Thursday, June 11, 2020

Dissecting the Baseball Hall of Fame's Plaques: Class of 1946

After the Old Timers Committee added 10 new immortals in the Class of 1945, 1946 saw 11 additional players gain access to Cooperstown. Well, 9 players, and player/manger Frank Chance and player/manager/executive Clark Griffith. As I said in the '45 post, no pitchers were selected the previous year, but 5 hurlers plus the multi-dimensional Griffith joined the fray in '46.

Image: B-. Already starting off with one of my pet-peeves, a cap-less player. Burkett's model is clearly based on this portrait, but I've always thought his plaque added the smallest hint of a smile.
Name: A-. His middle name Cail is abbreviated "C."
Teams: C. All of his teams are listed, just in the body paragraph without the corresponding years.
Text: B+. Okay, well it says that Burkett joins Cobb and Hornsby as the only trio to hit .400 or better three times. The only problem is that Burkett only did this twice, in 1895 and 1896 as the plaque states at the end. I'm assuming the other season they're talking about is 1899 when he hit .396, but .396 ain't .400. There was most likely a record keeping error. He did win three batting titles, and at least all of his teams are mentioned.


Image: A.Looks like its based on this image. Not bad.
Name: A. Including a full name is always good. The only thing missing is his nickname of "The Peerless Leader"
Teams: C. While the Cubs are mentioned in the first line of the plaque text, his other teams are buried at the bottom. Also, this was before the Hall designated inductees by position, so while the Hall currently places Chance as a first baseman, his plaque doesn't even specifically say that he was a player at all.
Text: C-. I almost gave this an F. As I just mentioned, you don't even know Chance was a player based on his plaque. While Chance had a noteworthy managerial career, and in my opinion, the only way he is deserving of Cooperstown is if you lump his playing and managerial career together, you can't just gloss over his first base accolades. Chance was solely a Cubs' player from 1898 to 1904, then became Chicago's player/manager from 1905 to 1912. In 1913 and 1914 he managed he Yankees, while also playing in 13 games. Finally in 1923, he skippered the Red Sox. By WAR, he was actually far and away the best first baseman in baseball from 1898 to 1911, leading Fred Tenney by a full 7.0 WAR.

Also, note how Chance is the only member of the "Tinker to Evers to Chance" doubleplay combination not to even mention the famous poem or his teammates by name. Johnny Evers and Joe Tinker's plaques do, which we''ll get to in a minute. Chance's plaque not bringing it up is kind of fitting to me, as I think he is the most deserving of the men if you combine his playing and managerial career. 



Image: A. I've looked everywhere for the inspiration image behind Chesbro's plaque and have come up empty. Perhaps the closest I can find is this shot which is attributed to his lone game with Boston in 1909, but I don't think it's the source. 
Name: A+. Full name followed by nickname. Great job.
Teams: C. The teams are buried in the text with no mention of timelines for each club.
Text: A. His plaque is off by a few wins and losses, as his career record was 198-132, not 192-128.


Image: B. Here's my guess for the source image, and if that's true, it looks like he's in a Boston Braves uniform. While he did win an MVP with Boston, the Chicago Cubs are clearly his primary team. He should be wearing a cap with the Cubs' "C" logo.
Name: A. Full name followed by nickname. Good job, even though his common name "Johnny" isn't found anywhere.
Teams: C-. A few of his teams are buried in the text with no mention of timelines for each club, and some of them aren't even named. He played for the Phillies in 1917, suited up for one game with the White Sox in 1922, and then managed the ChiSox for 124 games in 1924. 
Text: B. I mentioned before that both Evers and Joe Tinker's plaques bring up "Tinker to Evers to Chance," while Chance's does not. It is a bit odd, since clearly they were all put in together. Not too many plaques mention scouting, but since that role is not one of the qualifiers for induction, it really didn't have to be on here.

However it's the last line that kills me. "Shares record for making most singles in four game World Series." This is hilarious. First off, "shares record," means he doesn't even have this record by himself. The record is for singles, the easiest of all the hits, in not a 7-game World Series, but in the shortest possible series, just four games. Why not just say he hit .438 in the 1914 World Series, and .316 across 20 series games during his career? Who cares that he hit a bunch of singles in four games.




