So your solution then, Secretary-General Ziggy?
You know I love scrapping with you Skander. It makes life fun.
First I am operating under the impression that a majority of players did juice. Don't know all of who did and who didn't, just that at least more than 1/2 did. Now it is not up to me to vote so my opinion and approach is completely irrelevant to anything, but I don't feel compelled to be fair, and just either. I can be a pompus little pipsquek if I want to, and I can be arbitrary, and maybe even a little mean spirited. So can you. I also recognize that if I post it then I open myself up to people whacking on me, and making smart ass comments, just like I do to you.
The thing I hate the most is the players who got the glory all the while knowing that they were jucing, but acted like they were without peer. I just find that despicable, so I would love to see those guys squirm. The best examples are Clemens, Bonds, Sosa, McGwire, Marion Jones, Justin Gatlin, Shawn Merriman, Floyd Landis, and at some point I think Lance Armstrong will get causght up to. Now the baseball guys weren't "breaking the rules", though technically you could say they were breaking the law, but the law argument taken to it's logical conclusion is excessive. I break the law by speeding regularly, as do a lot of people. We get caught we pay for it, if we don't, then lets not waste our time chasing boogy men. So to retroactively punishing players for things that weren't against the rules I think is too much, but I can happily take pleasure in seeing them squirm for a long time about it.
So here is how I handle it.
First my approach is who dominated their respective eras. I wouldn't just look at lifetime totals, but I would look at who were the dominate players of their era, basing this on Bill James Black Ink test. You lead the league in important categories then you are a dominant player, do it often enough and you get in. This is a reasonable way to weed out the good players who padded their career stats by being juiced. The best example is Palmerio. He has a very low Black Ink score. It would take a lot for me to consider him for the hall. The fact that he lied in front of Congress in the most egregious way possible makes it easy to ignore him. Another good example here is Gary Sheffield. He used, it is common knowledge, and he will have great career stats, but he was lower than Palmerio in Black Ink. He is out.
I would then consider Hall of Fame monitor score for those who don't meet the black ink test. This is a measure of great seasons. If a player is good with this score, but his black ink is low then it would be hard to justify a vote for him. Guys that I would let in would be guys like Larry Walker, Jeff Bagwell, Roberto Alomar. Guys that would be excluded would be guys like Jeff Kent, Edgar Martinez, Juan Gonzalez. I suspect that all of those guys with the possible exception of Alomar used, but the last 3 were good offensive players in a great offensive era, so they are out.
Then I would consider the Gray Ink test, for the number of times in the top 10, but I would consider this in the context of other HoF players and expect players to exceed the average Hall member. Guys I would vote in here are Frank Thomas, and Vlad Guerrero.
I would then consider HoF Standards, which is more of a careers total measurement, but I would evaulate those players based upon their status of the other 3 scores. A couple of examples would be Biggio and Piazza.
If I was to vote I would not vote for those who I know or believe to have cheated in the first few elections, even if they have the "qualifications". I would wait till the 15th year for Bonds. He gets in, but for 15 years he gets hounded by the media, asked the same questions over and over. I would do the same for Clemens. If Clemens had done an Andy Pettitte or Fernando Vina and just admitted to it I would probably let him in sooner, but if he wants to be an arrogant f*#k about it, after all the glory, then let him squirm and answer the same tough questions over and over and over and over and over and over. I would wait for 15 years for McGwire as well. He has had his chance to just admit to it, and if he had I could give the guy a pass sooner, BUT HE DIDN'T.
Now Griffey, Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz, Jeter, Ricky Henderson, Pujols, A Rod, Randy Johnson, Pedro, all get in, right away, unless some good info comes out before they get elected. Once you get elected tough tiddlywinks. The nest tier of players I spoke about above (Piazza, Alomar, Thomas et al) I let them in, but they have to wait some time before they do. The greatest "CHEATERS" (Clemens, Bonds, McGwire et al) wait until their last year of eligibility, unless like Bonds they act like spoiled children about not getting in the first ballot, and then I let them slip to the veterans committee.
I don't put them in a separate wing, and I don't tar players who we have no evidence cheated. If Greg Maddux cheated handle him differently, but he was a dominate player and get eventually gets in. If we have no evidence he cheated then we don't assume that he did. We also do not make Greg Maddux "pay" because he may or may not have seen or heard something. It wasn't his job to police it.