The Modern Era Committee has chosen Jeff Kent for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame, while six other players, including Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens—both associated with steroid controversies—did not make the cut. Kent secured 14 out of 16 votes, surpassing the 12 votes needed to meet the 75% threshold.
Carlos Delgado received nine votes, and both Don Mattingly and Dale Murphy garnered six votes each. Players like Bonds, Clemens, Gary Sheffield, and Fernando Valenzuela received fewer than five votes. Kent’s Hall of Fame induction ceremony will take place on July 26th in Cooperstown, New York, alongside those elected by the Baseball Writers Association of America (BBWAA), whose results will be announced on January 20th.
Kent, a five-time All-Star second baseman, had a batting average of .290, with 377 home runs and 1,518 RBIs. He also led the BBWAA polls in 2023 with 46.5% of the vote. In 2022, the Hall restructured its Veterans Affairs Committee to review both the classic and modern eras (since 1980) with separate ballots for players, coaches, officials, and umpires. These committees meet every three years, with upcoming votes scheduled for modern-day managers and referees in December 2026, classic-era candidates in December 2027, and modern-era players again in December 2028.
New eligibility rules state that candidates receiving fewer than five votes become ineligible to vote on the committee for three years, and repeated low votes can bar candidates from future ballots. Bonds and Clemens narrowly missed election in the 2022 BBWAA vote with 66% and 65.2%, respectively, while Sheffield fell short in 2024 with 63.9%. Bonds has denied knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs), Clemens insists he never took PEDs, and Sheffield claims he was unaware steroids were part of his training regimen.
Bonds, a seven-time National League MVP and 14-time All-Star, holds the career record with 762 home runs and set the single-season home run record with 73 in 2001. Clemens, a seven-time Cy Young Award winner, boasts a 354-184 record with a 3.12 ERA and 4,672 strikeouts, ranking third all-time behind Nolan Ryan and Randy Johnson.
The December 2027 vote will mark Pete Rose’s first Hall of Fame ballot appearance following Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred’s decision to end Rose’s permanent suspension upon his death in September 2024. Currently, the Hall does not allow anyone on its permanent ineligibility list to be on the ballot.
Fan Take: Jeff Kent’s induction is a win for baseball purists who value on-field performance amidst the sport’s complicated era of PED allegations. This milestone underscores the ongoing struggle to reconcile baseball’s history with the integrity of the game, making it a crucial moment for fans and the future of the Hall of Fame.

