ScumbyJr wrote:No. Mussina was the Wade Boggs of pitching (worried about his stats). He always wanted to leave with a lead or tied and avoid getting losses on his record.
Um, isn't Wade Boggs in the Hall of Fame? And doesn't the manager decide when a pitcher leaves a game, not the pitcher himself?
I do think Mussina belongs in the Hall. Mussina had 270 win, 153 losses, a .638 W/L percentage, and an ERA+ of 123. Those are
really good numbers.
Red Ruffing is in the Hall with 273-225, .548, 109.
Burleigh Grimes is in the Hall with 270-212, .560, 108.
Ted Lyons is in the Hal with 260-230, .531, 118.
Waite Hoyt is in with 237-182, .566, 112.
Catfish Hunter is in with 224-166, .574, 104.
Mussina again to compare: 270-153, .638, 123.
What about WAR? Mussina ranks 24th in pitching WAR with 82.9,
way ahead of Ruffing (55.4), Grimes (46.9), Lyons (67.2), Hoyt (55.3) and Hunter (36.6).
Mussina's career record is as good or better than many, many pitchers who are in the HOF. The only real knock against him was that he won 20 games only once (in his final season). But a lot of that is a product of the times--He pitched in an era of five-man rotations when pitchers were rarely allowed by their managers to complete their games. Typical years for him were 18-5, 16-5, 19-9, 19-11, 18-7, 17-11, 18-10, 17-8, 20-9. Not too shabby.
Another way to put it is that he was never the most dominant pitcher in the league, but he was really, really good for a very long time.