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#1
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Koufax wins three Cy Young Awards, all UNANIMOUS. I rest my case.
__________________
Tony Biviano |
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#2
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Well, you got us. Lefty Grove didn't win a single Cy Young Award, let alone unanimous.
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#3
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Hubbell had a tremendous mid-career stretch that rivals or exceeds any stretch Grove ever had. Carl Hubbell had 4 years with lower WHIP than Grove ever did have. Hubbell also had 2 MVP's plus a 3rd - again better than Grove. For a 5 year stretch one could argue Hubbell better than Grove. They pitched in same 1930's. Hubbell needs some love. And heck, wasn't Koufax' great run abut 5 years?
Last edited by Touch'EmAll; 07-13-2020 at 06:54 PM. |
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#4
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The Koufax advocates are now arguing that
A) pitchers before integration do not count for "all time" and B) pitchers before the Cy Young Award do not count for "all time" When I said the logic had run off the rails earlier, well, it's now even worse. Also, Randy Johnson won 5 Cy Young's, so even with this twisted logic, Koufax loses. |
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#5
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And we all know the story of the 1934 All-Star Game where Hubbell struck out Ruth, Gehrig, Foxx, Simmons & Cronin - in a row. Legendary.
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#6
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Quote:
Don't forget that Koufax pitched against some great hitters (which he did,) while Grove only pitched against white stumblebums. Pitching against Pete Rose was way tougher than pitching against wussies like "Ruth" or "Gehrig." |
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#7
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And somehow, pitching in the most friendly park to a pitcher in the most pitcher friendly era in the last century is somehow further proof that Koufax is the GOAT.
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#8
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Quote:
Randy Johnson was unanimous pick once. Koufax was unanimous pick 3 times in all of baseball not just one league. I rest my case
__________________
Tony Biviano |
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#9
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Quote:
"The Koufax advocates are now arguing that A) pitchers before integration do not count for "all time" and B) pitchers before the Cy Young Award do not count for "all time" When I said the logic had run off the rails earlier, well, it's now even worse. Also, Randy Johnson won 5 Cy Young's, *but since they were not unanimous Koufax wins*" A stunning logical argument. |
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#10
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Forgive me, you keep resting your case but I'm not really sure what case you are trying to make. Stop dropping the mike and walking away without completing a thought. It looks like you are saying Koufax is better than Randy Johnson??
Last edited by earlywynnfan; 07-13-2020 at 08:12 PM. |
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#11
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Bingo!
__________________
Tony Biviano |
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#12
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Quote:
At any rate, again, I haven't been saying that there aren't strong cases to make for others being the greatest lefty. I am not saying that Koufax was or wasn't the greatest. But the idea that Koufax wasn't a great pitcher is ridiculous. The detractor camp is just not giving him his full due. At this point, I would say they're trying way too hard not to acknowledge him. If it comes to down to listening to what they think, and what guys like Hank Aaron think, I'll go with Aaron. |
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#13
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Quote:
Hanks testimony is useless, as he did not face any of the other pitchers in the discussion except Carlton. All of the guys in this thread have quotes from hitters about them being tough to bat against. That we selectively only apply this for Koufax, because statistical arguments in context cannot be found, is just one more reason he is not the greatest. The argument entirely relies on emotional appeals like this Last edited by G1911; 07-13-2020 at 08:36 PM. |
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#14
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Quote:
If Aaron's testimony is useless, so is that of everyone who is coming out against Koufax, because you guys didn't face him either, lol. Aaron wasn't saying Koufax was the greatest lefty ever, but was the greatest of the pitchers he had faced in his era. And yes, there are other quotes that will testify as to the greatness of the other pitchers. Who knows how players of the 30's would have felt against Koufax, and how players of the 60's would have felt against Grove or Johnson? But I think some of the remarks I made, as well as those by a couple of the other posters haven't been reflected on enough by those deriding Koufax's pre-1963 seasons. I'm not saying that some of the things you guys have brought up didn't help Koufax. But Koufax dominated that mid-60's time frame, and it wasn't merely due to Chavez Ravine. He developed as a player. If you had put him in Chavez Ravine in the late 50's, he would not have excelled as he did when he actually arrived there. You keep saying that I am making emotional appeals. I think that you are taking too clinical an approach. |
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#15
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I, for one, have never felt that Koufax, for 4 seasons at least and possibly even 6, wasn't great. I think he's the best pitcher of the 60's, RH or LH. I feel his lack of longevity keeps him from being best ever, and his peak, when taken in the context of eras, is not as great as Grove's.
