Mussina tops list of biggest vote gainers for Hall

by
Adam Hunger / Reuters

Not everyone will get to call Cooperstown home, but some are closer than others to being elected into the historic Hall of Fame.

The 2016 class was announced on Wednesday with Ken Griffey Jr. and Mike Piazza elected as the only inductees.

In a year that saw the number of voter ballots drop from 549 to 440, Alan Trammell (40.9%) and Mark McGwire (12.3%) fell short of the required 75 percent needed for election in their last year on the ballot, while others such as Jim Edmonds and Nomar Garciaparra received less than five percent of the vote, officially removing them from future ballots.

But not everyone experienced bad luck when votes were revealed. Below is a list of the biggest vote gainers who still have a chance of making the Hall of Fame on future ballots:

Player 2015 2016 Change
Mike Mussina 24.6% 43.0% 18.4%
Edgar Martinez 27.0% 43.4% 16.4%
Curt Schilling 39.2% 52.3% 16.1%
Jeff Bagwell 55.7% 71.6% 15.9%
Tim Raines 55.0% 69.8% 14.8%
Fred McGriff 12.9% 20.9% 8.0%
Roger Clemens 37.5% 45.2% 7.7%
Barry Bonds 36.8% 44.3% 7.5%
Larry Walker 11.8% 15.5% 3.7%
Jeff Kent 14.0% 16.6% 2.6%

While Mussina and Martinez top the list of biggest changes in terms of percentage gained, Jeff Bagwell and Tim Raines stand out as the two who moved closer to adding their names to the most exclusive team in baseball.

Next year will be the last that Raines can appear on the ballot, while Bagwell has four shots left to get the nod.

The Digest

Everything you need to know about the 2016 Hall of Fame vote

by theScore staff
The Sporting News / Sporting News / Getty

The votes are in and the tickets are punched: Ken Griffey Jr. and Mike Piazza are headed for Cooperstown.

Griffey's record-setting election - he appeared on an unprecedented 437 of the 440 ballots submitted by the BBWAA - puts a bow on the career of one of the greatest players in baseball history.

Wednesday's announcement also marks the first time a No. 1 pick has gained entrance into Cooperstown, a stark contrast to the distinction held by Piazza as the lowest-drafted player voted to the Hall.

That and other storylines dominating the 2016 Hall of Fame discussion:

NEXT STOP: COOPERSTOWN

ALL ABOUT THE KID

JUICED UP RESULTS

END OF THE ROAD

Advertisement