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Will we ever see another 300 game winner?

This is a question I have been thinking about lately and with Glavine getting to 300 today you have to wonder if baseball will ever have another one.
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Collecting 1970s Topps baseball wax, rack and cello packs, as well as PCGS graded Half Cents, Large Cents, Two Cent pieces and Three Cent Silver pieces.
/s/ JackWESQ
<< <i>As long as baseball remains a business, another 300 game winner will not come to pass. >>
Agreed! The pitching is too diluted today. You will see many, many more 500 Home Run Club members and maybe even 2 or 3 more All Time Home Run champs in our lifetime, but never another 300 game winner. Randy Johnson? No Way! Mussina? Not even a remote chance!
Mussina is a no. And then no one else is close. I actually think Oswalt stands the best chance in terms of age and number of wins already achieved. But think about it. 300 wins means 15 wins a season for TWENTY YEARS. In this day and age of 5 man rotations and nary a complete game, that may be too much to ask.
TIm Hudson:131 wins
Roy oswalt: 109 wins
Mark Buehrle:106 wins
CC Sabathia: 95 wins
Johan Santana: 89 wins
Carlos Zambrano: 78 wins
I cant think of any others besides the likes of some really young guys that havent had the track record yet to be considered. Interesting thaat nobody i see with a chance is even halfway there. That shows the durability of the 300 game winners, most guys tail off late in thier careers and fall short.
http://sportsfansnews.com/author/andy-fischer/
http://sportsfansnews.com/author/andy-fischer/
We'll never see a 60HR season is what they said after Ruth
We'll never see 715HR in a career they said as well,
Well no one can match Maris's 61
WOW Big Mac's record will stand forever...
And if you think it is all power....
Man, no one will last as long as Lou Gehrig did...
Why even play the games if we know what can and cannot be done.
Two active players have a shot and there are several young studs who show promise. Enjoy this one and then remember back when you are with your child or grandchild and say I remember the last 300 game winner, it's been a while but there it is.
But then again Sportscenter has no other stories to cover so why not crown him Last of the 300 wins....right after the WHo's Now Segment.
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Collecting all Yankees especially:
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For my son:
Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada
MY Baseball Card Page
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Big body, he may be able to stay off the DL long enough.
CDsNuts, 1/9/15
If there will be another 300 game winner, its going to be a long, long time.
The most glaring problem to getting 300 game winners right now is how deep they go into games. THe longer you go, the more chance of factoring in the decision obviously. For instance, Glavine has only 56 complete games. Tom Seaver had 231.
Games started is a factor as well(compared to the previous eras). Probably about 2-5 starts per season for the studs. It varies(and has varied) based on the pitcher and team philosophy. Obviously the 1910's are much more starts per year.
Looking at Glavine's lack of complete games compared to other 300 game winners, you get the idea on how strong the crummy mound opponents help in getting the pitching studs MORE wins. WHich means that 300 game winners can still happen, despite less starts and less innings...but it certainly is more of an uphill battle than before.
I don't think so. We've been waiting 40 years now for another 30-win seasaon, and last year we didn't even see a 20-game winner.
Certain milestones become virtually unattainable due to the evolution of the game and a 300-game winner is one of them.
Collecting 1970s Topps baseball wax, rack and cello packs, as well as PCGS graded Half Cents, Large Cents, Two Cent pieces and Three Cent Silver pieces.
Sometimes the great pitchers come in waves, and in this case you had Clemens, Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz, and Johnson all starting around the same time. There hadn't been a great wave of pitchers like that since the late 90s, and it's too early to tell where Halladay, Hudson, Oswalt, Sabathia, Zito, Peavy, Willis and all the other guys that could be studs end up. To say we'll never see another 300 game winner is just ludicrous. It's certainly a great feat, but 23 guys have done it in 120 years and many of them did it in the modern era.
I hope someone digs this thread up in another 13 years when 3 more guys are on the threshold.
Lee
Sometimes the great pitchers come in waves,
No one is saying that there aren't great pitchers pitching in MLB today. The real reason, though, that you're unlikely to see another 300-game winner has nothing to do with greatness, but in the way that the pitching game has evolved today. In your example above, all of those pitchers (Seaver, Carlton, Perry, Niekro, Ryan, etc.) pitched a significant number of seasons where the four-man rotation was the norm, no one outside of pitching coaches knew what a "pitch count" meant, there was no such thing as "set-up men", and 300-inning seasons were not unusual. It is ludicrous to compare today's pitchers with pitchers like those who pitched in that era. When was the last time a pitcher got even close to pitching 300 innings in a season, or even 275 innings for that matter? Or winning 30 games in a season? Last season no one won even 20 games. Six innings is now considered a "quality" start. Do you think Santana wouldn't have won 25 games last year if he weren't pitching in the 1970s or even the 1980s? That's the real reason why winning 300 games will be next to impossible. And I dug up the thread after McLain won 30 games in 1968 and we're still waiting for that to happen again.
