CC Sabathia was a workhorse, a Yankee favorite, and a master of reinvention. Billy Wagner was the embodiment of a firethrowing reliever, who just managed the most clutch save of his career.
CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner are headed to the Baseball Hall of Fame and the pair have announced the logos that will appear ...
Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia, and Billy Wagner have been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. The players and then the public learned the results of the 2025 vote by the Baseball Writers ...
Welcome to the Hall of Fame, Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner. It's a remarkable achievement to survive the gauntlet of baseball writers to get elected to Cooperstown: After all ...
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. Newly elected Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Ichiro Suzuki, left, ...
And there probably never will be again. One moment in 2018 showed why CC Sabathia was a Hall of Fame teammate. In his last year on the ballot, Billy Wagner felt the weight of the waiting game.
With the Yankees, CC Sabathia gained immortality ... threshold for entry and joining ex-Yankee Ichiro Suzuki, ex-Met Billy Wagner and the already elected Dave Parker and the late Dick Allen ...
It’s that time of year again - the Baseball Hall of Fame announced the results of this year’s voting last evening, and Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner exceeded tbe necessary 75% ...
CC Sabathia’s career ended abruptly ... saves with the Mets before being traded to Boston in August of 2009. Billy Wagner saved 101 games for the Mets from 2006-09. (Photo by Jeff Zelevansky ...
Ichiro, CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner topped the 75% threshold for induction. They’ll join Dick Allen and Dave Parker in the 2025 class. Allen and Parker were elected by the Classic Baseball ...
Ichiro Suzuki is the first Japanese-born player voted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. He'll be joined by CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner in the Class of 2025.
falling one vote shy of unanimous when he was elected Tuesday along with CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner. Suzuki received 393 of 394 votes from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.