Tom Brennan - The Current Era of Incomplete Games

In Days Gone By, Pitchers Used to Leave It All on the Field

There ought to be a parade every time a Mets pitcher throws a complete game (CG).  These days, there are so very, very, few.

Two Mets' complete games in 2021.  If you blinked twice, or you find that your nap time coincides with Mets broadcasts, you missed them.

In the 7 prior full Mets' seasons? 

2019 - 3 CG

2018 - 3 CG

2017 - 2 CG

2016 - 1 CG

2015 - 1 CG

2014 - 1 CG

2013 - 4 CG

In those 8 seasons, a total of 17 complete games.  An average of 2 a season.

In 1969, the Mets threw a tad more of them - 51 complete games. An average of 51 a season.

I saw an interesting graphic on the 1975 season regarding complete games that season.

Stunning, frankly, compared to today's game.

Catfish Hunter? 30 Complete Games

Jim Palmer and Gaylord Perry? 25 CG

Ferguson Jenkins? 22 CG

Bert Blyleven? 20 CG

One Met, who else but Tom Seaver, ended up in a 4-way tie for 17th most that year, with 15, tying the great Dave Goltz (Dave WHO?), Doc Medich, and Jerry Reuss.

Could pitchers today throw that many complete games in a season if the games were shortened to, say, 6 innings?  Doubt it.  5 innings?  Perhaps.

It is amazing to stop and think that in 1975, just in his complete game starts, Catfish threw 270 innings that year!!  Possibly more, if he went extra innings in any.  After all, in his career, he went beyond the 9th inning 16 times, throwing 25.1 innings, and having a 1.07 ERA in those extra innings.  

Ask a guy these days to go more than 9 innings, he'd want to the players' union to renegotiate the C.B.A. first.

Warren Spahn missed 3 seasons in World War II and still ended up with 382 complete games.  Spahn also had 39 career starts where he went beyond the 9th.  Tossing 79 total innings after the 9th, 3.06 ERA.  Hundreds of Mets' pitchers over the years never threw 79 innings, period.

The entire Mets' staff's 17 CG over the past 8 years would have only had the Metsies in a 3 way tie for the 11th spot amongst individual pitchers in 1975.

Highly successful ex-Met Nolan Ryan, by the way, had "only" 10 CG that season, but in 5 surrounding seasons, he averaged 24 CG a season.

Looking at that 1975 complete game top 20 list, one might think in horror, "weren't they at increased risk for UCL surgery?" 

Not worried about it back then - they were men who liked to finish what they started.

It's funny that the first pitcher ever to receive Tommy John surgery got it in the off season just prior to 1975, by the name of Tommy John.  Some coincidence there, dontcha think?

Interestingly, at least to me, Tommy John had 6 complete games when he first returned from TJS in 1976, 11 in 1977, and a total of 33 more in 1979 and 1980. I guess the surgery worked - oh, and he pitched 14 seasons after the surgery.  He must have bought the extended warranty.

OK, my article is complete.  I hope you're game enough to read it all.

I also hope didn't find it to be complete nonsense.  And find yourself game enough, please, to leave a complete comment.  You'll have my complete gratitude.


ความคิดเห็น