View Single Post
  #5  
Old 05-14-2025, 08:16 PM
nat's Avatar
nat nat is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2016
Posts: 961
Default

Faber played six more seasons after that. In which he won 49 more games, put up 15 more WAR, and pitched to a 111 ERA+. That's six more years of good pitching. (Not great pitching, but plenty good.) Cicotte may have had that in him - he was still a fine pitcher in 1920 - and if he could keep pitching effectively into his early 40s like Faber did, he would be well-qualified for the fall of fame (except for that whole throwing the world series thing). As it is, he's not a bad candidate, just not an especially good one either.
Reply With Quote