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Stephen Holland's Hall of Fame Suite
Cal Ripken Jr. '07 HOF
 

Very soon baseball season will be upon us, and Stephen Holland's galleries will be coming out swinging. With not one, but with both of this years Baseball Hall of Fame inductees.

And for a short time we are offering both for a special price.

 

Tony Gwynn '07 HOF
Cal Ripken by Stephen Holland     Tony Gwynn by Stephen Holland
42"x 28.5" Giclee on canvas
Edition 107
42"x 28.5" Giclee on canvas
Edition 107
 
Press Release from the Baseball Hall of Fame.
 
Gwynn, Ripken Jr. Join Baseball's Elite
 
Pair played their entire careers for one team, will be inducted on July 29
 
NEW YORK, NY: Tony Gwynn and Cal Ripken Jr. will be forever joined at the hip. They co-existed during the same era, playing their entire careers near their hometowns for a single Major League team, while dominating their respective leagues.
 
On Tuesday, they were elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame on their first tries, both having been selected with nearly the highest vote percentages in history – Ripken finishing third behind Tom Seaver and Nolan Ryan, while Gwynn nestled in at seventh.
 
“To me, the numbers and the stats, they’re overwhelming,” said Ripken, the Baltimore Orioles star who grew up in nearby Aberdeen, Md., and received a best-ever 537 votes on the record 545 ballots cast. “I really didn’t get caught up in wanting to be unanimous or wanting to have the most. I’m very content to be voted in.”
 
Gwynn, who grew up in Long Beach, Ca., and played 20 seasons down the freeway for the San Diego Padres, received 532 votes, the second most ever.
 
Gwynn, who won a record-tying eight National League batting titles, and Ripken, who shattered Lou Gehrig’s record by playing in 2,632 consecutive games, will be inducted at Cooperstown on July 29. They will be joined by any candidates elected in the Hall of Fame Veterans Committee election, the results of which will be announced on Feb. 27.
 
Ripken garnered 98.53 percent of the vote from veteran members of the Baseball Writers' Association of America, the most ever for a position player. Ripken finished behind Seaver (98.83 in 1992 and Ryan (98.79 in 1999). Gwynn's percentage of 97.6 percent ranks directly behind Ty Cobb, George Brett and Hank Aaron, pretty good company.
 
“These percentages started to concern me a bit,” Gwynn said during a conference call. “I feel guilty enough as it is being able to get in, while other guys can’t. I was hoping to be in the low 90s and I could go about my business. I didn’t want to be close to unanimous. I’m glad it worked out the way it did.”
 
Mark McGwire, also a ballot newcomer with 583 career home runs, fell well short of election, his name appearing on less than a quarter of the ballots cast, two of which were left completely blank.
 
It was a day of good news and bad news for Rich "Goose" Gossage, the reliever who is creeping ever so close to his day in the Cooperstown sun. The bad news is that this time Gossage came up 21 votes shy of the 75 percent needed to ascend to the Hall. The good news is that with a much thinner ballot next year, Gossage seems to be on the cusp. In 2008, Tim Raines and David Justice are the cream of the freshman class.
 
On the ballot for the eighth year, the Goose came in at 71.2 percent, an increase from his 64.6 percent a year ago. In the history of the BBWAA Hall of Fame voting, no candidate has ever received at least 70 percent in an election without eventually gaining a place in Cooperstown. Most recently, Don Sutton (73.2 percent in 1997) and Gaylord Perry (72.1 percent) were elected the very next year.
 
Of the 17 first-timers on the ballot, only McGwire and Harold Baines received enough votes to carry them over. Five years after he retires, a player has 15 years of eligibility on the ballot, but he must receive at least 5 percent of the vote each year to maintain that status.
 
With the addition of Gwynn and Ripken to the Hall, 280 members have now been elected, including 198 former Major League players -- 105 of them by BBWAA, whose voters must have at least 10 years of consecutive membership to receive a ballot.
 
Jim Rice and Andre Dawson, who like Gossage, received more than 60 percent of the vote last year, both lost a little ground. Rice dropped from 64.8 percent last year to 63.5 percent this year, while Dawson slumped from 61 percent in 2006 to 56.7 percent this time around.
 
From the outset, though, Gwynn and Ripken were dead-bang winners.
 
Gwynn played for the 1984 and 1998 pennant-winning Padres and considers his home run at Yankee Stadium in Game 1 of the 1998 World Series to be the highlight of his stellar career.
 
Gwynn tied Honus Wagner for the most NL batting titles in history, and his career-high .394 average during the strike-shortened 1994 season is the highest to lead either league in the past 65 years -- since Ted Williams became the last of the .400 hitters when he batted .406 to lead the American League in 1941.
 
In addition Gwynn was a 15-time NL All-Star who had 3,141 hits, batted .338 and won five Gold Gloves as a right fielder in his 20 Major League seasons, all played with the San Diego Padres.
 
But he hit only 135 homers and knocked in just 1,138 runs in 2,440 games, both stats he considered to be personal shortcomings. He also never played a complete 162-game season.
 
“I thought I was going to get penalized,” Gwynn said. “I didn’t win any championships. I didn’t hit whole lot of home runs. I didn’t drive in a whole lot of people. To be one of those lucky ones to get in is a blessing.”
 
In contrast, Ripken, a shortstop and third baseman, didn’t miss a game from May 30, 1982, to Sept. 20, 1998, shattering the 2,130 record consecutive game streak once held by Gehrig, the Yankees first baseman. Ripken had 3,184 hits -- including 431 home runs -- batted .276, was twice an AL Most Valuable Player (1983 and 1991), was a 19-time AL All-Star, and won two Gold Gloves.
 
His Orioles defeated the Phillies in five games to win the 1983 World Series, with Ripken, at short, snaring the series-ending line drive hit by Garry Maddux. But Ripken’s Baltimore squad never again played in the Fall Classic during the course of his 21-year career.
 
Certainly, he captivated the hearts of baseball fans everywhere on the night of Sept. 7, 1995, at Camden Yards when the Iron Man slipped past the Iron Horse. That night, after the game against the Angels became official in the fifth inning, Ripken circled the stadium slapping hands with many of the fans as a never-ending cacophony of cheers rained down on him.
 
“That was completely spontaneous,” Ripken said about the lap. “It was Bobby Bo (Bonilla) and Rafael Palmeiro who pushed me out of the dugout and said, ‘Hey, if you don’t do a lap around this thing we’re never going to get this game re-started.’ As I started to do it, the celebration of 50,000 became very one-on-one and personal. Catching the last out of the World Series was the best feeling because there was a sense of fulfillment, completion and joy.
 
“But the best human experience of my life was that lap. At the end of it, I couldn’t have cared less if that game got started again. This (the Hall of Fame) is a wonderful moment and a wonderful feeling.”
 
Barry M. Bloom is a national reporter for MLB.com.
 
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
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