The Cooperstown case for Tim Raines

It’s that time of the year again: Hall of Fame voting season. This month, the decade-long members of the BBWAA fill out their ballots for who belongs in Cooperstown.

There are many candidates on this year’s ballot, and many would make perfectly fine Hall of Famers. Several are doing worse in the BBWAA voting than I’d personally wish them to do (see Trammell, Alan), but one guy particularly strikes me as getting less support than he deserves: Tim Raines.

People have different standards for what constitutes a Hall of Famer, but in general there are too main ways of gauging Hall-worthiness: peak and career value. There are just different way to define greatness, and many Hall of Fame arguments boil down to if a person supports peak or career value in their candidates.

With Raines, though, it shouldn’t make any difference if you prefer peak or if you prefer career. Either way, he is highly qualified for Cooperstown.

Peak value

From 1981-87, Raines was one of the best players in the game, year-in and year-out. Here are his numbers and where he ranked overall in baseball during his seven-year peak:

Hits: first (1,202).

Triples: tied for first (63).

Runs: second (719).

Steals: second (504).

On base percentage: third (.396).

Doubles: tied for third (214).

Batting average: fifth (to three digits, he’s tied with Pedro Guerrero, but if you take it to the fourth digit, he has a slight lead) (.310).

Base of balls: seventh (553).

Intentional walks: seventh (78).

Games: 10th (1,000).

Total bases: 11th (1,740).

A Hardball Times Update
Goodbye for now.

Extra-base hits: tied for 18th (343).

Not bad. Some of the facts above look even more impressive when you dig into the details. His third-best OBP trails only Wade Boggs and Rickey Henderson. Not only are those guys both Hall of Famers, but they were both slam-dunk, first-ballot Hall of Famers.

The only four guys to have a better batting average than Raines were Boggs, Tony Gwynn, Don Mattingly, and Kirby Puckett. Three skated into Cooperstown on their first try, and Mattingly was on a similar track until back injuries derailed his career.

As for Raines’ famous success stealing bases, normally swiping 504 bases in seven years would make Raines an easy first-place finisher, but of course, it was only the second-best total of the period, as the greatest base stealer of all time was also in his peak then. Henderson stole 568 bases in those years.

Despite Henderson being the best base stealer ever, and despite Rickey having the most steals in this period, Raines was still more valuable on the bases. Steals are only half of the equation; caught stealings are the other half. Alongside Henderson’s 568-504 edge in steals, “The Greatest” also has a commanding lead in caught stealings: 137-74.

In other words, the difference between Henderson and Raines on the bases from 1981-87 was 64 steals and 63 caught stealings. Folks, that’s bad. A 50 percent success rate on the bases hurts a team instead of helping a team. Outs are too valuable, and the loss of a runner hurts too much.

How good a runner was Raines in his prime? Better than the best baserunner ever during his prime. Impressive.

Raines was an all-time great at stealing bases without getting caught. In 1985, he stole 70 bases while being caught only nine times. That set a new all-time record for most steals by someone with single-digit caught stealings. The next year, Raines tied his own record by going 70-for-79 again,and that’s still the record.

It shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise to learn that when you move to the more advanced stats, Raines scores brilliantly. He ranks second overall in Bill James’ Runs Created, and places third in WAR. He frequently finished in the top five in both stats’ annual rankings.

In his last annual Abstract, Bill James has an essay trying to figure out who the best player in the game was, and he ultimately ranks Raines second only to Boggs.

Raines at his absolute best: 1986-87

Maybe a seven-year stretch is too long. For some, peak means something a bit narrower. Let’s look at Raines at his pinnacle, 1986-87.

In 1986, he led the league with a .334 batting average. Though it didn’t garner nearly as much attention at the time, he also posted an NL-best .413 OBP. Those numbers included 35 doubles and 10 triples. Plus, of course, Raines stole 70 bases.

Something strange happened that offseason to Raines. He became a free agent and, despite being a great player and despite being the league’s best hitter, no one would offer him a contract. He became the biggest and most blatant victim of collusion, as the owners sought to keep salaries artificially low. (The move came back to burn the owners, as a series of arbitrators found them guilty of collusion and fined them huge sums of cash).

However, Raines looked for an offer all offseason, and due to the rules and regulations governing the process, he couldn’t sign with his own team until May 1. That’s how, despite being maybe the greatest player in the league, Raines missed a month in his prime.

