Fri Nov 28, 2014 2:13 pm
Hi Glenn,
I hope you'll be willing to answer a question I've had in mind for some time. It strikes me that very few pitchers from the 4 man rotation era of the 1960s ever made it to 300 wins. However, since 5 man rotations became more or less the norm, we have a lot more 300 win pitchers. These would include Maddux, Clemens, Carlton, Ryan, Sutton, Niekro, Seaver, Glavine and Randy Johnson. We might think of, say, Seaver as a 4 day rotation guy, but actually he never started more than 36 games in a season.
Very few of these pitchers started over 40 games more than once or twice in their careers--even knuckleballer Niekro only pitched 40+ 3 times in his career. Also, in general the workloads of these pitchers diminished as they got older.
It might see counter-intuitive that 5 day rotation pitchers would win 300 games more often in modern baseball than 4 day rotation pitchers, but it seems plausible to me that these more lightly used guys were able to win more games because they had much longer careers. Most of these pitchers worked well into their 40s.
By contrast, Sandy Koufax was pitched to death between 1963 and 1966 and had to retire at 30. Denny McLain never really recovered from his 30 win season. Ralph Houk started running out Whitey Ford every 4th day. Houk won some pennants (as did the Dodgers with Sandy) but eventually Whitey's arm fell off. Koufax retired despite a 2.07 ERA in his final season because he couldn't stand the pain. Ford's ERA was 1.64 in his last season, but after 7 games he had to give up. Could any of these guys have made it to 300 wins had they been more lightly used?
Anyway, does it seem plausible to you that more lightly used starters have a better chance to get to 300 wins? Are there other factors, do you think, that might be in effect, producing all of these 300 win pitchers.
Thanks for considering this, OL