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1010 WINS Oh, brother: 12 MLB players who couldn't quite match their Hall of Fame siblings' success

Oh, brother: 12 MLB players who couldn't quite match their Hall of Fame siblings' success

75756A5E-120A-4932-810C-2FD980DB785E
By Jordan Cohn, Audacy Sports
WFAN Sports Radio 101.9 FM/66AM New York

Lloyd Waner recorded over 200 hits four times, was a top-15 MVP candidate four times, finished with a career batting average of .316 and is in the Baseball Hall of Fame thanks to the Veterans Committee. And, somehow, he's the worse brother of MLB's Waner family. Big bro Paul recorded over 200 hits eight times, was an MVP winner in 1927, compiled over 3,000 hits and was inducted into the Hall of Fame 15 years before his baby bro.

Sometimes, that's the case. The genetic lottery was won not once, but twice. Look at players like Phil and Joe Niekro, both 200-win pitchers, though one was clearly superior. How about Gaylord and Jim Perry, both of whom won Cy Young Awards throughout their illustrious careers? Though Pedro Martinez was obviously the better sibling, Ramon Martinez was an All-Star and extremely effective pitcher at his peak. And it's not only on the mound, nor is it only in cases of a pair of siblings: all three DiMaggio bros were good to great hitters, and the trio of Felipe, Matty and Jesus Alou could all produce in the outfields of their respective teams.

But sometimes, while one brother hit the jackpot in terms of their baseball skill set, the other brother can't quite put up the same numbers. Becoming a professional baseball player and playing on the biggest stage in the world is an impressive feat, and there's no doubt about that. But when you're playing in the shadow of an all-time great who also happens to be your sibling, your less-than-stellar performance becomes just a bit more magnified. The same goes for fathers and sons, which we've already highlighted.

Related

Like Father, NOT Like Son: 11 MLB Players Who Did Not Live Up to Family Name
Like Father, NOT Like Son: 11 MLB Players Who Did Not Live Up to Family Name

Let's look at a dozen Baseball Hall of Famers alongside their fairly forgettable sibling counterparts.

All stats retrieved from Baseball Reference unless otherwise noted.

Honus Wagner
Honus is not only the better Wagner brother, he's also got the better baseball card. Photo credit (Chris Hondros/Newsmakers via Getty Images)

Honus and Butts Wagner

Honus Wagner stats: 3,420 hits, 1,732 RBI, 1,739 runs, .328/.391/.467, 130.8 WAR
Butts Wagner stats: 59 hits, 34 RBI, 22 R, .226/.279/.307, -1.2 WAR

Albert Wagner didn't get the best draw. If it wasn't enough that his younger brother Honus, who Albert is "generally credited with teaching" the game of baseball as a child, was far superior to him on the field, it's even worse that Albert was known by the nickname "Butts." I'm not sure what that meant back in the late 1800s and at the turn of the century, but he probably wouldn't have enjoyed going around with that moniker in today's world.

He only played for one season, in 1898, and wasn't all that great at the plate or in the field. In fact, he made 46 errors in 73 games, giving him a fielding percentage of 82.9 and a -1.2 dWAR. In the now-defunct NotGraphs section of FanGraphs, there is even a poem titled "Did I Ever Tell You How Lucky You Are You're Not Butts Wagner?" Harsh.

Christy Mathewson
Hall of Fame visitors come to Christy Mathewson's plaque often, but do they know about Henry? Photo credit (Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

Christy and Henry Mathewson

Christy Mathewson stats: 373 wins, 188 losses, 2.13 ERA, 2,507 K, 79 SHO, 106.5 WAR
Henry Mathewson stats: 0 wins, 1 loss, 4.91 ERA, 2 K, -0.3 WAR

Christy Mathewson led all of baseball in strikeout-to-walk ratio not once, not twice, but nine times throughout his 17-year career. Though his career K/BB figure of 2.96 is not so impressive when considering today's game — there are 70 other big leaguers who are higher on that career leaderboard — his accuracy and ability to get batters to whiff was second-to-none in his heyday. Mathewson was a true star for the game of baseball, so much so that he was presented as such in a novel called "The Celebrant."

Henry Mathewson, unfortunately, had no novels written about him. He also didn't have a stellar K/BB ratio — in fact, in his two years and 11 innings of pitching, the younger Mathewson brother recorded two strikeouts to 14 walks. And he hit a batter.

