1981…You Can’t
Please Everyone
The
1981 baseball season is one of the most memorable season in baseball history. During
the heat of summer, when fans would hear about names like Seaver, Carlton,
Carew and Schmidt, instead we heard about Ray Grebey, and Ken Moffett, Marvin
Miller and Bowie Kuhn.
Most
notably, the first ever in-season strike called by a major professional sport
cost each team close to fifty games each. And the settlement plan led to some
extenuating post-season berths.
Since
the strike happened in mid-season, it was decreed that season would be split
into halves. It would be the second ‘split-season’ in major league history,
with the National league doing so in 1892.
In that
year, the American Association folded, and four teams were merged with the
existing National League. The eight existing NL teams (Boston Beaneaters, Chicago
Colts, New York Giants, Philadelphia Phillies, Cleveland Spiders, Brooklyn Grooms,
Cincinnati Reds and Pittsburgh Pirates) absorbed the St. Louis Browns,
Baltimore Orioles, Louisville Colonels and the Washington Senators.
It was
then decided that there would be a split season, with the winner of the first
half playing the winner of the second half in a best of nine tournament called “The
World’s Championship Series”, which was won by Boston, in six games over the
Cleveland Spiders. (There was a tie in the first game, and the Beaneaters swept
the rest.
There
was some speculation that Boston, the decided first half winners, purposely did
not play up to par in order to choose their second half opponents. So much was
the scuttlebutt that the National League abandoned the split season for the
1893 season, as they also shortened the season to 13o games each, down from the
150 in 1892.
In 1981, the first-place team at
the end of play would be declared that 1st half winner, and the
first-place team at the end of the regular season would be declared the second
half winner. Those teams would face each other in the first ever Divisional
Playoff Series, which was best of five. Those winning that series would then
move on to the League Championship Series, again best five, and those winners
would face each other in the World Series.
But the two teams with the best
overall records, the Cincinnati Reds and The St. Louis Cardinals were shut out
of the playoffs. Both teams finished second in their divisions in each half. And
the Kansas City Royals, who finished first in the second half, made the playoffs
with an overall losing record. They finished at 50-53.
The Montreal Expos won their first
‘title’ in their history, a game against the Mets that I actually attended, and then won
their Divisional playoff, only to lose on a heartbreaking home run by Rick
Monday of the Dodgers. That Championship Series would mark the last post-season
appearance by the franchise while it was in Montreal.
Some of the topics discussed
between the owners at their meetings included splitting leagues into three
divisions and adding a wild-card component to begin in 1993 (didn’t happen then
but did eventually. And also roster expansion to twenty-eight players instead
of forty. That also didn’t happen then but did begin in the 2021 season.
Most of the baseball news was
centered on the strike talks and collective bargaining and such. But there was
enough on-field action to cover as well.
As mentioned earlier, the Dodgers
defeated the Expos in the National League Championship Series. The Expos beat
the Phillies in five games, and the Dodgers felled the Astros, also in five
games.
In the American League, The Yankees
beat Milwaukee in five, and the A’s swept the Royals. Then the Yankees swept
Billy Martin’s A’s to set up another match-up against the Dodgers.
They faced each other in 1977 and
1978, with the Yankees winning both times. But this year, it was all Dodgers,
as they took the Series four games to two.
In the Series, Yankee pitcher George Frazier was the losing pitcher in each of the three games he appeared in, tying Eddie Cicotte of the 1919 Chicago White Sox for the most losses in a single Series. Alluding to the allegations that the Sox 'threw' that Series, Frazier said, tongue in cheek, that he deserves more credit, because he was actually trying to win those games.
The Yankees had made the biggest
splash before the season, signing big dollar Free Agent Dave Winfield, who
didn’t fare too well in his World Series debut. Prompting Yankees owner George
Steinbrenner to dub him “Mr. May”, an allusion to teammate Reggie Jackson,
known as Mr. October.
Also, prior to the season’s starting, the Red Sox, owing to an egregious clerical error, allegedly mailed contracts to two of their star players late, two days past the major league baseball rules allowed. The players, perennial All-Stars Fred Lynn and Carlton Fisk both filed for free agency, citing the missed deadline. A grievance was filed.
