Al Oliver came to the league in 1969 as a line-drive hitter and for eighteen years consistently smacked the ball for hits. He had over 2,700 hits in his career, and despite not being a genuine power hitter, he had a plethora of RBI’s.
At the time of the infamous steroids trial, Rafael Palmeiro seemed to come off so well. Of course, when you are sitting next to a man who suddenly suffered from amnesia (Mark McGwire), a man who suddenly forgot the English language (Sammy Sosa), and the man who broke the “bro code” (Jose Canseco), a defiant and confident-sounding Rafael Palmeiro could not help but look good. A few months later, Palmeiro was suspended by Major League Baseball for testing positive for steroids.
Ironically, this could hurt Palmeiro’s chances more than anyone else who testified at Congress. At that point, he had reached 500 home runs, quieter than anyone else ever had, and was knocking on the door of 3,000 hits. Seemingly, anyone else with those numbers would be a celebrated figure beset with endorsements and rabid fans. Palmeiro had neither, as he was playing in the shadow of flashier and more successful power hitters. As such, he was not regularly in the hunt for MVPs and only appeared in four All-Star games, which, considering his career numbers, was relatively low. Subsequently, he was rarely with great teams and holds the dubious record of having played the most games without a World Series appearance.
Prior to the steroid stigmatism, Palmeiro had the Hall of Fame locked numbers of 500 Home Runs and 3,000 Hits. Without the allegations, he may not have even been a lock for first-ballot induction. With the PED label, a look at his offence showed a massive upswing at age 34. McGwire may one day be forgiven, as might Sosa. Palmeiro likely won’t. As unfathomable as it seemed a decade ago, he was almost a one-and-done Hall of Fame candidate, and his years on the ballot fell well short of the maximum as he fell off after his fourth year. This could be a sad reality for one of his day's most consistent offensive performers.
Should Rafael Palmeiro be in the Hall of Fame?
A lot of baseball players take flak for their high salaries. One of those who did was Kevin Brown, who was the first man in professional baseball to sign a contract worth $100 Million. Sadly for Brown, his deterioration made that one of the worst contracts, as in the final years of his career, he was not a player who should have been among the game’s highest-paid.
This isn’t to say that Kevin Brown didn’t have flashes of brilliance because he certainly had enough of them to warrant such a huge contract in the first place. He was regarded as one of the most intense pitchers, and as much as his temper served to fuel his unparalleled competitiveness, it also would cause his unraveling on occasion. Nevertheless, Kevin Brown was a major reason that the Florida Marlins won their surprise World Series in 1997 and the Padres’ 1998 World Series appearance. He had a brilliant fastball and forkball and rarely gave up the longball.
Unfortunately, Kevin Brown was unable to maintain his skill set, and his production dropped off during his final years with the Dodgers and during his American League return to the Yankees. Had Kevin Brown lived up to the years leading up to his nine-digit contract, he would be a serious contender for induction. As it stands now, it doesn’t look good.