It must have been a cool moment for the pair of siblings, however, on September 28, 1906, when Christy fired eight innings without giving up an earned run, only for Henry to come in and pitch one inning to close, also without an unearned run (h/t Mike Piazzi of SABR). His next outing didn't go as well, seeing as all 14 of his career walks came in that one game.

Both Christy and Henry sadly died young from Tuberculosis.

Joe Torre
Joe Torre was inspired by his brother Frank throughout his stint as a big league player and coach. Photo credit (Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)

Joe and Frank Torre

Joe Torre stats: 2,340 hits, 252 HR, 1,185 RBI, 996 R, .297/.365/.452, 9x All-Star, 1x MVP, 1x Batting Title, 1x Gold Glove, 57.5 WAR
Frank Torre stats: 404 hits, 13 HR, 179 RBI, 150 R, .273/.349/.372

While Joe Torre may not have been inducted into the Hall of Fame due to his playing career, he certainly received consideration. He was on the ballot for 15 years and got 22.2 percent of the vote in his final shot at eligibility, and reasonably could have been elected as a player at a later date through the Veterans Committee. Of course, he was eventually inducted via that group, though not as a player but as a manager with well over 2,000 wins and four World Series titles.

Nine years Joe's senior, Frank Torre was a solid if unexceptional hitter, with his best season coming in 1958 (.309/.386/.444 in 372 at-bats). His impact, however, was felt in plenty of ways off the field. His heart transplant in 1996 took place at the same time as Torre's first World Series run with the Yankees and served as an inspirational story line for the New York sports world. He was also known for helping lead Joe through a traumatic upbringing due to their abusive father, Joseph Sr., for his time working in the sporting goods industry and for serving as a board member of the Baseball Assistance Team (via Richard Goldstein of the New York Times).

Hank Aaron
Hank Aaron did most of the heavy lifting in setting the record, along with Tommie, for the most home runs by a pair of siblings. Photo credit (Guy Ferrell/The Palm Beach Post via Getty Images)

Hank and Tommie Aaron

Hank Aaron stats: 3,771 hits, 755 HR, 2,297 RBI, 2,174 R, .305/.374/.555, 25x All-Star, 1x MVP, 3x Gold Glove, 2x Batting Title, 143.1 WAR
Tommie Aaron stats: 216 hits, 13 HR, 94 RBI, 102 R, .229/.292/.327

If you've heard of Tommie Aaron, it's probably because you've been asked about the MLB brother duo with the most home runs as a pair. And yes, it's the Aaron bros, despite the fact that Hank did 98.3 percent of the work.

It looked as though Tommie would be a force in the major leagues based on his minor league career, however. He batted .290 across eight seasons in Triple-A ball, including his 1964 campaign with the Denver Bears — Phil Niekro and Sandy Alomar were among his teammates — in which he had a team-high 21 homers and scored 103 runs. He also won MVP in 1967 for the Richmond Braves, which eventually led to the creation of the Tommie Aaron Memorial Award for the team's best player until the franchise moved to Georgia (via Fred Jeter of the Richmond Free Press).

Of course, with a brother who is perhaps the finest player in league history, it's hard to make much of a name for yourself as a minor league stud.

Robin Yount
Robin Yount saw many, many pitches throughout his career. His brother, Larry, didn't even throw one. Photo credit (Allsport /Allsport via Getty Images)

Robin and Larry Yount

Robin Yount stats: 3,142 hits, 251 HR, 1,406 RBI, 1,632 R, .285/.342/.430, 3x All-Star, 2x MVP, 1x Gold Glove, 77.3 WAR
Larry Yount stats: 0 W, 0 L, 0 K, N/A ERA, 0.0 WAR

Okay... this is a weird one. In the top of the ninth inning in a 4-1 ballgame, with the Braves leading the Astros, Houston brought in pitcher Larry Yount for his big league debut. Something felt just a bit off for the 21-year-old reliever, though, and the only pitches he wound up logging were in warmups.

“I decided to pull myself out of the game and that was that,” Yount said (via MLB.com's Brian McTaggart). “Never in my wildest dreams did I think that would be the end of my career.”

But that's exactly what happened. Jim Ray replaced Yount before he could throw a single pitch, and that would spell the end of his career. And while Robin is in a good amount of exclusive and impressive clubs of his own, Larry can proudly say that he's the only pitcher in the game's history to appear in the statistical record books without ever facing a batter.

