Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Warren Newson wrote:
So if we're not going to look at a rate stat, and instead are going to look at the actual number of wins, then Feller (266) and Maddux (355) must be better pitchers than Pedro Martinez (219) Sandy Koufax (165), right? You can switch the perspective all you want, but the win stat isn't that descriptive of a pitcher's quality. All it means is that Maddux and Feller were able to stick around longer than Martinez and Koufax, it doesn't necessarily make them better. If we're talking about a pitcher's ability to compete against another pitcher, I'd take Martinez and Koufax in their prime over about 80% to 90% of all the other pitcher's in the Hall of Fame.
We're not looking at just the number of wins. We're looking at the W/L record. I assume you can figure the percentage pretty easily. That's exactly why, if we could only see one single stat to judge a
starting pitcher, career W/L record is by far the best choice. If you pick ERA you have no idea if the guy pitched two innings or 2000. If you pick strikeouts you have no idea how many walks the guy had to offset that (Nolan Ryan). A career W/L record gives you at least a rough idea of how many innings a guy pitched.
Baseball is a game of time and repetition. Anyone can get on base five times in a game like John Paciorek did (although no one else ever did just that and ended his career). You can't tell the difference between Babe Ruth and Daniel Palka in four- or even 400- at-bats. There can be a twenty game stretch where Ronald Acuna is better than Lou Gehrig. (That goes to my point that the difference between two big league offenses in the minute space of nine innings is immeasurable.)
Regarding Pedro Martinez and Koufax, Martinez has enough of a body of work at a brilliant level to make his induction in the Hall unquestionable. Koufax is a little different- a short career guy who burned very bright. The comp for him would be Dizzy Dean. But an argument cold easily be made that Dwight Gooden's first eight seasons were at least the equal of those two guys. So in effect, Gooden may have pitched his way out of the Hall of Fame. That doesn't seem right, does it?
No, it doesn't seem right. But, you know what else doesn't seem right? A pitcher going from one team that gives starters free reign to another team that keeps them on a tight leash, and then that pitcher instantly becoming a lesser pitcher under your model because he wont get the same amount of wins. I don't necessarily disagree with you that if we were going to limit ourselves to one stat, then wins aren't a bad one. But. if you'll just give me two, I'll take ERA and innings pitched over wins every day of the week.
If I asked you to list your top ten greatest starting pitchers in the history of the MLB, is it really going to track the wins list? For convenience sake, here is top the 10 wins list:
1. Cy Young+ (22) 511
2. Walter Johnson+ (21) 417
3. Pete Alexander+ (20) 373
Christy Mathewson+ (17) 373
5. Pud Galvin+ (15) 365
6. Warren Spahn+ (21) 363
7. Kid Nichols+ (15) 361
8. Greg Maddux+ (23) 355
9. Roger Clemens (24) 354
10. Tim Keefe+ (14) 342
As a counterpoint, I'm going to dig out my Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract from 2000. Here are the top ten in that treatise:
1. Walter Johnson
2. Lefty Grove
3. Pete Alexander
4. Cy Young
5. Warren Spahn
6. Tom Seaver
7. Christy Mathewson
8. Bob Gibson
9. Kid Nichols
10. Sany Koufax
Mind you, six guys are on each list, but 40% of the guys on the win list are not on Bill James' list. Further, three guys with substantially less wins than Cy Young are above him. I'm not saying Bill James is the final word, on the quality of a baseball player, but he is an intelligent, studied, and keen observer of the game. What does it say about wins, when it fails to identify 40% of the people on his list. What does it say about wins, if your list differs from the top 10 win leaders? Also, if you really thinks wins are the end all be all, you would have to think Cy Young is head and shoulders the greatest pitcher who ever lived. I hear very few people saying that.