Raines returned on May 2, 1987, and despite missing all of springing training and the first month of the season, immediately showed he was still one of the best. On his first day of the season, he went 4-for-5, capping his game with a 10th-inning grand slam to give Montreal an 11-7 win. Along the way, Raines also had a triple, walk, and (of course) stolen base.

The 1987 season is the great what-if for Raines. As great as he was that year, he should’ve been greater. Despite playing only 139 games, Raines scored 123 runs. Not only was that enough to lead the league, that would be enough to lead the NL any season from 1978-92, except 1982 (when Raines led the league scoring 133 runs).

His .330 batting average was a little lower than his league-leading total in 1986, but thanks to 90 walks, his OBP rose to .429 (though it wasn’t enough to lead the league this time). Meanwhile, Raines cracked out another 34 doubles, legged out eight more triples, and smashed a personal-best 18 homers. Plus he was 50-for-55 in base stealing opportunities.

If you give Raines back the 21 games he missed, he could’ve had 200 hits, 100 walks, 20 homers, nearly 60 steals and over 140 runs scored. Thanks to collusion, it remains a “what if.”

In other words, due to collusion, all those nice rankings of Raines from 1981-87 actually underestimate him by a bit. With those 21 games back, he’d likely be second in doubles, first outright in triples, possibly as high as tied for fifth in games played, and 12th in extra-base hits. Also, he’d probably pass Kirby Puckett for fourth place in batting average.

Career value

OK, so Raines had a great prime. But then he dropped off. He hit .270 in 1988 and never truly found his stride again. He also played 135 or more games in a season only three more times and never stole 50 bases in a season again. It’s the curse of the base stealer—guys who run a lot when they’re young tend to age poorly. That’s one thing that makes Henderson so impressive; he held up spectacularly well.

By the time Raines finally played his last game in 2002, many had forgotten how truly special he had been 15-20 seasons previously.

Despite that, his career numbers put him well within the Hall of Fame range. On the face of it, there’s nothing dramatically jaw dropping. Raines recorded 2,605 hits—that’s nice, but others have it without entering Cooperstown. The same can be said for his 430 doubles, 113 triples, 1,330 walks, .294 average, or .385 OBP. Even Raines’ 808 career steals pales compared to Henderson’s eleventy billion swipes in roughly the same time period.

Aye, but looker closer at Raines for a second. Those 808 steals are nothing compared to Henderson, but no one is impressive compared to Henderson. Let’s compare Raines to Lou Brock.

Brock beats Raines in steals, 938-808, a comfortable edge. All hail Brock. Again, however, steals are still only half the equation. What about caught stealings? (You can figure out how this one plays out, right?)

Yup, Brock has another comfortable edge: 307-146. Only this time, you don’t want the edge. Altogether, the difference between Brock and Raines on the bases is 130 steals and 161 times caught. You know what you call someone who goes 130-for-291 on the bases? You call him someone hurting his team.

OK, but stolen bases aren’t the only reason Brock made it into Cooperstown. He’s also a member of the 3,000 hit club, unlike Mr. 2,605 hits, Tim Raines.

Yeah, but you know why Brock got more hits than Raines? Because he never drew a walk. In his career, Brock had 761 walks, a far cry short of Raines’ total of 1,330. Raines actually reached base more times than Brock. In fact, Raines got on base more times than Brock despite Brock having the longer career. In all, Brock had nearly 1,000 more plate appearances, but Raines still got on base more.

OK, but this isn’t entirely a fair fight. Brock is something of a sabermetric whipping boy for being overrated. People see the steals and singles and miss the caught stealings and outs. Besides, we’re comparing across eras, and that is always a little muddier.

Let’s compare Raines to a peer: Hall of Famer Gwynn. The best pure hitter of his generation, Gwynn won seven batting titles and hit .338 for his career. He and Raines played at essentially the same time; Raines began two years earlier and lasted one year beyond Gwynn. Plus, they had nearly the same number of plate appearances: 10,232 for Gwynn, and 10,359 for Raines.

How do they compare? Well, Raines smokes Gwynn on the bases, that’s a given: 808 steals to 319. Their power numbers are similar. Gwynn comfortably leads in doubles while Raines has the upper hand in triples and homers. But power is ancillary to both of their Cooperstown cases.

We all know why Gwynn is in: he got 3,141 hits en route to that mighty .338 average. Raines can’t compete.

