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Worst K/BB ratios for 20-game winners

Posted by Andy on January 21, 2009

Wins & losses are ridiculously overrated stats for starting pitchers. I mean, sure, the pitcher himself has a lot to do with whether he gets a W or a L in a given game. But there are numerous other factors that are largely out of his control, the three biggest ones being offensive run support, quality of the opposing starting pitcher, and the range & performance of his defense.

Anyway, to illustrate my point, here are the "worst" 20-win seasons from the last 40 years, as ranked by lowest K/BB ratio:

  Cnt Player             **K/BB**  W Year Age Tm  Lg  G   GS CG SHO GF  L  W-L% SV   IP   H   R   ER  BB  SO   ERA  ERA+ HR  BF   AB  2B 3B IBB HBP  SH  SF GDP  SB CS Pk BK WP   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS  OPS+  Pit  Str
+----+-----------------+---------+--+----+---+---+--+---+---+--+---+--+--+-----+--+-----+---+---+---+---+---+------+----+--+----+----+--+--+---+---+---+---+---+---+--+--+--+--+-----+-----+-----+-----+----+----+----+
    1 Mike Torrez          0.89   20 1975  28 BAL AL  36  36 16   2  0  9  .690  0 270.2 238 103  92 133 119   3.06  115 15 1144  994 36  4   5   5   7   5  35   9 12  2  1 10  .239  .331  .329  .660   92           
    2 Joe Niekro           1.11   21 1979  34 HOU NL  38  38 11   5  0 11  .656  0 263.2 221 102  88 107 119   3.00  117 17 1095  970 26  7   1   7   6   5  27  31  9  1  0 19  .228  .308  .322  .630   83           
    3 Mel Stottlemyre      1.16   20 1969  27 NYY AL  39  39 24   3  0 14  .588  0 303   267 105  95  97 113   2.82  123 19 1244 1119 36  2  11   6  15   7  39   7  8  0  0  6  .239  .301  .325  .626   84           
    4 Ed Figueroa          1.19   20 1978  29 NYY AL  35  35 12   2  0  9  .690  0 253   233  96  84  77  92   2.99  121 22 1038  939 44  4   4   3  13   6  21  18 10  6  1  6  .248  .305  .374  .679   92           
    5 Mike Cuellar         1.23   22 1974  37 BAL AL  38  38 20   5  0 10  .688  0 269.1 253 106  93  86 106   3.11  111 17 1111 1004 33  5   4   2  11   8  31  18 10  5  0  2  .252  .310  .346  .656   91           
    6 Ron Bryant           1.24   24 1973  25 SFG NL  41  39  8   0  1 12  .667  0 270   240 125 106 115 143   3.53  109 23 1165 1027 34  3  12   9   9   5  13  12  7  2  1  8  .234  .315  .340  .655   84           
    7 Ross Grimsley        1.25   20 1978  28 MON NL  36  36 19   3  0 11  .645  0 263   237 103  89  67  84   3.05  115 17 1068  975 45  8   6   2  16   8  26  11  7  2  2  4  .243  .291  .358  .649   87           
    8 Clyde Wright         1.25   22 1970  29 CAL AL  39  39  7   2  0 12  .647  0 260.2 226  97  82  88 110   2.83  127 24 1086  975 27  4   4   7  10   6  19   7  6  1  0  8  .232  .298  .342  .640   85           
    9 Richard Dotson       1.29   22 1983  24 CHW AL  35  35  8   1  0  7  .759  0 240   209  92  86 106 137   3.23  130 19  997  872 34  3   1   8   4   7  33  29  5  2  0  7  .240  .325  .351  .676   83           
   10 Tom Glavine          1.33   22 1993  27 ATL NL  36  36  4   2  0  6  .786  0 239.1 236  91  85  90 120   3.20  127 16 1014  910 50  4   7   2  10   2  25   9  5  1  0  4  .259  .327  .376  .703   92           
   11 Joaquin Andujar      1.37   21 1985  32 STL NL  38  38 10   2  0 12  .636  0 269.2 265 113 102  82 112   3.40  105 15 1127 1019 51  4  12  11  11   4  32  29  9  2  0  2  .260  .321  .362  .683   97           
   12 Bob Forsch           1.38   20 1977  27 STL NL  35  35  8   2  0  7  .741  0 217.1 210  97  84  69  95   3.48  111 20  915  835 33  2   2   3   4   4  21  15  6  2  1  9  .251  .310  .368  .678   88           
   13 Tommy John           1.39   22 1980  37 NYY AL  36  36 16   6  0  9  .710  0 265.1 270 115 101  56  78   3.43  114 13 1089 1007 50 12   1   6  15   5  33   2 12  1  0  5  .268  .309  .380  .689   89           
   14 Jim Palmer           1.40   22 1973  27 BAL AL  38  37 19   6  1  9  .710  1 296.1 225  86  79 113 158   2.40  156 16 1190 1064 36  9   5   3   5   5  23  16 10  0  0  7  .211  .288  .307  .595   69           
   15 Paul Splittorff      1.41   20 1973  26 KCR AL  38  38 12   3  0 11  .645  0 262   279 135 116  78 110   3.98  102 19 1119 1026 51  6   7   5   5   6  40  11  5  4  1  9  .272  .325  .389  .714   96           
   16 Jim Palmer           1.42   21 1978  32 BAL AL  38  38 19   6  0 12  .636  0 296   246  94  81  97 138   2.46  143 19 1197 1085 33  6   1   1  10   4  21  18 17  1  1  5  .227  .290  .321  .611   76           
   17 J.R. Richard         1.42   20 1976  26 HOU NL  39  39 14   3  0 15  .571  0 291   221 105  89 151 214   2.75  116 14 1218 1044 36  2   4   4  13   6  26  34 11  4  2 13  .212  .312  .290  .602   84           
   18 Claude Osteen        1.45   20 1972  32 LAD NL  33  33 14   4  0 11  .645  0 252   232  82  74  69 100   2.64  127 16 1033  947 34  8   4   4  12   1  22   4 12  4  0  5  .245  .299  .348  .647   91           
   19 Russ Ortiz           1.46   21 2003  29 ATL NL  34  34  1   1  0  7  .750  0 212.1 177 101  90 102 149   3.81  112 17  912  793 41  3   7   4   6   7   9  22  5  2  0  5  .223  .312  .347  .659   76 3567 2102 
   20 Steve Stone          1.48   25 1980  32 BAL AL  37  37  9   1  0  7  .781  0 250.2 224 103  90 101 149   3.23  123 22 1048  930 39  5   3   6   6   3  20  18 16  1  0  7  .241  .318  .365  .683   87           
   21 Andy Messersmith     1.48   20 1971  25 CAL AL  38  38 14   4  0 13  .606  0 276.2 224 112  92 121 179   2.99  108 16 1170 1028 33  6   6   7   9   5  18  26  5  2  0  9  .218  .303  .308  .611   85           
   22 Vida Blue            1.50   20 1973  23 OAK AL  37  37 13   4  0  9  .690  0 263.2 214 108  96 105 158   3.28  108 26 1083  956 29  6   2   4   8  10  28  14  7  2  2 15  .224  .300  .348  .648   86           

