ThePhiladelphia Phillies Wall of Fame, formerly known as thePhiladelphia Baseball Wall of Fame and officially known as theToyota Phillies Wall of Fame for sponsorship reasons, is an exhibit located atCitizens Bank Park inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania. The exhibit is a collection ofplaques that honor players and personnel who made significant contributions tobaseball in Philadelphia, specifically with either thePhiladelphia Phillies or the formerPhiladelphia Athletics. Each person inducted into theWall of Fame is honored with a metal plaque showing the person's face, their position with and years of service to either team, along with a summary of the person's notable accolades and contributions during their career.
As of 2024, 73 individuals have been inducted into the Wall of Fame, 48 of which were affiliated with the Phillies, and 25 with the Athletics.
ThePhiladelphia Baseball Wall of Fame was created in 1978 as an exhibit display located in the 200 Level ofVeterans Stadium. Originally, the Phillies honored notable figures from theirfranchise history, along with notable members of the formerPhiladelphia Athletics, which played in Philadelphia from 1901 to the time of their relocation in 1954. The first induction ceremony took place on September 8, 1978, where Phillies pitcherRobin Roberts and Athletics managerConnie Mack were inducted as the first two members of the Wall of Fame.[1]
The Phillies continued to annually induct one notable member of their franchise and one notable member of the Athletics into the Wall of Fame (with the exception of 1983, when the Phillies only inducted the 13 members of their Centennial Team).[2] However, once Veterans Stadium closed in 2003, the plaques of Phillies members were moved to theAshburn Alley section of the newCitizens Bank Park, while the plaques of Athletics members were relocated to the Philadelphia Athletics Historical Society building inHatboro, Pennsylvania. When Citizens Bank Park was completed in 2004, a single plaque listing all of the Athletics inductees was attached to a statue of Connie Mack located outside the west side of the stadium.[3][4] Since the move to Citizens Bank Park, the Phillies no longer induct members of the Philadelphia Athletics to the Wall of Fame, and have renamed the exhibit to the "Phillies Wall of Fame".
After the Philadelphia Athletics Historical Society closed its Hatboro location in 2013, the Athletics’ plaques were put on display at Spike's Trophies in Philadelphia, among other memorabilia of the team.[5]
On April 10, 2017, it was announcedPete Rose would be that year's inductee into the Wall of Fame (Rose is already a member of the 1983 Centennial Team, but was planned to be honored with his own individual plaque).[6] However, on August 12, 2017, just ten days before the ceremony, the Phillies announced Rose would not be inducted amid recent statutory rape allegations.[7] The Phillies would ultimately not induct a new member of the Wall of Fame for 2017, and instead honored past members.
Prior to the 2018 season, Ashburn Alley was renovated, and the Phillies Wall of Fame was moved to a new location behind the left-field scoreboard, across from the left-field entrance of the stadium.[8] Along with the plaques, the new plaza features other aspects of Phillies history, including large replicas of the team's World Series trophies from1980 and2008, statues of its retired numbers, and banners commemorating the team's World Series titles, league pennants, division titles, and wild card berths.[9]
In 2022, the Phillies broke from their tradition of only inducting one member per year when they honored outfielderBake McBride and pitcherRon Reed, both members of the1980 championship team.[10] The next year, this followed with the induction of three members: owner and presidentRuly Carpenter, general managerJohn Quinn, and third basemanScott Rolen.[11]
Originally, the goal of the Wall of Fame was to induct the greatest players in Phillies and Athletics history, with the criteria requiring eligible players to be retired and have played at least four years with either the Phillies or the Athletics. However, exceptions have been made for non-players who have made significant contributions to the organization. Connie Mack, the Athletics' first inductee, had an 11-year playing career in theNational League and thePlayers' League,[12] but is most remembered for hismanagerial career,[13] and was honored as such on the Wall. Members have been inducted for contributions in more than one area;Paul Owens, inducted in 1988, spent 48 years as a member of the Phillies organization, contributing as ascout, manager,general manager, andteam executive.[14] The Phillies have inducted fourfirst basemen, foursecond basemen, fivethird basemen, threeshortstops, oneutility infielder, threecatchers, 21outfielders, 18pitchers, seven managers, one general manager, onecoach, two team executives, and twosportscasters. 25 members of the Wall of Fame are also members of theBaseball Hall of Fame, and all of the inductees in the first four seasons from both teams are hall of famers.Del Ennis was the first non-hall-of-famer to be inducted.
In 1983, rather than inducting a player into the Wall of Fame, the Phillies selected their Centennial Team,[87] commemorating the best players of the first 100 years in franchise history. The Centennial Team includes players from several periods in Phillies history. The team is honored with a plaque listing the names of all players selected at the left end of the Wall of Fame. 11 members of the Centennial Team also have their own individual plaques on the Wall, withJim Konstanty andPete Rose being the only players on the team without ones.
^On April 10, 2017, it was announcedPete Rose would be that year's inductee into the Wall of Fame (Rose is already a member of the 1983 Centennial Team, but was planned to be honored with his own individual plaque).[6] However, on August 12, 2017, just ten days before the ceremony, the Phillies announced Rose would not be inducted amid recent statutory rape allegations.[7] The Phillies would ultimately not induct a new member of the Wall of Fame for 2017, and instead honored past members.
a The induction committee judges entrants based on "longevity, ability, contributions to the [team] and baseball, character and special achievements".[88] The committee has consisted of a variety of personnel, including team executives and members of the media.[89]
b This denotes that the player's number has been retired by his respective team.[15] The Athletics have not retired any numbers from those who played their careers in Philadelphia.[90]