In appreciation of Mike Trout’s consistent greatness, Mike Trout Monday is For The Win’s weekly roundup of stuff Mike Trout did.

It’s the final Mike Trout Monday in May, and that means it’s time to look at the Hall of Famers Mike Trout has surpassed in WAR this month. May is not over yet, but Trout added 1.1 to his season WAR total since our last check-in by posting a very Mike Trout-ish .282/.418/.615 line since the start of the month. His career total now stands at 67.7 entering play Monday.

After surpassing 10 Hall of Famers in career WAR in April, Trout climbed past four more Hall of Famers on the all-time leaderboard this month. And where early versions of this exercise typically listed guys who missed long stretches of time due to actual war or injury, now Mike Trout is surpassing full-blown healthy Hall of Famers who had two-decade careers as productive Major Leaguers.

A couple of good games in the Angels’ final few games of the month could vault Trout past a couple more Hall of Famers, but those guys will be counted in June’s total. No one else I know of is regularly listing the Hall of Famers Mike Trout surpasses in WAR, so this is canon. Here are the four Hall of Famers Mike Trout has surpassed in WAR so far in May:

1. Don Sutton: Sutton won 324 games, then lingered on the Hall of Fame ballot for five years before he finally got in. He was really, really good and almost freakishly durable — he spent parts of 23 seasons in the Majors and basically never missed a start — but he’s the type of guy who is sometimes derided as “a compiler” in Cooperstown conversations, since he was never really the best pitcher in the league. I don’t see why condensed value is any more valuable than compiled value, really, and if anyone ever wins 324 games again it’ll undoubtedly come with first-ballot entry, even long after we learned about how wins are a dumb stat. Don Sutton was also an occasional Match Game celebrity panelist. Here he is in an episode that also featured Betty White and Richard Dawson.

2. Don Drysdale: A famously dominant starter, with a familiar story for pitchers of his era: Drysdale threw a ton of innings — including over 300 a year for four straight seasons from 1962-1965 — then ran into arm trouble and was washed up by age 32. Drysdale came up at age 19, though, so he spent parts of 14 season in the Majors, made eight All-Star teams, won three World Series rings and took the Cy Young Award in 1962. On the day he would be assassinated, Robert Kennedy opened his final speech by saying, “I want to first express my high regard for Don Drysdale, who pitched his sixth straight shutout today.” When Drysdale himself died of a heart attack at age 56 in 1993, a cassette tape of Kennedy’s speech was found in his room.

3. Roberto Alomar: A brilliant defensive second baseman and a perennial All-Star until the moment he joined the New York Mets in 2002, Alomar won 10 Gold Gloves and four Silver Sluggers, knocked 2,724 big-league hits, stole 474 bases, and finished with a lower career WAR than 27-year-old Mike Trout has right now.

4. Ernie Banks: Ernie Banks! A true legend of the game and one of its most celebrated personalities, Banks spent the first half of his career as a shortstop, was a two-time MVP and an All-Star in 11 different seasons. In 1969, he became only the ninth player in MLB history to clear the 500-homer threshold, and he finished his decorated tenure with 512. This is the Ernie Banks we’re talking about! Mike Trout, 27, already has a higher career WAR than Ernie Banks. And that’s not to knock Banks, at all. That’s to celebrate Mike Trout.