As a lifelong
baseball enthusiast, I can point to three aspects of the sport which have
served as my foundation as a fan: watching the games, studying the
statistics of the players, and collecting baseball cards. The majority of the articles I have written
focus on overlooked Hall of Fame candidates.
However, this past year, I dug back into my baseball card
collection. As a result my recent
writing has been less analytical and more baseball card-centric. With this in mind, I have been taking a look
at some of the candidates who have recently appeared on the Era Committee Hall
of Fame ballots, seeing which cards of these candidates I have in my
collection, picking out my three favorite cards, and giving my thoughts on
their Hall of Fame cases. This article
focuses on left-handed pitcher Tommy John, who has been a mainstay on the Era
Committee ballot, appearing on each of the Expansion and Modern Baseball Era
ballots. I currently have fifteen cards
of John in my collection.
Despite an impressive 288-win major league career which spanned parts of 26
seasons, Tommy John is arguably more famous for the surgery that bears his name
than for any of his accomplishments on the playing field. John made his major league debut in 1963 with
the Cleveland Indians. Prior to the 1965
season, John was sent to the Chicago White Sox as part of a massive three-team
trade. John spent seven years on the
Southside, putting up a solid 2.95 ERA but with only a middling 82-80 record to
show for it due to spending the bulk of that time pitching in front of uncompetitive
White Sox teams. Following the 1971
season, John was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Finally with a perennial contender, John
became a regular winner—going 40-15 in his first two and a half seasons with
the Dodgers. However, disaster struck
when John suffered a torn ligament in his pitching elbow midway through the
1974 season. Facing a potential
career-ending injury, John became the first pitcher to undergo ulnar collateral
ligament reconstruction when Dr. Frank Jobe performed the procedure, which
would later become known as Tommy John Surgery, roughly two months later. Determined to return to the mound, John
dedicated himself to a strenuous rehabilitation program for what was, at the
time, an uncharted path to recovery. Fortunately,
the surgery and the rehabilitation program both proved successful and John was
able to resume his pitching career at the beginning of the 1976 season.
John made a strong return and was named The Sporting News Comeback Player of the Year for 1976. The following season, John won 20 games for the first time, finished runner-up in the NL Cy Young vote, and helped lead the Dodgers to the World Series where they fell in six games to the New York Yankees. John won 17 games for the 1978 Dodgers, who took the NL Pennant for the second straight year but once again lost in six games to the Yankees in the Fall Classic. At the conclusion of the 1978 season, John became eligible for free agency and signed with the Yankees. John flourished in the Big Apple, reaching the 20-win plateau in his first two seasons with the Bronx Bombers, finishing runner-up to the AL Cy Young Award in 1979, and playing a key role in getting New York back to the World Series during the strike-shortened 1981 campaign. Ironically, John faced his old team, the Dodgers, in the 1981 Fall Classic. However, this time Los Angeles came out on top, beating the Yankees in six games. John made his final postseason appearance in the 1982 ALCS, pitching for the California Angels, who acquired the lefty in a late season trade. Despite being on the losing end of three Fall Classics, John was a solid playoff pitcher going 2-1 with a 2.67 ERA in the World Series and piecing together an overall 6-3 career postseason record supported by a 2.65 ERA. John finally began to struggle in his early forties, finishing the year with an ERA over 4.00 for the first time in 1983. After a particularly difficult 1985 season, split between the Angels and the Oakland Athletics, it appeared at age 42, the veteran pitcher might be ready to call it a career. Yet, John returned to the game with the Yankees the following year and pitched for parts of four more seasons. When John’s lengthy career finally came to a close in 1989, the 46-year old southpaw had finished just a dozen victories shy of the 300-win milestone with a 288-231 career record, while making 700 starts and putting up a solid 3.34 ERA in a little over 4700 innings. John’s perseverance to comeback from his elbow injury had certainly paid off as the hurler picked up 164 of his 288 wins after going under the knife.
