Mariano Rivera, Edgar Martinez, Roy Halladay and Mike Mussina were voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Tuesday. Rivera became the first player ever voted unanimously into the Hall.
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Clemens and Bonds — whose cases to make the Hall of Fame are muddied by steroid accusations — continued to make small gains in this year’s voting by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. With 75 percent of the vote needed for induction, Clemens rose from 57.3 percent to 59.5 percent from 2017 to ’18, while Bonds increased from 56.4 percent to 59.1 percent.
Both players have three years remaining on the ballot.
“Look, I pray every day I get a chance to get in,” Rodriguez said. “The Hall of Fame is the ultimate place.
“If you think about Roger and Barry specifically … If you stopped their career at the age of 33 or 34, they were both first ballot and then the noise [about PEDs] started. For me, it’s just a shame. I am certainly cheering for both of them. I like them both very much. They’re both friends, and I’m in their corner.”
Rodriguez played 22 seasons for the Seattle Mariners, Texas Rangers and the Yankees. A three-time AL MVP, he won five AL home run titles, led the league in runs scored five times and RBI twice. The 14-time All-Star selection hit 696 home runs and 2,086 RBIs during his career.
“I’ve taken the approach that I think talking about it is best,” Rodriguez said of taking PEDs, for which he has admitted and, as a result, was suspended for the entire 2014 season. “I’ve made my mistakes, I’ve paid huge penalties.
“I would love to get in [to the Hall of Fame], but I understand that I made my own bed. So if I don’t make it to the Hall of Fame, I can live with that. I will be bummed, it would suck and I can’t believe that I put myself in this situation. But if that happens, I have no one to blame but myself.”
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