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September 04, 2010

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Howard Wasserman

Bob Welch (1990) and Steve Carlton (1972) both won 27. Juan Marichal won 26 in 1968 (same year McLain won 31). Then a whole bunch of people have won 25. Is there someone else in the "big 3" you were looking for?

Tim Zinnecker

You're correct, Howard. The third-place tie is among Lolich, Hunter, Jenkins, Guidry, and Stone (each with 25).

Will we see a 30-game winner in our lifetime? I'm guessing no.

Fred Gedicks

Tim, didn't Ron Guidry win 27 with the Yankees in the late 70's? Fred Gedicks

Tim Zinnecker

Fred, Ron Guidry's best year was 1978, when he captured the Cy Young award for going 25-3 with an ERA of 1.78.
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/g/guidrro01.shtml

That may be the best "winning percentage" for a 20-game winner in ... forever?

David

The superstar who hit the home runs is Reggie Jackson. (Tim, you are revealing --or is it reveling in--your youth when you ask "Will we see a 30-game winner in our lifetime?" -- some of us actually did! But I doubt we'll see another; McLain had, I think, at least 40 starts that year.)

Tim Zinnecker

A slip of the tongue, David, as I'm old enough to remember the 1968 series. McLain may have won 31 that year, but it was Mickey Lolich who broke my heart.

Howard Wasserman

Tim: No way. A top starter now gets 33-35 starts a year. And the greater role for bullpens means starters have fewer no-decisions than in the past. I suppose if some team went to a 4-man rotation and a pitcher got very lucky with his bullpen it could happen. But I'm not counting on it.

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