For the record:
Bert Blyleven career, postseason:
8 games
5-1 record
2.47 ERA
47.3 innings pitched
36 strikeouts/8 walks
Yup. Awful.
For the record:
Bert Blyleven career, postseason:
8 games
5-1 record
2.47 ERA
47.3 innings pitched
36 strikeouts/8 walks
Yup. Awful.
Bert should be in. The K’s, his reputation and his longitivity are enough. I’d vote him in if he had a losing record. I think of him in the same breath as Nolan Ryan or Steve Carlton.
As for throwing out postseason performance, here’s a doozy - Ty Cobb, lifetime BA of .370, ten batting titles, most career triples and steals of home, second in hits… he wouldn’t make the cut. He was useless agains the 1907 Cubs and the 1909 Pirates, though he did pretty good in 1908.
As throwing the postseason in, then Kirk Gibson should be at the top of the HOF list for a single at-bat that destroyed the '88 A’s, not forgetting he’s hit 6 other homers in the postseason and helped win the '84 Series too.
ElvisL1ves, this statement is painfully incorrect in two regards:
SABR, which is pronounced “saber” and whose acronym led to the creation of the word sabermetrics (mathematical tools to analyze baseball), is about much more than stats. In fact, only a minority of members pursue “number crunching” research."**
(italicized emphasis mine)
As for finding non-statistical things insignificant – well, I’m guessing you don’t know many people who belong to SABR. I know a few myself (though I’m not a member), and they’re awfully passionate about plenty of non-statistical baseball-related things. I’ve been a lurker on these boards long enough to know that, if you’re going to make a derrogatory blanket statement about a group of people, you should probably provide a cite, or evidence, or something.
Look, I’m all for romanticizing certain things about baseball, but not when there’s real recorded evidence that those things just aren’t true. To address your examples:
Basketball is a much different game than baseball. With five guys essentially playing simultaneously, they have a much greater influence on the minute-to-to minute play of their teammates.
I’m curious – did the Phillies score more runs for Steve Carlton than for other pitchers in 1972? Or did he win so many of that team’s games because he gave up less than half as many runs per inning as Ken Reynolds, the next best starter for the Phils that year? And what happened in 1973, when his ERA was almost exactly at the league average, but his record was 13-20? Did he forget how to inspire his hitters that year? Look, I’d love to discover a pitcher who could spur his team score more runs whenever he pitched. But if there has been such a pitcher, wouldn’t there be one small shred of evidence? There just isn’t. Run support wavers from year to year even for the greatest pitchers. Roger Clemens, whom you cite in your example, is getting mediocre-at-best run support this year – he’s 40th in the majors, and getting over 2 runs less per game than his teammate David Wells. Never mind the lousy run support he got during his last few years with the Red Sox. What happened to his ability to inspire between last year and this year? Don’t you think it’s more likely that run support is simply a thing that pitchers don’t influence, regardless of how great they are, or how much their teammates love them?
I root and cheer with my heart, but I think with my brain. There’s room in my baseball life for both.
I’ll bet a vast majority of both fans and players would tell you that “good teams win the close games.” That must make it true, huh? Well, except that, like many things that people don’t scrutinize closely, it’s not true at all. Am I not an “actual fan” because I went and found that out?
I would be interested in seeing more newspaper articles written at the time about Bert, or real quotes about him from contemporary players.
Anyway, I doubt I’ll convince you of anything, when better minds than mine have failed.
At last, something on which we can agree. 
-Parthol