Image: A. This image of Griffith with the Washington Nationals looks like the basis for his plaque. Looks good.
Name: A-. Middle name of Calvin is abbreviated.
Teams: N/A. Another person elected who's career was combined as a player/manager/executive. The Hall currently treats Griffith as an executive/pioneer, but his playing career alone is, at worst, borderline. Griffith played for seven teams, but mostly with the Chicago Colts/Orphans. He followed that up with a 20-year managerial career which began while he was still playing. Griffith's time managing Washington from 1912 to 1920 led to his ownership of the club until his death in 1955.
Text: B+. Griffith had a lot going on during his lengthy baseball career. He doesn't neatly fall into one category, so his plaque does a good job of mentioning all his major roles. His playing stints with the St. Louis Browns and Boston Reds of the American Association in 1891 are not on his plaque, but more importantly, however, is that his pennant winning club of 1901, when he managed the White Sox, plus his pennants and 1924 World Series titles he captured while owning Washington go unnoticed as well.


Tommy McCarthy


Image: F. Everything about Tommy McCarthy and the Hall of Fame is wrong.

Okay, that was mean. But, seriously, McCarthy is probably the single-most randomly undeserving player in the entire Hall. There are a lot of dubious choices: Candy Cummings was considered a top pitcher for about a decade, even though he's in the Hall for possibly inventing the curveball. Rick Ferrell made eight All-Star teams. Ray Schalk received MVP votes four times. Jesse Haines won 20 games three times and has World Series glory. Hell, even Freddie Lindstrom is neck-and-neck with PieTraynor and Willie Kamm for highest WAR among third basemen for a ten-year window, and almost won an MVP in 1928.

But Tommy McCarthy, and his hilariously diminutive 14.6 career WAR, 1273 career games, and 102 OPS+ is by far the least-valuable player in the Hall of Fame who was inducted solely for their playing career. I don't care how much he popularized small-ball and strategy, or who his famous teammates in St. Louis and Boston were. He does not belong here.

Now, this project isn't about the worthiness of the inductees, but instead about their plaques. So, how does McCarthy's plaque hold up? Well, it's bizarre. Like, maybe the weirdest of them all.

This is 100% the basis for McCarthy's plaque image. Now, this plaque and the source image itself clearly show McCarthy older in life, years removed from his playing days. It is definitely not showing McCarthy with the Boston Beaneaters from 1892 and 1895, not the Brooklyn Bridegrooms during his final season of 1896. Not only does he look too old here for the image to be from that era, neither teams wore that style cap during those years.

I've long thought that this image must show McCarthy as a Brooklyn Dodgers/Robins coach, judging by the iconic Brooklyn "B" logo. However, I cannot find reference to McCarthy having any association with that club after his playing days. Maybe because this photo's appearance on the 1990 All-Time Dodgers card set has thrown me off all these years and made me assume that this showed him with Brooklyn.

He did, however, scout for the Boston Braves from what I believe to be around 1913 to 1917. Sure enough, Boston's white caps and pinstripes from 1915-1917 look to match McCarthy's photo. I cannot find this image on Getty or any site that has a caption. And perhaps I am wrong, but I think this makes the most sense. 

Also, his Perez-Steele postcard features this shot as well, and Dick Perez clearly colorized his uniform in Dodger Blue. From what I can tell, Boston's caps had a red "B," and since the original photo was black and white, everyone, like me, assumed this was a blue Brooklyn cap.

Whatever team the photo represents, it is a very poor choice for his plaque. Most of the solo studio shots of McCarthy are from early in his career with St. Louis, who probably should be his primary team. But Cooperstown lists Boston as his primary. If that was the case, there are several team photos from the era that they could have used, too. 

I am assuming that when McCarthy's plaque was crafted, they had few photos of him. In fact, I am betting that this was the most recent picture they had of him. They saw a "B" on the cap, and since they knew he played for Boston, and even Brooklyn, that this would be close enough, no one will care. And you know what, no one really does, except me, maybe. 

Tommy McCarthy is unquestionably more famous today for his dubious Hall of Fame status than anything. There are many things wrong with his selection, and his plaque image just adds to my frustration. 

