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Carlos Beltran and Andruw Jones Earn Baseball Hall of Fame Induction
Sportsnet.ca
January 20, 2026•1 day ago

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Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones were elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Beltrán, a nine-time All-Star, received 84.2% of the vote, while Jones, a five-time All-Star and ten-time Gold Glove winner, secured 78.4%. They will be inducted on July 26 alongside Jeff Kent.
NEW YORK — Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones, centre fielders who excelled at the plate and with their gloves, were elected to baseball's Hall of Fame on Tuesday.
Beltrán, making his fourth appearance on the ballot, received 358 of 425 votes for 84.2 per cent from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America, 39 above the 319 needed for the 75 per cent threshold.
Jones, in the ninth of 10 possible appearances, was picked on 333 ballots for 78.4 per cent.
Beltrán moved up steadily from 46.5 per cent in 2023 to 57.1 per cent the following year and 70.3 per cent in 2025, when he fell 19 votes short as Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner were elected.
Beltrán was hired as the New York Mets' manager on Nov. 1, 2019, then fired on Jan. 16 without having managed a game, three days after he was the only Astros player mentioned by name in a report by Major League Baseball regarding the team’s illicit use of electronics to steal signs during Houston’s run to the 2017 World Series championship.
Jones received just 7.3 per cent in his first appearance in 2018 and didn’t get half the total until receiving 58.1 per cent in 2023. He increased to 61.6 per cent and 66.2 per cent, falling 35 votes short last year.
They will be inducted at Cooperstown, New York, on July 26 along with second baseman Jeff Kent, voted in last month by the contemporary era committee.
BBWAA members with 10 or more consecutive years in the organization were eligible to vote.
Chase Utley (59.1 per cent) was the only other candidate to get at least half the vote, improving from 39.8 per cent last year. He was followed by Andy Pettitte at 48.5 per cent, an increase from 27.9 per cent last year, and Félix Hernández at 46.1 per cent, up from 20.6 per cent.
Cole Hamels topped first-time candidates at 23.8 per cent. The other first-time players were all under five per cent and will be dropped from future votes.
Steroids-tainted players again were kept from the hall. Alex Rodriguez received 40 per cent in his fifth appearance, up from 7.1 per cent, and Manny Ramirez 38.8 per cent in his 10th and final appearance.
David Wright increased to 14.8 per cent from 8.1 per cent.
There were 11 blank ballots.
A nine-time All-Star, the switch-hitting Beltrán batted .279 with 435 homers and 1,587 RBIs over 20 seasons with Kansas City (1999-2004), Houston (2004, ’17), the Mets (2005-11), San Francisco (2011), St. Louis (2012-13), the New York Yankees (20014-16) and Texas (2016). He had 311 homers hitting left-handed and 124 batting right-handed.
Beltrán was the 1999 AL Rookie of the Year and won three Gold Gloves, also hitting .307 in the post-season with 16 homers and 42 RBIs in 65 games.
Jones batted .254 with 434 homers, 1,289 RBIs and 152 stolen bases in 17 seasons with Atlanta (1996-2007), the Los Angeles Dodgers (2008), Texas (2009), the Chicago White Sox (2010) and the Yankees (2011-12). He finished his career with the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles of Japan’s Pacific League from 2013-14.
His batting average is the second-lowest for a position player voted to the Hall of Fame, just above the .253 of Ray Schalk, a superior defensive catcher, and just below the .256 of Harmon Killebrew, who hit 573 homers.
A five-time All-Star, Jones earned 10 Gold Gloves. He joins Braves teammates Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, John Smoltz and Chipper Jones in the hall, along with manager Bobby Cox.
In the 1996 World Series opener at Yankee Stadium, Jones, at 19 years, 5 months, became the youngest player to homer in a Series game, beating Mickey Mantle’s old mark by 18 months. Going deep against Pettitte in the second inning and Brian Boehringer in the third of a 12-1 rout, Jones became the second player to homer in his first two Series at-bats after Gene Tenace in 1972.
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