Happy 71st birthday to Larry Yount, brother of Hall of Famer Robin Yount and owner of the most unique one-game career in big league history. @astros https://t.co/DpxLaJsPHY pic.twitter.com/50bFUk2xxS

— National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum ⚾ (@baseballhall) February 15, 2021
Eddie Murray
Eddie Murray's Hall of Fame career did not mirror that of his brother, Rich. Photo credit (Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

Eddie and Rich Murray

Eddie Murray stats: 3,255 hits, 504 HR, 1,917 RBI, 1,627 R, .287/.359/.476, 8x All-Star, 3x Gold Glove, 68.6 WAR
Rich Murray stats: 44 hits, 4 HR, 25 RBI, 19 R, .216/.256/.333, -0.9 WAR

Steady Eddie was about as consistent a ballplayer as you'll find. He reached the 3,000 hit and 500 HR plateaus without ever recording more than 190 hits or 35 home runs in a season, but he did put up 15 seasons of at least 140 hits and 20 home runs. Only two batters — just some guys named Hank Aaron (17) and Albert Pujols (16) — have more total seasons with those stats.

There wasn't much time for younger brother Rich Murray to find that sort of consistency, seeing as he only played in the 1980 season (and four games in 1983). Though his minor league numbers were impressive — he slashed .283/.344/.425 across eight seasons in Triple-A ball — he couldn't quite put it together in the show.

Billy and Cal Ripken
Both Billy (left) and Cal (right) Ripken are recognizable baseball figures. Photo credit (Greg Fiume/Getty Images)

Cal and Billy Ripken

Cal Ripken stats: 3,184 hits, 431 HR, 1,695 RBI, 1,647 R, .276/.340/.447, 19x All-Star, 2x MVP, 2x Gold Glove, 95.9 WAR
Billy Ripken stats: 674 hits, 20 HR, 229 RBI, 287 R, .247/.294/.318, 5.9 WAR

To me, Billy Ripken is a very recognizable baseball presence. Perhaps it's the fact that "Ripken" is such a household surname in the baseball community. Perhaps it's because I've seen Billy Ripken on my TV screen as an analyst on MLB Network. Perhaps it's because of that incredible 1989 Fleer card.

30 Years Ago This Week: Billy Ripken takes that fateful picture at batting practice at Fenway Park, forgetting what he wrote on the knob of his bats that year.

The card makes it into packs of 1989 Fleer, goes from a common to $300, as kids across the nation want Billy not Cal. pic.twitter.com/e3vPuBoUCr

— Darren Rovell (@darrenrovell) September 11, 2018

But statistically, the oft-injured younger Ripken bro who "attacked the game of baseball with reckless abandon and paid the price," was no comparison at all to big bro Cal. If Cal was MLB's iron man, then perhaps Billy was MLB's glass man.

Chris Gwynn
Chris Gwynn was never quite the player that his brother, Tony, was. Photo credit (STEPHEN DUNN/ALLSPORT via Getty Images)

Tony and Chris Gwynn

Tony Gwynn stats: 3,141 hits, 135 HR, 1,138 RBI, 1,383 R, .338/.388/.459, 15x All-Star, 5x Gold Glove, 69.2 WAR
Chris Gwynn stats: 263 hits, 17 HR, 118 RBI, 119 R, .261/.308/.369, -1.4 WAR

It's not that Chris Gwynn couldn't hit. A .261 career batting average isn't bad at all, and in the season in which he got the most opportunity at the plate, he converted 287 at-bats into 86 hits for a .300 batting average. Again, not too shabby, especially when you consider that he also recorded a .997 fielding percentage in the outfield.

But when your brother's worst single-season batting average was .289 as a rookie, and that was literally the only year that he didn't bat over .300, you're not putting up much of a fight with Chris's numbers. The elder Gwynn — why is it always the older brothers who seem to be the better ones here? — was an unstoppable hitting machine who was destined for Hall of Fame greatness as soon as he stopped on the field.

Mike Maddux.
Mike Maddux had a long career, but he couldn't reach the heights that his brother, Greg, reached. Photo credit (Jed Jacobsohn /Allsport via Getty Images)

Greg and Mike Maddux

Greg Maddux stats: 355 W, 227 L, 3.16 ERA, 3,371 K, 35 SHO, 8x All-Star, 4x Cy Young, 18x Gold Glove, 106.6 WAR
Mike Maddux stats: 39 W, 27 L, 4.05 ERA, 564 K, 20 SV, 5.6 WAR

Any relief pitcher who pitches 472 games in the bigs probably sticks around that long for a reason. And that's how long Mike Maddux was able to pitch for, spending time in brief stints with nine different clubs from 1986 to 2000. It was a long career with some highs, like his two-year stretch with the Padres in which he recorded a 2.42 ERA across 178.1 innings, and lows, like his disastrous 10.13 ERA in Seattle before he was released. He's now the pitching coach for the St. Louis Cardinals, where he's found quite a bit of success.

