The 2024 Major League Baseball Hall of Fame class is an exciting one. A pair of two lifelong franchise players in Joe Mauer (Minnesota Twins) and Todd Helton (Colorado Rockies), a prodigal slugger in Adrián Beltré, and one of the best managers in baseball in Jim Leyland.
Just the other day, we watched as the 2024 Hall of Fame Class was announced. One player who will see his name end up in Cooperstown is Todd Helton, who became the second Colorado Rockies player to ever make the Hall of Fame.
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — The two players spent their entire careers playing for rivals in the National League West, yet the art of hitting was something that brought Tony Gwynn and Todd Helton together.
Fans tired of waiting for news regarding this year’s Major League Baseball (MLB) free-agent market can pivot their attention to the 2024 Hall of Fame election announcement.
On Tuesday night, longtime Colorado Rockies first baseman Todd Helton earned election into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Helton will go in to the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown in a July ceremony alongside Adrian Beltre, Joe Mauer and manager Jim Leyland.
Let's get one thing out of the way from the start. Todd Helton is a most deserving Hall of Famer. If you're still stuck on the fact that his numbers were helped by Coors Field, then you've missed the boat.
The Baseball Hall of Fame will gain three new members in the summer of 2024. So, who is heading to Cooperstown and who is not? The Baseball Writers’ Association of America revealed their votes on Tuesday, sending Adrián Beltré, Todd Helton, and Joe Mauer to the Hall of Fame.
The Los Angeles Dodgers had ties to eight players on the 2024 National Baseball Hall of Fame ballot, but Adrián Beltré was the only member of the group to be elected, along with Todd Helton and Joe Mauer.
We're feeling a little frisky on this fine Wednesday morning, so we scrolled past the regular NBA prop sections and targeted some plus-money alt lines to kick off our humpday adventure.
In his sixth appearance on the ballot, Colorado Rockies legend Todd Helton was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Of the many to congratulate Helton was another Hall of Famer in Peyton Manning.
MLB legend Todd Helton’s storied career will now forever be enshrined in Cooperstown. The Baseball Writers Association revealed Adrian Beltre, Joe Mauer,
The National Baseball Hall of Fame announced its 2024 class on Tuesday.
Former Tennessee standout and Colorado Rockies first baseman Todd Helton has been elected into the National Baseball Hall of Fame Class of 2024.
The Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA) announced the results of the 2024 National Baseball Hall of Fame voting, with Adrián Beltré, Joe Mauer and Todd Helton being nominated to Cooperstown.
The Hall of Fame announced on Tuesday that Adrián Beltré, Joe Mauer and Todd Helton have been elected by the Baseball Writers Association of America. They will be elected alongside Jim Leyland, who was selected by the Era Committee last month.
Former Tennessee Vols baseball star Todd Helton is hoping to receive some good news on Tuesday evening. The 17-year MLB veteran is currently trending toward Hall of Fame enshrinement.
We are still less than 10 percent of the way through the voting, but as of now, former Colorado Rockies first baseman Todd Helton is trending towards election into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
If some of the leading Baseball Hall of Fame prognosticators are to be believed, this is the last voting cycle that former Colorado Rockies first baseman Todd Helton will need to ensure his enshrinement in Cooperstown.
Former Colorado Rockies slugger Todd Helton is giving back to the community, teaming up with a charity to ease the financial struggles of local fans. Helton and RIP Medical Debt announced on Monday that they would band together to erase $10 million in medical debt from Colorado residents.
Things didn't go great in Karl Kauffmann's first outing, but he will get the ball again when the Colorado Rockies host the Miami Marlins in the third game of a four-game series on Wednesday night in Denver.
Five-time All-Star and three-time Gold Glove first baseman Todd Helton came up just eleven votes short of receiving entry to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum from the Baseball Writers of America Association vote Tuesday.
Scott Rolen and Todd Helton, who hit a combined 685 home runs in 4,285 major league games, are looking for one more trip around the bases. On Tuesday night, Rolen and Helton are hopeful their chance for a curtain call will arrive when Baseball Hall of Fame voting results are announced at 6 PM EST on MLB Network.
The National Baseball Hall of Fame is running low on candidates. Now, it’s easy to say, just vote in whoever is worthy but I heard a new voter recently say that he could only find six of the ten allowed.
Todd Helton may be one of the more underrated players in the history of Major League Baseball. The slugging first baseman played his entire career with the Colorado Rockies and had nothing short of a legendary career.
Narducci spent 37 years covering all sports for The Philadelphia Inquirer before recently retiring in July. Once again, Narducci reached out to see if we would be interested in publishing his Hall of Fame ballot.
Helton, a first-round pick by the Rockies in the 1995 MLB Draft, played all 17 of his major league seasons in Colorado.
Batting Stance Guy's ability to replicate batting stances and pitching mannerisms in uncanny.
How many of the career leaders in hits for every MLB franchise can you name in five minutes?
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