Ford C. Frick Award

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox sports award The Ford C. Frick Award is presented annually by the Baseball Hall of Fame in the United States to a broadcaster for "major contributions to baseball".Template:Efn It is named for Ford C. Frick, former commissioner of baseball. Prior to his career as an executive, Frick was a baseball writer and occasional broadcaster; he gained fame as a ghostwriter for Babe Ruth in the 1920s. The award was created in 1978, and named in tribute to Frick following his death that year.

Recipients of the award are not members of the Hall of Fame—they are not "inducted" or "enshrined", they are not "Hall of Fame broadcasters", and there is no "broadcasters' wing" of the Hall of Fame—they are officially "honorees."[1] The award is given at a separate ceremony from the induction ceremony on Hall of Fame weekend.[2] As with recipients of the BBWAA Career Excellence Award for baseball writing, the honorees are permanently recognized in a "Scribes & Mikemen" exhibit in the Hall's library.[3]

Selection

Detail on the selection process for the award when it was first established is lacking.

From Template:Bhofy to Template:Bhofy, fans were allowed to vote for three of the award's ten annual nominees; in the final years of fan voting, it was conducted on the Hall's Facebook page. Through Template:Bhofy, seven candidates were selected by a committee consisting of previous Frick Award winners and broadcast historians and columnists, which also determined the final recipient. Beginning with the Template:Bhofy award, the final election committee no longer selected any of the finalists; that became the role of a Hall of Fame research committee.[4]

2014 changes

Other changes in the selection process were also announced for the 2014 award; these changes were similar to those instituted in 2010 for Veterans Committee balloting. From 2014 to 2016, candidates were considered every third year, based on the era in which they made their most significant contributions:[4]

  • "High Tide Era": Mid-1980s to present, including the rise of regional cable networks. Individuals from this era were considered for the 2014 award.
  • "Living Room Era": Mid-1950s to early 1980s, reflecting the rise of television. Individuals from this era were considered for the 2015 award.
  • "Broadcasting Dawn Era": Origin of broadcasting to early 1950s. Individuals from this era were first considered for the 2016 award.

2017 changes

The Hall of Fame announced further changes to the selection process in 2016 that took effect immediately, with the first award affected by these changes being that for 2017. Fan voting was eliminated, and the final ballot was cut from 10 to 8. Candidates were still considered every third year, but in mostly different categories:[5]

  • "Current Major League Markets": Broadcasters who made their mark with one or more specific MLB teams. These individuals were first considered for the 2017 award.
  • "National Voices": Broadcasters who made their contributions with national media. These individuals were first considered for the 2018 award.
  • "Broadcasting Beginnings": Pioneers of baseball broadcasting, roughly covering the time span of the previous "Broadcasting Dawn Era". These individuals were first considered for the 2019 award.

2022 changes

In April 2022, the Hall of Fame announced further changes to the Frick Award selection process. The size of the ballot was restored to 10 nominees, while also requiring that at least one candidate be a foreign-language broadcaster.[6] The election cycle was also revised, effective with the 2023 balloting: four consecutive elections will have a composite ballot of local and national broadcasters, followed by one election for broadcasters whose careers ended prior to 1994 (the introduction of the Wild Card era).[6] Thus, recipients will be selected per the following balloting rotation, which will then repeat:[6]

  • Composite ballot (local and national voices): Template:Bhofy, 2024, 2025, 2026
  • Pre-Wild Card Era ballot: 2027

Veterans Committee participation

For several years in the early 2000s, Frick Award honorees also became life members of the Veterans Committee, which considers candidates for Hall of Fame induction who are not eligible for the regular voting by the Baseball Writers' Association of America – specifically, players no longer on the BBWAA ballot and all non-players. However, starting with the Template:Bhofy elections, voting for players on the main Veterans Committee ballot was restricted to Hall of Fame members. After further changes announced for the Template:Bhofy elections, Frick Award winners became eligible to serve on the voting bodies that replaced the Veterans Committee that consider candidates from different eras of baseball.

