by Outta Leftfield » Fri Jul 28, 2006 10:36 am
One thing that you can say about Clemens is that he's won 7 Cy Youngs. This is a truly awesome total and shows his ability to dominate consistently within his own era. Of course, Lefty Grove might have won about that many Cy Youngs if they'd had one in his time. Maybe Walter Johnson, too. I think Seaver and Gibson are really great pitchers, but perhaps not at this level. Neither won as many games or dominated as consistently, and—as has been pointed out—they pitched under conditions that much favored the pitcher. Gibson might or might not be as successful today as he was in his own era. He would have had trouble pitching inside the way he did, and the high fastball he counted on would be called a ball today.
Carlton was great and did pitch for some bad teams, but as has been pointed out, he couldn't pitch when he got older while Clemens has remained dominant. Also, Carlton would alternate great years with 15-14 and even 10-19 years. (By the way, I saw Carlton's last game as a Philly. Boy did he get bombed. He was released right after that and the GM said it was just too painful to watch anymore.)
By contrast, Clemens has never had a losing season and since 2000 his won-lost record is an amazing 94-38. Wow! When the guy started that run, he was 37.
For me, the top three would seem to be Clemens, Grove and Johnson in some order or other, with Matthewson and Pete Alexander close behind. Koufax was great, but just didn't do it long enough. In his first edition of the Historical Abstract, Bill James composed an argument saying Grove was the greatest ever, then in the revised version (a must have book) he argued that it was actually the Big Train. A few years have passed and with Clemens great recent performance, he has definitely entered the discussion. As I study the records of Clemens, Grove and Johnson, whoever I looked at last seems like the greatest ever.... :D