Everything about Win Baseball totally explained
A
win is a
statistic in
Major League Baseball credited to the
pitcher for the winning team who was in the game when his team last took the lead. The main exception is that a starting pitcher must complete five innings to earn a win; if this doesn't happen, the
official scorer awards the win based on guidelines set forth in the official rules. The winning pitcher can't also be credited with a
save in the same game.
The pitchers who receive the win and the
loss are known, collectively, as the
pitchers of record.
Every game has both a winning and a losing pitcher. A pitcher who starts a game but leaves without earning either a win or a loss (that is, before either team gains or surrenders the ultimate lead) is said to have received a
no decision, regardless of his individual performance.
A pitcher's total wins and losses are commonly noted together; for instance, a
pitching record of 12-10 indicates 12 wins and 10 losses.
In the early years of
major league baseball before
1900 it was common for an exceptional pitcher to win 40 or more games in one season. Since 1900, however, pitchers have made fewer and fewer starts and the standard has changed. Gradually, as hitting improved, better pitching was needed. This meant, among other things, throwing the ball much harder, and it became unrealistic to ask a pitcher to throw nearly as hard as he could for over 100 pitches a night without giving him several days to recover.
In the first third of the 20th century (especially in the
Live Ball Era), winning 30 games became the rare mark of excellent achievement; this standard diminished to 25 games during the
1940s through
1980s (the only pitcher to win 30 or more games during that time was
Denny McLain in
1968, in what was an anomalous pitching-dominated season).
Since
1990, this has changed even further, as winning 20 or more games in a single season is now achieved by only a handful of pitchers each season. For example, in
2004 only three of the more than five hundred major league pitchers did so. In
2006, no pitcher won more than 20 games. The last pitcher to win 25 games was
Bob Welch back in
1990, though it was achieved several times per decade immediately before that.
Wins, though a traditional method for determining a pitcher's success and ability (for instance helping journalists determine the recipient of the
Cy Young Award), have become significantly less popular in the past fifteen years. Many times a win is completely out of the pitcher's control, and in turn even a dominant pitcher can fail to record wins if his team doesn't score many
runs for him. For instance, in
2004,
Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher
Ben Sheets had a losing record of 12-14, despite displaying an easy league best 8:1
strikeout-to-
walk ratio and was among baseball's Top 5 in
ERA (2.70) and
WHIP (0.98). In addition to its dependence on run support, wins for a starting pitcher are also dependent on
bullpen support. A starting pitcher can pitch brilliantly, leaving the game with the lead, and then watch helplessly from the dugout as the bullpen blows the save and gives up the lead. That would entitle the starting pitcher to a no-decision instead of a win despite the strong performance, regardless of whether or not the team ends up winning. Starting pitchers on teams with a weak bullpen tend to have fewer wins because of this. Some often prefer the
quality start statistic as an indication of how many times a starting pitcher gave his team a realistic chance to win.
Nevertheless, there are still some traditionalists who value wins as a key statistic for pitchers, arguing that a good pitcher will have a high number of wins because he pitches "good enough to win", or "pitches to the situation", suggesting that a top pitcher might allow a few runs if his team's offense is routing the other team, yet be able to work a shutout if his offense has only put up a run or two.
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