At long last, Jones will be enshrined in Cooperstown

12:19 AM UTC

ATLANTA -- ’ long wait is over. The great center fielder can now join his many former Braves teammates as immortalized citizens of Cooperstown.

Jones had reason to celebrate on Tuesday, when he learned he had been elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame. He had not received the necessary 75 percent during any of his previous eight years of eligibility. But he was included in 78.4 percent of the ballots cast by select members of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America this year.

Jones will be officially inducted into the Hall of Fame on July 26 in Cooperstown. The induction ceremonies will also honor Carlos Beltrán, who was also elected on Tuesday, and Jeff Kent, who was elected by the Contemporary Baseball Era Committee in December.

In gaining election in his ninth year on the ballot, Jones completed an unprecedented rise: The 7.3 percent of the vote he got in his debut on the ballot in 2018 was the lowest of any player to be elected by the BBWAA.

With Jones’ election, the Braves will have another chance to celebrate the most successful stretch in franchise history. The newly elected Hall of Famer was a part of 10 of the 14 consecutive division titles Atlanta won from 1991-2005. His teammates during this span included Hall of Famers Greg Maddux (Class of 2014), Tom Glavine (2014), John Smoltz (2015), Chipper Jones (2018) and Fred McGriff (2023).

Jones will also now be enshrined alongside his former manager Bobby Cox (Class of 2014) and his former Atlanta general manager John Schuerholz (2017).

While Jones’ greatest years occurred with Atlanta from 1996-2007, he also played for the Dodgers (2008), Rangers (2009), White Sox (2010) and Yankees (2011-12).

Jones seemed destined for stardom in 1996, when he homered in his first two career World Series plate appearances. He was a bright-eyed 19-year-old phenom in the second inning of Game 1, when he took Andy Pettitte deep to become the youngest player to homer in a World Series game.

Nearly 30 years later, he remains the only teenager to homer in a World Series game.

But Jones’ grand entrance wasn’t complete. One inning after dinging Pettitte, Jones homered off Brian Boehringer to join the A’s Gene Tenace as the only players to homer in their first two World Series plate appearances.

Jones quickly established himself as an elite defensive player and he helped the Braves get back to the World Series in 1999, when he drew the decisive bases-loaded walk against the Mets’ Kenny Rogers in the NLCS. His greatest season occurred in 2005, when he became the first Braves player to tally 50-plus home runs. The five-time All-Star produced seven 30-homer seasons, with his single-season best being a whopping 51 long balls.

While Jones hit 434 homers, his difference-making skills were displayed on defense.

Jones, Willie Mays, Roberto Clemente, Al Kaline and Ken Griffey Jr. are the only outfielders to be elected to the Hall of Fame after winning at least 10 Gold Glove Awards.

While winning those 10 consecutive Gold Gloves with Atlanta from 1998-2007, Jones ranked third among all MLB players with a 57.6 bWAR, behind only Alex Rodriguez (80) and Barry Bonds (71). Chipper Jones, Todd Helton and Albert Pujols each produced a 54.9 mark during this decade-long stretch.

Jones had a 24.2 defensive WAR from 1998-2007. The next-closest players were Hall of Famers Scott Rolen (15.1) and Ivan “Pudge” Rodriguez (13.5).

Yes, there was a steep decline late in Jones’ career. He had just a 95 OPS+ as he played for the Dodgers, Rangers, White Sox and Yankees during his final five seasons (2008-12). That means he wasn’t even an average offensive player (100 OPS+) as he progressed through his early 30s.

But the fact he debuted as a teenager and almost immediately produced a decade’s worth of elite success ultimately couldn’t be ignored.

A player must receive 5 percent of the votes to remain on the Hall of Fame ballot. Jones received 7.3 percent in 2018 and 7.5 percent in 2019. Now, seven years after being nearly removed from the ballot in his first two years of eligibility, he has gained baseball’s greatest honor.