I started regularly collecting baseball cards in 1983, so my first several years in the hobby coincided with the latter stages of John’s career when the lefty was already in his forties. I knew John was an important pitcher and based on the tiny font used for his statistics on the back of his cards, I could tell the southpaw had plied his trade for a long time. However, it was evident from his more recent stats that the veteran’s best days were behind him. John never possessed anything close to an overpowering fastball and was not known for blowing hitters away. In fact, John’s highest strikeout total in a season was just 138. Instead, John relied on craftiness and guile, using the sinker as his primary pitch and focusing on producing weak ground balls from opposing hitters. In my cards of John that feature the hurler on the mound, his slow pitching delivery makes him look more like a little league coach throwing batting practice than a multiple time 20-game winner.
The card I most associate with John from my early years of collecting is his
1984 Topps, which was one of the initial cards I owned of the sinkerballer and
has always been among my favorites. Topps’
and Fleer’s sets from 1983 and 1984 were the first cards I regularly purchased
in packs. I have always been
particularly fond of the 1984 Topps design, so I often hold cards from that set
in high regard. The shot used for John’s
1984 Topps captures the veteran at the end of his pitching delivery with his arm
blurred and face grimaced. Yet even in
full pitching motion with his strained facial expression, John still looks like
he’s not actually throwing the ball very fast.
On his 1984 Topps, John is wearing an Angels jersey, the team he pitched
for at the time I started collecting. In
addition to John’s 1984 Topps, I have two other cards from the same year which
feature the southpaw in an Angels jersey.
John appeared on a Topps AL Active Career Victory Leaders card he shared
with Jim Palmer and former Dodgers teammate Don Sutton. Due to being among the active wins leaders,
John was also included in the Donruss Champions series, a small set of
oversized cards which honored active players and Hall of Famers for career and
single season achievements.
Since my first cards of John were as a member of the Angels, I spent most of my youth under the impression that the sinkerballer played with the Halos for an extended period of time when in actuality he only spent two full seasons and parts of two others taking the mound for California. The majority of John’s career was spent with three teams—the White Sox, the Dodgers, and the Yankees. Despite having an interest in collecting old cards from the 1960s and being intrigued by the many jersey changes the White Sox went through over the years, thus far, John’s seven seasons in Chicago are absent from my collection. Some of John’s best seasons came in Los Angeles, yet I only have two cards which feature the hurler in Dodger Blue. More than half of the cards I own of John are from his time with the Bronx Bombers, who the lefty played for on two separate stints. John’s initial 1979 to 1982 stretch in New York slightly predated my entry into the hobby while his second tour of duty in the Big Apple from 1986 to the conclusion of his career was right in the thick of main years of buying packs of cards, so the southpaw’s final seasons are well represented in my collection.
My full collection of Tommy John cards |
John made a strong return and was named The Sporting News Comeback Player of the Year for 1976. The following season, John won 20 games for the first time, finished runner-up in the NL Cy Young vote, and helped lead the Dodgers to the World Series where they fell in six games to the New York Yankees. John won 17 games for the 1978 Dodgers, who took the NL Pennant for the second straight year but once again lost in six games to the Yankees in the Fall Classic. At the conclusion of the 1978 season, John became eligible for free agency and signed with the Yankees. John flourished in the Big Apple, reaching the 20-win plateau in his first two seasons with the Bronx Bombers, finishing runner-up to the AL Cy Young Award in 1979, and playing a key role in getting New York back to the World Series during the strike-shortened 1981 campaign. Ironically, John faced his old team, the Dodgers, in the 1981 Fall Classic. However, this time Los Angeles came out on top, beating the Yankees in six games. John made his final postseason appearance in the 1982 ALCS, pitching for the California Angels, who acquired the lefty in a late season trade. Despite being on the losing end of three Fall Classics, John was a solid playoff pitcher going 2-1 with a 2.67 ERA in the World Series and piecing together an overall 6-3 career postseason record supported by a 2.65 ERA. John finally began to struggle in his early forties, finishing the year with an ERA over 4.00 for the first time in 1983. After a particularly difficult 1985 season, split between the Angels and the Oakland Athletics, it appeared at age 42, the veteran pitcher might be ready to call it a career. Yet, John returned to the game with the Yankees the following year and pitched for parts of four more seasons. When John’s lengthy career finally came to a close in 1989, the 46-year old southpaw had finished just a dozen victories shy of the 300-win milestone with a 288-231 career record, while making 700 starts and putting up a solid 3.34 ERA in a little over 4700 innings. John’s perseverance to comeback from his elbow injury had certainly paid off as the hurler picked up 164 of his 288 wins after going under the knife.
