Beltré was a no-doubter, garnering 95.1% of the vote (366 out of 385). He’s one of 12 players with at least 3,000 hits and 400 home runs, and he complemented that with excellent defense, winning five Gold Gloves at third base. Beltré played for the Dodgers, Mariners, Red Sox and Rangers. Here are the top 10 moments of his career.
Helton spent his entire career with the Rockies, making five All-Star games, winning three Gold Gloves at first base and winning the 2000 batting title. After receiving just 16% of the vote in his first year on the ballot, Helton steadily climbed and just received 79.7% this year.
Mauer received 76.1% of the vote and, like Helton, spent his entire career with one team — something that’s becoming increasingly rare, writes Matt Snyder. The Twins‘ backstop won the 2009 AL MVP, won three Gold Gloves and is the only catcher in MLB history with three batting titles.
Billy Wagner (73.8%) fell five votes short of election but has one year left on the ballot, and Matt explained why Wagner is set up for success. Gary Sheffield (63.9%) fell off the ballot after his 10th and final year and joined the oh-so-close club.
Snyder:“Andruw Jones jumped from 58.1% to 61.6%. It’s a gain, albeit a modest one. The pro-Jones camp would’ve loved to see more of a leap forward here in his seventh year on the ballot. … Carlos Beltrán saw more than modest gains, going from 46.5% in his first year to 57.1% in his second. … If a Beltrán fan asked me how it’ll go down, I’d say to be cautiously optimistic that he makes it via the BBWAA vote, eventually. As for Jones, probably a little less optimism, but similar sentiment.”
Matt also looked ahead to the 2025 class, which will feature Wagner in his final year and several intriguing first-year candidates, including Ichiro Suzuki.
Earlier this month, Giannis Antetokounmposaid he’d boo himself, too, after a blowout home loss to the Jazz.
The 30-13 record looks much better than the underlying numbers. Milwaukee is second in offensive efficiency but 22nd in defensive efficiency; last year it was 14th and fourth, respectively. But a defensive drop off was always in the cards with Lillard arriving and Jrue Holiday leaving; Brad Botkin says Griffin’s inability to get the most out of Lillard offensively cost him his job.
The Heat were looking for an offensive boost. Terry Rozier was quietly having an excellent offensive season for the rebuilding Hornets. The seemingly perfect match came true Tuesday with Miami acquiring Rozier and sending a first-round pick and Kyle Lowry back to Charlotte.
Rozier, 29, is on track for career highs in points per game (23.2), assists per game (6.6) and field goal percentage (45.9%). Miami (24-19) is 20th in offensive efficiency this season.
The first-round pick that Charlotte received is lottery-protected in 2027 and, if it doesn’t convey that year, unprotected in 2028. The 10-31 Hornets will try to trade Lowry, 37, ahead of the Feb. 8 trade deadline and could move other veterans as well.
Herbert: “Heat: A- … Miami needs offense, and Rozier can provide it. He doesn’t need to dominate the ball, but he can initiate offense and relieve Jimmy Butler, Bam Adebayo and Tyler Herro of playmaking responsibility. … He gives Miami another player who can hunt mismatches and get buckets when opposing teams are switching and the halfcourt offense is getting bogged down.”
South Carolina upsets No. 6 Kentucky
The nation’s top-scoring offense ran into a roadblock, and Lamont Paris might just have something cooking after a rough first year. South Carolina throttled No. 6 Kentucky, 79-62, the Gamecocks’ highest-ranked win since 2010 and their largest win over a top-10 team ever.
South Carolina made 11 of 24 (45.8%) 3-pointers, with Jacobi Wright making four. He entered the night shooting 22.7% from deep.
Against a Kentucky backcourt loaded with future NBA talent, Ta’Lon Cooper was the best player on the floor, tallying 20 points, six rebounds, five assists and zero turnovers. The last player to go 20/5/5/0 against Kentucky was Tim Quarterman in 2016.
It was the defense, though, that really impressed. The Wildcats entered the game averaging 91.6 points but fell woefully short of that. South Carolina was organized defensively, allowing just seven fast-break points against one of the nation’s fastest teams. South Carolina, which won just 11 games last season, is already up to 16 this season and has matched its four-win SEC total from a year ago. This one will look really good come Selection Sunday, notes Kyle Boone.
Boone:“Entering Tuesday, South Carolina was projected as a No. 9 seed, according to CBS Sports Bracketology Expert Jerry Palm. But the resume was still relatively light. Beating Kentucky, which counts as South Carolina’s second Quad 1 win, brings some insulation from the bubble for the time being.”
Oklahoma at No. 10 Texas (W), 7 p.m. on ESPNU No. 8 Auburn at Alabama (M), 7:30 p.m. on ESPN Hurricanes at Bruins, 7:30 p.m. on TNT Suns at Mavericks, 8:30 p.m. on ABC Kansas State at No. 23 Iowa State (M), 9 p.m. on ESPN2 Thunder at Spurs, 9:30 p.m. on ESPN Blackhawks at Kraken, 10 p.m. on TNT