We here at Notinhalloffame.com thought it would be fun to take a look at the major awards in North American team sports and see how it translates into Hall of Fame potential.

Needless to say, different awards in different sports yield hall of fame potential.  In basketball, the team sport with the least amount of players on a roster, the dividend for greatness much higher.  In baseball, it is not as much as a great individual season does not have the same impact.
This month, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame will be announcing its 2016 inductees. Judas Priest, who gives a fat rat's ass any more, anyway?

I'm not kidding. No one is ever happy with the selections. There is no definition of what "rock and roll" is, which means that there is no consensus on which artists are appropriate candidates. Apart from the need to have released the first recording at least 25 years previously to qualify and a vague suggestion of "musical excellence," there are no criteria that can be universally applied. And with only fragmentary glimpses of the Hall's nominating committee and its selection and voting procedures, sustained mutterings about how the entire process is an industry charade stage-managed by driving force Jann Wenner and his cronies are approaching whispered revelations about the Freemasons, the Illuminati, and other occult conspiracies.
Batter up! For 2016, the Pre-Integration Era Committee is at the plate for Baseball Hall of Fame evaluations and inductions not being done by the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA). The Pre-Integration Era covers the period from 1876, when the National League was formed, to 1946, the last year before Major League Baseball became integrated with the introduction of African-American players Jackie Robinson and Larry Doby into, respectively, the National League and American League.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com thought it would be fun to take a look at the major awards in North American team sports and see how it translates into Hall of Fame potential.

Needless to say, different awards in different sports yield hall of fame potential.  In basketball, the team sport with the least amount of players on a roster, the dividend for greatness much higher.  In baseball, it is not as much as a great individual season does not have the same impact.
The University of Virginia Women’s Basketball team houses the lady who many have called the hottest woman in the NCAA. For those unaware, let the good doctor introduce you to Tiffany Suarez who will be entering a dream in you. Chances are for my younger visitors those dreams will be wet!
Do you remember a time when you sat around with your friends and talked about the hot women of curling? Up until recently, neither did the good doctor! That has certainly changed for me (and many of you we suspect) when you first set eyes on Alexandra Saitova, who makes me “Hurry Hard”. Now how do you say that in Russian?
The good doctor never thought watching women’s basketball would be worthwhile other than for the skills of the players. In my world wide tour, I found that, My God, hoops girls are getting hot, and perhaps the most alluring is Croatia’s Antonija Misura, the blonde point guard for their national team.
Before Julia Simic, the only thing the good doctor thought about Nuremberg, Germany was that this is where the post World War II trials took place. After finding out that this is the hometown of Ms. Simic perhaps it is time to see what lovely damsel can put me on trial!
The good doctor knows that you know who Michelle Jenneke is. This is the woman who crashed YouTube with her sexy dancing prior to racing. I can’t tell you if she wins at all, or even finishes half or any of her races. All I know is that this is the one occasion where the best part of the race is well before the beginning!
The hills are alive with the sound of music! Isn’t that what Austria makes you think of first? The good doctor knows what he would like to do with the perky hills of Anna Fenninger, the Austrian skier! Also, I admit I am a sucker for those freckles!