The Modern Era Committee of the Baseball Hall of Fame elected Jeff Kent on Sunday, while steroid-tainted players Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens, along with five others, failed to gain enough votes. Kent secured 14 out of 16 votes, surpassing the 12 votes (75%) needed for induction.
Carlos Delgado received nine votes, with Don Mattingly and Dale Murphy each earning six. Bonds, Clemens, Gary Sheffield, and Fernando Valenzuela all received fewer than five votes. Kent will be inducted into the Hall of Fame on July 26 in Cooperstown, New York, alongside those chosen by the Baseball Writers Association of America, whose results will be announced on January 20.
Kent, a five-time All-Star second baseman, finished his 17-year career with a .290 batting average, 377 home runs, and 1,518 RBIs. He played for multiple teams, including Toronto, the New York Mets, Cleveland, San Francisco, Houston, and the Los Angeles . His 351 home runs as a second baseman stand as the highest in that position’s history.
Kent’s initial BBWAA vote percentage in 2014 was 15.2%, which rose to 46.5% in 2023, the highest in his election cycle. The Hall of Fame restructured its Veterans Committee in 2022, creating panels that assess players from different eras, including the modern era since 1980. These panels convene every three years, with future votes scheduled for 2026 (managers, executives, umpires), 2027 (classic era candidates), and 2028 (modern-era players).
A recent change mandates that candidates receiving fewer than five votes are barred from committee votes for three years, and repeated low votes result in permanent removal from future ballots.
In the final BBWAA voting round, Bonds received 66% of the vote, Clemens 65.2%, and Sheffield 63.9%, all falling short of the 75% needed. Bonds and Clemens have denied knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs, while Sheffield claimed ignorance of steroids in his training substances.
Bonds holds career records with 762 home runs and 73 in a single season, while Clemens earned seven Cy Young Awards with 4,672 strikeouts, third all-time behind Nolan Ryan and Randy Johnson.
The 2027 ballot will mark Pete Rose’s first appearance after his permanent suspension ends, as Hall policy prohibits anyone on the Permanent Ineligibility List from being on the ballot during suspension.
Fan Take: Jeff Kent’s election highlights the Hall’s effort to recognize deserving players outside steroid controversies, preserving baseball’s rich history. Meanwhile, the continued exclusion of Bonds and Clemens underscores the sport’s ongoing struggle to reconcile greatness with integrity, a debate that will influence baseball’s legacy for years to come.

