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Hoffman never pitched in college. He was a shortstop. And was AllPac10.Trevor Hoffman is all that comes to mind at first thought but I'll dig around in my brain a bit.
I'm going to guess that this is a relatively short list just because it is much harder to make the Hall of Fame if you play college ball and start your pro career "late" in the first place (and if you don't perform well in college on top of that the team that drafts you also might be more inclined to move you slowly through the minors). I thought of Hoffman specifically because I thought that relief pitcher might be the "easiest" path to do this.
Prolly nobody. Mediocre college players don’t get drafted.
Jim Thome went undrafted out of HS. Then played basketball and baseball at the JuCo level for a year before going in the 13th round.
No idea what Mike Piazza’s college stats were, but he went in the 62 round after JuCo and the U. So he’s prolly your answer. Only reason he was drafted is cuz he was Tommy Lasorda’s godson. Lowest drafted guy to ever make the hall.
Hoffman never pitched in college. He was a shortstop. And was AllPac10.
He couldn’t have been great after transferring to Miami, or wouldn’t have fell 1300 spots in the draft.I knew that Piazza had been drafted super late as a favour but I had completely forgotten that he put in some JuCo time, I was thinking that he was a high school draftee (the Blue Jays used to do this all the time with local high school seniors who were friends of the organization, they'd draft them in the throwaway rounds presumably so that they could all go down and tell their new NCAA teammates that they'd been drafted). But yeah, Piazza is definitely a decent guess for this (although I bet his JuCo numbers were still pretty good!).
I didn’t know he was that good off the top of my head. I looked it up.I knew he was not a pitcher but I was unaware that he was that accomplished as a SS.
I think I was thinking that "no stats" is even less of a track record than "mediocre stats" (although you are right, it's not the same thing).
He couldn’t have been great after transferring to Miami, or wouldn’t have fell 1300 spots in the draft.
If my research is right, only 65 HOFers have ever even played college ball.
How about MID then hall of really good?
My buddy was like a .350 hitting center fielder in D1 and didn’t get drafted.I mean I know that Miami-Dade is a top program for the level but it's JuCo ball, aren't there guys with "good" stats who never even get drafted?
Ron LaFlor comes to mind.How about MID then hall of really good?
I could be wrong. Idk.This is a higher number than I thought, I would have guessed under 50. It's difficult to build a Hall of Fame case unless you start early.
I could be wrong. Idk.
No college has put more than three guys into the Hall of Fame
Not sure if Jeter ever graduated, but he went to UofM. Did not play.I mean, I trust your actual counting way more than my "15% seems about right?" guess
I do know that bbref will seemingly list any college that the player went to no matter what age he was when he attended and even if he never played ball there but I doubt that makes any difference here, I don't know of any Hall of Famers offhand who pursued degrees during the offseason and/or after their careers had ended (and I doubt there are many, if any).
Ron LaFlore only play 9 seasons in MLB and had an 18.1 WAR.Ron LaFlor comes to mind.
He dropped out of HS without ever having played organized baseball.
Went to prison over college and stole 455 bases and made an AS team. Tigers scouted him at Jackson Prison. lol
Dizzy Dean didn’t even make it to Junior High