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Mathewson Vs. Johnson
Is it my misperception or does Christy seem to be gaining significant ground on Walter as of late in terms of pre-war card sales lately?
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Go Christy!
In 2008, Eric Seidman wrote a very nice article entitled, "Why Cy ?" The Cy Young award started in 1956. So Seidman went back and statistically analyzed the pre-war greats to get a better fix on dominant pitchers. His results had Walter Johnson winning 8 Cy Young awards, Matty & Grove winning 7 each, G. Alexander nabbing 6 awards, and Cy Young hoisting 4 awards. Seidman thinks it should be called the "Christy Mathewson Award" and rightly so.
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I was awarded a Johnson...that’s probably why not...
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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From a WAR perspective: Times led a league in WAR: Walter Johnson - 8 Cy Young - 6 Christy Mathewson - 3 |
In reading the article, the author concludes that, "Mathewson was much more dominant than Cy Young during the career of Cy Young". Maybe he was matching up actual year-for-year comparisons. Johnson pitched a little later than both Matty and Young.
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Answer: 511 career wins, 94 more than the next highest total. |
511 wins. Almost 100 more than WaJo and 140 more than Mathewson. Longevity does count for something.
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Hi Corey! I think it is almost universally agreed that Walter Johnson was the greatest pitcher ever. His ERA is almost half a run better than Young’s. His shutout total dwarfs Young’s. There is an argument for Mathewson, albeit a weak one, but really none for Young. |
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That said, for purposes of creating an award that would resonate with the public, it is a lot simpler to sell a guy that was the all-time win holder with no close second. |
IMO WaJo is the greatest, but I don’t think it’s entirely fair to penalize Cy for his ERA. During the early part of his career, he had to pitch through a major rule change, when they moved the mound back to its present day 60’ 6”. ERAs understandably shot up league wide. Cleveland’s team ERA increased almost 2 full runs from 1892 to 1893. Cy Young still outperformed the rest of the league in the 1890s, then had an amazing 7-8 year run during the latter part of his career (ERA barely above 2.00) as he approached 40.
To the OPs original question, I collect Matty pretty heavily and seem to have noticed an uptick over the past year or so. Not like the WaJo portrait, or the Cobbs, but each of Matty’s T206 poses seem to be creeping up, especially tougher backs. T205, and his many T202s seem pretty strong too. |
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I agree with the article though. I would take Matty over Young. Longevity means something, but not that much. Matty's ERA is a half run better than Young, better than WaJo too, No Dodger fan would take Don Sutton over Sandy Koufax. Tom Glavine wasn't better than Pedro Martinez. |
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Johnson did far more
with a much worse team Mathewson had the benefit of playing in New York 1. Young 2. Johnson 3. Matty |
Longevity mean A LOT. Young is the greatest pitcher of the era in my opinion, without question, and the award is RIGHTLY named after him.
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"in order to know what these statistics really mean, one would need to do an analysis of how league pitching stats might have changed over that period."
It's been done. Let's use ERA+ (because it's easy and handy, not because it's the only think you might want to look at). It takes a player's ERA, adjusts it to account for the park he pitched in, and then compares to it league average. 100 is average, higher is better. This allows cross-era comparisons, because if Joe has a 110 ERA+ in 1920 and Mike has a 110 ERA+ in 1950 it means that, relative to his competition, Joe's ERA (after adjustments for his park) was 10% better than league average, and it means the same thing for Mike. Cy Young ERA+ IP 138 7356 Walter Johnson ERA+ IP 147 5914 Christy Matthewson ERA+ IP 136 4788 Obviously all three were all-time greats, but Matty is a clear #3 in this company. |
A few other notable pitchers:
Roger Clemens ERA+ IP 143 4916 Lefty Grove ERA+ IP 148 3940 Grover Cleveland Alexander ERA+ IP 135 5190 Kid Nichols ERA+ IP 140 5076 ...how these guys compare to a more ordinary hall of famer... Jim Bunning ERA+ IP 115 3760 ...and just for fun... Babe Ruth ERA+ IP 122 1221 |
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Love 'em both
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Gotta get a picture on this thread
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and Walter
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And a Walter Johnson
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The next year with the top 5 not taking votes away, Young barely made the cut. He only got 153 votes out of 201 and finished 3rd in voting, behind Lajoie and Speaker (He had finished 8th in 1936 behind Lajoie and Speaker) again. I believe the award was named for Cy Young because he had won the most games at a time when wins were the most important stat. I think today we know better. Jacob deGrom is currently 8-9. By past standards, no one would vote for him because there are several pitchers with 17, 16, 15 wins and winning records. Today, he is a serious candidate to win the Cy Young because we don't value wins, but value ERA, WHIP and adjusting them for things like park, team defense and level of competition. |
All good points. I just think the "Johnson" award would lend itself to more interesting stories: "Here we are in the Astro locker room after Igor Gablowski has won the 2023 Walter Johnson award. Look, there's Igor raising his Johnson above his head. Now he is passing it around so his teammates can take a sip from it ..." admit it, it flows.
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Cy Young died in 1955, and the award was first given out in 1956. Perhaps it was done more in his memory, despite the fact there were pitchers with arguably better stats. |
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Why does an award have to be named after the best player (as opposed to a great player, but perhaps not the best)?
In 1999, then Commissioner Selig introduced the Hank Aaron award, given to the best hitter in each league. Was Aaron the best hitter of all time? Maybe? There are certainly others who have a case. Someone else mentioned that the Cy Young award came about a year after his death. It was introduced by then Commissioner Frick. I'm pretty certain that Selig thought very highly of Aaron, and I speculate that Frick probably felt similarly to Young, which is very likely why both awards were, in part, created. |
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Agreed.
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...and now, the contest begins for the Mario Mendoza Award... |
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a!!
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How 'bout The NICE GUY Award - to Chris Davis for being the LEAST OFFENSIVE player. :D DAVIS Slash (slush really) .171 / .246 / .302 / .548 MONCADA Slash .231 / .309 / .397 / .707 |
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RPPC proof....and the Cy Young Award
I agree there is no obligation to name the Most Games Won in a Year Award. It is named what it is because it makes the most sense. :) And I like Johnson as a collectible, a lot. And he has the nicest grandson on Earth too!! All that and The Big Train could dress too. But it doesn't change the fact (most wins in a lifetime by a lot) on what is the best name for the most wins in a season. And to get back to topic, Johnson has seemed to be collected right above Matty but not by much. And different card issues can easily have Matty going for more.
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Hi Hank
It is actually a real photo used as a sample to order the postcards. It was a salesman's sample book, at auction, for ordering the postcards... or the photos, actually. This (regular sized but enlarged here) business card should help with the initials. It is on the back page. Quote:
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Wow!
It was enjoyable and very cool just to witness that spread of information! OUTSTANDING! . |
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My mistake, it is best pitcher and not most wins. Blame Gabby, he told me what it was :). And the photo album was 2 bucks !! I paid a little more for it so probably overpaid as usual.
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Walter Johnson is best ever based on stats back then while Nolan Ryan is the best modern pitcher. Easy stuff, people. CV |
What amazes me most about Johnson is the 110 shutouts, a record that will never be broken. Second most impressive statistic of his is the 417 wins in spite of losing 63 games in which he allowed only one or two runs.
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