From Jeter to Judge, Halladay to Harper, here are baseball's best from the past 25 years.
Roy Halladay, an ace with the Toronto Blue Jays and Philadelphia Phillies, got 85.4 percent and will be the first posthumous inductee since Deacon White in 2013 and Ron Santo in 2012
Braden Halladay, son of late Phillies and Blue Jays ace Roy Halladay, got a standing ovation after working 1-2-3 eighth.
An autopsy report says retired star pitcher Roy Halladay had evidence of amphetamine, morphine and an insomnia drug in his system when he died in a small plane crash in Florida last year.
Roy Halladay, in the final seconds before plummeting into the Gulf of Mexico in his new sport plane two weeks ago, was climbing sharply, a federal report says, citing the plane's data.
A 91-minute "Celebration of Life for Roy Halladay" attracted more than 1,000 people to Spectrum Field in Florida. "The man made the ballplayer," Phillies owner John Middleton, one of nine speakers, said, "not the other way around."