Name: B. Alright, now to the meat and potatoes of his plaque. First, the name. His middle name of Francis is abbreviated. Actually, McCarthy has two listed middle names, Francis Michael, so I supposed they should have included both.

Also, here is where it is important to include nicknames. He will go down in history as "Tommy McCarthy," not "Thomas" But you wouldn't know that from the plaque. And since McCarthy is so obscure, some people only know him from his Hall plaque. 

Look at both that Perez postcard, and this "baseball immortals" card. They both have him as "Thomas McCarthy." And you know why? I'd wager to bet it’s because his plaque lists it that way. 

Teams: C-. I'm piling it on Mr. McCarthy here. It’s not his fault, really. He died in 1922, long before a group of baseball men bestowed upon him the sport's ultimate honor for almost no justifiable reason. 

But, his plaque lists only two of his five teams, with no mention of the tenures. Frankly, St. Louis and Boston are the only reason he's in the Hall, but we only can tell he played for the former in 1888 and the later in 1893 from the info here. He actually played for the Beaneaters for a 40-game spell in 1885 before seeing even less  playing time with the Phillies in 1886 and 1887. He patrolled the outfield for the American Association’s St. Louis Browns from 1888 to 1891, then took his talents back to Boston from 1892 to 1895. We already mentioned he ended his career with Brooklyn in 1896. 

One final team is the Boston Reds of the 1884 Union Association, McCarthy's first season of what has subsequently been referred to as Major League Baseball. McCarthy is the only player in the Hall who spent time in the UA, which was given MLB status in 1969 from the Special Baseball Records Committee. This committee decided that the UA and its lopsided talent distribution and lack of star or even fringe players who would have any meaningful career in either the NL or AA before or after the league's lone season, deserved MLB status. At the same time, they decided that the National Association from 1871-1875, baseball's first top professional league, did not. This has been harshly criticized. Few at the time considered the UA a major league, while the NA was literally the only major league in town, with a surplus of well-known players and several Hall of Famers.

Either way, I personally don't think the UA should be a major league, and if I ever became commissioner this would be top-priority for me. That is only partially sarcastic.
The Hall clearly thought the UA was a major league, however, as we'll see in the next section.

Text: F. Finally, the body paragraph. First, I'll address the last sentence, which relates to his time in the UA I just mentioned.

It says he played in 1,268 MLB games. I didn't even have to look this one up to guess that it is incorrect from today's record keeping, and sure enough it is 5 games off. That is actually a lot closer than I thought it would be. But that number is important, because it tells me that the Hall was including his games in the Union Association, of which he played in 53. 

This plaque is so interesting; it is one of the reasons I love to write about them. Going back to the top, it makes reference to the now-legendary tandem of McCarthy and teammate Hugh Duffy as the "Heavenly Twins" of the Boston Beaneaters outfield in the 1890s. So, wouldn't you think that the plaque would mention Duffy by name here, to give you some content as to who the hell the other "twin" was. No, because this plaque was designed to give some nerd an ulcer in 2020.

To make matters MORE confusing and interesting, the plaque then brings up Boston manager Frank Selee's name. So, you didn't think to add Duffy's name, the name most associated with him and a name that would add context to the previous line, but you added his manager's name?

Frank Selee became the second person directly named on a Hall of Fame plaque who was not a Hall of Famer at the time. This happened with Grover Cleveland Alexander's plaque when it mentioned he struck out Tony Lazzeri (listed only as "Lazzeri") with the bases loaded in Game 7 of the 1926 World Series after coming out of the bullpen. Lazzeri would earn Hall status in 1991, while Frank Selee had to wait until 1999. 

Then, it says he stole 109 bases for the Browns in 1888. Baseball-Reference lists 93 swipes that year, which might or might not include extra bases taken, as was custom for a time in the 19th century. I'm not going to critique this one, because stolen base numbers from this time are too dicey for my blood. 

