In fairness, the first five selected covered a period of over 40 years of baseball and were the cream of the cream.
I watched a discussion show on the MLB Network the other night before the results were announced. It was moderated by Bob Costas, who is insufferable when it comes to politics and general pomposity, but he's always been pretty good when it comes to baseball. At any rate, after hearing the panelists discuss the pros and cons of various players, I don't have a major problem with Frank Thomas getting in as his stats are very impressive. From everything I've read about him though, he personified the me-first, totally selfish approach among athletes that has evolved over the past 45 years, partly from glorifying some of the negative aspects of black behavior and partly because of the ever more mercenary nature of pro sports, including the ridiculous amounts of money the players make.
Biggio fell just two votes short in his second try and should get in next year. But what's quite interesting about the vote totals is that outside of Biggio and Piazza, the vote total of every single holdover dropped from last year to this year. That's great in the case of Barry Bonds, Lee Smith, Sammy Sosa and others, but alarming when it comes to Jeff Bagwell, whose natural progression should have been to increase from last year's nearly 60% in his first year of eligibility but instead fell to 54.3% this year.