Maddux’s 350th win is more then just a number

By john | May 11, 2008

The number 350 may just be a number to Greg Maddux but it’s a pretty huge number in the history of baseball.Each morning when I check on the status of my blog I look to see if there are any new incoming links and I check on just how many people are visiting. Sure it may be dumb and often the number can change one day to the next with little reason but it gives me some sense of where I am.

This morning I noticed I had an incoming link from Babes Love Baseball, now I’ve seen this blog a few times but never had left a comment or anything. They were mentioning Greg Maddux’s recent 350th career win and how amazing the number was.

I felt I had to leave a comment, after all these girls had link dropped and the numbers struck me.

Maddux who became just the ninth pitcher ever to record 350 wins and just the third since the end of World War II was in unchartered territory. Without performance enhancers like Roger Clemens before him Maddux had done it all by himself and armed with just a mid 80’s fastball, pinpoint control and a glove on his left hand.

He’s never been one to put too much into a single game out there on the mound and perhaps it’s his competitiveness that he always feels he can always rinse, repeat and reuse his performance for his next outing. Maddux has insisted throughout his career that one game does not make a season and that at the end of each year his goal was to always have those 15 wins. Reaching that number according to Maddux is a sure sign to know you had a good year.

Maddux reached 15 or more wins 17 years in a row from 1988-2004 and again in 2006. If we were basing his career on that then I think it’s safe to say Maddux has had a pretty good one.

Pitching numbers aren’t glorified like home runs. Hitters are superstars, the guys who get posters made of them and the guys who make the mega contracts.

Think about this though. On baseball tonight we have heard much of this season that Chipper Jones is on the threshold of 400 home runs. When Chipper Jones reaches 400 homers he will become the 43rd player ever to reach that number. There are seven active players with more then 400 home runs and that’s not even couting sluggers Mike Piazza, Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds who have not played this year.

Manny Ramirez is a constant MVP threat and an RBI machine and with three home runs he will join the 500 home run club. Ramirez will be the 24th player to reach that number and will rank fourth among active players. (again not counting Sosa or Bonds)

Ken Griffey Jr. has had quite a career and with three home runs he will reach 600, making the sixth time in history that number has been reached. It will also mark the third time since 2002 that number has been toppled.

Sure these numbers may not be achieved daily but they all have happened a lot more then a pitcher reaching 350 wins.

Take for example 300 wins. Roger Clemens reached 300 wins in 2003 since then Maddux and Tom Glavine have reached that number. When Glavine reached 300 wins he became the 23rd player to reach that milestone.

Home runs are expected to continue to increase with more and more players reaching 600. After all Alex Rodriguez is just 32 and already has 522, Jim Thome is 37 an with 514 should be considered a legit canadate to reach 600.

Manny Ramirez who is one year younger then Thome would need rouhgly 25 homers for the next four season to reach 600. Before last seasons dissapointing home run numbers Ramirez had topped 25 home runs 12 years in a row or every season since he became a regular in the lineup. That’s before we even count Garry Sheffield who is just 18 away for 500 for his career.

Big numbers but hardly something that never happens. Throw in Vladimir Guerrero, Albert Pujols and if Andruw Jones ever gets his stroke back and you could easily add three more players to the list of those over 500.

Paul Konerko, Todd Helton, Miguel Tejada, Adam Dunn, Alfonso Soriano and even Carlos Beltran all seem like sure bets to at least reach 400 home runs.

If you add those eight names listed above the list of players to reach 51 counting Chipper Jones. An increase of nearly 16%.

The closest player to 300 career wins is Randy Johnson who is 14 shy. Now many feel and probably rightfully so that Johnson will reach that number if nothing else by being stubborn. After Johnson the active pitcher with the most wins is Mike Mussina with 255 but he is 39. Jamie Moyer has 232 wins but he is 45. The first active pitcher under the age of 40 is Pedro Marinez with 209 at the age of 36. Martinez would seriously need to pick up the pace if he is ever to sniff 300 wins as he won just 12 games the last two seasons.

To put in perspective how much harder it is to reach even 300 wins Tim Hudson a pitcher who has won an average of 16 games though out his 10 year career would need to pick up 160 wins. Hudson would have to continue at that pace until he was 42 to reach 300 wins.

Johan Santana was the big name we kept hearing about all off season. Santana while a very good pitcher is 203 wins short of the 300 threshold. At the age of 29 he is in his ninth big league season. If Santana pitched until he was 45 he would need to win 13-14 games a season just to reach 300.

You may have noticed I kept saying just to reach 300 after all of the above stats. That’s because Greg Maddux didn’t just reach 300 he reached 350 career wins. You don’t think 50 wins means much? Tell that to the 20 guys who retired who won between 251-297 career games a list that includes Bob Gibson, Jim Palmer, Bob Feller. What about Tommy John (288), Bert Blyleven (287), Jim Kaat (283), who have all been kept out of the Hall of Fame since they did not win 300 games.