The plaque brings up his skills at trapping fly balls, which is a hilarious thing to be put into the Hall of Fame for. For example, Bill Coughlin has been regarded as the master of the hidden-ball trick, performing it multiple times, including in the 1907 World Series. Should we put him in the Hall of Fame, too? Obviously not, for his 8.3 career WAR is even less than McCarthy’s. But you know what? Just 6.3 WAR separates the two players. That is less of a disparity than between McCarthy’s WAR and the 25.3 career WAR of George Kelly, the next-lowest Hall of Famer who solely was inducted for his major league playing career. So, sure, why not, throw Coughlin in there, too!

Instead, this line should say something about pioneering the hit-and-run, which is still not enough of an accomplishment for him to earn his spot. 

The plaque also says he held the record for outfield assists, 53 in 1893. I have absolutely no idea what on earth this is talking about. Not only did McCarthy not set a record for outfield assists in that year, he didn't even lead the league. He finished fourth in the NL with 28, as Louisville's Tom Brown had 39. He did lead the league in outfield assists in 1888, with 42. This was not a record for the time, for as recently as 1884, Hugh Nicol had 48, and Hardy Richardson recorded 45 in 1881. There must have been a serious problem with record keeping of assists, because this may be the most confusing aspect of this out-of-this world plaque for baseball's most dubious Hall of Fame player.



Image: B-. Just like Jesse Burkett above, I'm not a fan of cap-less players on plaques. This shot of McGinnity appears to be the basis for the plaque, as the collar is a dead-giveaway. McGinnity's plaque image isn't bad, by any means, but I've always thought it makes him look like a teenager. McGinnity was at-least 30 when that photo was taken, but this plaque makes it seem like he was fresh out of middle or high school.
Name: A-. Full name is good, but would have preferred "Joe" somewhere here.
Teams: D+. All of his teams are mentioned, they are just buried in the text without any years. In fact, this may be the first plaque to not list a single year anywhere on it, which is why he gets a D+ here. Don't quote me on that, because I don't feel like going back and checking.

Like, how on earth are people supposed to know when this guy pitched? Were you supposed to infer the era? Based on the fact that he played for the Baltimore Orioles of the NL, which could only mean 1892-1899, and also Baltimore of the American League, which could have only meant the 1901-1902 Orioles, as the modern-day Orioles were still in St. Louis in 1946?

Text: C. McGinnity's plaque has at least one mistake. He won 20 or more games eight times, not seven as the plaque states. That whole point about there not being a single season mentioned his odd. As is devoting the first three-and-a-half lines to talking about how he pitched the most double headers in one day, doing so five times and winning both starts three times. That's nice and all, but that is not why McGinnity is in the Hall, and it doesn't deserve to take up almost half of his plaque. 


Image: A+. A great looking image. Looks to be based off of this shot by Charles Conlon.
Name: A-. Stewart, his middle name, is abbreviated. But he gets a bonus for the inclusion of a nickname which also has his common name "Eddie." this is always a good look in my book.
Teams: B. All of his teams are listed, along with the correct tenures, but they are buried in the text. At least they're there somewhere.

Text: A. I can't find anything really wrong with the body paragraph, or the plaque in general. Everything is factually correct. He was a great lefty, went straight to the majors from college and never pitched in the minors, and all of his listed pitching accolades are true. 
Image: A-. Clearly based on this image, the only problem would be that the Cubs' "C" is hidden from view.
Name: A-. Middle name, Bert, is abbreviated. Also including "Joe" would help novice fans.
Teams: B. Each of the three teams he played for are mentioned, including the Federal League's Chicago Chi-Feds/Whales, although its buried in the body paragraph without specific tenures listed . What is odd about the plaque is that it mentions him managing the Reds in 1913 and Cubs in 1916, but not managing with the Chicago Feds in 1914 and 1915. Interesting, especially when they included the Feds in his playing record.
Text: A. We get to the last member, alphabetically, of the Tinker-Evers-Chance trio. As I've already mentioned, Tinker and Evers' plaques mention the poem, while Chance's does not. 

Tinker's plaque devotes nearly seven of its nine lines on Tinker to Evers to Chance, the teams he played for and managed with, and that he played from 1902 to 1916. Finally at the end, it says he was on for pennant winners.

There is not one thing on Tinker's plaque that would give you the impression that he was a great player. It says he was apart of the "greatest double play combination," but that alone does not make one great, let alone a Hall of Famer. 

