by The Last Druid » Fri Jul 14, 2006 4:24 pm
'68 Gibson is not that great a card. Lefties ruin it.
A most interesting statistic is lifetime adjusted era. This is obtained through the usual statistical normalization process for each year. The results are directly analagous to IQ's. Thus 115 is 1 standard deviation above the mean, 130 is 2, 145 is 3. Excluding active players here is the top all time guys and their scores:
1. Grove 148
Johnson 147
Wilhelm 146
Walsh 145
Joss 142
Nichols 139
Young 138
Brown 137
Matthewson 136
Pete 135
Waddell 135
Koufax is 131 but obviously only had about five great years and a mediocore early career.
I mention this as Pete clearly has the best card of any pitcher currently. His adjusted era that year is an amazing 225. Let's see if any of the other pitchers can come close.
The Big Train that we use was a 148 in 1924. However his 1913 season was better than any Pete ever had. That adjusted era was a 258 (actual era was 1.14). Johnson had three other years that were 215 or greater. Pete's next best year was a 171. Johnson was a better pitcher than Pete. Period. Give us a card that reflects this.
Grove is often considered the best pitcher ever. Not by me but still. His ATG card sure doesn't reflect this. Now he did pitch in a really bad era for pitchers. But the season we get is a 151. His best year was '31 when he racked up a 218. But I don't think there will ever be a great Grove card. Good strat cards are based on WHIP and Slg. Pct. Although he led the league in era 9 times his whips aren't that good, just an artifact of when he played.
Our Matty's card is not very good. And he played in the dead ball era. His adjusted era for 1911 was 169. But he was past his peak and gave up about a hit per inning. However in 1905 and 1909 he had 223 and 230 adjusted eras. His actual eras from those years were 1.28 and 1.14. And his whips those years were superb too.
Joss only pitched 9 seasons. He had a great era but that is because he retired in 1910. However, the only year he had a adjusted era above 159 was a 205 in 1908. Still he is a welcome addition.
Gibson's 68 season was 258. Not too shabby. Gooden '85 was 227. I think the best ever for a season was our Eckersley card at 607. The '78 Guidry we are getting is 208 (the only year he ever broke 140). Our Koufax is only a 160. His best years were 187 and 191 from '64 and '66 respectively.
These adjusted era's are not the definitive stat for pitchers. But they do put the pitcher's performance in the right context relative to the years they played.
So let's see a few guys with 200+ seasons.
And let's dethrone Pete who certainly isn't on my list of top five pitchers for either career or peak seasons.