badrogue17 wrote:
SpiralStairs wrote:
But what does a win actually tell you about how well a pitcher pitched? I'd say it's next to nothing.
If you isolate wins and losses and look at two pitchers, one who won 10 games and lost 15 and the other who won 15 games and lost 10 it looks like the second pitcher was better.
That second pitcher could have won those 15 games by allowing 8 runs in each of them while his team scored 9.
The first pitcher could have lost 15 by allowing 1 run in each while his team scored 0.
Is the second pitcher made better because the rest of his team played well enough to overcome his terrible pitching? Is the first pitcher made worse?
I don't know what meaningful insight there is to be drawn from looking at a pitcher's win/loss total that doesn't then require one to look at some other statistic.
Look at it another way, Are there any really great pitchers out there with a shit career won loss record because they were unlucky enough to play for a crap team or got no "run support' everytime they pitched? Or any shitty pitchers with a great career won loss because they were lucky enough to get a lot of runs every time they pitched? .
YES, The teams, parks, exc does effect a pitchers career.
Michael William Hampton (born September 9, 1972) is a former American professional baseball player. Hampton played in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a pitcher from 1993 through 2010. He pitched for the Seattle Mariners, Houston Astros, New York Mets, Colorado Rockies, Atlanta Braves and Arizona Diamondbacks.
Hampton is a two-time MLB All-Star. He won five Silver Slugger Awards and a Gold Glove Award. He was the Most Valuable Player of the 2000 National League Championship Series, and he pitched in the 2000 World Series for the Mets.
Hampton became a starter for
Houston in 1995, and kept his ERA under 4.00 for every season he was with the Astros. In 1999, Hampton had his best year. He broke through with a
22–4 record, best in the National League, and a 2.90 ERA. He picked up his first of five Silver Slugger Awards and narrowly finished second in National League Cy Young Award voting to Randy Johnson.
Entering the final year of his contract, Hampton was dealt to the
New York Mets in the wake of his big season. He went 15–10 with a 3.12 ERA and helped the Mets greatly in the postseason. With two wins and no earned runs in two starts,
Hampton was named the MVP of the 2000 NLCSThe
Colorado Rockies signed Hampton to an expensive, long-term contract on December 9, 2000. It was the largest contract in sports history at the time. Hampton went a disappointing
14–13 with a 5.12 ERA in 2001,
his pitching clearly affected by Coors Field. Like his predecessor Darryl Kile, Hampton succumbed to control problems. The next season was even more of a disaster for the highly paid Hampton, as
he went 7–15 with his ERA climbing to 6.15.