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Most Career Post-Season Starts With Game Score >70

Posted by Steve Lombardi on October 3, 2011

Here are the starting pitchers with 5+ career post-season games with a Game Score greater than 70:

Rk Player #Matching   W L W-L% ERA GS CG SHO SV IP H ER HR BB SO WHIP
1 Curt Schilling 7 Ind. Games 5 0 1.000 0.78 7 4 2 0 58.0 28 5 2 12 62 0.69
2 Orel Hershiser 7 Ind. Games 6 0 1.000 0.63 7 3 2 0 57.1 28 4 2 13 49 0.72
3 John Smoltz 6 Ind. Games 5 1 .833 0.71 6 2 1 0 50.2 26 4 3 10 48 0.71
4 Andy Pettitte 6 Ind. Games 6 0 1.000 0.58 6 0 0 0 46.2 26 3 1 9 39 0.75
5 Christy Mathewson 6 Ind. Games 5 1 .833 0.32 6 6 4 0 57.0 36 2 1 3 31 0.68
6 Cliff Lee 6 Ind. Games 6 0 1.000 0.54 6 3 0 0 50.0 28 3 1 1 59 0.58
7 Bob Gibson 6 Ind. Games 6 0 1.000 0.65 6 6 2 0 55.0 30 4 3 10 66 0.73
8 Whitey Ford 6 Ind. Games 6 0 1.000 0.34 6 5 3 0 53.2 29 2 0 12 34 0.76
9 Josh Beckett 6 Ind. Games 4 2 .667 0.73 6 3 3 0 49.1 21 4 0 12 58 0.67
10 Eddie Plank 5 Ind. Games 2 3 .400 0.80 5 5 0 0 45.0 26 4 0 9 27 0.78
11 Mike Mussina 5 Ind. Games 2 0 1.000 0.97 5 0 0 0 37.0 15 4 3 11 46 0.70
12 Catfish Hunter 5 Ind. Games 4 0 1.000 0.65 5 2 1 0 41.2 23 3 1 9 19 0.77
13 Tom Glavine 5 Ind. Games 4 0 1.000 0.46 5 1 0 0 39.0 17 2 1 6 29 0.59
14 George Earnshaw 5 Ind. Games 3 1 .750 0.63 5 4 1 0 43.0 21 3 1 10 37 0.72
15 Mike Cuellar 5 Ind. Games 2 2 .500 1.64 5 3 0 0 44.0 23 8 3 9 34 0.73
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 10/3/2011.

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So, who is the greatest post-season starting pitcher of all-time?

41 Responses to “Most Career Post-Season Starts With Game Score >70”

  1. Jeff H Says:

    Don't you need to consider all starts post-season starts before crowning the "greatest"?

  2. Jeff H Says:

    Clearly it's not Schilling, he only "won" 5 out 7 +70 starts!

  3. Jaxx Says:

    this stat is kinda meaningless without considering total starts in the post season.

  4. Adam Darowski Says:

    According to WPA, it goes:
    1) Schilling
    2) Smoltz
    3) Pettitte

    http://www.beyondtheboxscore.com/2011/9/26/2449377/mariano-rivera-king-of-postseason-wpa

  5. Dvd Avins Says:

    Gibson had 9 starts in all, and I bet the other three weren't all that much below 70, either.

  6. mik Says:

    My first thought for the greatest single postseason performance is Randy Johnson in 2001. He was 5-1 with 2 complete game shutouts and an ERA of 1.52. Won 3 games in the WS alone. He struck out 47 batters in 41.1 innings.

  7. JoeThunder Says:

    @6, Christy Mathewson would beg to differ.

  8. Larry R. Says:

    Koufax. 7 starts, 57 IP, 36 H, 11 BB, 61 K, 0.95 ERA, 0.825 WHIP. These numbers are Rivera-esque, only as a starter, not 1 inning per outing.

  9. The Original Jimbo Says:

    Schilling, Smoltz, and Pettite are all HOF worthy in my book because their play-off performances give them a major boost. None have quite enough regular season credentials but what they did in the play-offs should give them the boost they need.

  10. Andrew Says:

    @7: Rivera often goes more than 1 inning in postseason.

    For me it has to be Christy Mathewson on his performance in the 1905 WS alone. He pitched three complete game shutouts in Games 1, 3, and 5. He struck out 18 and walked only one batter in 27 innings. That's insanity in any run-scoring environment.

  11. salvomania Says:

    For me it has to be Christy Mathewson on his performance in the 1905 WS alone. He pitched three complete game shutouts in Games 1, 3, and 5. He struck out 18 and walked only one batter in 27 innings. That's insanity in any run-scoring environment.

