COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. -- A look at the players to be inducted July 24 into the Baseball Hall of Fame:---GEORGE KENNETH GRIFFEY JR.: Born Nov. 21, 1969, in Stan Musials hometown of Donora, Pennsylvania, on Musials 49th birthday. ... 6-foot-3, 195 pounds, throws left, bats left. ... In 22 seasons hit 630 home runs, sixth all-time, had 2,781 hits and batted .284, scored 1,662 runs and had 1,836 RBI, 15th all-time, and 5,271 total bases, 13th all-time. ... 13-time All-Star. ... Won 10 Gold Glove Awards and seven Silver Slugger Awards. ... Grew up in Cincinnati watching his father, Ken Griffey Sr., play outfield for the Reds. ... Selected first overall in 1987 amateur draft. ... Made major league debut on opening day 1989 against the defending American League champion Athletics and doubled off ace Dave Stewart in his first at-bat. ... In 1993, homered in eight straight games to tie the MLB record held by Dale Long and Don Mattingly. ... From 1993-2000 had seven 40-plus home run reasons, interrupted only by a broken wrist that cost him half of 1995 season. ... Led AL in home runs three times from 1996-99, hitting 56 in both 1997 and 1998. ... In October 1995, became just the second player (Reggie Jackson in the 1977 World Series is the other) to hit five home runs in a single postseason series. ... Named AL MVP in 1997, totaling 393 bases and leading the league in runs (125) and RBI (147). ... Traded by Seattle to the Reds following the 1999 season for four prospects. ... Named to baseballs All-Century Team in 1999. ... Signed nine-year deal with Reds worth $116 million. ... Hit 40 home runs and drove in 118 runs in 2000. ... From 2001-04, played fewer than 80 games per year on average due to hamstring tears, knee problems, a dislocated shoulder, and ankle tendon ruptures. ... Hit 35 homers in 2005 and captured NL Comeback Player of the Year Award. ... Reached 30-home run mark again in 2007, earning final All-Star Game selection. ... Finished career as a bench player for the White Sox and Mariners. ... With his father in 1990, became the first father-son duo to play together in MLB history and they also hit back-to-back homers in one game. ... Retired early in the 2010 season.---MICHAEL JOSEPH PIAZZA: Born Sept. 4, 1968, in Norristown, Pennsylvania ... 6-foot-3, 200 pounds, throws right, bats right. ... In 16 major league seasons hit 427 home runs, including a major league-record 396 as a catcher, drove in 1,335 runs, fourth all-time among catchers, had 2,127 hits, and posted a .308 career batting average. ... Named to 12 All-Star Games and was named 1996 All-Star Game MVP. ... Captured 10 Silver Slugger Awards at catcher and finished in the top five of NL MVP voting four times, including back-to-back second-place finishes in 1996 and 1997. ... Had baseball connections from the start. His father, Vince, grew up in the same neighborhood as Hall of Fame manager Tommy Lasorda. ... Attended the University of Miami and Miami-Dade Community College and was taken in the 62nd round of 1988 amateur draft by the Dodgers on the recommendation of Lasorda. ... A first baseman in college, Piazza switched to catcher. ... After briefly quitting the game, established himself as a top prospect in the minor leagues by hitting 52 home runs combined during the 1991 and 1992 seasons. ... Called up to the Dodgers at the end of the 1992 season and went 3 for 3 in debut. ... In 1993, had 35 home runs, 112 RBI and .318 batting average, and was unanimous selection as NL Rookie of the Year. ... From 1993-97, averaged better than 33 homers and 105 RBI and a .337 batting average per season despite shortened seasons due to the 1994-95 strike. ... Had 201 hits in 1997 to become the first player whose primary position was catcher to reach 200 hits in a single season. ... Led league in putouts four times and assists twice. ... Traded to Florida Marlins with Todd Zeile on May 14, 1998, for five players, including Bobby Bonilla, Jim Eisenreich, Charles Johnson and Gary Sheffield, and eight days later was dealt to the New York Mets for Geoff Goetz, Preston Wilson and Ed Yarnall. ... Had 32 homers, 111 RBI and a .328 batting average in 1998 and led Mets to playoff berths in both 1999 and 2000, advancing to the World Series in 2000 where he had two homers and four RBI in a losing cause. ... Topped the 30-homer