Who am I?

I'm from Houston, a graduate of the University of Texas, a fan of the Houston Astros and Houston Texans. But this blog will be about the "greater sports", whatever that means.

Follow me on Twitter: @lhd_on_sports

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LHD_PotW (655) MLB (191) NFL (169) NCAA (130) NFL Playoffs (74) NBA (70) NHL (64)

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Sportsman of the Week Ending 1/12/2025


What a fun weekend for football. For five straight days, we had two College Football semifinal tilts both of which went down to the fourth quarter (somehow the best teams advancing eventually produce great games).  Then three days of the Wild Card Round of the NFL Playoffs.  Not as competitive.  But the latter cemented a future Hall of Famer's status as a big game player and may be the reason his team wins its first Super Bowl in 12 years.  Baltimore Ravens Derrick Henry may have finally found a team to take him to his first Super Bowl appearance.  Or maybe more he'll be taking them.  Henry pounded the Pittsburgh Steelers defense for 186 yards and 26 carries, well over 7 YPC.  Add two TD.  And broke their spirit in a 28-14 win.  Not his first spirit broken.  His presence also opens up lanes for former and probable MVP Lamar Jackson.  You can't guard both.  And they have tight ends.  And a defense.  How do you stop the Ravens?  The Buffalo Bills will try, but Derrick Henry is the Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week.

This is Henry's third Sportsman of the Week nod, tied for most all time: 

January 7, 2018

November 15, 2015

2025 National Baseball Hall of Fame Vote

In an LHD on Sports Blog tradition, I am once again conveying my thoughts on who I would vote for if I had a BBWAA ballot for the 2025 National Baseball Hall of Fame.

The BBWAA vote will be revealed on Major League Baseball (MLB) Network on Tuesday, January 21, 2025.  The Hall of Fame vote reveal remains one of the most anticipated moments on the baseball calendar and certainly of the offseason.  Here is the 2025 National Baseball Hall of Fame Candidates Eligible for vote (via Baseball Reference with prior year percentage total for returning candidates).  75% of all ballots cast must include the players name for induction.

Induction Weekend 2024

As most readers probably know, the actual voting committee is the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA).  Prior to 2016, once a member, always a vote.  In 2016, several changes to the voting process were made (see my related Blog here) culling the list of voters to those who had covered the game in the prior 10 years.  This played out to remove a number of small vote ballots and increase percentages for those on the bubble.

There are a few overarching factors to cover before we get to the specifics.

1) A major, controversial specter over the Hall will continue to be how to handle candidates associated with Performance Enhancing Drug (PED) use in baseball primarily in the 1990s and early 2000s, an era for which many players accused are now on the Hall of Fame ballot although the number is dwindling with Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Sammy Sosa, Mark McGwire, and Gary Sheffield running out of eligibility.  There are players whose on-field performance likely merits election, however because of their associated with substances that enhanced their performance, some members (a minority) of the BBWAA have been hesitant to cast votes their way.  At least in the 75% needed for induction.  Because the official voting rules include the words "integrity, sportsmanship, and character," their reluctance is justified in my mind.  For my selection, I will not presume guilt, but if there are legal findings, firsthand accounts (including Mitchell Report) or strong anecdotal evidence of PED use, I will strongly weigh against voting for the candidate.  You can count me in the "The PED STJ" type here in a blog I wrote.  A constant I hear is "how can it be a Hall of Fame without Bonds, Clemens, Pete Rose, etc."  Their accomplishments, records, videos, etc. are more than prominent in the museum portion of the Hall of Fame and museum, but down by the plaques, you won't find them there.  Did the crime, do the time.

2) A change in consideration for me is how to assess pitchers.  Whereas the 300-win plateau with a low ERA reflective of the dead ball, or pitcher dominated, eras prior to 1970 used to be a norm, it's become increasingly more difficult to get wins in the era of specialty relievers with starters leaving the game before the end of the sixth inning many times in close games.  Conversely, however, one would think this would benefit starting pitchers ERA by seldom going through a lineup more than twice in some cases, rarely more than three times.  Also, after many years of closers not being strongly considered, Mariano Rivera became the first and only to date unanimous inductee to the Hall, along with high save count Trevor Hoffman and Lee Smith in recent years.  The doors have opened a bit in that regard.  In the end, for pitchers, I strongly weigh dominance over a reasonable period of time, along with Cy Young Awards, All-Star games, win titles, career saves, and ERA.

3) There is also first and last ballot bias.  First ballot candidates some BBWAA voters seem reticent to vote in to protect some sort of integrity of being a "first ballot hall of famer".  Evidence, three voters who did not include Ken Griffey Jr. in 2016.  Likewise, when a player is on his last ballot (as Tim Raines was in 2017Edgar Martinez in 2019, and Larry Walker in 2020) voters who previously withheld a vote tend to pay a bit more attention to their candidacy considering it's a final shot and vote favorably.

Monday, January 6, 2025

Sportsman of the Week Ending 1/5/2025


Happy New Year Sports Fans!  Many consider this the "Most Wonderful Time of the Year" with Bowl Games and NFL drama.  Not to mention NBA, NCAA Basketball, and Hockey.  The last week of the NFL had a number of teams competing for limited playoff spots, but one game had stakes including a first-round bye versus road game the next week.  The Detroit Lions and Minnesota Vikings were the first regular season game in NFL history to feature a total 28 wins.  28 wins is more than the Patriots, Browns, Jaguars, Titans, Raiders, Jets, and Giants combined.  After a defensive struggle in the first half which ended 10-6, the Detroit Lions busted out their offense in the second to defeat the Vikings 31-9 and get the first-round bye and home field advantage throughout the playoffs.  And led by a commanding performance by runing back Jahmyr Gibbs.  Gibbs thrashed the Vikings defense for a total of 139 yards on a yeoman-like 23 carries and 3 TDs.  He caught another 5 passes for 31 yards and a fourth TD.  The entire Vikings defense knew he was their scoring player and couldn't stop him.  Gibbs will be a huge part of the Lions postseason run to balance a great passing game and is the Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!