Collecting 1970s Topps baseball wax, rack and cello packs, as well as PCGS graded Half Cents, Large Cents, Two Cent pieces and Three Cent Silver pieces.
It is going to be some time, though, before someone approaches 300 again...I don't think Unit's going to be able to come back and get it done, but there is a great group of young pitchers who, if they stay healthy, will have a chance in a decade or so.
As a parallel, NFL running backs who get a ton of carries have tremendously short careers (Terrell Davis, soon-to-be Larry Johnson) while guys who are not overused last 10 years or more (Marcus Allen, Thurman Thomas, etc...).
If those earlier guys had pitching specialists and pitch counts we might be looking at 400 as the career milestone. Look at Ryan, take those 5386 IP and shorten the CG's and you get could several more then 773 games started. Which means several more wins. Primitive I know and some SABR guy will have better numbers but it seems logical.
______
Collecting all Yankees especially:
Thurman Munson, Yogi Berra, Melky Cabrera!
For my son:
Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada
MY Baseball Card Page
My Player Collection Needs
This doesn't even take into account the advances in medicine and physical therapy that will no doubt keep players in better playing shape as they get older.
I bring it up as an anaolgy only...to illustrate the fact that certain milestones become unattainable because of how the game has evolved, especially in the pitching game. Just looking at the numbers these days and the number of 20-game winners in recent years, reveals just how difficult it'll be for a guy to amass the number of decisions necessary to approach 300 victories. Winning 20 games these days is a difficult enough feat, even winning 15 games is considered an achievment in today's game and a guy would have to average 15 wins for 20 seasons to reach 300 wins. I'm not saying it's impossible, just highly unlikely based on the pitching stats you see for starters in today's game.
Collecting 1970s Topps baseball wax, rack and cello packs, as well as PCGS graded Half Cents, Large Cents, Two Cent pieces and Three Cent Silver pieces.
Back when Ryan, Niekro and Sutton were pitching in their 40s they were an oddity, and they looked like they were too old to play. Now it is the norm and guys still look relatively refreshed. Compare the way Clemens looks to the way Ryan looked when he was 40. Maddux to Niekro. The Big Unit to Sutton. Kenny Rogers to Tom Seaver. All of the 40 year olds now look 5-10 years younger than the 40 year olds back in the 70s and 80s. The game doesn't wear players down like it used to, so it stands to reason that pitchers will have longer careers (on average).
All three of these pitchers pitched well into their 40s and both Niekro and Sutton retired 20 years ago and Ryan retired 15 years ago, so pitching into your 40s was not at all unusual during that era, either.
Collecting 1970s Topps baseball wax, rack and cello packs, as well as PCGS graded Half Cents, Large Cents, Two Cent pieces and Three Cent Silver pieces.
I came up with 13 pitchers (I probably missed a few) who played while they were 40 in the entire decade of the 80s. Compare that to the 18 that are pitching this year alone, not to mention the guys who will turn 40 in the next few years as well as the bunch who recently retired, and it's easy to see that it's much more common for a player to pitch in his 40s now than it was 20 years ago. Before the decade is over, there are going to be 35-45 pitchers who pitched in their 40's from 2000-2009.
That may be true, but truthfully, how many of those guys will be on the verge of winning 300 games? I'd say there is a better than likely chance the number is zero. On the other hand, many guys who won 300 games pitched into their 40s before the advent of the 5-man rotation (almost all of the 300-game winners you listed are in that category, and Niekro won 121 games after turning 40, and many other guys from that era won many games after turning 40, too, because the pitching game was much different than it is today). There will be many more guys that will pitch into their 40s in future years, too, but right now at least, it seems unlikely that any of them will approach 300 wins.
Collecting 1970s Topps baseball wax, rack and cello packs, as well as PCGS graded Half Cents, Large Cents, Two Cent pieces and Three Cent Silver pieces.
espn don't know everything i guess?
j
RIP GURU
I understand your point, and the gap between Ryan and Clemens was a long one, but I just don't agree that you can use that example to a modern day situation. The fact is that Clemens had six 20-win seasons and routinely exceeded 250 innings a season during the earlier part of his career. He is probably the best example of a guy who bridged the old era of pitching with the new, and he is also probably the best pitcher of his generation.
