Alan Trammell Should be in the HOF
To grow up in the Midwest is to grow up rooting for
underdogs. In my childhood that meant
the Detroit Tigers. I was just becoming
a baseball fan in 1961, playing little league and dying a little when my home
town team rolled into Yankee Stadium to play the hated Yankees in a Labor Day
series that would decide the pennant.
The Tigers were swept, and my long agony – interrupted only be the
miracles of 68 and 84 – as a fan was born.
We get used to our teams losing (well, in less you’re a Cubs fan), it’s
the lack of respect for our heroes that really hurts. Oh sure, there is an occasional Kaline or
Greenberg that sneaks in, but players who if they had played for the Yankees,
Dodgers or Red Sox would surely be in the Hall are routinely ignored.
To me the most
irritating example of this is Alan Trammell, shortstop for the Tigers. He played of the 84 world champions, the team
that opened with a record of 35-5, still the best on record. He was the MVP of the World Series and
probably should have been the league MVP, losing out to George “Taco” Bell of
the Blue Jays. Along with Lou Whitaker,
he was part of the longest playing and most productive double play combination
in the history of baseball. He was a
consummate professional, adapting to multiple spots in the order to help the
team. No one who looks at the numbers
seems to disagree that he fits comfortably in zone of HOF shortstops. So what’s the problem.
Any Tiger fan can tell you the problem – he played in
Detroit. If he had played in New York,
Boston or LA, he would have already have his plaque in the gallery on the first
floor of the Hall. But unless the
Veterans Committee has mercy on he and Sweet Lou (Jack Morris was probably the
best player on that team but he left via free agency, so Twins and Blue Jays
fans can lobby for him) they’ll be unjustly forgotten. Trammell isn’t upset at the snub, but at its
core this is about more than baseball.
This is about having to deal with the snobbery of the East and West
coast. Of having to listen to idiots who
think they own the known world because they happen to live in the promised
land. Alan Trammell is being discounted
for the same reason we are all discounted – geography.
In the Midwest we grow up hearing about the “best” schools,
food, people and sports teams. We
listen, but we never hear our names called.
Frankly, it’s sickening. I’ve
been around plenty of the best people from the best schools, and – unless you
count massive egos and hubris – I’m still waiting to be awed. Alan Trammell (even though he’s from
California- only a little better that the East) is a consummate Midwestern
hero. He was a great baseball player,
but he wasn’t a celebrity. He did his
job and he did it well – better than a lot of shortstops who have been
inducted.
There’s nothing you folks in the East can do to solve what
ails us here in the heartland – well you could just shut up and listen
sometimes. But you can make a good faith
gesture. You can put Tramm in the Hall
where he belongs.trammell