But his achievements will never reach the heights of the younger — finally, a better younger brother! — Greg, who is four years his brother's junior and exponentially more difficult to hit. Maddux's pinpoint control and confidence on the mound reached such high levels where he would literally allow batters to have success against him on purpose in order to gain an advantage on them the next few times around. When you can do that, you've got something working for you.

Trevor and Glenn Hoffman
Trevor and Glenn Hoffman had very different careers. Photo credit (Denis Poroy/Getty Images)

Trevor and Glenn Hoffman

Trevor Hoffman stats: 61 W, 75 L, 2.87 ERA, 1,133 K, 601 SV, 7x All-Star, 28.0 WAR
Glenn Hoffman stats: 524 hits, 23 HR, 210 RBI, 247 R, .242/.291/.331, 0.3 WAR

If the Hoffman brothers had to face each other, we're assuming that the younger brother would win the matchup, oh, maybe 99 out of 100 times. Trevor, nine years younger than big bro Glenn, was a lights out closer whose 601 saves rank only below Mariano Rivera. Over 18 years, batters were held to just a .609 OPS when he was the pitcher...

...which is nearly the same as the career OPS of .623 that Glenn had against every pitcher. Debuting in 1980, Glenn had his best year with a .285 average, but could never deliver in a larger role and played his final game in 1989, four seasons before Trevor made his debut.

On July 11, 1998, @THoffman51 recorded the save in a 4-1 #Padres win over the Dodgers, who were managed by his brother Glenn. 💪

Later that season, Glenn watched Trevor and the #Padres clinch the NL West at Dodger Stadium. #SDGreatsOf98

We’ll announce a winner shortly! pic.twitter.com/Xwo6eZo873

— San Diego Padres (@Padres) May 25, 2018
Wilton Guerrero
Wilton Guerrero was a solid hitter, but his free-swinging approach harmed him more than helped him, unlike Vladimir. Photo credit (Elsa Hasch /Allsport via Getty Images)

Vladimir and Wilton Guerrero

Vladimir Guerrero stats: 2,590 hits, 449 HR, 1,496 RBI, 1,328 R, .318/.379/.553, 9x All-Star, 1x MVP, 59.5 WAR
Wilton Guerrero stats: 473 hits, 11 HR, 127 RBI, 197 R, .282/.308/.369, -1.8 WAR

A .282 career average for Wilton, you say? That's not so bad, is it? No, but when you factor in that his on-base percentage was just minimally higher and that he really did not help out defensively (-2.2 dWAR), it's not hard to see why he couldn't maintain as long a career as his Hall of Fame brother.

Vladimir, who's around four months younger than Wilton, used the free-swinging approach that Wilton used but really made the most out of it, still drawing walks as a fearsome hitter and somehow connecting with his wild swing on pitches that simply aren't meant to be hit. As we have all come to find out very quickly, he's passed that skill on to his son (and Wilton's nephew).

Vlad Jr. swinging like Sr. pic.twitter.com/Xtvzwg99W7

— MLB (@MLB) August 17, 2019
Barry Larkin
Barry Larkin was a much more talented player than his brother, Steve. Photo credit (Stephen Dunn/Getty Images

Barry and Stephen Larkin

Barry Larkin stats: 2,340 hits, 198 HR, 960 RBI, 1,329 R, .295/.371/.444, 12x All-Star, 1x MVP, 3x Gold Glove, 70.5 WAR
Stephen Larkin stats: 1 hit, 0 HR, 0 RBI, 0 R, .333/.333/.333, 0.0 WAR

Yep. Stephen Larkin played in one game. He recorded one hit. And that was it. The coolest thing about it, however, was that he shared the infield with not only brother Barry, but with brothers Bret and Aaron Boone. Two pairs of brothers, all in the same infield, all in the same game. Take that one to your next baseball trivia party!

Happy #NationalSiblingsDay!

Did you know?: On 9/27/98, the Reds became the first team ever to start two sets of brothers in the infield.

🔴 1B Stephen Larkin
🔴 2B Bret Boone
🔴 3B Aaron Boone
🔴 SS Barry Larkin

It was the only big league game of Stephen Larkin's career. pic.twitter.com/n9GqgFXN5p

— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) April 10, 2018

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