Larry Walker Made the Baseball Hall of Fame on His Final Ballot

data-mm-id=”_6gmenxs34″>Larry Walker is now a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame, as he was elected on Tuesday in his 10th and final year of eligibility. Given his career accomplishments and how he dominated the 1990s, he should have been a no-brainer. It's amazing it took this long. In his final ballot appearance, Larry Walker gets in. #HOF2020 pic.twitter.com/HTNbvdvueG— MLB (@MLB) January 21, 2020The long-time Colorado Rockies star was finally granted entry into the Hall of Fame, garnering 76.6 percent of the vote. He needed 75 percent to get in.During a 17-year career with the Rockies, Montreal Expos and St. Louis Cardinals Walker was consistently fantastic. He was a five-time All-Star, a seven-time Gold Glove Award winner, a three-time Silver Slugger winner, won three batting titles and was the National League MVP in 1997. For his career, Walker hit .313, with 383 home runs, 1,311 RBIs and an OPS of .965. Those numbers are crazy and absolutely worth of the Hall of Fame. Some will suggest those numbers are wildly inflated by playing his home games at Coors Field, but that's not completely fair. The Athletic's Jayson Stark can explain:I ran Larry Walker's career thru the baseball-reference Stat Neutralizer today, filtered for a neutral 2019 NL park. This is where his final numbers wound up:.305/.390/.547/.937, with just 14 fewer hits & 11 fewer HR.That's in a "neutral" park, not Coors. Get the picture?— Jayson Stark (@jaysonst) January 21, 2020Walker consistently hit at an insanely-high level throughout his career and was an incredible defensive outfielder. Oh, and he did this in an All-Star Game when he — as a lefty — had to face Randy Johnson:Larry Walker turns his helmet backward and bats righty against Randy Johnson after a pitch sails over his head at the Baseball #AllStarGame in Cleveland! (July 8, 1997) Bonus flashback clip: Kruk vs. Johnson '93 #MLB #ASG #History pic.twitter.com/hOsDCiJRXq— Baseball by BSmile (@BSmile) July 8, 2019He's a fine addition to the Hall of Fame.

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