While the arbitration was looming,
the red Sox worked a trade with the California Angels, sending Lynn westward,
along with pitcher Steve Renko, in exchange for long coveted outfielder Joe
Rudi, and pitchers Frank Tanana and Jim Dorsey.
Lynn then negotiated a four-year contract with the Angels, believed to be worth just over $1 million per season.
There was no such deal for Fisk,
who was declared a Free Agent and signed with the White Sox for five years.
Fisk, a future Hall of Famer, would play for Chicago for the next thirteen
seasons.
The season started with an historic
note, as there were two African American managers in the Major Leagues. Frank
Robinson, who was the first African American manager was at the helm of the San
Francisco Giants, and Maury Wills was leading the Seattle Mariners. Robinson
would have a lengthy managerial career with several franchises over a sixteen-year
career. He would win the Manager of the Year Award in 1989 with the Orioles.
Wills, on the other hand, did not fare so well as skipper. He took over late in the 1980 season, and lasted just twenty-four games into the 1981 season, when he was replaced by Rene Lachemann. Wills struggled with some serious off-field issues, and never was called to manage in the majors again. But not before controversy.
In late April, he allegedly
instructed the grounds crew at the Kingdome to extend the batters boxes by a
foot on each side, in preparation for a game against the Oakland A’s. Now the A’s
staff was made up of curve ball pitchers who had stymied the league, and an
extra foot in the box would allow extra time for batters to identify and adjust
to the breaking pitches.
Unfortunately for Wills, the A’s skipper,
Billy Martin, noticed something odd and had home plate umpire Bill Kunkel to
check it out. He did and found the boxes in violation. Wills was suspended and
fined $500 for his actions.
In April, baseball’s 3,000
strikeout club gained two new members. Tom Seaver struck out Keith Hernandez,
and Steve Carlton struck out Tim Wallach. They became the fifth and sixth
pitchers to reach that milestone. (More on Carlton below)
Cleveland’s Len Barker hurled a perfect game against the Blue Jays on May 15th. It was the first perfect game in the majors since Catfish Hunter’s 1968 gem. Ron Hassey was Barker’s catcher that game, and he also caught Dennis Martinez’ perfect game in 1991. Hassey is the only player to have caught two perfect games.
And first-base umpire Greg Kosc was
behind the plate or the next perfect game, which was pitched by Mike Witt of the
Angels in 1984.
Los Angeles, and really all of the baseball world, was entranced by rookie southpaw Fernando Valenzuela. He was the talk of the country, having fans running for the box scores in their local papers (before the 24 hours sports networks) to see how he did the night before.
The young phenom from Mexico won
his first eight starts, five of them by shutout. He would finish with thirteen
wins and tied a rookie record with eight shutouts. He won both the Rookie of
the Year Award AND the Cy Young Award, something that has yet to occur again.
As a minor leaguer, the Dodgers
were not overly impressed with his speed, but did like his movement. They
thought he needed to add another pitch, so they asked teammate Bobby Castillo
to work with Fernando on a screwball, which worked well with his unorthodox
windup and delivery. The result was “Fernandomania.”
Fernando was on magazine covers and
television shows around the country. As he warmed up, the Dodger’s PA system
would play the song “Fernando” by ABBA.
Fernando could hit as well. In sixty-four
at bats, he struck out just nine times, and won the NL Silver Slugger Award for
pitchers.
Fernando would become the first National league pitcher to lead the league in strikeouts in his rookie season, and just the second to do so after Herb Score with the 1957 Indians.
Dodger teammate Steve Garvey would play in his 945th consecutive game, which is the fifth longest in history.
In Oakland, the Billy Martin led A’s,
playing a brand of baseball dubbed “Billyball” shot out to an early lead in
their division. They won the first eleven straight of the season. Despite losing
fifty-three scheduled games due to the strike, the A’s were the only team to increase
their attendance over the 1980 season.
The pugilistic Martin was involved in an on-field altercation with umpire Terry Cooney. During an argument, Martin bumped the umpire, and then reached down and threw dirt at him. Martin was given a one-week suspension and fined $1,000. In the meantime, Cooney pressed criminal charges on Martin, but dropped those when Martin publicly apologized.
Phillies manager Dallas Green was also fined and suspended for his actions in a game against the Braves in Atlanta. During an argument with umpire Steve Fields, Green knocked fields’ cap off, and then kicked the cap. He was fined $1,000 and served a five-game suspension.
