The 25 Shortstops With the Best Careers

October 15, 2008 by · 2 Comments

Here are the 25 shortstops who had the best careers during the 20th century (as measured by the NEWS HOF Gauge).

For a shortstop, a NEWS score of 250 is required to say that he has obvious HOF numbers.  There are seventeen shortstops who posted these numbers.  The only other position that has more players with HOF numbers is left field (with eighteen).

Please keep in mind that a player may not have obvious HOF numbersbut may still be a deserving Hall of Famer for other reasons.

All numbers include the 2007 season.
Bold print = Hall of Famer
Italic = active player in 2008
CWS = Career Win Shares
CV  =  Core Value (sum of win shares for 10 best seasons)
NEWS = Career Value  =  CV  +  .25(CWS – CV)

The Shortstops with Hall of Fame Numbers (NEWS = 250)

Player Years CWS CV NEWS
1.
Honus Wagner 1897-1917 655 422 480
2.
Alex Rodriguez
1994- 369
332
341
3.
Arky Vaughan 1932-1948 356 308 320
4.
Robin Yount
1974-1993 423 278 314
5.
Cal Ripken Jr.
1981-2001 427 276 314
6.
Luke Appling
1930-1950 378 275 301
7.
George Davis
1890-1909 398 255 291
8.
Joe Cronin
1926-1945 333 275 290
9.
Bill Dahlen 1891-1911 394 250 286
10.
Barry Larkin 1986-2004 347 258 280
11.
Derek Jeter
1995- 301 264 273
12.
Ernie Banks
1953-1971 332 247 268
13.
Pee Wee Reese
1940-1958 314 246 263
14.
Lou Boudreau
1938-1952 277 255 261
15.
Alan Trammell 1977-1996 318 238 258
16.
Bobby Wallace
1894-1918 345 227 257
17.
Ozzie Smith
1978-1996 325 226 251

As the numbers indicate, Honus Wagneris in a league of his own as far as shortstops are concerned.  If Alex Rodriguezcontinues to play at the rate that he has so far in his career, there is a slight possibility that he might challenge Honus as the #1 shortstop of all time – although that is a real longshot.

Twelve of these seventeen shortstops are in the Hall of Fame.  And ARod and Derek Jetershould be first round choices when they become eligible.  I also think that Barry Larkinwill be elected by the writers within his first few years of eligibility.

Bill Dahlenhas been overlooked for years.  He was not even on the ballot for the Veteran’s Committee in 2007.  You will notice that he has 394 career win shares and every player with 400 is in the Hall of Fame.  Happily, those who chose the “Pre-1943” candidates for the Veterans ballot in 2008 recognized his accomplishments and have included him.  Hopefully, he will be elected this year.

That would leave only Alan Trammellas a retired shortstop with HOF numbers but with very little chance of being elected to the Hall any time soon.  He was still on the BBWAA ballot in 2007 but he got only 18% of the vote – so, his chances do not look good.

It is interesting to note the balance in era of these players.  Eight of these seventeen outstanding shortstops played the bulk of their careers before 1950 and eight played during the second half of the century – while Pee Wee Reese essentially straddled the mid-century mark.

The Other Shortstops in the Top 25

Here are the other eight players who ranked among the top 25 shortstops of the century in terms of career value.

Player CWS CV NEWS
18.
Vern Stephens 265 239 246
19.
Joe Sewell 277 233 244
20.
Jim Fregosi 261 226 235
21.
Dave Bancroft 269 222 234
22.
Tony Fernandez 280 219 234
23.
Rabbit Maranville
302 206 230
24.
Bert Campaneris 280 210 228
25.
Maury Wills 253 218 227

Three of these players are already in the Hall of Fame: Joe Sewell, Dave Bancroftand Rabbit Maranville.

Tony Fernandezwas on the 2007 BBWAA ballot but got only 1% of the vote so he will not appear there again.  Dave Concepcionwas on the 2008 BBWAA ballot and got 16% of the vote but his numbers are not as good as Fernandez.

Player CWS CV NEWS
Dave Concepcion
269
205 221

It does not appear that either of these players has any real chance of election to the Hall.

There were also three shortstops on the 2007 Veteran’s Committee ballot.  Maury Willsgot 40.2% of the vote – a respectable showing.  He is also on the “After-1943” Veterans Committee ballot for 2008 – but his numbers do not really merit serious consideration.

Cecil Travisand Marty Marion(see below) did not come close to our top 25 but were also on the 2007 Veterans ballot.  They got 14.6% and 13.4%, respectively, and appear to have no chance of being elected to the Hall.

Player CWS CV NEWS
Cecil Travis
169
167 168
Marty Marion
177
164 167

Finally, here are four other shortstops who are in the Hall of Fame but who did not make it into the top 25.

Player CWS CV NEWS
Joe Tinker
258
211 223
Phil Rizzuto
231
218 221
Luis Aparicio
293
193 218
Travis Jackson
211
191 196

Whether any of these four shortstops really belongs in the Hall of Fame is, of course, a matter of continuing debate among fans of the game.

For more information on the NEWS HOF Gauge, see BASEBALL’S BEST: The TRUE Hall of Famers on this site.

Comments

2 Responses to “The 25 Shortstops With the Best Careers”
  1. Alfonso L. Tusa C says:

    CWS,CV and NEWS are only offensive numbers or they also include defensive ones and in which proportion?

  2. Mike Hoban says:

    All three concepts are based on Bill James’ Win Shares. And win shares include all of a player’s contributions during the season.

    But it is probably fair to say that an outstanding fielder may not get sufficient credit for his defensive skills. The basic premise in win shares appears to favor offense somewhat over defense. But I think it is fair to say that virtually all baseball metrics that attempt to include offense and defense favor offense to some degree.

    Mike

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