Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Almost all pitchers have ups and downs. I'm not really sure what you're attempting to get at here other than trying to play some silly "gotcha" game. Park had a good career. At times he was dominating. Cain was dominating as well at times, in fact moreso than Park. But it was relatively short-lived and he appears to have gone into decline sooner, due, no doubt, to his injury. If you believe Park was lucky in posting his .560 winning percentage we"ll just have to disagree.
1. I'm not playing gotcha games, you are asserting things and I'm just asking you to back them up with data, or a better explanation using facts. This isn't a gotcha thing, it's just me not willing to blindly accept the bullshit that you shovel around here all the time.
2. I agree that Park had a good career, I've never said otherwise.
3. I agree that Cain was dominating, that's the hallmark of a good pitcher. Dominating at times.
4. Cain's dominance was longer than Parks as shown here:
One Post wrote:
This isn't even accurate (ranked by best seasons):
Park's Peak: Cain Peak:
132 ERA+ 4.23 FIP 5 WAR 147 ERA+ 3.89 FIP 6.3 WAR
115 ERA+ 4.22 FIP 3.5 WAR 126 ERA+ 3.40 FIP 3.9 WAR
114 ERA+ 3.89 FIP 4.1 WAR 124 ERA+ 3.65 FIP 4.5 WAR
109 ERA+ 3.82 FIP 3.0 WAR 121 ERA+ 2.91 FIP 3.7 WAR
82 ERA+ 5.18 FIP 0.2 WAR 117 ERA+ 3.91 FIP 4.6 WAR
So when you stack what you call Park's "really good" years against Cain's top 5 seasons, you'll see that across the board Cain's seasons are better or at least equal to Park's for the period of time in which you assert that Park was a "really good" pitcher. In short you can't pick a short enough time frame in which Park was better than Cain.
5. Cain didn't go into decline sooner than Park, in fact he was better for longer as evidenced by these two posts:
One Post wrote:
Here are Park's top eight seasons as a starting pitcher by games started:
2001: 35 Starts 218 K's 114 ERA+
1998: 34 Starts 191 K's 109 ERA+
2000: 34 Starts 217 K's 132 ERA+
1999: 33 Starts 174 K's 82 ERA+ (yuk)
1997: 29 Starts 166 K's 115 ERA +
You'll probably want to avert your eyes Indiana Jones Raiders of the Lost Ark Style
2005: 29 Starts 113 K's 76 ERA+ (hint, this sucks)
2002: 25 Starts 121 K's 83 ERA+ (hint, this is awful)
2006: 21 Starts 96 K's 84 ERA+ (hint, whatever is marginally above awful, this is it)
If you want to stretch it to 10 it does not help (see I know what "about" means, unlike yourself).
2004: 16 Starts 63 K's 92 ERA+ (a career renaissance!)
1996: 10 Starts 119 K's 107 ERA+ (not a bad season for a relief pitcher, which what he primarily was here.
One Post wrote:
Here are Cain's seasons
2005: 46 IP 30 K's 185 ERA+
2006 190 IP 179 K's 108 ERA+
2007 200 IP 163 K's 123 ERA+
2008 217 IP 186 K's 117 ERA+
2009 217 IP 171 K's 147 ERA+ (AS Game Appearance)
2010 223 IP 181 K's 124 ERA+ (12th in Cy Young Voting WS Ring)
2011 221 IP 177 K's 121 ERA + (AS Game Appearance 8th in Cy Young Voting)
2012 219 IP 193 K's 126 ERA +(AS Game Appearance 6th in Cy Young Voting WS Ring)
2013 184 IP 158 K's 86 ERA +
2014 90 IP 70 K's 83 ERA +
2015 60 IP 71 K's 65 ERA +
2016 57 IP 41 K's 75 ERA +
I'll grant that 2013-2016 were not good seasons (bad if you will), so you've got to tell me which of the 3 seasons from 2005-2012 he wasn't a good pitcher for him to have more bad seasons than good seasons.
6. I never said anything about if Park was lucky or unlucky to get the wins that he did. All I have ever said is that Matt Cain was a good pitcher. All you ever said, and reaffirmed a bunch of times, is that Park was a "good" pitcher at the least or potentially "really good". The above just shows that for a lot of data points Cain was as good if not better than Park, something you admit to an extent yourself when you say that Cain was more dominant. Not only was he more dominant he was better for longer.
7. Again, I don't know why you are picking this fight over Cain. You threw out what I thought was an interesting question, good starter with 200 starts and a losing record. I thought I would find a bunch, and was surprised that I did not. But I did find some. Instead of acknowledging there are a few outliers to that data set you've spent the whole afternoon arguing that Matt Cain was a worse pitcher than Chan Ho Park. I mean it's silly really when you look at every stat other than the one we are isolating for.