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Rickey Henley Henderson
Born: Dec. 25, 1958, in Chicago; Ht: 5-feet-10; Wt: 195 pounds
Threw left-handed, batted right-handed
Major-league career: Played for Oakland (AL) from 1979-84, 1989-93, 1994-95, 1998; New York (AL) 1985-89; Toronto (AL) 1993; San Diego (NL) 1996-97, 2001; Anaheim (AL) 1997; New York (NL) 1999-2000; Seattle (AL) 2000; Boston (AL) 2002; Los Angeles (AL) 2003.
Career highlights: Ten-time all-star with .279 lifetime batting average, 3,055 hits and 297 homers. ... led AL in steals 12 times and holds the all-time record for steals with 1,406, runs scored (2,295), unintentional walks (2,129), and homers leading off games (81). ... won 1990 AL Most Valuable Player award and won World Series with 1989 Athletics and 1993 Blue Jays. ... in 1980 became the first AL player to steal 100 or more bases in a single season with 100 to break Ty Cobb's record of 96 steals in 1915. ... in 1982 set modern major-league record for stolen bases with 130 to break Lou Brock's mark of 118 and also set record for most times caught stealing at 42. ... in 1983 went over 100 steals (108) for the third time in his career. ... in 1986 his 146 runs led AL and was the highest total in the major leagues since Ted Williams scored 150 in 1949; also became the first AL player to hit 20 homers and steal 50 bases in a season and set an AL season record with 9 leadoff homers. ... in 1989 postseason won ALCS MVP honors with Oakland and in nine games hit .441, scored 12 runs, had 15 hits, eight for extra bases, walked 9 times, had 8 RBIs and 11 steals. ... in 1990 hit a career-best .325 and matched his career high with 28 homers, led the AL in runs (119), on-base percentage (.439) and steals (65), was second with a .577 slugging percentage to win MVP honors.
James Edward Rice
Born: March 8, 1953 in Anderson, S.C.; Ht.: 6-2; Wt.: 205 pounds; Threw and batted right-handed.
Major-league career: Played for Boston (AL) 1974-89.
Career highlights: Had 2,452 hits, 373 doubles, 79 triples, 382 home runs and 1,451 RBIs. ... hit at least 20 homers in 11 of his first 12 full seasons and led the AL in total bases four times, homers three times, and RBI and slugging percentage twice each. ... eight-time all-star. ... won AL MVP in 1978 when he collected 406 total bases, the most in the AL since 1937, hitting .315 and leading the league in home runs (46), RBI (139), hits (213), triples (15) and slugging average (.600). ... one of only two AL players ever to lead the league in both triples and home runs in the same season and only player to lead the major leagues in triples, home runs and RBI in the same season. ... in 1986 batted .324 with 200 hits and 110 RBI and collected 14 hits, including 2 home runs, scored 14 runs and drove in six in 14 postseason games.
Joe "Flash" Gordon
Born: Feb. 18, 1915; Died: April 14, 1978; Ht.: 5-10; Wt.: 180 pounds
Threw and batted right-handed.
Major-league career: Played for New York (AL) 1938-43, 1946; Cleveland (AL) 1947-50
Career highlights: Made major-league debut April 18, 1938, and hit 25 home runs with a slugging percentage of .502 in his rookie season with the Yankees. ... hit .322 in 1942 en route to winning AL MVP award. ... nine-time all-star. ... hit 20 or more home runs in six seasons and drove in at least 100 runs in four seasons. ... won four World Series titles with the Yankees and one with the Indians in 1948.
Tony Kubek
Recipient of Ford C. Frick Award, presented annually for major contributions to baseball broadcasting. ... four-time all-star shortstop during a nine-year big-league career with the New York Yankees from 1957-65. ... AL rookie of the year in 1957 and appeared in six World Series. ... served as an analyst for the NBC Game of the Week, the Toronto Blue Jays and Yankees for 30 years. broadcast 11 World Series and 14 AL championship series for NBC as well as 10 All-Star Games.
Nick Peters
Recipient of J.G. Taylor Spink Award, presented annually for meritorious contributions to baseball writing ... San Francisco native was a traveling beat writer for the Giants for more than three decades. ... has covered more Giants games than anyone in a career that spanned 47 seasons (1961-2007).
