Posted by tecwrg on 2/24/2012 3:59:00 PM (view original):
Posted by eschwartz67 on 2/24/2012 3:17:00 PM (view original):
Posted by tecwrg on 2/24/2012 10:25:00 AM (view original):
Hunter's career (1965 - 1979) through age 33: 224-166 W/L, 3449 IP, 3.26 ERA, 1.134 WHIP.
Carlton's career (1965 - 1979) through age 34: 225-160 W/L. 3485 IP, 3.08 ERA, 1.225 WHIP
They were the same pitcher. Then, Carlton pitched another 1732 IPs.
Tec... Being that I wanted to believe that Hunter was the equal of Carlton (which was my opinion until this morning when I looked up the real stats for them), your post is the most rational argument for Hunter being close to the equal (if not very equal) to Steve Carlton. My question for you, is where in your thoughts on this do the fact that during Hunter's career, he played on many more high quality teams than did Carlton. And it was not through the fault of Carlton. He pitched amazingly well. But the Cardinals of the 60s won 1 championship and the Phillies of the 70s won zero. Hunter played on many champions with the A's and Yankees. How does that factor in knowing that Carlton had a slightly better W/L record playing on vastly inferior teams?
Excellent question. Glad you made me look this up because I didn't realize what I was about to find.
It's actually a misperception that Calrton played on vastly inferior teams. Hunter started with Kansas City in 1965, and they were pretty horrendous in the mid to late 60's. Carlton started with the Cardinals who were pretty good back then. Carlton only really played on two "bad" teams - the '72 and '73 Phillies, while Hunter played on three bad teams - the '65, '66 and '67 Kansas City A's.
When you add up the W/L records of the teams they played on during the '65 through '79 seasons, they're actually very close:
Carlton (Cardinals '65 through '71, Phillies '72 through '79): 1286-1136 (.531 winning percentage) - 5 post-season teams
Hunter (Athletics '65 through '74, Yankees '75 through '79): 1301-1112 (.539 winning percentage) - 7 post-season teams
So they had very similar records and stats during the '65 through '79 periods, playing on compositely similarly successful teams.
Thank you for looking it up. And thank you for the answer.
I still think that after digesting all the stats, also using my watching of both pitchers through the 70s and 80s (for Carlton) and looking back at the comments made on both sides...... though I still hate Steve Carlton.....
Steve Carlton was the better pitcher. It's close. Hunter had 5 STRAIGHT seasons (71-75) that were HOF worthy. Carlton never put together a stretch like that. His 5 best seasons are strewn across a decade of work. Hunter won more championships and pitched better in postseason than did Carlton. HOWEVER.... subtracting 1971-1975 from Hunter leaves him with a career record of 113-117. Thats just poor. And though Tec showed that the teams Hunter & Carlton pitched for were close to equal (Hunter's being slightly better), using 1965 & 1966 for both Carlton & Hunter is a sham. Hunter pitched a total of 309 innings for those teams (half of his output during his years in his prime. And Carlton had a total of 70 innings for the 65 & 66 Cardinals combined. So using only 1967-1979 would show a MARKED difference between the caliber of teams Hunter had and Carlton had.
I hate the ******.... but Carlton was the better pitcher. And he had 4 more very high level seasons (1980-1983) after Hunter retired. I can put up with 1984-1988 being ****. He should have retired in 1984. He hung around, but his overall numbers were not affected that much, and I dont remember him as a washed up member of the 1987 Twins, but rather a Met killer for the 1980 Phillies.