Decision time is coming fast for who may join Jeff Kent as members of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum’s Class of 2026, and Carlos Beltran and Andruw Jones are among the strongest contenders.
As president of the Baseball Hall of Fame, Rawitch welcomes all newcomers. Jack O'Connell, BBWAA secretary-treasurer, has the pleasant job of informing those candidates who received 75 percent of the votes—from the 394 voters who have covered baseball for 10 consecutive seasons or more—that they will be joining the game’s most exclusive club. Thereafter, work will begin in Cooperstown for the summer’s Induction Weekend.
Kent’s election is a reminder that no matter how confident a player may be of his career performance indicating election, until Rawitch takes to the podium in the Hall of Fame’s plaque gallery at announcement time, it’s a guessing game for all.

Having played all outfield positions, Beltran is predominantly remembered for his time as a center fielder. Breaking into the big leagues with the Kansas City Royals in 1998, Beltran’s 2,725 hits, 435 home runs, 1,587 RBIs, and .279 average earned over the next 19 MLB seasons is a resume few who have played the game have equaled or exceeded. For those who may question the sub-.300 batting average, Beltran shares the same .279 as Hall of Famer Andre Dawson and beats fellow Hall of Famer Gary Carter’s .262 career average.
For Jones, the 2026 ballot is the ninth he has appeared on since retiring after the 2012 season playing for the New Yankees. If not elected to the Hall of Fame this year, Jones would be eligible in 2027. After his 10th year on the BBWAA ballot, Jones would need to be elected by the Contemporary Committee, the route Kent traveled to Cooperstown. Starting his career in 1996 at age 19, and playing 17 MLB seasons, he is best remembered for his 12 years wearing an Atlanta Braves uniform. Jones is regarded as among the very best center fielders of his time. During a 10-year period (1998–2007), Jones won Rawlings Gold Gloves consecutively.

Of the 27 names on this year’s BBWAA ballot that voting members needed to return to the Hall of Fame by Dec. 31, 15 are holdovers from 2025, and 12 are new candidates.
Between Bobby Abreu and David Wright, in alphabetical order, interesting cases could be built for several that have a better-than-average opportunity to have a plaque made for them in the Upstate New York village. Among those with little opportunity to gain the 5 percent of the vote that would keep them on the following year’s ballot, however, are Gio Gonzalez, Ryan Braun, Rick Porcello, and Alex Gordon.
Of the 15 returning names on the BBWAA ballot, Alex Rodriguez, Manny Ramirez, Jimmy Rollins, and Dustin Pedroia, marquee draws in their careers, will need to enter 25 Main Street in Cooperstown through the Contemporary Committee if they are to have any chance of becoming Hall of Famers.
With less competition on this year’s BBWAA ballot, as compared to 2025 when Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia, and Billy Wagner were generating the majority of attention by voters (all were elected to the Hall of Fame), 2026 should be Beltran’s year. The increase for Jones by voters can be interrupted as encouraging. And, again, with less competition in securing votes, Jones just may squeak in at 75 percent.
The 2026 Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Induction Weekend is scheduled for July 24–27. Ceremonies take place on the Clark Sports Center grounds, one mile southeast of the Village of Cooperstown.







