Chipper Jones. Vladimir Guerrero. Jim Thome. Trevor Hoffman.
There will be some long and very interesting speeches on July 30 when these four - plus Veterans Committee choices Alan Trammel and Jack Morris - are inducted into the Hall of Fame.
This is just the fourth time that four players have been elected in one class. The last time was in 2015 - and that is noteworthy. Hall of Fame voters are starting to clear the decks. Now 16 players have been elected since the shutout of 2013, the most of any five-year stretch.
It suggests voters are selecting more than four or five players on their ballots. They are dealing with the wave of eligible closers and designated hitters, a wave we all knew was coming. This will allow us to take harder looks at other players' cases instead of worrying about running out of boxes to check off (no, I'm not a fan of the Rule of 10).
The one interesting thing is that the PED candidates stalled this year. Jeff Bagwell, Mike Piazza, Ivan Rodriguez and Bud Selig - three players who were linked to PED use, and one executive who was accused of enabling the era - have been elected in recent years. It seemed to reflect shifting views about how to treat players from that era. But Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens - the two most controversial figures during that period - saw little, if any, progress toward the 75 percent needed for induction.
I thought views have softened (mine have) but that wasn't reflected with Clemens and Bonds.
Clemens received 57.3 percent of the vote, just up from 54.1. In fact, Clemens received 242 votes this year, only three more votes than last year. Bonds is at 56.4, up from 53.8. But Bonds received exactly the same amount of votes as he did a year ago, 238. Fewer ballots this year as compared to last year explains why the percentages rose.
Both players have been on the ballot for six seasons, which means they have four more chances to be voted in. With the decks cleared this year, perhaps voters will take a harder look at their cases or, at least, examine their stance on how to deal with to key players from the PED era.