Well, he can’t compete with hits, but what about getting on base? Alongside Gwynn’s 3,141 hits are 790 walks and 24 hit-by-pitch. That’s 3,955 times on base. Since World War II, that’s the 33rd-most times on base for a player, which sure is nice.

Care to guess who is No. 32 on the list just ahead of Gwynn? Yep, it’s Raines with his 2,605 hits, 1,330 walks, and 42 HBP: 3,977 times on base overall.

That .385 OBP mentioned above is actually a tremendous achievement over 10,000 plate appearances. Of the 37 players since WWII with that many, Raines has the 11th-best on-base percentage. Eleventh out of 37 may not sound too impressive, until you realize that only the best players have that many OBP. It tops Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Pete Rose, Mike Schmidt, and Derek Jeter, among others.

Am I saying Raines was better than Gwynn? No. Singles are more important than walks, and Raines’ edge in times on base is so slight as to be a toss-up. But that’s the point. Raines’ career value may not be better than Gwynn’s, but it’s very similar.

Gwynn entered Cooperstown on the first ballot to universal acclimation as a deserving choice, and Raines can stand beside him and look similar. Raines has enough career value to be in Cooperstown.

Why is Raines underrated?

In his first year on the ballot, Brock snuck into Cooperstown with a little over 75 percent of the vote. Gwynn did far better, making it with 98 percent of the vote.

One year after Gwynn hit the ballot, Raines debuted with 24 percent of the vote.

Why did he do so poorly? Raines had several problems. First, while he was the second-greatest leadoff hitter of all-time, he played at the same time as the greatest. Making it even worse, Henderson aged better, too.

It wasn’t so much that Raines aged poorly. He remained a productive player for over a decade, but he just seemed like a journeyman. The longer he survived, the further his glory period faded into the past, and baseball’s increased offensive numbers of the 1990s made it fade that much quicker.

Also, much of Raines’ value on the bases lay in his ability to avoid getting caught stealing, and who pays attention to caught stealings?

For that matter, his ability to get on base is well divided between his ability to get hits and to draw walks. He was really good at both but not great at either. Two pretty goods can add up to a great overall ability to get on base, but it is harder to notice. He never drew 100 walks in a season or had 200 hits. Those 2,605 safeties get respect, but not acclaim. His 1,330 walks are 35th on the all-time list, but who notices them?

Raines also did cocaine in the early 1980s, but then again so did Paul Molitor, and he’s in Cooperstown. Raines (in)famously would slide headfirst in order to make sure the vial of cocaine in his back pocket wouldn’t break, but judging by his success on the bases, that didn’t hurt the team.

The future for Tim Raines

Despite his lackluster ballot debut, my hunch is that Raines will go into Cooperstown eventually. After debuting with 24 percent in 2008, he sprang up to 38 percent in 2011, and he’s a very good bet to rise up much more this year (as should all the backlog).

image
Cooperstown has called Dawson and Carter. Will their
Montreal teammate join them?

Furthermore, down the road Raines will be helped because he’ll have a case like no one else.

The ballot looks like it will be littered with powerful sluggers and some good pitchers— along with a few others fitting various styles—but who else will have 800-plus steals? Raines will stand out, and that will help him.

Best of all, his case is strong enough to help him. Yeah, that does matter.

There is a downside. In 2013, the ballot goes crazy with a huge list of super candidates all arriving, and some of them will stick around due to the steroids controversy. Beginning in 2013, no one from the backlog will go in for several years.

Yes, but Raines will have 10 more tries, and his is a high-quality case. It’s possible the BBWAA won’t elect him.

No one knows what will happen after the steroids controversy erupts in full with Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds arriving. Maybe Raines’ drug usage will be seen as similar.

However, the guys who score really well with the BBWAA but get passed on almost always get elected by the VC.

Here’s my favorite Cooperstown fact: The complete list of people who ever topped 50 percent in the BBWAA vote even once and are neither in Cooperstown nor currently on the ballot is: Gil Hodges. That’s it. He’s the entire list.

Raines may not get 75 percent of the BBWAA vote this year, but maybe he will in 8-10 years. Even if he doesn’t, he should get over 50 percent, and thus end up on top of the VC caseload.

He deserves to go in next year, or three years ago, really. But he should get the plaque he deserves.

References & Resources
All stats comes from Baseball-Reference.com. It’s Play Index came in very handy for all rankings.

In the 1988 Baseball Abstract (the green one), Bill James has an essay called “Rain Delay,” in which he ranks Raines behind only Boggs as the best player in baseball.

