williewilliejuan
Giant Member
Koufax had a great peak, but longevity matters.
He is disqualified merely by his association with the Dodgers.
Koufax had a great peak, but longevity matters.
And you're right.In the discussion for greatest peaks(I don't think his was the best, the runs Maddux and Pedro went on in their peak were more impressive to me because of the far better offenses they were facing), but not in discussion for the best ever. Peaks are very important, but longevity matters.
Bob was one of my favorites. His World Series record was 7-2 and 8 of the 9 games were complete games. He homered off Jim Lonborg in Game 7 of the 1967 World Series. He also homered in the 1968 World Series against Detroit. He was one of two pitchers who hit 2 World Series home runs. Ironically, the two HR pitchers accomplished this in 4 consecutive seasons. Gibson, 1967-68, and Baltimore's Dave McNally (another favorite of mine) in 1969 against the Mets, and a grand slam in 1970 against the Reds (interestingly enough, another top pitcher on the Orioles, Mike Cuellar, hit a grand slam in the playoffs against the Twins in the 1970 ALCS...now what are the odds on that?!!!). Cuellar was a teammate of Bob Gibson during the 1964 season. In retrospect, the Cardinals would have been wise to keep the young Cuellar as he really developed into a terrific pitcher.I've always leaned towards Bob Gibson. Guy was clutch as hell when it mattered.
And he swung a pretty decent bat. I remember him clouting HRs in the World Series.
Mean too.
2 Cy Youngs, one NL MVP.
And 2 World Series MVPs.
For a 5 year span, no one could/can beat Koufax.For a 5 year span, I'd put Steve Carlton in there too.
I don't think we have Jason's Deli around here.
None here either.
Bob was one of my favorites. His World Series record was 7-2 and 8 of the 9 games were complete games. He homered off Jim Lonborg in Game 7 of the 1967 World Series. He also homered in the 1968 World Series against Detroit. He was one of two pitchers who hit 2 World Series home runs. Ironically, the two HR pitchers accomplished this in 4 consecutive seasons. Gibson, 1967-68, and Baltimore's Dave McNally (another favorite of mine) in 1969 against the Mets, and a grand slam in 1970 against the Reds (interestingly enough, another top pitcher on the Orioles, Mike Cuellar, hit a grand slam in the playoffs against the Twins in the 1970 ALCS...now what are the odds on that?!!!). Cuellar was a teammate of Bob Gibson during the 1964 season. In retrospect, the Cardinals would have been wise to keep the young Cuellar as he really developed into a terrific pitcher.
For a 5 year span, no one could/can beat Koufax.
In the discussion for greatest peaks(I don't think his was the best, the runs Maddux and Pedro went on in their peak were more impressive to me because of the far better offenses they were facing), but not in discussion for the best ever. Peaks are very important, but longevity matters.
Naw, you're correct. Mike Piazza batted .364/.440/.955 in 25 career plate appearances against Roger Clemens, including postseason. 4 HR (including a grand slam), to only 2 Ks.
Roid Rage Roger was just mad that Piazza owned him
note: i have no stats or data to back up this opinion, just a youtube video. welcome to 2020, y'all
Remember those 4 20 winners: Cuellar, McAnally, Palmer, Dobson.
Steve had some amazing seasons. He played most of his career with two very good franchises, St. Louis and Philadelphia (once the latter got going in the mid-70s). His best season was with one of Philly's worst seasons...1972. The Phillies had a 59-97 record (that season the teams played a 154-156 game season due to a strike during Spring Training that eliminated 6-8 early season games). Steve was 27-10 that year...winning almost half of his teams games - and doing much of it himself as he completed 30 games and threw 346 innings with 8 shutouts. He also had 23 hits while batting. The second best pitcher on the team was Wayne Twitchell, who was 7-7. I guess the only time they really played is when Steve was on the mound.For a 5 year span, I'd put Steve Carlton in there too.
That would be McNally...not McAnally...! The only reason I mentioned the probable typo is there was a MLB pitcher named Ernie MaAnally who pitched for the Expos. But, he was no real comparison to Dave McNally! Ironically, Dave McNally's final season was as a free agent with the Expos...he didn't have much left at the time (plus he was finally playing for a team that didn't provide a lot of support) so he called it a career in 1975 midway through the season.
McAnally seems like he was a back of the rotation guyThat would be McNally...not McAnally...! The only reason I mentioned the probable typo is there was a MLB pitcher named Ernie MaAnally who pitched for the Expos. But, he was no real comparison to Dave McNally! Ironically, Dave McNally's final season was as a free agent with the Expos...he didn't have much left at the time (plus he was finally playing for a team that didn't provide a lot of support) so he called it a career in 1975 midway through the season.
IMO:
LHP:
1. Randy Johnson
2. Lefty Grove
3. Warren Spahn
4. Steve Carlton
5. Clayton Kershaw
Kershaw could move up to 3 with some more good seasons. I like Spahn over Carlton because of better peak years (Spahn had thirteen seasons in top 10 in WAR, Carlton had 8). I'd take Carlton's 1972 and 1980 seasons over any of Spahn's best, but I think Spahn has far more good/great seasons than Carlton did (Spahn had 14 seasons of 4+ WAR, Carlton had 10). Grove had more WAR than Johnson, but I'd give Johnson the edge because of competition.
RHP:
1. Roger Clemens
2. Walter Johnson
3. Cy Young
4. Greg Maddux
5. Tom Seaver
This one is a lot tougher for me. Can't argue with swapping Johnson/Clemens, though I gave Clemens the edge due to the difference in competition. Johnson did have some amazing strikeout numbers for his era (a 7.6 K/9 in 1910 when the league average was 3.9, for instance). Could also put Maddux/Seaver over Young. You could also probably swap one of Young/Maddux/Seaver with Mathewson/Pedro.
I think he was a catcher for the Browns
He's lucky that he started playing after protection had been developed for that position