Warren Spahn appeared in just four games prior to World War II he didn’t even pick up a win. Four years later Spahn who was the only baseball player who fought in the war to receive a commission was back in baseball at the age of 25. He went on to win 363 games a number that still stands as the most for a pitcher who pitched exclusievly following the 1920’s.

We’ll never know how many games Spahn could have won if he had of those four years we were at war but I think it’s almost a given that he would have picked up at least 10 wins which would have have placed him third on the all time wins list. It’s not even a stretch to suggest Spahn would have amassed more then 54 wins during that four year span.

We do know that Spahn won 363 games following the second World War. The most of any player. Spahn, a left handed pitcher who never had more then 191 strike outs in any season stands alone.

Greg Maddux now stands just 13 wins away from Spahn. Will Maddux pitch next season to give himself the opportunity? We don’t know the answer to that. We just know that Greg Maddux is just the third pitcher who pitched after 1920 to reach 350 wins. In a time where 300 wins seems like an impossible task Greg Maddux has went even further, 350 wins.

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Maddux wins 350th game

By john | May 11, 2008

It may have taken him five tries but Greg Maddux achieved his 350th win Saturday night as the San Diego Padres defeated the Colorado Rockies 3-2 in San Diego.

Maddux retired the Rockies on five pitches in the first and was helped in the fourth when Adrian Gonzalez hit a three run home run to score Tadahito Iguchi and Brian Giles.

On his way to pitching six full innings, Maddux allowed just three hits and one unearned run as he needed just 68 pitches on the night.

The Padres bullpen picked it up from there as Cla Meredith, Heath Bell and Trevor Hoffman pitched the final three innings.

The Padres catcher for the game was Luke Carlin who was making his major league debut. Carlin is just the third catcher ever to make his big league debut by catching Maddux.

The win for the Padres puts an end to a five game losing streak.

As for Maddux the win puts him four behind Roger Clemens on the all-time list as he becomes just the ninth pitcher in major league history to reach the number 350.

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Maddux denied 350th win again

By john | April 30, 2008

For Greg Maddux last night was the third time he aimed for career win 350 and unfortunately for him and the Padres they ran into the buzzsaw that is Cole Hamels.

Maddux allowed three runs over six, including eight hits but took a loss to fall to 2-2 as the Philadelphia Phillies bested the San Diego Padres 7-4.

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Maddux again eyes 350th win

By john | April 26, 2008

Greg Maddux will again be going for milestone win number 350. In his last outing he was two outs away before Trevor Hoffman gave up a game-tying homer to Bengie Molina.

Maddux had pitched seven scoreless innings, allowing just four hits. He didn’t walk a batter and struck out five. He threw 75 pitches, 51 for strikes. This came on the heels of one of his worst outings ever when he allowed six runs in the first inning against the Diamondbacks. In that game he threw 113 pitches, the most he had tossed in a start in 2 1/2 seasons.

The opponent is not an easy one. Maddux faces the Philadelphia Phillies and Cole Hamels. After posting a 0.82 ERA in his first three outings, Hamels has a 5.79 ERA in his past two, having allowed nine runs in 14 innings. He threw 121 pitches in his April 23 outing against Milwaukee — striking out 11 — but lost because he gave up two home runs to Prince Fielder. Hamels has never beaten the Padres, the team for which he grew up rooting, in three career meetings.

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Maddux to turn 42

By john | April 13, 2008

Just a reminder that Greg turns 42 tomorrow. He’s always said he thought it would be cool to be the oldest guy in the league after being the youngest when he started.

Well… Jamie Moyer is still going strong at 45 so I guess Greg is going to just have to keep paying for a few more seasons.

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Maddux dandy against Dodgers

By john | April 13, 2008

Greg Maddux again showed why he has been successful in the big leagues. The result was Maddux picking up win number 349 for his career and the second of the 2008 season propelled behind five innings of scoreless ball in which he allowed just two hits and a walk.

The win puts Maddux just 5 behind Roger Clemens, and 14 away from tying Warren Spahn for the most victories after World War II.

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Maddux defeats Giants for first win

By john | April 11, 2008

Pardon the delay in my posting but Greg Maddux picked up his first win of the season April 7th at San Fransisco.

It was win #348 for his career as he pitched 7 innings allowing 1 earned run, 3 hits and 2 walks while striking out five.

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Maddux defeats Giants for first win

By john | April 7, 2008

 Greg Maddux pitched seven innings of one-run ball to beat the Giants on Monday.

Maddux is 6-0 against the Giants in nine starts since the beginning of 2004. He allowed three hits, walked two and struck out five today.

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Maddux makes second spring start

By john | March 9, 2008

Saturday, Pitching against the Texas Rangers Greg Maddux allowed one run on one hit in three innings. Maddux picked up his first spring win of the season in the game as Tony Clark, Chase Headley and Craig Stansberry all homered on the day.

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Maddux makes first spring apperance

By john | March 6, 2008

In his spring debut, Greg Maddux retired all six Giants he faced Tuesday as the Padres won 9-6.

Topics: recaps | No Comments »

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