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Final game of the World Series. Johnson, Mathewson, Cy Young?
Who would you want on the mound? I'll go with Matty with Wojo a close second....
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If it were against the Baltimore Orioles, Steve Blass.
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Is it the 9th inning of Game 7? Mariano Rivera.
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It could be 8th inning too. Still Mo.
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Incorporate my prior answer. :)
http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=223981 |
Peter, I hear you. My first choice was Johnson originally until I looked at alot of numbers. Talk about a toss up!
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To me Johnson is by a significant margin the best pitcher of all time. Therefore, I would take him. Hard to go wrong with any of these though, or Alexander.
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Johnson 417-279, ERA 2.17
Mathewson 373-188, ERA 2.12 These two were about as good as it gets.... |
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Man,
I Love da "BiG SiX" iN THiS Arena, Especially if they Played da Tigers! Mr. Cobb Out RiGHT Suck'd in the WS And He Nevar Faced Mr. Mathewson! Howevar, Mr. Johnson Against Mr. Cobb, Different Story All tagether... Ole' Cobb had Mr. Johnson's Number Down Pat ~ Woulda Still Been Interesting ta See? How Matty would of handled the Peach & All !?!? imho Ole' Mr. Young woulda been a coin toss... Honorable Mention Goes ta Mr. "BiG Ed" Walsh, He was Certainly No Slouch Either! Mr. Mathewson woulda certainly of gotten the nod from me!!! |
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Johnson 2.52 Mathewson 0.97 I'll take Matty. |
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Off topic, but I would love to match him against Bumgarner in a game 7. :D |
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Baseball Reference.
Hall of Fame Statistics Black Ink Pitching - 150 (1), Average HOFer ≈ 40 Gray Ink Pitching - 420 (2), Average HOFer ≈ 185 Hall of Fame Monitor Pitching - 364 (1), Likely HOFer ≈ 100 Hall of Fame Standards Pitching - 82 (2), Average HOFer ≈ 50 JAWS Starting Pitcher (1st): 165.6 career WAR / 89.5 7yr-peak WAR / 127.5 JAWS Average HOF P (out of 62): 73.9 career WAR / 50.3 7yr-peak WAR / 62.1 JAWS |
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Thank you. Good to hear from a fellow Pirates fan. Adams and Maddox I like for a seventh game. As for Johnson, and Val Kehl, please forgive me, but the Pirates did beat Johnson in the seventh game of the 1925 World Series. |
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Matty
1905 World Series |
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not an option but...
If the pitcher also gets to hit in this hypothetical, I'm going with Babe Ruth...with Bob Gibson getting an honorable mention.
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Seriously, I think the best predictor of how a guy is going to pitch in one game is his career, not a small sample of WS games. and certainly not very late in his career Now if a pitcher has pitched enough playoff/WS games that he seems to have an issue, like Kershaw, I could see not using that metric. |
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Strongly disagree about great career equating to pitching in the clutch. Kershaw is the prime example of that. The two are not the same. The regular season is completely different than the World Seried where every game is against a great team. For a pressure game, pick the guy who can handle the pressure, not the guy who is slightly better in the regular season, but doesn't excel under pressure. And what does late in the career have to do with anything? In 1924 Wajo led the AL in wins, ERA, Ks, games, shutouts, win %, Whip, Fip, etc and was the AL MVP. That is just a lame excuse. |
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BTW, Brian, you should also ask for forgiveness from Hank Thomas! |
Walter Johnson. Not close.
All of your postseason sample sizes are too small to predict postseason performance in a single game better than a career's worth of regular season performances do. It's the only thing I ever blogged about other than sex: https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...-base-and-more |
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Don't believe me? Pick a number between 100 and 500. 220 let's say. Then look up how the pitcher performed in games 220 through 225 of his career. See if you can tell which numbers belong to Greg Maddux versus Jamie Moyer versus Dennis Martinez vs. Randy Johnson. You could probably match Randy Johnson with the right K total, but with W/L%, WHIP, ERA+? You can't tell much from 6 games. |
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Statistics uses small sample sizes all the time. The bigger the better, but they don't ignore small ones, it just leads to less confidence in the result. When there is significant regular season performance to back up that sample size, it produces a higher confidence. Your flaw is your opinion that postseason games aren't significant and no different than regular season ones. Pollsters use a small sample size of 1000 to predict an election of over 120 million. They do it very accurately. Even the last election when they missed the result of the electoral college, the result of the general election was right on as well as most individual states. |
But you still have the question whether Johnson's 6 games (at the end of his career) are really representative, in order to make a comparison with Mathewson.
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Ok, so he is post-war, but Koufax.
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Pre War: have to go with Matty - Three Straight Shutouts!
Post-War only: Based on how they pitched in the World Series (not the regular season), I'd have to go with Bob Gibson followed by Sandy Koufax and then Johnson - but Randy, not Walter. Schilling and Smoltz would be runners up (and I also thought about adding Jack Morris too). |
1916-18 era Babe Ruth would be my choice.
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Pedro Martinez is my choice. Circa 2000. I'm not sure there is a close second.
Tom C |
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Talking about the three greatest pitchers ever and not a single card shown? You guys are losing it. Here's my choice.
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Who cares who's on the mound? Just make sure Buckner isn't playing first base (unless, of course, you're a Mets fan :D).
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quoting Stengel:
You can forget that other fella. You can forget Waddell. The Jewish kid is the best of any of them.---Casey Stengel, on Sandy Koufax. ("The other fella" referred to Walter Johnson. |
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http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=10126http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=10124http://www.net54baseball.com/picture...ictureid=10123 Tough choice. I'd have to go Matty and his pinpoint control. Really there's no wrong answer. |
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I'll take whomever didnt pitch game 6
And you can't compare pitchers of today with these guys. Too many variables. these guys get 5 days rest and with the exception of a handful of guys, no one ever goes 8 innings, let alone 9...todays pitchers learned from Matty, Young and Johnson...different era, different pitchers, no comparison. Same goes for hitters. It irritates me when someone compares Aaron, Bonds or ARod to Cobb, Gehrig or Ruth... If Ruth didnt pitch for the first 5 years, he'd have 900 homeruns...and Aaron would still have 755
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BTW, Brian, you should also ask for forgiveness from Hank Thomas![/QUOTE]
None required, Val or Brian. Although I never mind making his case, Walter's record speaks for itself. I love this quote from Clyde Milan from "Walter Johnson: King of the Pitchers." "Tell you about Walter? I can tell you this. If I were manager of a team that had one game to play--the one most important ball game in all the world to play--and the good Lord called down and said, 'Milan, you can choose your own pitcher for this. Jut tell us what you want and we'll make up a pitcher to fit your specifications. He can have Matty's curve, or Rusie's speed, or Griffith's shrewdness and anything else you want.' Well, if that happened, I'd say never mind the specifications. Don't make me up anything fancy. Just send me Walter Johnson when he was about twenty-six years old, and you don't have to add even one little item. He'll do for me, thank you kindly." |
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