Red Sox legend Ortiz elected to Hall of Fame on 1st ballot; Bonds, Clemens denied entry
CBC
David Ortiz was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in his first turn on the ballot, while steroid-tainted stars Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens were denied entry to Cooperstown in their final year under consideration by the Baseball Writers' Association of America.
Ortiz, a clutch slugger and 10-time all-star over 20 seasons mostly with the Boston Red Sox, was named on 77.9 per cent of ballots unveiled Tuesday night, clearing the 75 per cent threshold needed for enshrinement. He's the fourth primary designated hitter voted into the Hall.
"It's something I really never dreamed of it," Ortiz said. "I was the type of player, I know I got the talent, but all I was looking for was the opportunity to be an everyday player."
Big Papi was among baseball's most recognizable faces through the 2000s and 2010s. His enormous grin endeared him to fans, but the Dominican's hulking frame menaced pitchers, especially in the late innings. Three of his 23 career game-ending hits came during Boston's drought-breaking 2004 postseason, when the Red Sox won their first World Series in 86 years.
Ortiz batted .286 with 541 home runs with Boston and Minnesota while making 88 per cent of his plate appearances as a designated hitter, the most by anyone in the Hall. He passes Edgar Martinez, who was a DH for 71.7 per cent of his plate appearances. Frank Thomas and Harold Baines are the only other Hall members to DH more than half the time.
He's the fourth Hall of Famer born in the Dominican Republic, joining Juan Marichal, Pedro Martinez and Vladimir Guerrero.
WATCH | Red Sox retire Ortiz's number:
The left-handed hitter was signed by Seattle as a teenager and traded to Minnesota as a minor leaguer. He made his major league debut with the Twins in 1997 but hardly looked like a future Hall of Famer there. He was released in 2002, signed a free agent deal with Boston and slugged 31 homers the next season.
Ortiz said he joined the Red Sox to figure out what made stars like Martinez, Manny Ramirez and Nomar Garciaparra great.
"Once I figured it out, it was going to be a wrap," Ortiz said. "That team was surrounded by so many superstars, and I went in there like a sponge ready to learn."
Martinez was with Ortiz in the Dominican Republic when he got the news Tuesday.
"This guy behind me?" Ortiz said, motioning at Boston's former ace. "This guy was like a father to me."
Ortiz also has performance-enhancing drug baggage, but enough voters chose to ignore a positive test that came during survey testing in 2003 that was supposed to be anonymous. Ortiz has denied using steroids, and Commissioner Rob Manfred said in 2016 "I think it would be wrong" to exclude him from the Hall of Fame based on that lone test.
"I never failed a test, so what does that tell you?" Ortiz said.