At long last love: Larry Walker’s going to the Baseball Hall of Fame
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As usual, he was right on the edge, but in the end he prevailed--pretty much like he always did on a baseball field. Walker becomes the first position player from Canada ever to be elected to the Hall and the second Canadian, following pitcher Ferguson Jenkins, from Chatham, Ontario, who was voted in in 1991. https://twitter.com/fergieajenkins/status/1219764866422136832?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1219764866422136832&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.rcinet.ca%2Fen%2Fwp-admin%2Fpost.php%3Fpost%3D135793%26action%3Dedit It was Walker's 10th and final chance to be voted in by the baseball writers and he barely made it above the minimum 75 per cent of the votes required, but he will now have a place to go during the last week of July every summer when members of the Hall of Fame gather to celebrate. And that weekend will sit just fine for Walker, a man possessed with the ability--as was one of his mentors, Tim Wallach--to make everyone around him feel terrific. Walker is greeted by his teammate and mentor Tim Wallach, left, after Walker’s two-run home run in 1990. (Mary Butkus/Associated Press) Walker, who was born and raised in British Columbia, first gained fame as a member of the Montreal Expos and was on the team in 1994, the year a work stoppage cost the team what everybody said was a legit shot to become World Series champion. The team was dismantled the following spring, and Walker moved on to Colorado, where he excelled. But the sensational numbers he put up were said to be tainted--at least my many HOF voters--because the thin mountain air allows a baseball to travel a whole lot further, so it wasn't a fair fight--or so the experts said. But as the Sabermetrics guys proliferated across the game, so did new respect for Walker. Colorado Rockies' Larry Walker breaks from the batter's box after laying down a bunt single on a pitch from Cincinnati Reds' Mike Remlinger in the fifth inning of the Rockies' 6-4 victory in game one of a day-night doubleheader in Denver's Coors Field on July 23, 1998. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP, David Zalubowski Gradually, people began to realize that playing in Colorado was not the piece of cake everybody thought it was. And so, Walker, finally--and legitimately--has made it to Cooperstown. About time, I say. But I confess to some prejudice in this matter. At one point, when I covered the Expos in a various capacities, we were friends. Walker was one of those guys who had a lot of friends. Gregarious, generous, and a possessor of immaculate comic timing, he was a guy you wanted to be around and last night he was on Cloud Nine as he spoke to the CBC's Andrew Chang. Never mind Hall of Fame Ballplayer, Walker's always been a Hall of Game Guy. In an interview Tuesday with the CBC's Andrew Chang, Walker was on Cloud Nine. A mutual friend is Richard Griffin, who is the director of baseball media for the Toronto Blue Jays, after being the top baseball writer and columnist for the Toronto Star. Before that, Griffin was Expos media relations director, a job that saw him spend a lot of hours with Walker. Griffin joined me by phone from his home in Toronto today to talk about Walker, the person, Walker, the ballplayer, and Walker, the Canadian. ListenEN_Interview_4-20200122-WIE40
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