Tinker actually was a pretty good player, maybe even great, ranking second among all shortstops in WAR (53.2) during his career, far behind Honus Wagner, but comfortably above Bobby Wallace who ranked third. 

But simply having notable teammates, playing on pennant winners, playing for 15 years and managing for a few more doesn't scream "Hall of Famer." They should have actually brought up some of his playing accomplishments, as he is regarded as an all-time great defender.

 
Image: A+. I love this plaque image. Whoever crafted it did a great job. Here is the inspiration behind it, they seemed to have just closed his mouth.
Name: A+. Full name and nickname are all here. Two for two so far.
Teams: D+. Sheesh, Rube, you started off so well. Only one of his five teams are listed, the Philadelphia Athletics. And just like Joe McGinnity before him, there is not a single year mentioned. Rube could have pitched anytime between 1901 and when the A's left Philly after 1954, since tehy're the only team mentioned by name.

Text: A. All the words in the plaque are correct, really the only thing wrong is that its missing his years played and four of his five teams. He gets and "F" for the teams, but an "A'" for everything else.

 
Image: C+. We've finally reached the end of the class of 1946. And the last plaque has always bothered me. Not Ed Walsh himself, he is the all time ERA leader after all.

It is his plaque, well specifically his eyes. It looks like he's missing his eyeballs, or at least that he is squinting really bad. At one point I thought maybe they wore away due to age or something, but here is his plaque on the 1955 postcard set. He's all eyebrows there, too.

I can't find what image this was based on, but I am curious to see what his eyes look like in it.
Name: A+. Everything looks good here, though. 
Teams: B. He only played for two teams, the White Sox from 1904-1916 and briefly for the Boston Braves in 1917, and all are mentioned along with the tenures, just in the body paragraph and not at the top.
Text: A. Not too bad, but it devotes over three lines to mentioning pitching and winning double headers on two occasions and a great double header performance in 1908. that's swell and all, but not really Hall of Fame plaque worthy. I'm not sure if the writers knew that Big Ed ranked first all-time in ERA when he retired, but that is definitely what he is known for today.
 

Monday, February 3, 2020

Dissecting the Baseball Hall of Fame's Plaques: Class of 1945

After not inducting any new players outside of Rogers Hornsby from 1940 to 1944, the Hall turned to the Old Timers Committee in 1945 They promptly selected 10 players, mostly from the 1890s and 1900s. The classes of 1945 and 1946 are mostly a mixed-bag, with some outstanding selections like Dan Brouthers and Eddie Plank. With them came some of the most outlandish electees of any Hall of Fame, most notably Tommy McCarthy in '46.

It seems that the 1945 class focused more on hitters, as all 10 were position players including catcher/manager Wilbert Robinson. The following year saw five hitters and six pitchers, including pitcher/manager/executive Clark Griffith.

Perhaps the most curious thing about this time period is that the BBWAA couldn't agree on any new electees. They passed on the likes of Lefty Grove, Carl Hubbell and Al Simmons, while the Old Timers had no problem putting in long-forgotten figures like Jesse Burkett and Jim O'Rourke.

Lets dive in to how the Hall handled this new crop of plaques:

Image: A-. A nice representation. Something to note, however, is that Bresnahan's plaque image is probably derived from this photo of him with the Cubs, with whom he played for for two games in 1900, and again from 1913 to 1915. Getty Images states this photo is from 1913. Bresnahan would easily be classified as a New York Giant when it comes to primary teams, but since the Giants should no easily recognizable cap feature during this time, the Hall gets a pass for an incorrect plaque logo.
Name: B-. They're missing his middle name, Phillip, and his nickname "The Duke of Tralee" is lopped in with his text section.
Teams: D. Only the New York Giants are mentioned, in the second line of text, and there is no indication of what other clubs he played for or for how long.
Text: C. It is never a good sign when another player is the focal point of FIRST LINE of text on your Hall of Fame plaque. "Battery Mate of Christy Mathewson," sounds like it is the most famous thing about him, which might be true, but this is not a strong enough claim to immortality. 
Let's keep reading. "One of the game's most natural players and might have starred at any position," I don't like this line. All of this text could have been avoided using one word: Versatile. What exactly does it mean to be a "natural player" anyway? If you're in the Baseball Hall of Fame, shouldn't it be assumed you were good at playing baseball? That you had a knack for it? That you were a "natural"? 

