort that you put in as a player. In the seven years that I was here, thereâ€s no doubt I went through ups and down, but at the end of the day, when I look at the numbers, I feel proud.
“Being able to be accepted into any team Hall of Fame is a beautiful thing, so Iâ€m super happy and grateful for the opportunity.â€
Beltran doesnâ€t know what to expect as far as his emotions when the big day comes, but heâ€s hoping to be able to keep things in check so he can deliver a good speech for the fans, his family, and his teammates.
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The slugger had many memorable moments during his seven-year stint in orange and blue, but some of his favorites came during the 2006 campaign, which was one of his best with the club.
“Going to the playoffs was a beautiful moment,†he said. “I was also able to win my first Gold Glove with the Mets; being able to receive that call was an incredible thing because I worked so hard in Kansas City to try to win and never won it — I got to experience that and a lot of other good things with the Mets.â€
Some of those good things include five All-Star appearances, two more Gold Gloves, and a pair of Silver Sluggers.
Beltran also slashed .280/.369/.500 with 149 home runs, 208 doubles, 559 RBI, 551 runs scored, and 100 stolen bases during his time with the Mets.