Sunday, January 22, 2023

EXPANDED LEAGUE LEADERS: 1978 N.L. VICTORIES

On the blog today, we move on to the N.L.’s top three winning pitchers for 1977 shown on an “expanded” 1978 league leader card:
 

Actually the card shows SIX pitchers, as the third place spot was taken up by four guys who posted 20 wins each in 1977.
But first, we begin with all-timer Steve Carlton, who took home his second Cy Young Award that season after pacing the league with his 23 wins, while posting a very nice 2.64 earned run average and 198 strikeouts for the Philadelphia Phillies.
It was Carlton’s fourth 20-win season, something he will do another two more times before he’s done, retiring with 329 wins along with 4136 strikeouts and 55 shutouts over his incredible 24 year career.
In second place with 21 wins, “Tom Terrific” Tom Seaver, who split the 1977 campaign with the New York Mets and Cincinnati Reds, going 21-7 with a league-leading seven shutouts, while striking out 196 batters with 19 complete games, having arguably a better year than Carlton to be honest.
For Seaver it was his fifth and final 20-year season, on his way to 311 wins for his stellar career, while fanning 3640 batters and throwing 61 shutouts over 20 years under the Big League sun.
Just incredible, and easily my favorite pitcher of the decade if I say so myself.
In fourth place with 20 wins, four pitchers who all put in decent MLB careers: John Candelaria of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Ken Forsch of the St. Louis Cardinals, Tommy John of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Rick Reuschel of the Chicago Cubs.
These are all men who at one point in their careers were the aces of their staffs, putting in solid Big League tenures well into the 1980’s, with Tommy John especially unique do to his surgery just a couple of years before that would have ended his career in another time or era.
The man went on to pitch over a quarter of a century and receive a surgery that ultimately bears his name and is almost a par-for-the-course ritual for today’s pitchers. Just incredible that he was able to go on for so long and end up with 288 wins over 26 years!
There you have it! The top winning pitchers in the National League in 1977, proudly displayed on a 1978 “expanded league leader” card.
Next week, the A.L.!

 

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