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76. Vada Pinson

The start of Vada Pinson’s career showed promise of a Hall of Fame career as he was a five-tool baseball player.  So just how does a player who had this much promise, still compile over 2,700 hits and yet have what was considered a journeyman career?

65. Bobby Bonds

It seemed like Bobby Bonds was always in someone’s shadow.  As a kid breaking into the Giants he shared an outfield with Willie Mays.  In his final years, he remained a talented pro but was regulated to journeyman status bouncing around the league.  Currently, he is Barry’s father.  We prefer to think of him as one of the early prototypes to the modern baseball athlete.

32. Stan Hack

Stan Hack played his entire 16-season career with the Chicago Cubs.  He was one of the Cubbies most popular players as “Smilin” Stan’s sunny disposition made him a fan favorite among players, fans, and journalists alike.  It also didn’t hurt that he was one hell of a hitter.

Hack hit over 2,100 hits batting first for Chicago, but like any true good leadoff hitter, he found a way to get on base.  Hack knew how to draw the free pass and was constantly among league leaders in On Base Percentage.  Once on the base paths, Hack was an intelligent base runner, making few mistakes.  He made even fewer mistakes at third, where he would have likely won multiple Gold Gloves had they been implemented at the time.

Hack had no significant slugging numbers, but that was not what he was paid to do.  His main goals were to get on base and defend the hot corner, and he did both very well.  He did accumulate some of his numbers during a weakened league (during World War II), but he was a consistent performer who should have gotten more Hall of Fame votes than he did.


Should Stan Hack be in the Hall of Fame?

Definitely put him in! - 77.2%
Maybe, but others deserve it first. - 8.3%
Probably not, but it wouldn't be the end of the world. - 10.3%
No opinion. - 0.7%
No way! - 3.4%

53. Rusty Staub

If the main criteria for the Hall is perseverance and effort then Rusty Staub should have been a first ballot Hall of Famer.  His hard work resulted in over 2,700 hits in a Major League career that many people who saw him early on would never have pegged him for an amount that high.