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  1. Ted Simmons | National Baseball Hall of Fame Plaque | Class of 2020 . Ted Simmons was behind the plate in 1,769 games — 1,578 were complete games! He caught 122 shutouts, was an eight-time All-Star, batted above .300 seven times, hit twenty-or-more home runs six times, and drove in 90+ RBI nine times.

  2. Sep 2, 2021 · September 2, 2021. Ted Simmons' induction to the Baseball Hall of Fame has robust support from the record book. He has the most hits in Major League history among switch-hitting catchers. His career OPS+ is higher than that of fellow Hall of Famers Carlton Fisk, Gary Carter, and Iván Rodríguez.

  3. Ted Simmons was the rarest of the rare in baseball: A catcher who could hit for power and average. Born Aug. 9, 1949, in Highland Park, Mich., Simmons excelled in both baseball and football in high school, earning gridiron scholarship offers from Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State, Purdue and Colorado.

  4. Dec 9, 2019 · This week, Simmons found closure to another decades-long quest. Twenty-five years after his first and only appearance on the Hall of Fame ballot, he has attained baseball’s highest honor with election to Cooperstown via the Hall’s Modern Baseball Era Committee.

  5. Dec 9, 2019 · Ted Simmons was on the first Milwaukee Brewers team to make the playoffs and the first to earn a trip to the World Series. Now more than 30 years after his retirement as a player, he’s received one of baseball’s biggest honors. On Sunday, it was announced Simmons was voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

  6. Dec 9, 2019 · Ted Simmons. Gregory H. Wolf. He was an eight-time All-Star, batted .300-plus seven times, and upon his retirement after the 1988 season, held the major-league record for hits (2,472) and doubles (483) by a catcher, to go along with 248 home runs and 1,389 RBIs.

  7. Feb 27, 2020 · Simmons, who played 21 seasons with the Cardinals, Brewers and Braves, made his first trip to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum since his election – along with pioneering labor leader Marvin Miller – by the Modern Baseball Era Committee in December.

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