Making the cut (75 percent or more of vote)
Tim Raines (90.2 percent)
2016 Hall of Fame Inductions
Tim Raines hoping to make HOF in final year
Former White Sox outfielder Tim Raines discusses being eligible for his 10th and final year for election to the Hall of Fame
Jeff Bagwell (80.5 percent)
Bagwell finished last year with 71.6 percent of the vote, and historically, all candidates who garnered at least 68 percent of the vote eventually got in. So, 2017 looks pretty good for Bagwell, who will be on the ballot for the sixth time. Bagwell actually finished a little higher on our poll last year, at 82.35 percent. But we're guessing that in the real election, he'll continue to trend up. Bagwell's 71.6 percentage last year was way up from 55.7 in 2015. The huge jump had more to do with approximately 100 voters who no longer cover baseball losing voting privileges -- Bagwell actually only received nine more votes last year than in '15. What hasn't changed, of course, are his credentials -- a slash line of .297/.408/.540, 449 homers, 488 doubles, 1,314 hits and 1,529 RBIs. His career OPS+ of 149 ranks 37th all-time.
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MLB.com writers discuss Jeff Bagwell coming 15 votes shy of enshrinement into the Hall of Fame and how his chances look for 2017
Wait 'til next year? (50-74.9 percent of vote)
Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds will be halfway through their eligibility in 2017, and our poll, a small sampling of a much larger voting body, suggests they may have a chance to be elected before their 10 years is up. The PED cloud will continue to plague both, but in this particular survey, they're receiving considerably more support than they did in the actual Baseball Writers' Association of America vote. On that ballot, neither Bonds (44.3 percent) nor Clemens (45.2 percent) came close to the mid-60s.
Ivan Rodriguez (70.7 percent)
Clemens (68.3 percent)
Bonds (65.9 percent)
Trevor Hoffman (61 percent)
Curt Schilling (58.5 percent)
Mike Mussina (53.7 percent)
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In the middle of the 3rd inning, Barry Bonds is honored by the Giants with a video tribute commemorating his great moments with the team
Missing the cut (5-49.9 percent of vote)
Candidates are in this category because they fell under the 50 percent mark, but that in no way indicates they're not Hall of Fame worthy. Vladimir Guerrero, for example, is on the ballot for the first time and should see a huge spike on future ballots. Whether he's a Hall of Famer is debatable, but a career slash line of .318/.379/.553 indicates he'll be in the conversation for many years to come (if he lasts that long on the ballot).
Edgar Martinez (48.8 percent)
Guerrero (46.3 percent)
Manny Ramirez (36.6 percent)
Lee Smith (31.7 percent)
Larry Walker (26.8 percent)
Gary Sheffield (14.6 percent)
Fred McGriff (14.6 percent)
Jeff Kent (12.2 percent)
Sammy Sosa (7.3 percent)
Billy Wagner (7.3 percent)
The guys on MLB Network discuss Guerrero, HOF
The guys on MLB Network talk about the Hall-of-Fame chances for Vladimir Guerrero
Leaving the ballot (Less than 5 percent)
Mike Cameron, Javier Vazquez, J.D. Drew, Jorge Posada, Magglio Ordonez, Tim Wakefield, Derrek Lee, Edgar Renteria, Melvin Mora, Carlos Guillen, Jason Varitek, Orlando Cabrera, Aaron Rowand, Pat Burrell, Freddy Sanchez, Arthur Rhodes, Julio Lugo, Danys Baez.
Alyson Footer is a national correspondent for MLB.com. Follow her on Twitter @alysonfooter. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
Experts tab Raines, Bagwell for '17 HOF Class in poll
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