- Posts: 953
- Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2017 12:34 am
I rarely lobby for player cards. Folks submit so many worthy cards without my adding to it.
I'm a Cardinals fan. My SOM Cardinal teams always play to mediocre results. They need pitching help.
Please consider:
Harry 'the Cat' Brecheen, 1948: 1.04 WHIP, 20-7, 2.24 ERA,
1st in ERA, ERA+, K, FIP, WHIP, ShO, 8.9 WAR, 5th in MVP
1 card in SOM
a lefty, an excellent fielder, 0.83 World Series ERA, 41.4 career WAR
Bill Doak, 1914: 19-6, 1.72 ERA, 1.09 WHIP
1st in ERA and ERA+, 5.4 WAR, 13th in MVP
2 cards in SOM
had a long career, 'Spittin' Bill' was one of 17 pitchers allowed to throw the spitter after 1920
Adam Wainwright, 2010: 20-11, 2.42 ERA, 1.05 WHIP
No cards in SOM
He has 4 years of WAR above 6.0. It's hard to choose one year. In 2010 he did not lead the league in any
category. In other years he has led in IP, W, CG.
Also 2 pitchers in the 18.1 group that won't get chosen (I wish Brecheen had been nominated instead):
Jose DeLeon: 16-12, 3.05 ERA, 1.03 WHIP
1st in K and H/9
No cards in SOM
Not a stellar career, but had a 3.76 lifetime ERA: DeLeon and Kerry Wood are the only pitchers in major league
history to record fewer than 100 wins and still get 1500 or more strikeouts. He also led the league in losses
twice. Will be at least 6R card.
Dick Hughes: 16-6, 2.57 ERA, 0.95 WHIP
1st in WHIP, H/9, 2nd in ROY (to Tom Seaver), 17th in MVP
Appeared in 40 games, started 27 games (he replaced Al Jackson in rotation in late May). 222 IP, 12 CG, 3 saves.
In spring training of 1968, Hughes was warming up in the bullpen when he felt pain in his throwing shoulder.
Though un-diagnosed at the time, the injury was later determined to be a torn rotator cuff. At the time, there
was no surgery to fix such an injury. 1968 was his lat year. Apparently a phenom cut down pre-Tommy John, but
he did not appear in the majors until his age 29 season.
I understand the bias against pre-1900 or pre-1893 stats (the rules were remarkably different, and there are arguments both ways on their inclusion). If we do include them, i would put forward James 'Silver' King, 1888: 1st in ERA, ERA+, IP, WHIP, FIP, K/W (he was very dominant). No cards in SOM. Known for his fastball he had unusually large hands, worked without a windup (it was a different game!), and threw sidearm.