Cardinals’ shortstop Garry Templeton was suspended indefinitely and fined $5,000 for making an obscene gesture towards the hometown St. Louis fans at Busch Stadium. The suspension began on August26th, and Templeton returned to the field on September16th, but not before undergoing a psychiatric evaluation and apologizing to the fans of the team.
He would be traded to San Diego
following the season for Ozzie Smith.
Astro’s outfielder Cesar Cedeno was fined $5,000 for going into the stands in Atlanta after a heckler, and Reggie Smith of the Dodgers received the same fine plus a five-day suspension for going into the stands in San Francisco and fighting a fan.
In the 1977 amateur draft, in the
15th round, the Toronto Blue Jays selected infielder Danny Ainge out
of North High School in Eugene, Oregon. Ainge signed a three-year deal to play
baseball, and not play basketball. After reaching the big leagues in 1979 with
Toronto, Ainge struggled, never hitting higher than .248 at any level, and
decided to give up his baseball career and concentrate on basketball. He was then
drafted by the Boston Celtics of the NBA in the second round of the 1981 draft.
But…he was still under contract to the Toronto Blue Jays. A federal court ruled that his baseball contract was binding and forbade Ainge from joining the Celtics. However, the two teams reached an agreement that allowed Ainge to join the Celtics, where he became an All-Star shooting guard.
Pete Rose of the Phillies tied Stan
Musial’s all-time National League hit record at 3,630 before the strike was
called. On resumption of play, Rose wasted little time eclipsing the record,
singling off of Cardinal’s stopper Bruce Sutter in a game in Philadelphia, with
Musial in attendance.
Rose would lead the National League in hits for the seventh time, besting Musial’s record of six.
Phils third-baseman Mike Schmidt
would hit his 310th career homer, setting a new record for any
Philadelphia player. Jimmie Foxx hit 309 while playing for the A’s.
(As an aside, I was at the game at Shea Stadium where Schmidt hit his 300th homer, off of Mike Scott)
Phillies ace Steve “Lefty” Carlton became the first left-handed pitcher to reach the 3,000-strikeout mark. His strikeouts and the Mets have a strange history. On September 15, 1969, for example, Carlton struck out a record nineteen Mets, yet lost the game on a pair of home runs hit by Ron Swoboda.
On September 14, 1981, nearly
twelve years to the day, Carlton was the only pitcher to reach fifteen
strikeouts in a game. Against the Mets. He lost on a home run to Met’s catcher
John Stearns. It was Stearns’ first homer in 197 games.
Houston’s Nolan Ryan, in front of a
large television audience on NBC’s Game of the Week no-hit the Los Angeles Dodgers.
It was Ryan’s record fifth no-hitter. (He would pitch two more before his
illustrious career would end, no one else has more than four)
Nolan also set the new career walks issued record breaking the one set by Early Wynn. Wynn finished with 1,775 walks. And while Steve Carlton (1,833) and Gaylord Perry (1,809) both surpassed Wynn as well, it is safe to say that no one will touch Ryan’s career total of 2,795.
(Justin Verlander is the current
active leader with 851 as of this writing)
And Ryan finished with a 1.69 ERA,
to win his first and only ERA title, he also led the league in wild pitches for
the fourth time in his career. He set the record for the lowest ERA for a
league wild pitch leader.
Gary Gaetti of the Twins homers in his first major league at bat. Joining him on the home run barrage were rookie teammates Kent Hrbek and Tim Laudner, who hit their fist home runs in that same game.
In Seattle, Mariner’s third baseman
(and prospective stand-up comedian) Lenny Randle got down on all fours to blow
a slow rolling ball foul. The umpires called the ball fair and allowed Amos
Otis of the Royals to remain on first with a base hit. Randle claimed there was
no rule against his play and has claimed credit for a ‘no blow’ rule that
baseball clarified and implemented.
In Montreal, rookie speedster Tim “Rock” Raines stole a total of 71 bases to set a rookie record. Prior to the strike, he stole 50 bases in 55 chances, a 91% success rate.
The Pirates, in an attempt to get a
stadium deal, threatened to move the team to New Orleans.
With no major league baseball in
the summer, fans turned to the minor leagues. The saw Pawtucket Red Sox and the
Rochester Red Wings play in a record 33-inning game. Future Hall of Famers Wade
Boggs and Cal Ripken Jr. went a combine 6 for 25 in that game.