The last line on his ability to hit leadoff is fine, as he did so in all five games of the 1905 World Series. Its worth noting that perhaps his greatest claim to fame besides the Mathewson connection is his popularization of shin guards, which isn't even mentioned on his plaque.

All this being said, Roger Bresnahan is one of the most controversial Hall of Famers. His 1252 career hits ranks dead last among Hall of Famers inducted solely as (non-Negro League) major league position player, behind Billy Southworth, Bucky Harris, Ned Hanlon and Leo Durocher, who are all inducted as managers. In his book, Whatever Happened to the Hall of Fame?, Bill James calls the election of Bresnahan and Hughie Jennings, who we'll get to in a bit, "the Hall of Fame's first clear, unmistakable errors" who "wandered into the Hall of Fame on a series of miscalculations."

When I first began studying the Hall, I too thought that Bresnahan was out of place; a light-hitting catcher who had famous teammates and popularized a now-common aspect of the sport. As I look closer, the more I like his election. Among all catchers from his first full season in 1901 until his finale in 1915, he ranks first in WAR, by far. His 40.7 mark is 15.9 above second-place finisher Johnny Kling. If you look at the first 50 years of MLB, 1871-1921, Bresnahan ranks second among all catchers in WAR, just 5.9 behind Buck Ewing, who is regarded as an obvious Hall of Famer. Thanks to a high on-base percentage (.386) and versatility, he makes up for his low hit totals. If you stack him up against his peers, and the era before and after him, Roger Bresnahan is a worthy Hall of Famer too me.

Image: B-. Could have used a cap. The source of this image appears to be this c. 1887 shot of Brouthers with the Detroit Wolverines. 
Name: B. Just by looking at his plaque, fans are left assuming one of two things: 1) that his full name was "Dan Brouthers," or B) Dan is an obvious nickname for "Daniel," which must have been his real first name then. Of course, neither are true, as his full name was Dennis Joseph Brouthers. 
Teams: D. Missing mention of six of his eight teams, with only Buffalo and Detroit appearing in the body paragraph.
Text: B. This wouldn't be that bad a text section if not for his non-existent .419 batting average in 1887. In actuality, he hit a still-impressive .338. This confusion stems from the fact that for one season, 1887, walks were counted as hits in league records. However, even if you add Brouthers' 71 walks to his 169 hits, factoring in his 588 plate appearances, his average would be.416, not .419.

Image: A. A Fine representation, probably based on this photo.
Name: B. Oddly, Clarke's first name is not Frederick or a variation of it, it was simply Fred. However, his middle name, Clifford, is missing. 
Teams: N/A. See John McGraw, Clarke had an equally-notable playing and managing career, and its not clear which, if either, was more important in his Hall of Fame election. He's in the Hall as a player, but he managed for 19 years, and won 4 pennants and a World Series. He was an everyday player for the 15 years of his career as a player-manager. Since he only played and managed two clubs, the Louisville Colonels and Pittsburgh Pirates, his plaque could have read:
Louisville (N.L.), 1894-1899
 Pittsburgh (N.L.) 1900-1915
There are several problems with this, as he technically did not play in 1912, as he devoted all of his time that season to managing the Pirates. He also did not manage a game until 1897, but if he was elected as a player, the layout above could have been used, possibly leaving out 1912.
Text: C. It is odd that the Hall classifies Clarke as a left fielder, as his playing career gets one mention on his plaque, at the end. Also, they were incorrect to say he "starred as an outfielder for 22 seasons," since he only played in parts of 21 years, and never saw action in more than nine games a year from 1913 to 1915.
Every other sentence references his managing success. Also worth noting is that Clarke was not the first young, "boy manager" to guide his team to a pennant. The first National Association champions, the 1871 Philadelphia Athletics, were led by a 24-year-old Dick McBride. The Chicago White Stockings, the 1876 National League champs, were managed by 25-year-old Albert Spalding. Cap Anson was 28 when he won his first pennant in 1880, and a 25-year-old Charles Comiskey piloted the St. Louis Browns to the 1885 American Association crown, then led them to three more pennants the next three years.