I enjoy these topics, and I know I can come across as yelling sometimes, but that's because I love the debate, not because I think ill of someone with differing opinions. I did learn something about Grove in this: his #1 comparable stunned me! Without looking, can anyone guess? I'll post tomorrow. Not the HOFer I was expecting! |
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#16
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Since Baseball Reference similarity scores don’t adjust for era... is it Hubbell or John Clarkson? A lot of their career stats are fairly close off memory |
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#17
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Quote:
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#18
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1. Grove 2. R. Johnson 3. Spahn 4. Hubbell Hubbell has better peak than Spahn, but Spahn was so reliably effective for so many more innings. I think 2-4 all have valid arguments for any position in that range. 5 on down is a drop from the top 4, I think. Plank (hurt by never leading the league in much), Ford, Carlton (inconsistent) would come next I think in some order. Kershaw is climbing up and just needs solid years, not great ones, to quickly jump up the rankings. Less than 2,300 innings and the postseason is all that holds him back |
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#19
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Quote:
1. Koufax 2. Kershaw 3. Ford 4. Hubbell 5. Johnson 6. Grove 7. Carlton 8. Spahn 3 and 4 are close, 5-8 are close, but there are 3 clear tiers. |
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#20
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My vote (posted because I just like lookin at it)
__________________
My Monster Progess Complete Set......: 238 / 520 : 45% HOF Cards..........: 009 / 076 : 12% Southern League.: 000 / 048 : 00% Minor League......: 055 / 086 : 41% Portrait Cards......: 077 / 180 : 43% Horizontal Cards.: 000 / 006 : 00% |
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#21
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Take a look at Koufax numbers in 1961, his first really good year and the Dodgers last year at LA Memorial Coliseum. He was pretty bad at home and very good on the road. Then look at his home/road splits the next five years. He was very good on the road but put up video game numbers at Dodger Stadium. To be fair the numbers in 1966 were pretty even. But the other four years he was a border line HOF pitcher on the road and the best ever at home.
Larry Walker syndrome. Still a very good player on the road but freakish at home. That doesn't get enough play with Koufax for some reason. The numbers don't lie |
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#22
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#23
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Any idea who had a 2.58 ERA over that same four year period? And if you include 1966 to add a fifth year this person had an ERA of 2.34 . Any idea? Gary Peters. But sure. Koufax road ERA of 2.81 from 1962-1965 makes him super special. Larry. Walker. |
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#24
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Koufax home ERA 1962-1965............... 1.32
Koufax road ERA 1962-1965................ 2.75 Nothing to see here obviously. |
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#25
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#26
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Which makes him the best lefty of his era, not best of all time.
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#27
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Yet, the same argument is being made for Grove because he won more ERA titles. The difference is that Koufax did that against much tougher competition. To be unanimous over Spahn, Gibson, Marichal, Drysdale, Bunning, Perry and Sutton is far more impressive. He did that by winning the pitching triple crown each year as well as leading in most other stats. Grove was the best lefty of his era, but if he was truly great, why could he only pitch 35 shutouts in 17 seasons?
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#28
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Cy Youngs are not fair judge of pitchers of different eras, only fair when judging contemporaries since their in direct competition. |
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#29
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WHIP, SHUTOUTS, and STRIKEOUTS: most important ERA and WINS: maybe; wins subjective to team WAR: Made-up and useless What about ERA+? Also, era discrepancies like vastly different batting averages and runs scored when compared between the early 1930's and mid-1960's are because the pitching was so deep and talented in the 1960's, correct? Even though you listed the amazing hitters Koufax had to pitch to? Does the fact that Grove was often called in as an effective reliever matter? |
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