A few years ago, Tom M. Tango wrote “Tim Raines’ case for the Hall of Fame” here at THT. This piece wasn’t inspired by it, but I did skim it to make sure I just wasn’t go to rehash what he already said. While both articles have the same conclusion, the approaches in each are different.


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Jim G.
12 years ago

Not bad. Your comparison against Gwynn seems more plausible than against Henderson. Henderson was good for so long, including adding power to his offense. Something Raines could never do.
Gwynn was such a free swinger. It makes you wonder how many less hits he would have if he were more patient at the plate. (Or vice versa for Raines.)

Mike
12 years ago

As a Chicago White Sox fan, I was super excited when Ron Schueler finally pulled the trigger on the long-rumored trade for Tim Raines, a future hall-of-fame player seemingly still in his prime. And never was I more disappointed with a player, at least until Adam Dunn came along. Raines gave the White Sox one good season and one great season and then for some reason just stopped trying to steal bases. In left field, he was below average defensively and really never seemed to play with very much enthusiasm. It was almost as if he lost his desire for the game. Granted, he was great in Montreal. A hall-of-famer, though? Meh.

Richard
12 years ago

Seriously, Mike? Raines record in Chicago looks pretty good to me. Perhaps he wasn’t as great as at his peak, but was that really a reasonable expectation? And I suspect he stopped running so frequently because he was no longer so successful at it. His last year in Montreal and his first year with the White Sox showed a spike in caught stealings. He knew what he could do. Oh, and his defense looks just fine, too, other than his poor final season.

Eugene Freedman
12 years ago

I’d recommend Tom Tango’s Raines30 site for more good pieces on Raines and comparisons to his contemporaries and other HOFers.

http://raines30.com/

A couple years I wrote one myself using a rudimentary calculation called Rock Pile- total bases+sb plus walks and compared it to total chances (PA+CS).  Raines compared in the middle of the pack among HOF outfielders and contemporary HOFers across positions.

Neal Traven
12 years ago

Thanks for this, Chris.  The Rock was my second-favorite player in the 80s, behind only Michael Jack Schmidt.  A no-brainer for the HOF, IMHO.

Yes, the comparison with Henderson is his problem in the voting.  How unfortunate that the second-best leadoff hitter of all time played at exactly the same time as the best of all.  Being the best percentage base stealer ever, while vitally important, isn’t nearly sexy enough for the BBWAA voters.  Convincing them to look at Gwynn rather than Rickey might be the way to build his case.

Drug use?  I don’t think that’s really a stain for Raines.  He had a brief foray into cocaine in 1982(?), but other than that he was clean, a fine upstanding citizen.

Finally, speaking of Rickey, did you know that he set three all-time records in a single game?  Sure, he was only extending his own records in R, BB, and SB, but still…  Actually, he did it five times—4/13/2002, 5/12/2002 (I was at that game, in Safeco, and noted the three records at the time), 5/29/2002, 7/18/2002, and 8/29/2003.  The last of those also saw the final BB and the final SB of his career.  He scored one more run after that, in the last game of his career on 9/19/2003.

Chris J.
12 years ago

Neal – I don’t think coke means much in the Raines case either, but wanted to preemptively bring it up and mention the Molitor comparison.

One bug in the article that bugs me:  “Eleventh out of 37 may not sound too impressive, until you realize that only the best players have that many OBP.” That should say PA at the end.  Looking at players with 10,000 PA in their career.

David P. Stokes
12 years ago

I’d take a bit of issue with the idea that guys that run a lot when they’re young don’t age well. 

Overall, though, I agree with the article—Raines clearly should be inducted into the Hall.  In fact, he should already have been.  It’s mind-boggling that 76% of the voting members of the BBWA didn’t think he was worthy from the moment he came on the ballot.

Chris J.
12 years ago

David—I gave the running guys age poorly thing because I didn’t want to go too far off on a tangent. 

Short version: if you make a list of the top ten guys with the most steals before their age 30-season and another list of the top stealers age 30-onward, there’s only one guy in common.  It’s Henderson, of course, who is top on both lists. 

I actually give the lists in this article from 2009:
http://www.hardballtimes.com/main/article/the-wonder-of-rickey/

mitch forman
12 years ago

I think there’s confusion regarding the aging of speed players.  Players who start out faster, will, given a normal decline with age, retain an age-for-age speed advantage vs. other players and thus might age well (outfield play, first to third, etc.).  It’s players who rely on stolen base success for a large percentage of their offensive value that don’t age well.