Bob Dernier of the Phiilies
affiliate Oklahoma City 89ers in the American Association stole 72 bases.
In the International League, the aforementioned
Wade Boggs of the Pawtucket Red Sox won the batting title edging out Brett
Butler of the Richmond Braves by 5 thousandth of a percentage, .3353 to .3348.
Steve Balboni of the Columbus
Clipper, the Yankees IL affiliate led the league with 33 homes and 98 runs
batted in.
In the Pacific Coast League, Mike
Marshall of the Albuquerque Dukes (Dodgers) won the offensive triple crown and
was voted the Minor League Player of the Year by The Sporting News.
Teammate Ted Power led the league
with 18 wins, and Rudy Law amassed 56 stolen bases. Jimmy Sexton of the Tacoma
Tigers (A’s) also stole 56 bases. They both finished second to Alan Wiggins of
the Hawaii Islander (Padres) who stole 73.
In the Eastern League, Ron Kittle
of the Glens Falls White Sox hit 40 homers and Tom Lawless of the Waterbury Reds
stole 60 bases.
In the Southern League, catcher Tim Laudner of the Orlando
Twins led professional baseball with 42 homers, while Kevin Rhomberg of the Chattanooga
Lookouts (Indians) stole 60 bases.
In the Texas League, Shreveport
Captains (Giants) stole 52 bases.
In the California League, Rob Deer
of the Fresno Giants hit 33 homers. Robert McNeely of the San Jose Missions
(independent team) stole 63 bases, Wayne Rudolph of the Modesto A’s stole 55
bases, and Ron Wilkinson of the Visalia Oaks (Twins) stole 53 bases.
In the Carolina League, Gerald
Davis of the Salem Redbirds (Padres) hit 34 homers, Gus Burgess of the Winston-Salem
Red Sox stole 68 bases, and teammate Mike Brown finished with a 1.49 ERA, and
Jeff Bittiger of the Lynchburg Mets struck out 168 in 137 innings, an 11.04 k/9
innings rate.
In the Florida State League, Julio
Beltran of the Daytona Beach Astros stole 69 bases. Al Nipper of the Winter
Haven Red Sox finished with a 1.70 ERA and Nick Fiorello of the Tampa Tarpons
(Reds) finished with a 1.98 ERA.
In the Midwest League, Glen Walker
of the Wausau Timbers (Mariners) hit 35 homers and drove in 111 runs. Teammate
Harold Reynolds stole 69 bases, and pitcher Edwin Nunez struck out 205 batters
in 186 innings, a 9.9/k per 9 innings.
Henry Cotto of the Quad City Cubs
stole 52 bases.
In the Pioneer League, Eric Payton
of the Butte Copper Kings (Brewers) led the short-season league with a .403
average, the only pro player to eclipse the .400 mark.
And in the Amateur Draft, the
Seattle Mariners chose pitcher Mike Moore as the first overall choice in the draft.
Other players of note from the early rounds include Joe Carter (Cubs), Kevin
McReynolds (Padres), Ron Darling (Rangers), Mark Langston (Mariners), Frank
Viola (Twins).
In the second round, the fifty-second
pick, the Yankees drafted John Elway from Stanford. Elway would continue to
play football for Stanford but was signed and assigned to the Oneonta team of
the New York Penn League for the 1982 season. Elway would famously leverage his
baseball career to avoid being drafted by the Baltimore Colts of the NFL in the
1983 draft, saying that he would continue to play baseball.
Elway was indeed drafted by the Colts in the first round but would be traded to the Denver Broncos a few weeks later. There were eight future NFL Hall of Famers drafted in that first round.
In the third round, the Padres
drafted outfielder Tony Gwynn form San Diego State. Gwynn was also drafted in
the tenth round of the NBA draft that same day, by the San Diego Clippers.
Luckily, the San Diego native was not put off by the Padres and in Gwynn’s
words, the “ugliest uniforms I’ve ever seen in my life.” And signed with the
Padres.
He was the only baseball Hall of Famer from the 1981 baseball draft class.
Two other NFL stars of note were
drafted as well. Future Steelers quarterback Bubby Brister was drafted in the
fourth round by the Tigers and spent the 1981 season with the Bristol Tigers in
the Appalachian League. And future Tennessee Titans head coach Jack Del Rio was
drafted out of high school in the twenty-second round by the Toronto Blue Jays.