    Yeah, but a 0.00 ERA in 1905 is still only an ERA+ of 116....

  12. Don Mattingly's Disembodied Moustache Says:

    @7 I've got some bad news for you...my grandpa was the original Jimbo, so I'm going to just have to call you, Jimbo. Anyway, concerning Schilling, Smoltz & Petitte...their playoff mastery certainly does enhance their HOF chances. However, I think that Schilling & Smoltz's regular season stats are worthy regardless. 200+ wins, 3000k, HOF caliber WAR, etc. It pains me to say this, but...even with his post-season stats, I don't think that Andy is going to be elected to the HOF...even with 100+ more wins than losses. And, I always was very fond of Petitte and his unassuming nature.

  13. Don Mattingly's Disembodied Moustache Says:

    On the other hand, Mike "Moose" Mussina does deserve and will get into the HOF.

  14. Don Mattingly's Disembodied Moustache Says:

    Correction: Comment 11 should be directed @8

  15. Zachary Says:

    Schilling would be my initial thought, especially considering that he was excellent over a period of over a decade in a high run-scoring environment.

  16. Jeff Williams Says:

    @8: All those guys will get in eventually, in my opinion. Maybe they're not inner-circle HOFers but not everyone can be Greg Maddux or Tom Seaver or Cy Young.

  17. Cameron Says:

    Schilling will likely get into the HOF because of his playoff performances. also his 1992 season shows how unappreciated pitching statistics other than wins were. he was only 14-11 but with a 150 ERA+, 0.990 WHIP, 5.4 WAR and no CYA votes. not great numbers but certainly worthy of some votes.

  18. Frank Clingenpeel Says:

    It's really hard not to tab Gibson with that "greatest" moniker. In his three Series {1964, 1967 and 1968}, he managed to turn even the more jaded observers {of which, I will admit, I was until his '67 performance} into a grudging believer. Whenever he [itched against the Reds, I was wishing he'd spurned baseball to become the next Goose Tatum.

  19. nesnhab Says:

    You beat me to it. It's hard for me to take anybody but Gibson. I grew up before Sabermetrics but I bet he'd stand up pretty well to that test.

  20. nesnhab Says:

    I guess the historical context of pitching in the mid to late sixties might hurt Gibson. D@mn Sabermetrics.

  21. Julian Says:

    Not sure I would call him the greatest ever, but Cliff Lee's 59 strikeouts versus 1 walk in 50 innings (on the above list) is hard to ignore.

  22. Max Says:

    No surprise that the only two pitchers on the list without a CG are the ones that had Rivera in the pen.

  23. Wowbagger Says:

    It's hard to compare stats from eras, especially now that there are so many more postseason games played, but Bob Gibson looks to be the greatest still. Here are his stats from his World Series appearances: 2nd in wins (7), 3rd in K/9 (10.2), 6th in IP (81), 2nd in K (92), tied for 7th in GS (9) and tied for 3rd in CG (8) and tied for 4th in Shutouts (2).

  24. SocraticGadfly Says:

    Yeah, if Gibby had had LCS, let alone Division Series, he'd have double figures in +70 starts. Pettitte had all of those, with all the times the Yankees were in the WS.

  25. steven Says:

    Bob Gibson was the best.

  26. DavidRF Says:

    @11
    Haha... some interesting food for thought though.

    2011 NL: 4.13 R/G
    1905 NL: 4.10 R/G

  27. topper009 Says:

    2011 NL: 3.81 ER/G (0.63 errors/team game)
    1905 NL: 2.95 ER/G (1.90 errors/team game)

    Errors may cause a pitcher to lose some wins but they also lower your ERA.

  28. Doug Says:

    @11, @18.

    Have to mention Mickey Lolich in '68. Like Mathewson in 1905, Lolich had 3 complete game victories, albeit none by shutout. Still, he struck out 21, walked only 6 and allowed only 5 ER over those 27 innings.

    And, he beat Gibson to win game 7.

  29. Doug Says:

    @28.

    Just looked up Lolich's game scores. In 5 career post-season games, his game scores were 78, 64, 74, 65 and 77.

    He pitched 9 innings 4 times, and into the 11th inning the other time (game 1 of the '72 ALCS). His only loss was 3-2 in that 11-inning game, after a blown save by Chuck Seelbach.

    Pretty solid stuff.

  30. Doug Says:

    In five of Eddie Plank's six post-season starts, he had a game score over 70, yet pitched in tough luck, going just 2-3 in those 5 games, and 2-5 overall (including one relief appearance).

    His 3 losses were 1-0 twice, and 3-0 in 10 innings. He had identical 81 game scores in his 2 wins, both by 3-1 scores.

