The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HEADED FOR HALL OF FAME

Braves’ Chipper Jones earns baseball’s highest honor

- Dobrien@ajc.com

Throughout a 19-year career spent entirely with the Braves, Chipper Jones did wondrous things that made baseball’s Hall of Fame appear an increasing­ly imminent career conclusion. But that didn’t lessen the grandness of the occasion Wednesday when he got the long-anticipate­d call from the Hall.

Jones was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in his first year on the ballot, drawing an overwhelmi­ng 97.2-percent support from voting members of the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America, who also elected Vladimir Guerrero, Jim Thome and Trevor Hoffman for the Class of 2018 to be

inducted July 29 in Cooperstow­n, N.Y.

“I got that (area code) 212 call from New York, and my eyes got this big,” Jones said. “I can’t describe it. It was one of those spine-tingling, chill-bump moments that you just can’t describe.”

The 2018 class also will include Alan Trammell and Jack Morris, who were elected in December by the Hall of Fame’s Modern Era committee.

Seventy-five percent is the threshold for election by the writers, and Jones’ percentage (officially 97.16) nearly matched the

97.2 percent that Greg Maddux got in 2014 as the highest ever for a former Brave and is the 11th-highest in history overall. The highest voting percentage for any former Brave was legendary slugger Hank Aaron’s 97.8 in 1982.

“I want to thank all the writers; it blows my mind that 97 percent of you guys voted for me,” said Jones, who was named on 410 of 422 ballots cast by writers. “I want to express my gratitude on this day, for giving a small-town kid an unbelievab­le dream of making it to the Hall of Fame.”

Former Expos and Angels outfielder Guerrero (92.9 percent) and Thome (89.8 percent), who hit 612 home runs with six teams, also easily made it, Guerrero in his second year on the ballot and Thome in his first. Hoffman, whose 601 saves included 552 in 16 seasons with the Padres, was on 89.9 percent of ballots in his third year.

Jones is the sixth Brave from the team’s greatest era to be elected to the Hall of Fame in a five-year span, joining pitchers John Smoltz, Tom Glavine and Maddux, their longtime manager Bobby Cox and former general manager John Schuerholz.

All played integral roles in the team’s unpreceden­ted 14 consecutiv­e division titles through 2005, with Jones manning third base and batting third for the vast majority of games during the final 11 years of that run after helping the Braves win the 1995 World Series as a rookie.

“I can’t tell you what a pleasure it was to play behind those three pitchers,” Jones said. “It was a pleasure to come to work knowing we had an opportunit­y to win each and every night they took the mound. I’m grateful to John Schuerholz and Bobby Cox every year for giving us a chance coming into spring training to achieve our ultimate goal . ...

“For us to have our own little fraternity up there in a little piece of heaven in Cooperstow­n, New York, is something we can and should be very proud of because we did an awful lot of winning during the ’90s and early 2000s down here in Atlanta.”

Along with his wife and children, Jones had his parents at his home in Milton when the call came from the Hall of Fame.

“Having my mother and father here at the house, it was waterworks when I got off that phone call,” he said. “Only thing I could say to my dad when I hugged him was, ‘We did it.’ I mean, this has been 35, 36 years in the making. To have it culminate today with all the people I love and care about the most here to share it with me was pretty awesome.”

Longtime former teammate Andruw Jones, a 10-time Gold Glove winner and another cornerston­e of that Braves era, was named on just 7.3 percent of ballots in his first year of Hall of Fame eligibilit­y, narrowly surviving the five-percent minimum required to remain on the ballot for future considerat­ion.

Fred McGriff, who hit 130 of his 493 career homers as a Brave and helped Atlanta to its 1995 World Series championsh­ip, again received a surprising­ly low 23.2 percent of votes in his ninth and nextto-last year on the ballot.

Chipper Jones, regarded as one of the greatest switch-hitters along with Mickey Mantle and Eddie Murray, hit 468 home runs and finished with a .303 average, .401 OBP and .529 slugging percentage in 19 seasons, making him the lone switch-hitter and only third baseman with a “slash line” of at least .300/.400/.500 in 7,500 or more plate appearance­s. He was an eight-time AllStar and the 1999 National League MVP.

Jones, 45, is one of nine players in major league history to hit at least 400 homers and have at least a .300 average, .400 OBP and .500 slugging percentage, a rarefied group with Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Ted Williams, Stan Musial, Jimmie Foxx, Mel Ott, Frank Thomas and Manny Ramirez.

The highest Hall of Fame voting percentage in history was Ken Griffey Jr.’s 99.32 percent (437 of 440 ballots) in 2016, which broke Tom Seaver’s record of 98.84 percent in 1992. Four others were named on at least 98 percent of the ballots: Nolan Ryan (98.79 percent) in 1999, Cal Ripken Jr. (98.53) in 2007, Ty Cobb (98.23) in 1936 and George Brett (98.19) in 1999.

Jones had 1,055 extra-base hits, 1,623 RBIs, and more walks (1,512) than strikeouts (1,409) in his Braves career, never striking out 100 times in a season. He hit .300 or better 10 times, had at least 20 home runs in nine consecutiv­e seasons through 2008, drove in at least 100 runs in nine seasons, and scored at least 100 runs in eight.

“How lucky we all were as Braves fans, and all baseball fans for that matter, to see Chipper Jones play,” said former Braves superstar Dale Murphy, who won consecutiv­e NL MVP awards in 1982-83. “We all could tell that he was unique and had elite-level baseball talent. I think we could see that being inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame was inevitable. Truly one of the best of the best.”

The first overall pick of the 1996 draft out of The Bolles School in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., Jones was the Braves’ Golden Boy and became a face of the franchise for baseball’s team of the ’90s. He is an Atlanta sports icon whose performanc­e, good looks and self-assured demeanor contribute­d to first-name fame that stretched throughout the Southeast and beyond.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Former Braves third basemen Chipper Jones, an Atlanta sports icon after playing 19 years with the Braves, calls the notificati­on Wednesday he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame with more than 97 percent of the votes “one of those spine-tingling,...
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Former Braves third basemen Chipper Jones, an Atlanta sports icon after playing 19 years with the Braves, calls the notificati­on Wednesday he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame with more than 97 percent of the votes “one of those spine-tingling,...
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