MLB’s regular season is over, which means we don’t get to watch Mike Trout play baseball for several months. There’s a World Series on the horizon which will distract us, but every baseball game endeavored for the remainder of 2016 will be one that lacks the sport’s best player. Trout won’t likely win the MVP because he’s marooned on an otherwise lousy Angels team, but he turned in his fifth consecutive incredible season.

Trout’s first five seasons match up pretty well with the best five-season stretches enjoyed by the best players of all time. And at only 25 years old, Trout keeps flying up baseball’s all-time leaderboard for Wins Above Replacement (WAR). He passed 12 Hall of Famers on that list in the first half of the season, another five in July, then nine more in August. Since the last update, Trout passed six more Hall of Famers in career WAR, meaning Mike Trout — 25-year-old Mike Trout — surpassed 32 Hall of Famers in career WAR this season alone.

Trout finished his 2016 campaign with a 10.6 WAR, becoming only the 12th position player in big-league history to twice clear the 10-win threshold.

Here are the six most recent Hall of Famers Trout has surpassed in career WAR, then, for the sake of completion, the remaining 26 guys he had already passed this season.

1. Kiki Cuyler: A pretty good outfielder who got kind of a late start, Cuyler was a Top 10 player for a few years in the late 1920s and a good one up until the late 1930s. He stole a lot of bases for his era and hit lots of triples, and batted .321 for his career with 2,299 hits. But despite all that, across parts of 18 seasons the Hall of Famer did not provide his clubs as much as Mike Trout has in five.

2. Hoyt Wilhelm: WAR isn’t a great way to measure relief pitchers, so it seems unfair to compare the old knuckleballer Wilhelm to the young slugger Trout. Wilhelm broke into the Majors at age 29 and pitched until he was 49, most often working in a relief role that doesn’t exist anymore. He threw more than 100 innings out of the bullpen in eight different seasons.

3. Jim Rice: Rice, a Red Sox slugger of the 1970s and 80s, got the Hall of Fame nod on his fifteenth and final year on the ballot. Though Rice was one of the best hitters of his era, his Cooperstown case always seemed a bit tenuous because he was a corner outfielder without any of the big offensive benchmarks for induction. No one’s here to begrudge Jim Rice his Hall of Fame plaque, only to note that the 47.4 career WAR he tallied over parts of 16 big-league seasons pale to Trout’s contributions in five.

4. Buck Ewing: Despite what his name suggests, Buck Ewing was not a star of golden-age Western movies so much as he was a good-hitting catcher of the late 19th century. Ewing broke in with the National League team that was in Troy, N.Y. in the early 1880s, when Troy, N.Y. was apparently a place to put a professional sports team. He is credited with the introduction of the catcher’s mitt, which seems like an important piece of a equipment.

5. Johnny Evers: Evers joins Chance among players in that poem that Trout has surpassed in career WAR this season, and Tinker should fall sometime next year. Evers hated Tinker. Who knew? Not as good as Mike Trout.

6. Earl Averill: Known by the fairly awesome nickname “The Earl of Snohomish,” the Washington state-born outfielder got a late start to his big-league career, but mashed from the day he broke in at age 26 in 1929. Averill’s excellence lasted through a firecracker incident that cost him part of the 1935 season, but he was more or less done by 1939, and his short big-league tenure meant that he could not total as much WAR as Mike Trout.

Now, for the rest of the Hall of Famers that Mike Trout surpassed in career WAR this season. Their cases and any extenuating circumstances are discussed in the posts from early July, late July, and August.

7. Lefty Gomez

8. Hack Wilson

9. Phil Rizzuto

10. Catfish Hunter

11. Jack Chesbro

12. Roger Bresnahan

13. Goose Gossage

14. Red Schoendienst

15. Hughie Jennings

16. Earle Combs

17. Rabbit Maranville

18. Hugh Duffy

19. King Kelly

20. Chuck Klein

21. Travis Jackson

22. Addie Joss

23. Sam Thompson

24. Herb Pennock

25. Dizzy Dean

26. Edd Rousch

27. Lou Brock

28. Deacon White

29. John McGraw

30. Frank Chance

31. Heinie Manush

32. Ernie Lombardi