On a ballot packed with qualified candidates for the National Baseball Hall of Fame, is it possible that none of them will be elected this year?
If that happens, as it did last year, it would be the third time in the last decade that the qualified voters of the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) have thrown a shutout at the Hall of Fame. This is an odd paradox considering that after the Big Zilch of 2013, the BBWAA in subsequent years went on to elect 22 players across the next seven ballots, with the various guises of the veterans committee voting in another five players (and six non-players) during that seven-year span. (In 2013, the veterans committee did elect three candidates to the Hall.)
Last year, Curt Schilling, who had garnered 70 percent of the vote on the previous ballot, seemed to be a lock for election. Instead, he stalled with a negligible increase in support, then threw a social-media Trumper tantrum declaring that he wanted to be removed from this year's ballot. The Hall of Fame quickly responded that it would not do so.
Is this the year Curt Schilling makes it into the National Baseball Hall of Fame? Will Schilling be the only player elected to the Hall this year? After all the tumultuous voting activity of the 2010s, has voting for the Hall returned to "normal"?
Only a crystal ball, or the patience to wait until voting results for the 2021 Baseball Hall of Fame are announced on January 26, 2021, can give us the definitive answers, but of course that doesn't stop us from prognosticating before we learn the results.
For now, the short answers are:
1. Maybe.
2. Possibly.
3. Likely.
In a tumultuous year that was not normal for anything and everything including baseball, one thing that might be back to normal is voting for the Baseball Hall of Fame. Granted, the 2021 Baseball Hall of Fame ballot has 14 returning candidates, with just about every one of them owning cases for induction that range from borderline to compelling.
Tim Hudson was with the Oakland A's for the first six seasons of his MLB career. Hudson was one of the highest regarded pitchers in his time in Oakland, and his 92-39 record there was one of the highest winning percentages in baseball.
After an excellent run with the Oakland Athletics, Tim Hudson would be traded to Atlanta, where he would win 113 of his 222 career Wins. Hudson won at least 13 Games in each of his first three seasons, and in late 2008, he underwent Tommy John surgery. While that ailment kept him out of baseball for a year, he rebounded in 2017 with his best season in years, including an All-Star appearance, a 17 Win season, and an ERA under 3. He would finish fourth in Cy Young voting that year. Hudson would win 16 Games over the next two seasons, and before signing with the San Francisco Giants after the 2013 Season, he recorded 997 Strikeouts as a Brave.
In 2018, Hudson was elected into the Braves Hall of Fame.