AaronB
12 years ago

I always liked Raines, very good player player.  I think he suffers a bit from the Ted Simmons issue:

Simmons has the misfortune of being a C and having his peak years during a great time for C’s:  Bench, Fisk, Carter, Munson…so despite being a great C, he was never considered the best at his position.  Very much like the Raines/Ricky combo.  I’ll also throw out Vince Coleman.  Coleman was no where near the player Raines was, but from ‘85-‘89, Coleman got lots of play because he was stealing 100+ & the Cards were winning.  Similar to Simmons…

Another similarity between the two, after having their peak years, they become journeymen and were not as productive.  That last taste of both left for the baseball writers wasn’t very appealing. 

Finally, both carry an albatross that also sticks with voters:  Raines & the cocaine, Simmons & his defense. 

Yes, I hope they both get in because they deserve it.

Eric Taylor
12 years ago

I agree Raines should be in the HOF.  Can you make (or discredit) an argument about one of Timmy’s contemporaries…Dale Murphy?  I thought he should have been a lock (particularly since he was a fan/media darling with zero bad press…ever), but it seems he is languishing with an absurdly low number of votes each year.

Any explanation?

Michael
12 years ago

If Raines had played CF, I think it would have been a much better case. As it is, he has a solid case for the HOF, and I would vote for him, but he is not as underrated as some other players (Trammell, for instance) because he played a position that is pretty well represented in the Hall, LF.

Chris J.
12 years ago

Eric,

I think an answer for Murphy is hinted at in Michael’s comment just below yours. HoF voters rarely distinguish between LF, CF, and RF.  CF has more defensive value, but that gets no value from the electorate, meanwhile he’s still gotta compete w/ the most offense-based positions out there, corner OF.

Also, Murphy’s fall off was huge and swift, so his career numbers aren’t quite there.

tc
12 years ago

I think the HOF should resemble a sliced apple pie. Each slice should represent a position. 1st basemen only on this slice, 2nd basemen only on that and on and on right through the relief pitchers, long, set up and closers plus the management side as well. And every year the voters should be instructed to vote for a player in comparison to only the players occupying the slice he would be elected to. You could even then rank the players by their position on the slice, for example, the weakest at the outer circle and the greatest with perhaps statues of the current best at the center of the pie, representing what is thought to be the greatest team of all time. I don’t know what the Hall looks like but that’s what it should look like, IMHO.
One more thing. I always thought it was ridiculous that stealing percentage was ignored in discussing base stealing. As Chris pointed out, base runners getting caught hurt a team and Raines achievement in this area was never given enough credit.

John C
12 years ago

You’re preaching to the choir posting this article here.

Raines has two problems that have kept him out of the Hall of Fame so far. One is that he was an exact contemporary of Rickey Henderson, and the other is that all of his great seasons were in Montreal.

It’s ridiculous that Andre Dawson is already in Cooperstown, but Raines isn’t. But Dawson won an MVP with the Cubs, so he got to be really famous. By the time Raines left the Expos, he’d gone from superstar to just a good ballplayer.

Try to look at it this way. Raines will surely get there eventually. Dwight Evans was better than the guy he played alongside in the Boston outfield for so long, but he’ll probably always be on the outside looking in, while Jim Rice is in.

David A Wishinsky
12 years ago

Didnt Steve Garvey have over 50% yet fail to get in?

Johnny
12 years ago

Compelling case and I agree 100% I enjoyed the Bagwell case as well and agree with it also.

Small correction, Raines did steal 50 bases again(51 to be exact) after 1988, which was in 1991.

Zubinsum
12 years ago

I think Raines should go into the HoF but I have a minor quibble.  The greatest base stealer ever at peak or for his career is Vince Coleman, hands down.  Raines has an edge on SB% (85% to 81%), but Coleman absolutely trounces Raines in stolen base per oportunity (~45% to ~25%).  Don’t get me wrong, Coleman is no hall of famer but he was a better base stealer than Raines, Henderson or anyone else.

Bob P
12 years ago

David Wishinsky: no, Garvey’s best HOF year was 1995 (his third year of eligibility) with 42.6%. That was the year only Mike Schmidt got in.

Garvey topped 40% two other times: 1993, his first year (only Reggie Jackson got in) and 1998 (only Don Sutton got in).