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. - Jim Rice's icy glare melted into a wide smile. Brash, flamboyant Rickey Henderson was humbled by it all.
The former left fielders were inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday along with the late Joe Gordon, and Henderson, baseball's all-time leading basestealer, was briefly overcome before evoking some hearty laughs.
"My journey as a player is complete," Henderson said. "I am now in the class of the greatest players of all time, and at this moment I am very humbled."
Born in Chicago on Christmas Day 1958, Henderson moved with his family to California when he was 7 years old and became a three-sport star at Oakland Technical High School. Football was his forte and he received numerous scholarships. He was persuaded to turn them down for a shot at baseball.
"My dream was to play football for the Oakland Raiders," Henderson said. "But my mother thought I would get hurt playing football, so she chose baseball for me. I guess moms do know best."
Henderson led the AL in steals 12 times and holds the record for steals with 1,406, runs scored with 2,295, unintentional walks with 2,129 and homers leading off a game with 81.
He said he owed much of that to a trick played by his former Babe Ruth coach, Hank Thompson.
"He tricked me into playing by coming to pick me up with a glazed doughnut and a cup of hot chocolate," said Henderson, who played for nine teams during his 25-year career. "That was the way he would get me up and out of bed."
Henderson said a high school counselor who needed players for the baseball team provided even more spark.
"She would pay me a quarter every time I would get a hit, when I would score or stole a base," he said. "After my first 10 games, I had 30 hits, 25 runs scored and 33 steals. Not bad money for a kid."
Henderson was drafted by the Oakland Athletics on the fourth round in 1976 and made his major-league debut with Oakland in late June 1979. It was a day Henderson said he would never forget.
"That was the most thrilling time of my life," Henderson said, remembering former A's owner Charlie Finley. "Charlie, wherever you're at, and that donkey, I want to say thank you for that opportunity."
When Finley hired Billy Martin as manager in 1980, Henderson had the perfect partner in crime. "Billyball" - the aggressive attack Martin relished - helped catapult Henderson to stardom.
Just the thought of that time forced Henderson to halt briefly in his speech when remembering Martin, who was killed in a car crash on Christmas 1989.
"Billy always got the most out of me," he said. "Billy, I miss you so much and I wish you were here today."
In 1980 Henderson became the first AL player to steal 100 or more bases in a single season with 100 to break Ty Cobb's record of 96 steals in 1915. Two years later he set the modern major-league record for stolen bases with 130, breaking former Cardinals star Lou Brock's mark of 118.
While Henderson, now 50, was just the 44th player elected to the Hall in his first year of eligibility, Rice had to wait until his final year of eligibility to be selected.
"It doesn't matter that the call came 15 years later," Rice said. "What matters is that I got it.
"It's hard to comprehend. I am in awe to be in this elite company and humbled to be accepting this honor. I cannot think of anywhere I'd rather be than to be right here, right now, with you and you," Rice said, pointing at the 50 Hall of Famers on stage behind him and then at the fans. "Thank you."
Playing at a time when offensive numbers paled in comparison to the past two decades, the so-called steroid era, Rice batted .298 with 382 home runs and 1,451 RBI from 1974-89.
He drove in 100 or more runs eight times, batted over .300 seven times, and topped 200 hits four times. And he's the only player in major-league history with at least 35 homers and 200 hits in three consecutive seasons (1977-79).
And he has known for a long time the reason he had to wait so long.
"The media often asked me about my players (teammates)," said Rice, now 56. "I refused to be the media's mouthpiece. I came to Boston to play professional baseball, and that's what I did. And I did it well."
The day's most poignant moment came at the end of the acceptance speech given by Gordon's daughter, Judy. Gordon died in 1978 at age 63 and requested that he not have a funeral.
"We consider Cooperstown and the National Baseball Hall of Fame as his final resting place, a place he'll be honored forever," Judy Gordon said, tears welling in her eyes. "
Gordon won the 1942 AL MVP, beating out Triple Crown winner Ted Williams, and was an all-star nine times in 11 seasons, leading the league in assists four times and in double plays three times.
Nicknamed "Flash" because of his quick feet, Gordon was the first AL second baseman to hit 20 home runs in a season - he did it seven times - and still holds the league mark for career homers by a second baseman (246).
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