While there are a number of good-to-great names on this list, I challenge you to come up with another list of 20-game winners that is less impressive overall in terms of collective career achievements. Even this list, most losses in a 20-win season, isn't as bad.

Strikeouts are an important part of the game and very few starting pitchers with a low strikeout rate (or a high walk rate) experience long-term success in the game.

7 Responses to “Worst K/BB ratios for 20-game winners”

  1. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    That list doesn't strike as having an inordinate number of flukey 20-game winners. A lot of those pitchers had very good careers, and others were legitimately good for a short period of time. But I won't take your challenge 🙂

    I notice that most of those pitchers got a lot of DP turned behind them. Splittorff's 40 is the 7th highest single-season total since 1956. That will help mitigate a few walks.

    I also just noticed that the worst ERA+ on the list is 102. Not a single below average ERA. That surprises me. I checked and in fact there's only been two 20-game winners with an ERA+ under 100 in the past 40 years. Wins may be overrated but you got to be a good pitcher to get a lot of them. Pitchers don't luck their way to 20 -- especially these days, when almost no one can get to 20 at all.

    Eventually it would be nice to have a normalized K/BB stat. A 2:1 K/BB ratio used to be very good, now it's average.

  2. Andy Says:

    Johnny, I'm not trying to suggest that the guys on the list above were crap, just that they are not a very impressive list of 20-game winners. Here is a list of most 20-win seasons by HOFers. That list has Spahn, Mathewson, Johnson, Alexander, Palmer (who is also in the above list), Grove, Plank, Jenkins, and Lemon as the top 9. I think you'd have to agree that the average career talent on this list of 9 is better by a pretty considerable margin that the list above.

  3. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    Agreed. I was just sort of surprised that the list is as good as it is. I thought there would be more flukey 20-win seasons than there have been.

  4. gerry Says:

    K/BB ratio doesn't appeal to me as a way to distinguish better seasons from worse ones. How about a list of the worst 20-win seasons of the last 40 years as determined by ERA+?

  5. Andy Says:

    I must admit that Johnny sort of twisted my post into something that it wasn't. I wasn't trying to identify the flukiest 20-game winners. I picked K/BB ratio because that number tends to be a decent indicator of long-term success for most pitchers and most eras, so the guys with the lowest ratios I guessed would have had the "least impressive" careers, which I think I achieved, at least approximately.

    Here is the list of 20-win seasons ranked by worst ERA+:

    http://www.bb-ref.com/pi/shareit/Xh2c

    Compare that list this this one, which is the same one, just from 1978 onward:

    http://www.bb-ref.com/pi/shareit/UtYF

    So there has been only one 20-win season in the last 30 seasons with a below-average ERA (J Niekro in 1980.) But it was a lot more common in the early part of last century.

  6. gerry Says:

    Thanks, Andy. So, compare your list of 22 worst K/BB ratios for a 20-game winner, last 40 years, to the list of 22 worst ERA+ numbers for a 20-game winner, last 40 years:

    K/BB: Mike Torrez, Joe Niekro, Mel Stottlemyre, Ed Figueroa, Mike Cuellar, Ron Bryant, Ross Grimsley, Clyde Wright, Richard Dotson, Tom Glavine, Joaquin Andujar, Bob Forsch, Tommy John, Jim Palmer x 2, Paul Splittorff, J R Richard, Claude Osteen, Russ Ortiz, Steve Stone, Andy Messersmith, Vida Blue.

    ERA+: Stan Bahnsen, Joe Niekro, Steve Carlton, Paul Splittorff, Jack Morris, Jim Merritt, Joaquin Andujar x 2, Mike Cuellar, Wilbur Wood, John Burkett, Tom Browning, Catfish Hunter, Dennis Leonard, Bill Gullickson, Andy Messersmith, Vida Blue, Rick Helling, Ron Bryant, Bill Singer, Jim Lieber.

    Which list is less impressive?

  7. TheGoof Says:

    Both of those lists are great, gerry.

    How about this one? First thing I noticed about the original report was the low OPS+ on those guys. Some had ways of countering the high walks or lack of strikeouts. But these guys let runners on AND let runs score (which is not the same thing, as some would suggest). http://www.bb-ref.com/pi/shareit/pmCu