Episode 31 - George Van Haltren

The Case For: A Baseball Hall of Fame Podcast

Russell Christian

September 7, 202535 min
Baseball

Episode 31 - George Van Haltren

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Episode Notes

George Van Haltren played between 1887 and 1903, retiring with a .316 batting average, 1642 runs, 2544 hits, and 583 stolen bases. He is is 1 of only 5 players with 1600+ runs, 550+ steals and a career .300+ avg. The other 4 are HOFers Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner, Eddie Collins, and Billy Hamilton.  

Additionally, "Rip" (as he was known) was perhaps the original dual threat player, and retired with a pitching record of 40-31 with a 4.05 ERA and 281 strikeouts. 

He had what can be considered two successful "two-way" seasons long before Shohei Ohtani made it seem so easy. In 1888 Rip went 13-13 with a 3.52 ERA and 139 K’s while batting .283 with 14 triples and 21 stolen bases. In 1890 he went 15-10 with a 4.28 ERA, 48 K's, and batted .335 with 84 runs, 9 triples, 54 RBI and 35 stolen bases. 

Rip had 11 seasons with 100+ runs tied for 4th best all-time. At the time of his retirement he was in the top 10 all-time in hits, stolen bases, runs, and walks. But the first Hall of Fame class was not until 1936 and Rip's career has been lost in the sands of time. Will he ever make a HOF ballot and find his long overdue day in July Cooperstown sun?