Del Rio did not sign, opting to accept a scholarship to USC where he was a
two-sport star. He was teammates with future major leaguers Don Wakamatsu, Mark
McGwire and Randy Johnson.
Other draftees include Paul O’Neill
(4th round Reds), John Franco (5th round Dodgers), Devon
White (6th round Angels), Fred McGriff (9th Yankees), Len
Dykstra (13th Mets) and Matt Nokes (20th Giants).
Notable unsigned draftees include
Alvin Davis (6th A’s), Mark McGwire (8th Expos), Roger
Clemens (12th Mets), Vince Coleman (20th Phillies), Lance
Johnson (30th Pirates) and Cecil Fielder (31st Orioles).
Going back to the major league
season at hand, our overall complete season team leaders for offense were:
National League |
American League |
Phillies |
Red Sox |
Cardinals |
Brewers |
Reds |
White Sox |
Dodgers |
Rangers |
Pirates |
Indians |
And on the pitching side, we have
this ranking:
Astros |
Yankees |
Dodgers |
A’s |
Expos |
Rangers |
Cardinals |
Tigers |
Giants |
Brewers |
And our top five overall teams would fall this
way:
Cardinals |
1st overall NL East, no playoffs |
Dodgers |
2nd overall NL West, World Series Champs |
Yankees |
4th overall AL East, AL Champs |
Astros |
3rd overall in NL West. Lost 1st
Round |
Red Sox |
5th overall AL East, no playoffs |
And to look at the overall
performances for the offensive players, beginning in the National League, we
have this initial top ten list:
Player |
Team |
HR |
RBI |
AVG |
SB |
RC/G |
Mike Schmidt |
Phillies |
31 |
91 |
.316 |
12 |
1.35 |
George Foster |
Reds |
22 |
90 |
.295 |
4 |
1.19 |
Gary Mathews |
Phillies |
9 |
67 |
.301 |
15 |
1.19 |
Andre Dawson |
Expos |
24 |
64 |
.302 |
26 |
1.08 |
Gary Carter |
Expos |
16 |
68 |
.251 |
1 |
1.00 |
George Hendrick |
Cardinals |
18 |
61 |
.284 |
4 |
1.09 |
Tim Raines |
Expos |
5 |
37 |
.304 |
71 |
1.06 |
Dave Concepcion |
Reds |
5 |
67 |
.306 |
4 |
1.12 |
Keith Hernandez |
Cardinals |
8 |
48 |
.306 |
12 |
1.02 |
Bill Buckner |
Cubs |
10 |
75 |
.311 |
5 |
1.04 |
And against their team averages, we
get this list:
Bill Buckner |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Mike Schmidt |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Andre Dawson |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Gary Carter |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
George Foster |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Tim Raines |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Dave Kingman |
Mets |
22 |
59 |
.221 |
6 |
0.77 |
Jack Clark |
Giants |
17 |
53 |
.268 |
1 |
0.97 |
Bob Horner |
Braves |
15 |
42 |
.277 |
2 |
0.87 |
Bill Madlock |
Pirates |
6 |
45 |
.341 |
18 |
0.90 |
That brings our overall top ten
National League offensive players to this:
Mike Schmidt |
National League MVP |
George Foster |
3rd in MVP |
Andre Dawson |
2nd in MVP |
Bill Buckner |
10th in MVP (tied) |
Gary Carter |
6th in MVP |
Tim Raines |
19th in MVP, 2nd in Rookie of the
Year |
Gary Mathews |
13th in MVP |
Dave Concepcion |
4th in MVP |
Bill Madlock |
17th in MVP |
George Hendrick |
14th in MVP |
On to the American League, where their
batters fared 2.7% better than the National leaguers, our initial top ten list
is:
Dwight Evans |
Red Sox |
22 |
71 |
.296 |
3 |
1.23 |
Eddie Murray |
Orioles |
22 |
78 |
.294 |
2 |
1.14 |
Cecil Cooper |
