I would go Pedro here but innings 8 and 9 were dicey at times. Randy Johnson and Roger Clemens were both pretty bad ass. I didn't see a lot of the others pitch...W. Johnson, Young, Koufax.
Bob Gibson and Nolan Ryan have to be on this poll...
Not enough dominance IMO. Absolute workhorse though. Same with Ryan (though Spahn had a considerably better ERA/ERA+). 17 consecutive seasons in the top 10 in his league IP (most of which were top 3 finishes).Many here wouldn't agree but in my opinion it would be Warren Spahn.
Spahn pitched consistently for two decades in the big leagues. He is deserving in my opinion.Not enough dominance IMO. Absolute workhorse though. Same with Ryan (though Spahn had a considerably better ERA/ERA+). 17 consecutive seasons in the top 10 in his league IP (most of which were top 3 finishes).
Honestly, Koufax has become very overrated to me. That 5-year stretch consisted of some great seasons, but in 1962 he pitched about half a season, only pitching 9.2 innings after July 12th. He missed significant time in 1964 as well, only 14th in the NL in innings pitched that year. Drysdale's ERA was just .44 higher and he pitched 100 more innings. His truly dominant years were '63, '65, and '66. I'll take Pedro from '97-'03Walter Johnson is a no-brainer.
But, I'd still take Koufax for a 5-year stretch.
Honestly, Koufax has become very overrated to me. That 5-year stretch consisted of some great seasons, but in 1962 he pitched about half a season, only pitching 9.2 innings after July 12th. He missed significant time in 1964 as well, only 14th in the NL in innings pitched that year. Drysdale's ERA was just .44 higher and he pitched 100 more innings. His truly dominant years were '63, '65, and '66. I'll take Pedro from '97-'03
Honestly, Koufax has become very overrated to me. That 5-year stretch consisted of some great seasons, but in 1962 he pitched about half a season, only pitching 9.2 innings after July 12th. He missed significant time in 1964 as well, only 14th in the NL in innings pitched that year. Drysdale's ERA was just .44 higher and he pitched 100 more innings. His truly dominant years were '63, '65, and '66. I'll take Pedro from '97-'03
I'm downgrading his performance because he was 14th in innings pitched in the NL and 28th in baseball. You pointed out a bunch of rate stats, which I completely understand he led in. However, those are not as impressive when you are throwing far fewer innings.Downgrading his 1964 season is ludicrous. It was the only season he led in all 3 categories of ERA+/FIP/WHIP.
(He also led the NL in Win Pct./ERA/Shutouts--While Drysdale was losing 16 games).
You have a point about 1962. But, you sound sadly misinformed downgrading his performance in 1964.
All depends on how you look at what makes a guy GOAT.Spahn pitched consistently for two decades in the big leagues. He is deserving in my opinion.
Downgrading his 1964 season is ludicrous. It was the only season he led in all 3 categories of ERA+/FIP/WHIP.
(He also led the NL in Win Pct./ERA/Shutouts--While Drysdale was losing 16 games).
You have a point about 1962. But, you sound sadly misinformed downgrading his performance in 1964.