COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Baseball’s Hall of Fame is restructuring its veterans committees for the third time in 12 years.
The Hall said Friday it is revamping the panels into the Contemporary Baseball Era from 1980 on and Classic Baseball Era for before 1980. The Contemporary Baseball Era will hold a separate ballot for players and another for managers, executives and umpires.
Each ballot will include eight candidates to be considered by 16 voters, down from 10 candidates previously. A vote of at least 75% remains necessary for election.
Starting in January, the player ballot will include candidates who have been retired for 16 seasons — one year after exhausting eligibility for the Baseball Writers’ Association of America ballot.
Each committee will meet every three years, starting with Contemporary Baseball/Players in December, Contemporary Baseball/Managers-Umpires-Executives in December 2023 and Classic Baseball in December 2024.
In 2010, the Hall established three committees: Pre-Integration (1871-1946), Golden (1947-72) and Expansion (starting in 1973). That was changed in 2016 to four committees: Early Baseball (1871-1949), Golden Days (1950-69), Modern Baseball (1970-87) and Today’s Game (1988-2016).
The Ford C. Frick Award for a distinguished baseball broadcaster will have 10 candidates, up from eight, with at least one required to be a foreign-language broadcaster. Local and national broadcasters will be considered in four consecutive years, from the 2023 to 2026 awards, followed by a pre-wild-card era (1994) ballot in 2027, with the cycle to repeat.
Since 2016, the Frick Award ballot had rotated among Major League Markets (team-specific announcers), National Voices (broadcasters whose contributions were realized on a national level) and Broadcasting Beginnings (early team voices and pioneers of baseball broadcasting).