Image: B-. I'm assuming his image is based on this photo. Much like George Sisler, I wish he was wearing a cap.
Name: B. As would be the case with Lou Boudreau 25 years later, the Hall should have noted Collins' common nickname of "Jimmy," as this plaque would make it seem that he was known as "James Collins" during his career. Also, his middle name Joseph is missing if they wanted to go super formal with the naming conventions. 
Teams: D. Collins played for four teams, but only one is mentioned, his most famous club the Red Sox. Boston didn't even go by "Red Sox" officially the entire time Collins played for them, so they mentioned one team but couldn't even get that historically accurate. Also missing is his years played.
Text: B. We already addressed the Red Sox text, now let's get to the first line of his paragraph. It probably should have said "one of the game's greatest third baseman," rather than simply giving him the title outright. While he was the first inductee who primarily played at the hot corner, I would argue Frank "Home Run" Baker was a notch better, though he would have to wait until 1955 to gain election. It would also only be three years later when Pie Traynor joined Collins in Cooperstown. Traynor's playing excellence and overall value have been decimated in recent years, as Sabermetrics has chewed up and spit out his career though, leaving him with a 36.2 WAR, not even high enough to crack the top-5 third basemen from 1871-1945.

Image: B-. Again I don't like it when players are missing their caps, Clearly based on this shot. The interesting thing is that Delahanty is not wearing a baseball uniform in that photo, and by extension, not on his HOF plaque. How many players are depicted in street clothes? Just Delahanty?
Name: B. Missing his full name "Edward James."
Teams: D. Complete list of teams and years played are missing, and only some details are scattered in the bio. Philadelphia, who he spent 13 years with, has as many mentions as Washington, who he played with for two seasons, but you'd have no idea about any of that from this plaque.
Text: B. Modern record keeping has boosted Big Ed's 1899 batting average from the listed .408 to .410, while his 1902 mark of .376 has stood. 


Image: B-. What is it with the Class of 1945 and no caps? Brouthers, Collins, Delahanty, Duffy and King Kelly (coming up shortly) all apparently showed up to photo day with cold heads. 
Name: A. This would have been hard for the Hall to mess up, as Duffy has no middle name, no longer first name and no widely-used nicknames. 
Teams: F. Guess how many teams Hugh Duffy played for? A quick look at his plaque would give you one answer: one. Now of course he played mostly for the Boston Beaneaters of the NL, and they get a much-deserved shout-out here. But Duffy played for FIVE other teams, abet none for more than three seasons. Also missing is his years played.
Text: C-. This text says two things: that he was a good defensive outfielder for Boston, and that he had a monster year in 1894 when he had an historically high batting average. That's it. The guy played in parts of 17 seasons but all we care about is that he was good in the field and had a good season once? Duffy actually doesn't rate high with modern defensive metrics, but I admittedly don't hold much stock in that. His 1894 average has been retroactively raised to .440, so the Hall cuts him a bit short here, and they miss that he won the Triple Crown that season. He also won a batting title in 1893 and hit .462 in the 1892 World Series. All in all, this is one of the most barren plaques.
Image: A. Hey, we got a cap! 100% based on this photo
Name: B. Same situation as Keeler, among others. Jennings' full name of Hugh Ambrose Jennings is omitted. Unlike Keeler, who got his famous quote of "Hit 'em where they ain't" plastered on his plaque for all of eternity, Jennings' cry of "Ee-Yah!" is nowhere to be found. 
Teams: N/A. Like Mack, McGraw and Clarke before him, Jennings split his career between the diamond and the dugout, so listing his teams and years spent with them would have been difficult. They did mention the two most important, Baltimore and Detroit, but missing are Louisville, Brooklyn and the Philadelphia Phillies from his playing career, as well as his brief stints managing the New York Giants in 1924 and 1925.  
Text: C. The main thing that has bothered me about Jennings' text is the line "he was one of the game's mighty mites." The term "Mighty Mite" has been almost solely applied to Miller Huggins, who like Jennings began his career as a player before transitioning to manager. I can't find any references to Jennings being given this tag as well, so it has always struck me as very odd. Like, what does it even mean? I'm seriously wondering, so it just throws off the whole plaque for me. Since they don't list a year, or even what team it was for, I'm assuming the .397 season refers to 1896 with Baltimore, when he actually hit .401. Finally, from the plaque you would think the Tigers won three World Series under Jennings, right? They actually only won three American League championships, and no World Series, so it should have said either pennants or league titles.


