Photorealistic desk scene of MLB writer's 2026 Hall of Fame ballots with notes on Beltrán, Jones, Hamels amid PED debates.
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Additional MLB writers detail rationales for 2026 Hall of Fame ballots

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Following ballots from Jason Foster and Mike Petriello, more MLB.com writers—including Anthony DiComo, Bryan Hoch, and Jason Beck—have explained their 2026 BBWAA Hall of Fame selections. Their rationales emphasize peak performance, postseason impact, durability, and debates over PED issues and off-field incidents amid holdovers like Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones, and newcomers led by Cole Hamels.

DiComo prioritized peak performance, voting for David Wright (seven All-Stars, four top-10 NL MVP finishes over nine peak seasons), Chase Utley, Dustin Pedroia, Félix Hernández, Andy Pettitte, and Beltrán. He excluded Alex Rodriguez and Manny Ramirez for post-rule PED violations, and opted against Jones due to a 2012 domestic battery charge.

Hoch focused on players who "truly mattered," supporting Beltrán (70 bWAR, elite postseason), Pettitte (256 wins, 19 postseason victories in 44 starts), Mark Buehrle (14 seasons of 200+ innings), Hamels (eight seasons with 120+ ERA+), Rodriguez and Ramirez (after MLB punishments), Bobby Abreu, Jones, and Utley (56.9 JAWS above average).

Beck took a "Big Hall" stance, filling all 10 votes with Beltrán, Jones (five 6.5+ bWAR seasons), Hernández (2010 Cy Young on a 101-loss team), Utley, Pedroia, Pettitte, Hamels, Abreu (top-75 in walks and doubles, eight 100-RBI seasons in nine years), and Francisco Rodríguez (437 saves).

Common support persists for Beltrán, Utley, Hernández, and Pettitte across voters, highlighting ongoing debates on scandals versus stats. Results are expected in January.

Ce que les gens disent

X discussions focus on MLB writers' explanations of their 2026 Hall of Fame ballots, with Bryan Hoch's post drawing high engagement and mixed reactions praising selections like Mark Buehrle while criticizing omissions such as Dustin Pedroia and PED debates around A-Rod. Mark Feinsand aggregates columns from Anthony DiComo, Bryan Hoch, Jason Beck, and others, highlighting rationales on peak performance, postseason impact, durability, and controversies. Trackers note strong support for holdovers like Beltrán and Jones, with optimism for newcomers like Hamels.

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