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ScumbyJr wrote:
This article make the exact argument. He is HOFer based on stats, but not domination. I would compare him to Tommy John though not Brown.
http://lastwordonsports.com/2015/01/16/ ... -of-famer/
We seem to be going around in circles, somewhat. Yes, Mussina and Tommy John both pitched for a long time, but otherwise it's a false equivalency. In terms of performance, Mussina was a LOT better than Tommy John. Lets look at their lines:
John: 288-231/ .555/ 111 ERA+/ 62.3 WAR
Mussina: 270-153/ .638 / 123 ERA+/ 82.7 WAR
Both John and Mussina pitched mostly for good teams. Granted that, there's a very big difference between a .555 w/l % and .638. There's a big different between 111 OPS+ and 123. There's a big difference between 62.3 and 82.7 WAR. In terms of wins and losses, think of it this way. John's 18 extra wins cost 78 extra losses. That's a whole lot of losses--half a season's worth. And those losses are a direct product of John's significantly weaker ERA relative to his leagues.
Mussina's combo of wins, w/l pct, ERA+ and WAR place him in elite company. Very few pitchers have performed at that level along that range of measures.
As everybody agrees, the legitimate knock against him is that he wasn't ever the best pitcher in his league. But that shouldn't be disqualifying in an of itself. He was frequently among the top 5. He finished between 2 and 6 in the CYA 9 times. That isn't just hanging-around performance. John finished in the top 6 in CYA only 3 times. Another way to look at this is HOF Black Ink vs Grey Ink. Black Ink measures league leading performance in various categories, while grey ink measures top 10 performance. Mussina has 15 points for black ink, whereas the HOF average is 40 pts. That shows that he wasn't dominant. But he also has 250 for grey ink, while the HOF average is 185. This only happens if you're really good for a really long time. This makes him a type of player who usually doesn't get selected in the first round, but whose career stats eventually prove so overwhelming that he makes it in a subsequent round.
HOF voters are looking for both dominance and high level performance over a long career. Only the very, very best players have both. Greg Maddux, Walter Johnson, Randy Johnson, etc.—they have both, and they get in right away. Koufax and Dizzy Dean, had short but dominant careers. They got in too. Mussina had a career that was never dominant, but that was long and brilliant, and that's something special in itself.
We had the same thing with Carlton and Sutton. They had virtually identical career stats, but Carlton had a bunch of dominant season, which Sutton didn't. I think it was appropriate that Carlton got in the HOF in the first round and that Sutton had to wait a few years. But if Sutton had never been selected, it would have been a real injustice. He belongs in the HOF too.
Getting back to John and Mussina --the HOF voters have already shown that they recognize a difference. John was voted on 15 times. He started with 21.3% of the vote and never got more than 31% (in his last year of eligibility). This was the only time John broke 30%, showing he never got any momentum behind him. Mussina started at 20.3%, but in 4 seasons he's already up to 51.8%. Mussina's clearly got momentum, as voters begin to absorb the meaning of his career. I think that he will ultimately be chosen by the HOF voters. It's probably just a matter of time.