The Baseball Writers’ Association of America elected four new members to the National Baseball Hall of Fame on Tuesday evening, Mariano Rivera, Roy Halladay, Edgar Martinez, and Mike Mussina.

Those four will join Harold Baines and Lee Smith, both voted in by the Hall of Fame’s Era Committee in December, in Cooperstown, New York this July for their inductions.

Mariano Rivera became the first player in the history of baseball to be unanimously elected to the Hall of Fame after being named on all 425 ballots.

Over the Panamanian native’s 19-year major-league career, Rivera’s cut fastball led him to an MLB-record 652 saves with a 2.21 earned-run average, 1,173 strikeouts, 286 walks, a 2.76 fielding independent pitching rating, 1.00 WHIP, and a 4.10 strikeouts-to-walks ratio over 1,115 appearances (all but 10 in relief).

Rivera was a 13-time All-Star and five-time World Series champion with the New York Yankees, whom he spent his entire career with.

Edgar Martinez, in his final year on the ballot, was named on 85.4 percent of the BBWAA’s ballots (363 votes) to become the first full-time designated hitter to gain election to the Hall of Fame.

Martinez, born in New York then raised in Puerto Rico, was a seven-time All-Star, five-time Silver Slugger Award winner, and two-time American League batting champion (1992, 1995) during his 18-year MLB career, all with the Seattle Mariners.

The current Mariners’ hitting coach accrued a .312/.418/.515 slash line, along with 2,247 hits, 514 doubles, 309 home runs, and 1,261 runs batted in over 2,055 major-league games.

Roy Halladay became the sixth player in MLB history to be posthumously elected to the Hall of Fame, receiving the same 85.4 percent of the votes as fellow inductee Edgar Martinez.

Over the Colorado native’s 16-year major-league career, Halladay won two Cy Young Awards (2003, Toronto; 2010, Philadelphia), was named to eight All-Star teams and became the first pitcher since Don Larsen in 1956 to throw a no-hitter in the postseason with his gem versus Cincinnati in Game 1 of the 2010 NLCS.

Halladay finished his career with a 203-105 win-loss record, 3.38 earned-run average, with 2,117 strikeouts, 592 walks, a 3.39 fielding independent pitching rating, 1.178 WHIP, and a 3.58 strikeouts-to-walks ratio over 416 career appearances (390 starts; 2,749.1 innings).

Roy Halladay passed away in 2017 when the airplane he was piloting crashed. He was 40.

Mike Mussina, a native of Montoursville, Pennsylvania was named on 76.7 percent of the writers’ ballots (326 votes) to gain election in his sixth year on the ballot.

Over the course of his 18-year career, the right-hander they called Moose won 270 games for the Baltimore Orioles (1991 to 2000) and the New York Yankees (2001 to 2008), pitching to a 3.68 earned-run average with 2,813 strikeouts, a 3.57 fielding independent pitching rating, 1.192 WHIP, and a 3.58 strikeouts-to-walks ratio.

Mussina was named to five American League All-Star teams and won seven Gold Glove Awards over the course of his career.

Congratulations to all four inductees!

Full voting results can be found here.