Posted by Mwett on 3/17/2021 1:21:00 AM (view original):
Unless you meant their stats had to be accumulated entirely while in Missouri, the possibilities are hundreds, maybe thousands.
In addition to most of those already mentioned (Shantz was an all-star), I stopped very quickly in a 2 season search with :
Paul Dean 50/3.75
Dazzy Vance 197/3.24
Burleigh Grimes 270/3.53
Ed Heusser 56/3.69
Jesse Haines 210/3.64
Some of this was pre-'33 that also continued past, but did fit your criteria of "career". I get what you were trying to do and sounds fun, so, sorry.
We are not understanding each other.
The All-Star game did not exist before 1933. So anything someone did that should have earned an All-Star team berth is pointless if it happened before 1933, and in my question their whole careers had to be post-existence of All-Star game, post 1933, that is.
Dazzy Vance pitched 2966 innings in his career, and only 176 of those were during the existence of the All-Star game. His record in 1933 and 1934 was 7-5. Hardly All-Star material.
Paul Dean did pitch his whole career after 1933 but his career ERA was 3.75, not under 3.75.
Burleigh Grimes went 7-12 after the All-Star game had been founded. He won 263 games BEFORE there was an All-Star team to be named to.
Ed Huesser had one winning season in his whole career and that was because it was World War Two and the competition sucked.
Jesse Haines went 29-23 over FIVE seasons after the All-Star game was founded. He won 181 games before that.
In other words, you are wasting people's time. I was clearly asking about pitchers that SHOULD have been on All-Star teams, not asking "which MLB players were never elected President of Russia".
So, now tell me of these five, which combination of FOUR of them adds up the win total that was specified in the question asked. Because I am pretty sure that there are NOT thousands of pitchers who never pitched in an All-Star game whose totals, if added to those of three other pitchers, would meet the criteria cited and who played for teams based in Missouri, Indeed, pretty sure that there have not been "thousands" of pitchers for Missouri-based MLB teams all told.