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The following players will appear on the 2026 ballot. There will be 15 players carried over from the 2025 ballot, who garnered at least 5% of the vote and are still eligible for election, as well as a selection of players whose last major league appearance was in 2020, played at least 10 seasons of Major League Baseball, and chosen by a screening committee. [1]
The list of players appearing on the BBWAA ballot was released on November 20, 2023. There were 14 players carried over from the 2023 ballot, [3] [4] who garnered at least 5% of the vote and were still eligible for election, as well as 12 players whose last major league appearance was in 2018, played at least 10 seasons of Major League Baseball, and were chosen by a screening committee. [5]
We are just five days away from Jan. 21, the day the Baseball Hall of Fame will announce the inductees for the Class of 2025. Thanks to the Hall of Fame Ballot Tracker, created by Ryan Thibodaux ...
PETOSKEY — Friday night had just about everything the Petoskey basketball fanbase could hope for on a packed night inside the Petoskey high school gym. Petoskey adds suspense to hall of fame ...
The ballot for election by the Expansion Era Committee was released on November 4, 2013, [1] and the Hall of Fame announced the results on December 9. The cutoff for election and summer 2014 induction remains the standard 75%, or 12 of 16 votes. [3]
Jack Frank and Jennifer Crockett put their full heart into skiing and now the Petoskey Athletic Hall of Fame is welcoming the pair as part of the 2024 class:
The list of players appearing on the BBWAA ballot was announced on November 22, 2021. [6] There were 17 players carried over from the prior year's ballot, who garnered at least 5% of the vote in 2021 balloting and were still eligible for election, along with 13 players selected to appear on this ballot in their first year of eligibility, whose final major league appearance was in 2016.
This is just what Hall of Fame discourse looks like now. “Any ballot is going to make somebody angry,” says Ryan Thibodaux, who has been publicly tracking the voting process since 2013.