Profiles in Sports   /     Episode #70 (2/20/17): Dave Van Horne

Description

It took ten years and plenty of voters to be convinced otherwise, but Tim Raines made it to the Hall of Fame on his last try on the writer’s ballot. The premiere National League lead-off hitter of the 1980s was a seven-time All-Star with the Montreal Expos, a batting champion in 1986, and credited with 808 stolen bases – the fourth-most in major league history. Many factors were responsible for the delayed induction. Ford C. Frick winner Dave Van Horne, who was behind the mic for Raines' entire tenure in Montreal, lends his perspective on the "Rock" had on the Expos franchise. Photo courtesy of Getty Images Audio courtesy of MLB.com

Subtitle
It took ten years and plenty of voters to be convinced otherwise, but Tim Raines made it to the Hall of Fame on his last try on the writer’s ballot. The premiere National League lead-off hitter of the 1980s was a seven-time All-Star with the Montreal
Duration
1180
Publishing date
2017-02-21 22:21
Link
https://audioboom.com/posts/5632655
Contributors
  Brian Wright
author  
Enclosures
https://audioboom.com/posts/5632655.mp3?modified=1487716003&source=rss&stitched=1
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

It took ten years and plenty of voters to be convinced otherwise, but Tim Raines made it to the Hall of Fame on his last try on the writer’s ballot. The premiere National League lead-off hitter of the 1980s was a seven-time All-Star with the Montreal Expos, a batting champion in 1986, and credited with 808 stolen bases – the fourth-most in major league history.

Many factors were responsible for the delayed induction. Ford C. Frick winner Dave Van Horne, who was behind the mic for Raines' entire tenure in Montreal, lends his perspective on the "Rock" had on the Expos franchise.

Photo courtesy of Getty Images Audio courtesy of MLB.com