On the other hand, look at Johan Santana, widely considered the best pitcher in the majors right now. He has won 20 games exactly once in his career, and at age 29 he is not even one third of the way (89 wins) to 300. Halladay has won 20 games once and is barely one-third of the way there (107 wins) at age 30, Oswalt has won exactly 20 games twice and has 109 wins at age 29, and Sabathia, even though he has never had a 20-win season, has 95 wins at age 26, so even if he were to average 15 wins a season while remaining injury-free in the process, would stiill need to pitch about 14 seasons more to reach 300, so he probably has the best chance of anyone right now. Like I said, I don't think it's impossible, just unlikely that anyone will reach 300 wins anytime soon, and there's no doubt in my mind that reaching that milestone will be much more difficult than it has been in any other previous era.
Mussina may have a shot (as I stated in a previous post) and the Big Unit, too, though at this point it looks like Randy may not make it after all, either, which goes to show that even guys who look to be on track in the latter part of their careers need some luck in avoiding injuries and just the general loss of effectiveness.
Collecting 1970s Topps baseball wax, rack and cello packs, as well as PCGS graded Half Cents, Large Cents, Two Cent pieces and Three Cent Silver pieces.
Don Sutton broke 20 wins only once (21), and Ryan only did it twice (21, 22).
I see no correllation between winning 25 or 30 games in a season and getting 300 wins. If anything, that type of wear on a pitcher will only shorten his career, as evidenced by the far fewer 40 year old pitchers in the 80s compared to today. The fact that no one's getting a ton of wins in any one season is fairly meaningless. It's the ability to pitch well over several years that makes it happen, and since pitchers now have longer careers, that only makes it more likely they will get to 300.
While it does seem that there are many more guys pitching into their 40s today, very few of them, if any, have amassed the victory totals in their careers to make a serious run at 300 wins. Sabathia of the Indians, because he came up at only 21 years of age and immediately began putting some healthy win totals from that point, seems to have the best shot at reaching 300 wins, IMO, but he it's far too early to say with any degree of certainity that he will approach that level. There have been many guys who put up impressive win totals early on (like Gooden) only to fizzle out for one reason or another. It certainly will be a tough feat, and if Mussina or Johnson don't make it within the next couple of years (and there's certainly no guarantee they will), it'll be long wait till the next one, that much is for certain.
Collecting 1970s Topps baseball wax, rack and cello packs, as well as PCGS graded Half Cents, Large Cents, Two Cent pieces and Three Cent Silver pieces.
/s/ JackWESQ
<< <i>I know 14 victories is a lot, but I'm hoping Randy Johnson can somehow make it. He starts Sunday going for career win number 287.
/s/ JackWESQ >>
I am with you...i have a lot of hope for Randy!
I personally believe if Randy or Hudson don't do it, we won't see anyone do it that is currently pitching today.
Don't waste your time and fees listing on ebay before getting in touch me by PM or at gregmo32@aol.com !
1. R Clemens*354
2. G Maddux*349
3. T Glavine*303
4. R Johnson*286
5. M Mussina*255
6. D Wells*239
7. J Moyer*232
8. C Schilling*216
9. K Rogers*212
10. J Smoltz*210
11. P Martinez*209
12. A Pettitte*204
13. T Wakefield*171
14. A Sele*148
15. B Colon*146
16. S Trachsel*142
17. T Hudson*140
18. L Hernandez*139
19. M Hampton*138
20. T Gordon*136
"Molon Labe"
Collector of OPC 1980-1985
Looking for Charlie (Charley) Maxwell cards.
It's a longevity stat, so someone might eventually make it. But pitchers get fewer decisions now then before.
I guess who cares? Maybe some great pitchers will only hit 200 wins now.
<< <i>Pedro only has 209 career wins? I thought ESPN already had him in the Hall of Fame. >>
He has the greatest win/loss ratio of all current players and third on the all time list in that category..
He has the third best all time strikeouts/9ip
Member of the 3000 strikeout club
Before his injuries, he was the most dominating pitcher of his era
I say first ballot hof'er
<< <i>Guys, wheres some love for Maddux, 1 away from 350. How high can he go? How many more season can he pitch? Is 400 possible? With this debate about 300 going on, let's give a little dap to a man who's already there and looking at an even higher milestone. If Maddux throws two more seasons and ends up around 380, with the tarnishing og Clemens, does Maddux eclipse Clemens in collectors and card values? >>
I doubt Maddux ever gets to 400 especially playing for the padres....he's already 42 years old.
He already eclipses clemens card values, except for his mass produced rookie which never will be worth much because of supply.
Compare his auto cards today compared to clemens today.
Its like winning 20 games a season for 15 years (or 15 games a season for 20 years) No way.
Many of these guys will have trouble winning 20 games for 3-4 seasons in their career.
PS Pedro is a 1st ballet HOFer! He is one of the top 5 pitchers of all time, period, it doesnt matter about how many wins he has, he can retire this year and still is a 1st ballet HOFer.
Collector of OPC 1980-1985