and 90-RBI marks in both 2001 and 2002. ... Hit memorable two-run homer in first game at Shea Stadium after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. ... Granted free agency in October 2005, played one season apiece with Padres and As, and retired following 2007 season. Cheap Nike Tanjun Shoes . -- If this was Aaron Gordons final home game at Arizona, and it almost certainly was, then he went out in style. Cheap Nike Tanjun China . Barcelonas entertaining victory ensured the defending Spanish champions retained their share of the league lead with Atletico Madrid two rounds ahead of their meeting in the capital. Real Madrid needed a late goal by substitute Jese Rodriguez to earn a 3-2 victory at Valencia to stay in third place and three points behind its title rivals. http://www.niketanjunoutlet.com/ . "Jeff is a hard worker who was an important special-teams contributor for us last season," said Stamps GM John Hufnagel. Discount Nike Tanjun Shoes . Barcelonas entertaining victory ensured the defending Spanish champions retained their share of the league lead with Atletico Madrid two rounds ahead of their meeting in the capital. Real Madrid needed a late goal by substitute Jese Rodriguez to earn a 3-2 victory at Valencia to stay in third place and three points behind its title rivals. Nike Tanjun Cheap Outlet . NBA officials ruled the court unplayable in the Bucks final exhibition game on Oct. 25 because players were slipping, and the game was cancelled midway through the first period. Last updated: Dec. 6, 2016How consistency ratings workUsing fantasy points determined by ESPNs standard scoring, the charts contained in this column rate players based upon how consistently reliable they have been from the 2014 through 2016 seasons, a span of 47 weeks worth of games (17 weeks apiece in 2014 and 2015 and 13 thus far in 2016). For IDPs (individual defensive players), the following scoring is used: solo tackle (1), assisted tackle (0.5), sack (3), interception (3), forced fumble (3), fumble recovery (3), touchdown (6), safety (2), pass defended (1). To familiarize you with some of the terminology and column headers listed in the charts below:Start%: The players start percentage, which shows how often he earned your start in an ESPN standard league. This is his number of Starts -- those defined below -- divided by his number of scheduled team games.CR: The players consistency rating, which is calculated as his weekly standard deviation divided by his fantasy points per game average. This is meant to identify the players who were most consistently close to their weekly averages. The lower the number, the more consistent the player. Again, lower numbers are better.PPR%: The players start percentage using PPR scoring, which uses ESPNs standard scoring settings but adds one point per reception.FPTS/G: The players average fantasy points scored per game.Start: The number of times that the players point total in a given week was worthy of having had him active iin an ESPN standard league.ddddddddddddStud: The number of times the players point total ranked among the top at his position.Stiff: The number of times the players point total ranked among the worst at his position, making almost any waiver-wire option a smarter choice.These are the benchmarks for what constitutes a Start, Stud or Stiff performance:Sat: The number of times the player missed a game. Players are not charged Stiff points for sitting out, nor does it impact their overall consistency rating (CR), but it hurts their overall start percentage (Start%).Players must have at least a 20.0 percent start percentage (Start%) in either standard scoring or PPR leagues, or must rank among the top 10 quarterbacks, tight ends or kickers, top 25 running backs or wide receivers, or top 20 defensive linemen, linebackers or defensive backs, in terms of total fantasy points at their position from 2014-16, for inclusion in the chart. All defense/special teams are included, regardless of whether they met those minimums.For Consistency Ratings from only the 2016 season, click here.Quick click by position:QuarterbacksRunning backsWide receiversTight endsKickersTeam defense/special teamsDefensive linemenLinebackersDefensive backsQuarterbacksRunning backsWide receiversTight endsKickersTeam defense/special teamsDefensive linemenLinebackersDefensive backs ' ' '