  31. Nash Bruce Says:

    Where's AJ Burnett???????

  32. Jason Says:

    @11

    So because three complete game shutouts in the WS
    only scores an ERA+ of 117, you choose to denigrate
    the accomplishment.

    Mathewson pitched game the second shutout on 2 days
    rest and the third on 1 day of rest.

    How does that figure into ERA+?

    ERA+ is a great tool. But it is not the end all, one still
    needs to actually look at what happened.

  33. aweb Says:

    @32 - I'm pretty sure your sarcasm detector is off on comment 11...ERA+ isn't even defined for a 0.00 ERA. The fact that Mathewson "broke" the stat three games running is awesome, actually. I don't think any single year performance will ever exceed Mathewson's, and the career line is pretty impressive too (the 11 unearned runs in other years stand out even for his era - did his defense destroy him, or did they make a few 2 out errors followed by big rallies? )

  34. DavidRF Says:

    @32
    He was joking about the ERA+ of 117.

    ERA+ is undefined until a pitcher gives up his first earned run. You could say the ERA+ is effectivly "infinite" for that case I suppose but I don't want to get into a pedantic fight over math definitions. bb-ref usually leaves the ERA+ column blank when there are no earned runs.

    Three shutouts gives an undefined ERA+ in any scoring context.

    Mathewson's regular season ERA+ was 230 that year.

  35. Kahuna Tuna Says:

    @1: Don't you need to consider all post-season starts before crowning the "greatest"?

    Here are all postseason starts with a 70+ Game Score as a percentage of all postseason starts. (I've added to Steve's list four pitchers with four 70+ postseason Game Scores: Sandy Koufax, Jim Palmer, Monte Pearson, and Red Ruffing.)

    Monte Pearson, 4/4: 1.000
    Eddie Plank, 5/6: .833
    Bob Gibson, 6/9: .667
    George Earnshaw, 5/8: .625
    Sandy Koufax, 4/7: .571
    Christy Mathewson, 6/11: .545
    Cliff Lee, 6/11: .545
    Josh Beckett, 6/13: .462
    Mike Cuéllar, 5/12: .417
    Red Ruffing, 4/10: .400
    Orel Hershiser, 7/18: .389
    Curt Schilling, 7/19: .368
    Whitey Ford, 6/22: .273
    Jim Palmer, 4/15: .267
    Catfish Hunter, 5/19: .263
    Mike Mussina, 5/21: .238
    John Smoltz, 6/27: .222
    Andy Pettitte, 6/42: .143
    Tom Glavine, 5/35: .143

  36. tomXVI Says:

    I think Mike Scott wouold have made the list if the 1986 NLCS went to 7 games.

  37. Dan Says:

    M. Rivera has pitched in 40 more playoff games than any other pitcher ever?

    Wow.

  38. Jason Says:

    @34 thanks. It went over my head. On edge for my Yanks tonight.

  39. Larry R. Says:

    @35

    Koufax's 3 other starts had game scores of 68, 62 and 50. I'll still take Sandy.

  40. Johnny Twisto Says:

    the 11 unearned runs in other years stand out even for his era - did his defense destroy him, or did they make a few 2 out errors followed by big rallies?

    I just looked at one game, 10/9/12 vs the Red Sox when he allowed 6 runs, all unearned. (The game ended as a 6-6 tie after 11 innings; Big Six went the distance.)

    In the first inning, the Sox scored three runs: one who reached on an error, and then two on a single with two outs when the inning should have been over. Trying to reconstruct the inning, I think there's a chance one run would have scored even if no errors were committed, just because a later force-out at home wouldn't have been available. (Reading a game description about exactly where the balls were hit would give more info than the PBP log.)

    In the 5th, with one out, a base stealer was thrown out but apparently the Giants SS dropped the ball for an error. The next batter tripled him home. Mathewson then caught a break by getting a line drive DP.

    In the 8th, with 2 outs, a runner on second scored on a shortstop error. No fault to Mathewson.

    In the 10th, trying to hold a 1-run lead, Mathewson allowed a deep drive to Speaker, who then scored when the catcher dropped the throw home. The following batter doubled, so the run would have scored anyway.

    Anyway, his defense didn't help him, with 5 errors, 4 of which contributed to the unER. But Mathewson didn't pitch well either, allowing 10 hits overall, and failing to mitigate the damage when he had a chance.

  41. Dvd Avins Says:

    Gibson: 9 games, 81 IP. He did only go 8 innings once because they had to pinch hit for him, but he made up for it with a 10 inning complete game another time.

    Game scores
    1964: 56, 87, 55 on 2 days rest to win game 7 against the Yankees,
    1967: 80, 82, 80
    1968: 93, 81, 62