Warren Newson wrote:
He had a really cool career (no hitter, perfect game, world series title, save in the world series) but having watched his entire career, I never thought I was watching a Hall of Famer. How many years would you say he was even a true number one starter? According to the article, he actually is ahead of several starters from a WAR standpoint:
His 59.1 career WAR is 69th among starting pitchers, 14.2 WAR below the standard, and ahead of just 19 of the 65 enshrinees, only six of whom were elected by the BBWAA. Four of those were elected despite short careers (Dizzy Dean, Catfish Hunter, Sandy Koufax, Bob Lemon), but had other things going for them including stellar postseason work and better Hall of Fame Monitor scores, as did the longer-lasting Whitey Ford (whose bWAR is curiously low) and Herb Pennock.
Catfish Hunter is a really good comp for him. And frankly, Catfish is a questionable Hall of Famer himself. If we're using the terminology "Number One Starter" or "Ace" I would say Buehrle was a "Number Two Deluxe".
But I do think the way pitchers are now being used, that Buehrle's durability and skillset will be more appreciated by the writers/voters than they would have been twenty years ago.
Blowing hitters away with "filthy stuff" is fun to watch, but when you can only get through the lineup twice without falling apart, it's tough to say you're better than Buehrle.
I'm sure this stuff is all recorded and categorized on Fangraphs, I don't know for sure, but what I'm going to say is strictly anecdotal and comes from me watching most of Buehrle's starts throughout his career. Buehrle didn't
really throw a curveball. He was a "fast"ball, changeup, cutter guy. But I specifically remember watching a close game where it was the eighth inning and Buehrle was in a tough spot with men on. The game was in the balance. (Here's where Jose Quintana would have given up a double off the wall and lost 3-2 due to a lack of "run support".) He was facing a middle of the order guy for the fourth time in the game. I don't remember who but it was a real hitter. It was a full count and the guy was fouling off pitch after pitch. And suddenly out of nowhere without previously having thrown a single curveball in the entire game Buehrle dropped Uncle Charlie on him for strike three. That's a fucking pitcher.