Ivan
Rodriguez elected to baseball Hall of Fame's Class of 2017
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[January 19, 2017]
(Reuters) - Ivan Rodriguez, a
strong hitter and rifle-armed catcher who nabbed would-be base
stealers at a 46 percent career rate, was elected to the National
Baseball Hall of Fame on Wednesday in his first year of eligibility.
Rodriguez, who spent most of his Major League Baseball career with
the Texas Rangers, will be joined in the Class of 2017 by Houston
Astros great Jeff Bagwell and former Montreal Expos All-Star Tim
Raines with their induction on July 30.
Puerto Rico's Rodriguez became only the second catcher after Johnny
Bench to be elected at his first opportunity, five years after
retirement.
Rodriguez received 76 percent of the vote of Baseball Writers'
Association of America members, just eclipsing the required 75
percent needed for induction into the Cooperstown, New York-based
baseball shrine.
A 14-time All-Star, he had a career .296 batting average, claimed 13
Gold Gloves for defensive excellence and was the 1999 American
League Most Valuable Player.
Bagwell, whose thunderous swing made him one of the most
intimidating hitters ever for the Houston Astros, was the leading
vote-getter, garnering 86.2 percent of 442 votes cast.
The first baseman slugged 449 home runs with a .297 lifetime batting
average and was named the 1994 National League MVP.
Outfielder Raines, who was in his 10th and last year of eligibility,
played 23 seasons for six teams and was a brilliant leadoff hitter
boasting a .294 career batting average. He amassed 808 stolen bases,
scored 100 runs or more six times, swiped 40 or more bases 11 times.
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Ivan Rodriguez throws out the ceremonial first pitch before Game 4
of the MLB ALCS baseball playoff series between the New York Yankees
and the Detroit Tigers in Detroit, Michigan, October 18, 2012.
REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi
Trevor Hoffman, who notched 606 career saves, finished an agonizing
five votes short of the 332 required, while power-hitting outfielder
Vladimir Guerrero fell 15 shy.
There was renewed hope for seven-time Cy Young winner Roger Clemens
and seven-time MVP Barry Bonds, shunned in their first years on the
ballot over suspicion of doping.
Clemens received 239 votes, one more than Bonds, for 54.1 percent, a
jump of about 10 percent from last year.
(Reporting by Larry Fine in New York; Editing by Frank Pingue)
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