J. G. Taylor Spink Award
The J. G. Taylor Spink Award is the highest award given by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. The award was instituted in and named after J. G. Taylor Spink, publisher of The Sporting News from 1914 to 1962, and first recipient. The honoree does not have to be a member of the BBWAA, but every recipient from the award's inception through had been a BBWAA member at some time; the first recipient to have never have been a member was recipient Roger Angell.
The Spink Award is presented at the induction festivities of the Baseball Hall of Fame in the year following the selection of the recipient. Through 2010, the award was presented during the actual induction ceremony; since then, it has been presented at the Hall of Fame Awards Presentation, held the day before the induction ceremony. In recent years, the Hall of Fame has announced the finalists for the award and final vote totals. Previously, the results were kept secret.
Winners are not considered to be members of the Hall. They are not "inducted" or "enshrined", but are permanently recognized in an exhibit at the Hall's library. For several years in the early 2000s, Spink Award honorees became life members of the Veterans Committee, which elects players whose eligibility for BBWAA consideration has ended, and is also the sole body that elects non-players for induction into the Hall. Starting with elections for induction in, voting on the main Veterans Committee, which then selected only players whose careers began in 1943 or later, was restricted to Hall of Fame members. After further changes announced for the and elections, Spink Award winners are eligible to serve on all of the era-based voting bodies that replaced the Veterans Committee.
Among the well-known Spink Award winners are Fred Lieb, Shirley Povich, Jerome Holtzman, Ring Lardner, Wendell Smith, Warren Brown, Sam Lacy, and Peter Gammons.
Recipients
Note: For the years below — through 2006 — the year reflects when the recipient was announced; the award is formally presented the following year. In 2007, the BBWAA changed the year designation for the award to coincide with the Hall of Fame induction ceremony, i.e., the year after the award is announced. This makes it appear as though 2007 was skipped, though it was not.Year | Honoree | Beat |
1962 | St. Louis | |
1963 | Chicago | |
1964 | Chicago | |
1965 | Chicago | |
1966 | New York City | |
1967 | New York City | |
1968 | Detroit | |
1969 | New York City | |
1970 | New York City | |
1971 | New York City | |
1972 | New York City | |
1972 | New York City | |
1972 | St. Louis | |
1973 | Chicago | |
1973 | New York City | |
1973 | New York City | |
1974 | Chicago | |
1974 | Philadelphia | |
1975 | New York City | |
1975 | Washington, D.C. | |
1976 | Boston | |
1976 | New York City | |
1977 | Cleveland | |
1977 | Chicago | |
1978 | Boston | |
1978 | New York City | |
1979 | St. Louis | |
1979 | New York City | |
1980 | New York City | |
1980 | New York City | |
1981 | Philadelphia | |
1981 | Washington, D.C. | |
1982 | Dayton, Ohio | |
1983 | New York City | |
1984 | Kansas City, Missouri | |
1985 | Cincinnati | |
1986 | New York City | |
1987 | Los Angeles | |
1988 | Los Angeles | |
1989 | Philadelphia | |
1989 | Chicago | |
1990 | San Diego | |
1991 | Dayton, Ohio | |
1992 | New York City | |
1992 | Philadelphia | |
1993 | Pittsburgh | |
1994 | ' | n/a |
1995 | New York City | |
1996 | New York City | |
1997 | Washington, D.C. | |
1998 | San Francisco | |
1999 | Cleveland | |
2000 | Los Angeles | |
2001 | Detroit | |
2002 | Dayton, Ohio | |
2003 | New York City | |
2004 | Boston | |
2005 | Denver | |
2006 | St. Louis | |
2007 | ' | n/a |
2008 | Boston | |
2009 | San Francisco | |
2010 | New York City | |
2011 | Philadelphia | |
2012 | Montreal / Toronto | |
2013 | Dallas–Fort Worth / Philadelphia | |
2014 | The New Yorker | |
2015 | Detroit | |
2016 | Boston | |
2017 | New York City | |
2018 | Akron, Ohio | |
2019 | Philadelphia | |
2020 | Boston |