Image: B-. Rounding out the cap-less Class of 1945 is King Kelly. Many similar shots of Kelly facing to his right exist, so I'm not sure exactly what photo this was drawn from. The way its cutoff gives the appearance that Kelly's not even wearing a jersey here, as you can't see his collar. 
Name: B-. Talk about inconsistent naming conventions. Why is Michael abbreviated to Mike? Joseph is shortened to J. And this is the first player who's nickname is enclosed in parenthesis as opposed to quotes since Nap Lajoie in 1937.
Teams: F. Only one city and year, Boston in 1887, gets a nod here. Kelly played for six major league franchises from 1878 to 1893. 
Text: B-. Okay, so the glaring problem here is the claim that he hit .394 in 1887. Since walks counted as hits that season (see Brouthers above), it actually was .391. Modern record keeping with the walks removed brings it down to .322. It's very odd that they don't even mention his time in Chicago. They are after all who sold him to Boston. Similar to Duffy, Kelly's plaque basically says three things: that he was an interesting and exciting player, he had a good year in '87, and that he was sold for a lot of money. Also, shouldn't the last two lines be switched? As the trade happened before his 1887 season. The plaque reads like he played well in 1887, then got traded, when it was the other way around. 

Image: A. Man, what a mustache Jim O'Rourke had. 
Name: A-. Henry is shortened to H, and his nickname is moved to the first line of the body paragraph.
Teams: C-. Teams are lumped in the text, with only two years mentioned, but at least all are given placement on the plaque, all except the National Association's Middletown Mansfields for whom O'Rourke began his big league career with.
Text: C-. Okay, nickname in the body paragraph? Check. Teams in the body paragraph without years? Check. O'Rourke already has a few knocks against him here. Now, how does he do in the fact-checking department? Well, he did play in the minors well past his 50th birthday, but minor league accomplishments have never impacted a player's Hall case before, so why do they matter all of a sudden? And to get the opening line of text on his plaque???
 
Now this just gets weird. It mentions his pennant winning teams in Boston in 1873 and Providence in 1879, but why on Earth did they randomly note 1873 as a pennant winner, but not 1872 and 1874? Boston won the NA title all three seasons, and O'Rourke was there for all three of them? It makes no sense.

Wilbert Robinson
Image: A. Finally we come to the end of the Class of '45. This bust of Wilbert Robinson is among the most lifelike in the Hall. I just wish they would have plastered a Brooklyn "B" on that hat, as the Robins didn't seem to wear blank caps during his tenure. 
Name: A+. Perfect, not that there was much room for error; a full name followed by a common nickname.
Teams: N/A. Robinson should probably get between a F and a C- on this one, but like McGraw, Mack, Clarke and Jennings before him, Robinson had his playing and managerial career grouped together here, so listing his teams and years might have been difficult.
Text: F. Okay, let's break this down. Both Mack and Robinson have their plaques begin with the claim that they were a "star catcher." Like Mack, Robinson might have been famous, but he certainly wasn't great. Robinson played for 17 years for four clubs, and totaled a whopping 6.7 WAR over that time. Yikes. 
He clearly earned his call to the Hall for his managerial career, of which 18 of his 19 seasons were spent with Brooklyn. Robins, a moniker inspired by his own surname, was what the club officially went by during that time, not Dodgers as this plaque says, which didn't become the team name until after he was replaced with Max Carey. 
Then, the plaque throws it right back to his playing career, singling out the time he had seven hits in seven at-bats. They don't list the year of what team he played for, but it was in 1892 for Baltimore. So, over half of the lines of text are devoted to his playing career, for which he shouldn't be in the Hall for. It doesn't even mention his two pennants won as manager, the only thing his HOF case has going for it. The more you dig into this one, the less sense it makes.