Interesting stats --- Topic

Rank Name SN G GS CG SHO W L SV SVO IP H R ER HR BB SO OAV OBP SLG WHIP ERA
1 Seaver, Tom -- 300 280 27 14 147 54 0 1 1,972.33 1658 748 668 178 578 1750 .223 .283 .333 1.13 3.05
2 Lolich, Mickey -- 319 319 39 13 135 97 0 0 2,170.00 2226 1024 899 227 685 1625 .262 .320 .388 1.34 3.73
3 Gibson, Bob -- 263 263 18 10 134 71 0 0 1,798.33 1689 742 661 95 615 1355 .246 .311 .330 1.28 3.31
4 Jenkins, Fergie -- 286 250 82 14 130 74 13 15 1,928.67 1938 882 793 222 374 1399 .256 .294 .388 1.20 3.70
5 Sutton, Don -- 254 254 41 10 130 66 0 0 1,794.33 1579 688 572 148 486 1311 .231 .285 .335 1.15 2.87
6 Perry, Gaylord -- 252 243 44 15 125 62 2 3 1,789.33 1607 684 601 135 516 1198 .236 .293 .339 1.19 3.02
7 McNally, Dave -- 237 235 21 5 123 64 0 0 1,626.00 1511 618 553 127 455 733 .244 .298 .347 1.21 3.06
8 Palmer, Jim -- 230 228 42 9 122 58 1 1 1,599.00 1271 510 474 117 512 989 .216 .281 .307 1.12 2.67
9 Ryan, Nolan -- 313 222 16 11 119 54 5 7 1,568.67 1129 544 496 87 875 1653 .199 .310 .274 1.28 2.85
10 Niekro, Phil -- 259 250 72 15 117 90 1 2 1,871.00 1836 863 758 225 525 1213 .252 .306 .387 1.26 3.65
11 Cuellar, Mike -- 238 237 31 10 116 58 0 0 1,650.67 1498 661 587 138 505 819 .239 .297 .346 1.21 3.20
12 Hunter, Catfish -- 274 263 46 17 115 84 1 1 1,876.67 1677 721 641 175 489 1118 .236 .288 .350 1.15 3.07
13 Stottlemyre Sr., Mel -- 273 196 46 16 110 41 3 5 1,577.33 1388 558 495 90 462 665 .234 .292 .320 1.17 2.82
14 Dobson, Pat -- 348 264 3 3 109 80 4 9 1,639.00 1648 770 698 157 499 1011 .259 .316 .375 1.31 3.83
15 Ellis, Dock -- 241 222 3 2 108 53 4 5 1,387.33 1324 567 506 67 459 847 .249 .312 .328 1.29 3.28
16 Carlton, Steve -- 222 222 82 18 107 72 0 0 1,664.33 1497 645 571 107 591 1268 .238 .306 .326 1.25 3.09
17 Peterson, Fritz -- 232 229 23 7 106 53 0 0 1,529.00 1575 636 573 120 291 676 .263 .298 .365 1.22 3.37
18 Perry, Jim -- 250 247 13 8 102 61 0 0 1,588.33 1586 738 652 139 453 727 .257 .311 .370 1.28 3.69
19 Blyleven, Bert -- 212 209 31 13 101 52 1 1 1,478.67 1414 609 554 105 375 1245 .249 .299 .349 1.21 3.37
20 Dierker, Larry -- 250 212 13 7 100 53 4 6 1,344.67 1236 540 497 116 374 858 .242 .298 .353 1.20 3.33
21 Bahnsen, Stan -- 234 232 18 6 97 72 0 0 1,468.00 1550 715 650 136 547 753 .268 .333 .386 1.43 3.99
22 Messersmith, Andy -- 228 211 39 10 95 62 3 3 1,564.67 1249 585 498 117 600 1219 .215 .293 .306 1.18 2.86
23 Osteen, Claude -- 263 247 27 9 91 89 5 5 1,588.00 1653 777 664 138 438 695 .263 .314 .372 1.32 3.76
24 Wilson, Don -- 256 255 11 4 89 77 0 0 1,589.67 1467 696 618 120 535 1104 .242 .307 .342 1.26 3.50
25 Wood, Wilbur -- 356 169 53 12 89 72 54 69 1,522.67 1526 663 593 123 401 910 .257 .306 .361 1.27 3.51
8/3/2012 11:38 PM
these are stats from a progressive that has ranged from 1969-1975  - The pitchers are sorted according to wins - Is this the list of pitchers you'd expect to see here?  

I was *kind of* surprised to see Carlton at #16...but relieved that Hunter was #12 since I traded Carlton for Hunter and a 1st.   It looks like I've got the better end of the deal...at least this far!  

How about that baltimore threesome??  McNally, Palmer and Cuellar are #7, #8 and #11.  