I started regularly collecting baseball cards in 1983, so my first several years in the hobby coincided with the latter stages of John’s career when the lefty was already in his forties. I knew John was an important pitcher and based on the tiny font used for his statistics on the back of his cards, I could tell the southpaw had plied his trade for a long time. However, it was evident from his more recent stats that the veteran’s best days were behind him. John never possessed anything close to an overpowering fastball and was not known for blowing hitters away. In fact, John’s highest strikeout total in a season was just 138. Instead, John relied on craftiness and guile, using the sinker as his primary pitch and focusing on producing weak ground balls from opposing hitters. In my cards of John that feature the hurler on the mound, his slow pitching delivery makes him look more like a little league coach throwing batting practice than a multiple time 20-game winner.
John's 1984 Topps and other cards featuring his slow pitching delivery |
Since my first cards of John were as a member of the Angels, I spent most of my youth under the impression that the sinkerballer played with the Halos for an extended period of time when in actuality he only spent two full seasons and parts of two others taking the mound for California. The majority of John’s career was spent with three teams—the White Sox, the Dodgers, and the Yankees. Despite having an interest in collecting old cards from the 1960s and being intrigued by the many jersey changes the White Sox went through over the years, thus far, John’s seven seasons in Chicago are absent from my collection. Some of John’s best seasons came in Los Angeles, yet I only have two cards which feature the hurler in Dodger Blue. More than half of the cards I own of John are from his time with the Bronx Bombers, who the lefty played for on two separate stints. John’s initial 1979 to 1982 stretch in New York slightly predated my entry into the hobby while his second tour of duty in the Big Apple from 1986 to the conclusion of his career was right in the thick of main years of buying packs of cards, so the southpaw’s final seasons are well represented in my collection.
John retired just a dozen victories shy of the 300-win milestone |
Between 1977 and 1980, Burger King distributed small sets of cards produced by Topps. These cards featured players from select teams and were available at Burger King locations in the team’s corresponding market. For 1979, Burger King distributed cards of players from the Yankees and the Philadelphia Phillies. Topps used the exact same designs for their Burger King cards as they did for their base set. However, in some cases the photo of the player on the Burger King issue differed from the shot used on the base set. John’s 1979 Topps cards are a good example of one of these variations as he is wearing a Dodgers uniform on his card from the base set while his Burger King card uses a completely different picture of the hurler which features him in a Yankees jersey taken after his signing with New York prior to the 1979 season. The action shot on John’s Burger King card looks similar to his 1987 Topps but I prefer the image of the crafty lefty in home whites over the club’s gray road jersey.
The photo on John's 1979 Topps Burger King card differed from the shot used for Topps' base set |
The 1980 Topps Yankees team set featured four Era Committee candidates |
Since the Era Committee replaced the Veterans Committee in 2010, Ted Simmons, Steve Garvey, and Tommy John are the only candidates to have appeared on all four Expansion/Modern Baseball Era ballots. Each of those candidates struggled to draw support on the two Expansion Era ballots and were relegated to the “fewer than” group. Simmons broke out of the pack on the 2018 ballot, missing election by a single tally before being voted into Cooperstown on the subsequent 2020 ballot. Garvey has yet to come close to election but after finishing among the “fewer than” group on his first three appearances, the slugger finally drew notable support on the 2020 ballot with his 37.5% mark tied with much ballyhooed newcomer Lou Whitaker for the fifth-highest total among the ten candidates. As the lone candidate to appear on all four Expansion/Modern Baseball Era ballots who failed to break out of the “fewer than” group, John’s continued presence on the ballot is not a given. Each Era Committee ballot is devised by the Historical Overview Committee—a small 10-12 member panel which screens and selects the candidates for each ballot. The Historical Overview Committee rarely changes members so it is clear that John’s career is held in high regard by the panel. However, due to repeatedly struggling to draw support on four consecutive ballots, the Historical Overview Committee may choose to exclude John from the 2023 Modern Baseball Era ballot and go with a candidate who has previously been on the ballot like Luis Tiant or select a candidate such as Rick Reuschel or Dave Stieb who has yet to appear on an Era ballot.
