How about Bob Gibson. He was so good the lowered the mound to give hitters a chance.
His earned run average in 1968 was 1.12
His lifetime ERA was 2.91
Other Stats:
3,117 strikeouts
National League MVP (1968)
World Series MVP Award (1964, 1967)
8-time All-Star (1962, 1965-70, 1972)
Gold Glove Award (1965-1973)
Cy Young Awards (1968, 1970)
ERA of 1.12 in 1968 is major league best in the Live Ball Era, 2nd best all-time ERA.
Eight World Series Wins
Record for most strikeouts during a World Series (35 Ks in 1968)
2007-04-18 09:39:55
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answer #1
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answered by SoccerClipCincy 7
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Everybody has their favorite. Mine is Nolan Ryan. His longevity is made of legends. 27 years. A long career is usually 10 or more years. 27 years. That's amazing. Look at his stats. Sure, people would say he was barely over .500 (324-292), but look at the teams he played for. The Muts were good one year of the five he was there. The Angels couldn't win if they were given a nine run lead into the ninth. The 'Stros weren't bad, but they never hit for him. Case in point, in 1987, he was 8-16. On the surface, that's a bad year. Look at his ERA that year. It was a league-leading 2.76. He also led the league in K's with 270. He became the first, and maybe still the only, pitcher to lead his league in both stats and NOT win the Cy Young. He was the best pitcher in the NL so he should have won it. Too much emphasis is put on win-loss percentage. That's the last pitching stat I look at. ERA is far more important. His lifetime ERA was 3.19. That's very respectable. He had seven no-hitters. He as over 40 when he got his last one. His K record will never be broken. A pitcher would have to average 300 K's for 19 years to do it. That's almost impossible.
2007-04-17 16:03:07
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answer #2
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answered by Slartibartfast 2
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classic pitchers were Cy Young or The Babe. But you can't forget Nolan Ryan, Roger Clemens, Bob Gibson.
The main problem is that you can't compare pitcher from such different eras. The slider changed the game of baseball. Pitch counts are changing the game. Pitchers pitch every 5 days now. Before they could pitch every 3 or 4. You just have to look at who was the best at their time.
2007-04-17 15:27:08
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answer #3
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answered by ottoe57 2
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I my recommendations the most dominating Pitcher of the most suitable 50 years is Roger Clemens. the 2d most suitable strikeout pitcher for a occupation has received 7 Cy youthful awards, 11 time all-movie star received the Pitching AL Triple Crown two times. no one has been as sturdy for see you later as Roger Clemens has. the way he pitches as we talk, he ought to pitch till he’s 50. he's 40 years previous and had an era lower than 2, which in as we talk an age is stunning. My hats off to the most excellent pitcher I ever stated, and that i stated Carlton, Ryan, Seaver, and different Pitch in Philadelphia contained in the 70, 80, ninety and latest and Clemens is the most suitable.
2016-12-04 05:35:52
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answer #4
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answered by smallwood 4
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Cy Young is the winningest, but Nolan Ryan is probably the best. #1 in Strikeouts: 5,714 #1 in No-hitters: 7. 324-292 record. Only player (other than Jackie Robinson) to have his number retired by 4 teams (Mets, Angels, Astros and Rangers) 61 Shutouts. He only gave up 321 homeruns in 27 years in the league. 222 Complete Games.
2007-04-18 09:49:57
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answer #5
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answered by Brodie Fan85 2
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Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators.
2007-04-18 06:27:25
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answer #6
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answered by G.W. loves winter! 7
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Despite a short career, Sandy Koufax
2007-04-17 15:38:46
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Satchel Paige is the greatest pitcher of all time. Just MLB might be Koufax or Gibson.
2007-04-17 16:00:11
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answer #8
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answered by David W 2
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Cy Young
2007-04-17 15:19:48
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answer #9
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answered by Lionheart ® 7
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Cy Young
2007-04-17 15:17:03
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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