Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
immessedup17 wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
rogers park bryan wrote:
Its the runs your offense scores and it has a large effect on W-L
Certain pitchers get more runs because their offense is superior.
The runs have to be scored off a pitcher(s). If the guy you're discussing is so great, then how could it be that he is regularly outpitched by supposedly lesser guys? It isn't because he faces some offensive juggernaut each time out. That's just an excuse and most often one that is unsupportable. Like when Frank argued with me that Maddux may not have won 300 games had he stayed with the Cubs and I showed him that there was little difference between the offenses of the two teams in many years and in some seasons the Cub offense was decidedly better. It's misperception. The key element that makes one team better than another is the starting pitchers. If the Red Sox faced Jose Fernandez in all 162 games, they wouldn't have a good offense.
Jose Fernandez would also have worse stats than he did in 2013.
His ERA may be slightly higher, but his W/L record would probably not be significantly different. Admittedly, Fernandez may not be the best example because his sample is relatively small.
There have always been guys who looked like great pitchers but didn't get results. Javy Vazquez looked like he was going to contend for a Cy Young going into every season. he wasn't a bad pitcher like some Sox fans would have you believe. But he was a disappointing one based on his peripheral numbers which are largely the result of "stuff". There are successful pitchers with limited "stuff" and guys with great "stuff" who have limited success. Walter Johnson won 400 games pitching for a lot of shitty teams.
Felix Hernandez won the Cy Young Award in 2010 with a 13–12 record. A dominant pitcher like Felix cannot record a win if his team does not score any runs for him.
2004, Ben Sheets had a losing record of 12–14, despite displaying an league-best 8:1 strikeout-to-walk ratio and was among the top 5 pitchers in ERA (2.70) and WHIP (0.98).
Pitchers DO count on run support, and also bullpen support. A starting pitcher can pitch brilliantly, leaving the game with the lead, and then watch helplessly from the dugout as the bullpen blows the save and gives up the lead. That would entitle the starting pitcher to a no-decision instead of a win despite the strong performance, regardless of whether or not the team ends up winning. Starting pitchers on teams with a weak bullpen tend to have fewer wins because of this. Likewise, a pitcher can give a poor performance and give up many runs and leave the game earlier than desired, but still win because his team scored even more runs.
Not sure why you think run support doesn't matter. Clearly the run support + bullpen support = W/L.
I prefer quality starts over Win Loss records when comparing pitchers.
Sale and Samardijza both have 3.
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