Analysis: Joey Votto could be Hall of Fame bound after stellar 17-year career
TORONTO — Now that Joey Votto’s Major League Baseball career is officially over, there’s only one question remaining: will he become the third Canadian enshrined in Baseball’s Hall of Fame?
Although there’s no doubt that the 2010 National League MVP and six-time all-star had an excellent 17-year career with the Cincinnati Reds, he’s not as clear cut a choice for Cooperstown as fellow Canadians Ferguson Jenkins and Larry Walker were when they were elected to baseball’s most hallowed hall.
There have certainly been well-earned accolades throughout the Toronto native’s career, including winning the Lou Marsh Trophy, since renamed the Northern Star Award, as the Canadian athlete of the year in 2010 and 2017. He also won the James “Tip” O’Neill Award, presented to the year’s best Canadian baseball player, seven times, second only to Walker’s nine.
But gaining entry into Cooperstown is a more exacting process, with players inducted into the Hall of Fame through election by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. Players become eligible five years after retirement and are elected if they’re named on 75 per cent or more of all ballots cast. A player who is named on fewer than 5 per cent of ballots is dropped from future elections.