But were Ryan's teams really THAT much worse than those of others? We're talking about a 20+ plus year stretch, after all. There were some good ones in there too - and Seaver, Carlton, Blyleven, etc. (everybody but Yankees) endured some bad teams.
You may be right, but it just seems to me it would even out over long careers- maybe not completely, but to a great extent.
We're talking about some huge disparities in pitcher WL PCT - Ryan's .526 vs. Seaver's .603, for example. Even Carlton's .574, which doesn't sound that great, represents 5 more wins and 48 fewer losses than Ryan.
I'm doing some research on this question just because it interests me - preliminary results are interesting!
WL Records of Ryan's teams (1968-1992 and half of 1993): 2062 Wins, 2010 Losses .506
Team Records without Ryan's decisions (1968-1992 and half of 1993): 1738 wins, 1718 Losses .502
Doesn't look like he played for that many horrible teams...
Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyCoxDodgers3B
Tim,
First off, I'd politely like to take the superhuman Walter Johnson out of what I say below.
The other pitchers you used for comparison in your last post all actually had good/great teams helping them secure higher winning percentages quite often in their careers. Ryan couldn't be expected to win all the games on his own with absolutely no aid from some disgustingly terrible teams. Aside from 1969, which was so early on for him, when did he ever have any support? His W-L totals are not solely his doing. Not to mention that he was barely used in 1969; less than 90 IP.
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