Mainstay Era Committee candidates John & Kaat share similar stats |
Some of what has hindered John’s Hall of Fame candidacy are his detractors who view the southpaw as a compiler and dismiss his 288 wins as a byproduct of longevity rather than dominance. By pitching well into his forties, John added an extra tail to his career that, while it brought him closer to 300 wins, also made him appear to be more of a compiler than he actually was. For example, had John retired after the 1985 campaign and not comeback to take the mound for New York for parts of four additional seasons during his early-to-mid forties, the lefty would have still crossed the secondary milestone of 250 wins and finished his career with a 259-207 record and 3.23 ERA. Also, by playing until 1989 at age 46, John retired nearly a decade removed from his last 20-win season. Nevertheless, between 1972 and 1982, John had an excellent eleven-year run in which he went 153-80 with a 3.08 ERA across 2101.2 innings despite losing nearly a season and a half to an elbow injury. During that impressive stretch, John’s .657 winning percentage led all hurlers with 1500 or more innings pitched. Within that span, John had a five-year spell, from 1977 to 1981, in which he reached the 20-win plateau three times and finished runner-up to the Cy Young Award in both 1977 and 1979. In addition, John played a key role in helping the Dodgers capture the 1977 and 1978 NL Pennant and the Yankees take the 1981 AL Pennant.
Another factor that likely has cost John Hall of Fame support is that he was not a fastball pitcher who blew away hitters and did not amass high strikeout totals during his career. Instead, John primarily used the sinkerball to produce weak ground balls and often ranked among the league leaders in fewest walks issued and home runs allowed. According to an MLB.com article by Joe Posnanski, John’s 605 double plays induced are the most all-time—well ahead of the 462 by runner-up Jim Kaat. Obviously the only way to create double play opportunities is to allow baserunners. Yet, by generating weak contact and rarely giving up the longball, John was able to minimize the damage and be an effective pitcher.
Will John remain on the Era Committee Hall of Fame ballot in the future? |
However, looking at a list of candidates for each of the four Era Committee ballots John has appeared on, I can only state with 100% certainty that the sinkerballer would have received my vote on the 2011 Expansion Era ballot. As for John’s other three appearances on Era Committee ballots, the combination of only being allowed to vote for a limited number of candidates and the presence of more deserving candidates would have forced me to leave the hurler off my mock ballot. Most recently, on last December’s Modern Baseball Era ballot, I would have used the four available spots to vote for Dwight Evans, Lou Whitaker, Marvin Miller, and Ted Simmons. Had I been able to vote for one more candidate, John along with Thurman Munson and Dale Murphy would have vied for a hypothetical fifth spot. Unlike BBWAA Hall of Fame voters, Era Committee panel members are very secretive and do not divulge which candidates they voted for or may have supported had they had room to include them on their ballot. Thus, we do not know if any voters supported John’s Hall of Fame case but ran out of space, forcing them to exclude the hurler from their ballot. As the lone candidate to appear on all four Expansion/Modern Baseball Era ballots and fail to break out of the “fewer than” group, John’s continued presence on the ballot is not a given. Nevertheless, if John makes a fifth Era Committee ballot, I hope members of the electorate will take a longer look at his impressive career and find room on their ballot to vote for the crafty lefty.
----by John
Tuberty
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Sources: Baseball Reference, Baseball Reference Play Index, Tommy John SABR, Frank Jobe SABR, MLB, Baseball Hall of Fame, Sports Collectors Daily, Fangraphs
Tommy John
cards: 1976 Topps, 1979 Topps, 1979
Topps Burger King, 1980 Topps, 1982 Donruss Yankee Winners, 1982 Topps Yankees
Leaders, 1984 Donruss Champion, 1984 Topps, 1984 Topps AL Active Career Victory
Leaders, 1986 Topps, 1987 Topps, 1988 Donruss, 1988 Donruss Diamond Kings, 1988
Topps, 1989 Topps
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The Quirk-y Truth about Harold Baines Wearing the Number 6 Jersey on Some of His 1991 Baseball Cards
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