I am equally surprised at Lolich at #2 - I know wins don't necessarily point to being the best pitchers - but the fact that he's 2nd behind Seaver is saying something right???  I've never put much value in him as a pitcher in this era.  Anywho....thoughts??
8/3/2012 11:42 PM
Looking at Lolich's WHIP and ERA compared to the other guys, I think you have to conclude that his wins total is a function of (a) his sheer number of games and IP (b) perhaps the quality of the offense on his team (c) luck.  I would say he's been no better than the 15-20th best pitcher of the guys on the list.

Hunter has been better than Carlton so far, but as of '75, Catfish is done.  Whereas Carlton is really just getting started; his run from 1976-83 should be pretty awesome.
8/4/2012 8:25 AM
Further proof that wins aren't a good measure of a pitcher's true value, but instead are a function of team ability. 
8/7/2012 11:37 AM
I've come to think of wins and RBI's as "storytelling stats". They help explain what actually happened during a season. I'm tired of thinking of wins as worthless. But yeah, even die hard non-sabermetric fans gotta start admitting that wins correlate only slightly with actual pitcher ability.
8/7/2012 11:47 AM
loma, I really like the "storytelling stats" since baseball is very much about story telling but it is also true, as you, contrarian and others point out, that these are not the crucial stats to tell how good a player is, but rather as you say, what happened. 
8/7/2012 3:27 PM
But I have to defend Catfish Hunter just for a minute. In 1976 he goes 17-15, 3.53 and has a WHIP of 1.12. He pitched the second game of the Series after pitching reasonably well in the playoffs, and he might have won game 2 for the  Yankees had Jim Mason not bobbled a ball in a late inning, a break the Reds did not need. 

In 1978 he was no Ron Guidry, but no one was. But 12-6, 3.58 and a WHIP of 1.12 is not chopped liver either. 

And the Boston Massacre that year began with Catfish Hunter against Mike Torrez. The game was 15-3 Yankees. Some Boston fans may still be bitter enough to consider Catfish "done" by 1975, perhaps blocking out memory of that game and the rest.  :-)

Plus, Bob Dylan never wrote a song about Luis Tiant, Roger Clemens, Pedro Martinez  or Curt Shilling.   Here is the Joe Cocker cover of the Dylan song: 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VCNsNK4vpwk
8/7/2012 3:36 PM
One of the reasons many pitchers don't have eye popping stats (RL) is they pitched to the score. If they had a big lead, they relaxed. In today's game, it is different. To get the mega bucks, you need the mega stats. That really doesn't apply to our game, but I had an experience with 1940 Bob Feller in Donburgh's exclusive ownership league. His ability to pitch and not get fatigued was incredible, he won 27 games. His stats, other than the wins, were very ordinary. I had a very strong offense, led by '43 Rudy York (!?) 50 HRs 143 RBIs. Pitchers that are able to go deep into games get wins that other pitchers can't get. And managers who are willing to set their PC high enough to keep them in games helps, too. some of my most amazing pitcher's seasons occurred because my bullpen was awful, and I left the starters in.
8/7/2012 3:44 PM
Thanks for saying that pfattkatt. I really don't believe that W-L is pointless, though I agree with others that it is a dependent and not an independent variable. But I think that many of these great pitchers had every game been 2-1 would have ended up on the right side of the ledger. But with a 5-1 lead the thinking was, throw strikes, don't let anyone on on BBs. So a HR or two, or a double and and a single here or there meant their WHIPs were not overwhelming. 

I would still rather have Catfish, Dave Stewart, any of the big three Orioles pitchers of the 70s (who tormented me as some Yankees greats tormented Red Sox fans), or, though I hate to say it, Curt Shilling, than Pedro, or maybe even Maddox, magnificent as he was, if it were game 7. 
8/7/2012 4:00 PM
ps, I just got so caught up in this debate that I managed to eat the top of my hamburger bun without eating the rest of the burger as I typed that previous post. 
8/7/2012 4:02 PM
Rudy York is a real interesting story.  He apparently was the reason why the Tigers ditched Greenberg....he was all bat, no glove, and a real nice guy.
8/7/2012 4:39 PM
Lolich has the most losses and the only one to break 2000 IP.
8/7/2012 6:30 PM
This post has a rating of , which is below the default threshold.
I'd take 2000 or 2001 Pedro certainly over Catfish, Cuellar, McNally, or David Stewart without a second thought, over any Maddux marginally, but maybe not over Jim Palmer in his prime in a game 7.  His peak was short, but it was ridiculous.
8/7/2012 7:01 PM
bases loaded - 2 outs, full count -  the best hitter ever in your mind up to bat - 


Who you you want making that last pitch?  
8/7/2012 8:03 PM
1234 Next ▸
Interesting stats --- Topic

Search Criteria

Terms of Use Customer Support Privacy Statement

© 1999-2025 WhatIfSports.com, Inc. All rights reserved. WhatIfSports is a trademark of WhatIfSports.com, Inc. SimLeague, SimMatchup and iSimNow are trademarks or registered trademarks of Electronic Arts, Inc. Used under license. The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.