Recipients

File:Mel Allen NYWTS.jpg
Mel Allen, 1978 co-recipient
File:Harry Caray 1988.jpg
Harry Caray, 1989 recipient
File:Jaime Jarrin 2009.jpg
Jaime Jarrín, 1998 recipient
File:Bob Costas.JPG
Bob Costas, 2018 recipient
Year Honoree Primary affiliation(s)
1978 Script error: No such module "Sort". New York Yankees
Script error: No such module "Sort". Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Yankees
1979 Script error: No such module "Sort". Chicago White Sox, Chicago Cubs, Mutual
1980 Script error: No such module "Sort". New York/San Francisco Giants
1981 Script error: No such module "Sort". Detroit Tigers
1982 Script error: No such module "Sort". Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers, NBC, CBS Radio
1983 Script error: No such module "Sort". Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox
1984 Script error: No such module "Sort". Boston Red Sox, NBC
1985 Script error: No such module "Sort". New York Yankees, New York Mets
1986 Script error: No such module "Sort". Pittsburgh Pirates
1987 Script error: No such module "Sort". St. Louis Cardinals, CBS
1988 Script error: No such module "Sort". New York Mets
1989 Script error: No such module "Sort". St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago White Sox, Chicago Cubs
1990 Script error: No such module "Sort". Philadelphia Phillies, Philadelphia Athletics
1991 Script error: No such module "Sort". St. Louis Cardinals, NBC
1992 Script error: No such module "Sort". Houston Astros
1993 Script error: No such module "Sort". Baltimore Orioles
1994 Script error: No such module "Sort". New York Mets
1995 Script error: No such module "Sort". Washington Senators, NBC
1996 Script error: No such module "Sort". Minnesota Twins
1997 Script error: No such module "Sort". Cleveland Indians
1998 Script error: No such module "Sort". Los Angeles Dodgers
1999 Script error: No such module "Sort". Washington Senators
2000 Script error: No such module "Sort". Cincinnati Reds
2001 Script error: No such module "Sort". Florida Marlins
2002 Script error: No such module "Sort". Philadelphia Phillies
2003 Script error: No such module "Sort". Milwaukee Brewers, ABC, NBC
2004 Script error: No such module "Sort". San Francisco Giants, Oakland Athletics
2005 Script error: No such module "Sort". San Diego Padres
2006 Script error: No such module "Sort". Houston Astros, CBS Radio
2007 Script error: No such module "Sort". Kansas City Royals
2008 Script error: No such module "Sort". Seattle Mariners
2009 Script error: No such module "Sort". Toronto Blue Jays, New York Yankees, NBC
2010 Script error: No such module "Sort". Baltimore Orioles, San Francisco Giants, ESPN
2011 Script error: No such module "Sort". Montreal Expos, Florida Marlins
2012 Script error: No such module "Sort". New York Mets, ABC, CBS, Fox
2013 Script error: No such module "Sort". Toronto Blue Jays
2014 Script error: No such module "Sort". Texas Rangers
2015 Script error: No such module "Sort". California Angels, San Diego Padres, NBC
2016 Script error: No such module "Sort". NBC Radio
2017 Script error: No such module "Sort". Oakland Athletics
2018 Script error: No such module "Sort". NBC, MLB Network
2019 Script error: No such module "Sort". Brooklyn Dodgers, Mutual
2020 Script error: No such module "Sort". Chicago White Sox
2021 Script error: No such module "Sort". Cincinnati Reds, San Francisco Giants, ABC
2022 Script error: No such module "Sort". Cleveland Indians
2023 Pat Hughes Milwaukee Brewers, Chicago Cubs
2024 Joe Castiglione Boston Red Sox
2025 Tom Hamilton Cleveland Indians/Guardians
2026 Joe Buck St. Louis Cardinals, Fox

Source:[7][8]

See also

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Notes

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References

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