Quote:
Originally Posted by RCMcKenzie
I picked Valenzuela because he was the best left-hander that I witnessed. I saw Carlton and Johnson, and they were also good.
Of the players I did not see, like Koufax, Sphan, Grove etc., the most eye-popping stats belong to Ed Morris.
Over a 3 year span, from 1884-1886, Morris was 114-57. He threw 1566 innings in those 3 seasons.
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So no one jumped on my Ruth suggestion but he had a three year span of about 2.00 average ERA, 20 wins a year and 300 innings a year. Then he went on to hit 714 home runs from the left side with over 2,200 RBI and a BA of .342 and OBP of .474 lifetime. That’s why he’s the greatest left handed ball player of all time.
Fernando? C’mon.