Brewers |
12 |
60 |
.320 |
5 |
1.11 |
Rickey Henderson |
A’s |
6 |
35 |
.319 |
56 |
1.09 |
Carney Lansford |
Red Sox |
4 |
52 |
.336 |
15 |
1.07 |
Bobby Grich |
Angels |
22 |
61 |
.304 |
2 |
0.95 |
Tom Paciorek |
Mariners |
14 |
66 |
.326 |
13 |
0.98 |
Dave Winfield |
Yankees |
13 |
68 |
.294 |
11 |
1.02 |
Chet Lemon |
White Sox |
9 |
50 |
.302 |
5 |
0.97 |
Buddy Bell |
Rangers |
10 |
64 |
.294 |
3 |
1.01 |
And then compared to their team’s
averages, we get this list:
Eddie Murray |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Tom Paciorek |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Dave Winfield |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Rickey Henderson |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
John Mayberry |
Blue Jays |
17 |
43 |
.248 |
1 |
0.64 |
Dwight Evans |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Bobby Grich |
Above |
|
|
|
|
|
Ken Singleton |
Orioles |
13 |
44 |
.248 |
0 |
0.82 |
George Brett |
Royals |
6 |
43 |
.314 |
14 |
0.89 |
Cliff Johnson |
A’s |
17 |
59 |
.260 |
5 |
0.98 |
Which brings our final top ten
performers list to this:
Eddie Murray |
5th in MVP |
Dwight Evans |
3rd in MVP |
Rickey Henderson |
2nd in MVP |
Tom Paciorek |
10th in MVP |
Dave Winfield |
7th in MVP |
Cecil Cooper |
8th in MVP |
Bobby Grich |
14th in MVP |
Ken Singleton |
23rd in MVP |
Cliff Johnson |
No votes |
Chet Lemon |
No votes |
The National League Most Valuable
Player, as voted by the BBWAA was Mike Schmidt. The American League winner was
reliever Rollie Fingers, who also won the Cy Young Award.
Beginning with the National League
pitchers, our initial list is:
Team |
W-L |
ERA |
Svs |
|
Nolan Ryan |
Astros |
11-5 |
1.69 |
0 |
Tom Seaver |
Reds |
14-2 |
2.54 |
0 |
Steve Carlton |
Phillies |
13-4 |
2.42 |
0 |
Fernando
Valenzuela |
Dodgers |
13-7 |
2.48 |
0 |
Burt Hooton |
Dodgers |
11-6 |
2.28 |
0 |
Jerry Reuss |
Dodgers |
10-4 |
2.30 |
0 |
Don Sutton |
Astros |
11-9 |
2.61 |
0 |
Bob Knepper |
Astros |
9-5 |
2.18 |
0 |
Rick Camp |
Braves |
9-3 |
1.78 |
17 |
Vida Blue |
Giants |
8-6 |
2.45 |
0 |
And against their team’s
performances, we get this list:
Steve Carlton |
Above |
|
|
|
Tom Seaver |
Above |
|
|
|
Rick Camp |
Above |
|
|
|
Jim Bibby |
Pirates |
6-3 |
2.50 |
0 |
Gary Lucas |
Padres |
7-7 |
2.00 |
13 |
Nolan Ryan |
Above |
|
|
|
Doug Bird |
Cubs* |
4-5 |
3.58 |
0 |
Mike Krukow |
Cubs |
9-9 |
3.68 |
0 |
Vida Blue |
Above |
|
|
|
Fernando Valenzuela |
Above |
|
|
|
*Bird was traded from the Yankees
to the Cubs, along with another player, in exchange for Rick Reuschel.
As a brief aside, Doug Bird has one
of my favorite baseball-literate nicknames. If you remember in 1976, the
American League Rookie of the Year was Tigers pitching phenom Mark Fidrych. Tall
and lanky with curly blond hair, Fidrych earned the nickname “The Bird”.
Doug Bird’s nickname was “The
Fidrych”.
Nolan Ryan |
4th in Cy Young, 13th in MVP |
Tom Seaver |
2nd in Cy Young, 10th in MVP (tied) |
Steve Carlton |
3rd in Cy Young, 9th in MVP |
Fernando Valenzuela |
Cy Young winner, Rookie of the Year winner ,5th
in MVP |
Rick Camp |
20th in MVP (tied) |
Jerry Reuss |
No votes |
Jim Bibby |
No votes |
Don Sutton |
No votes |
Vida Blue |
No votes |
And to the American League, our
initial top ten performers were:
Steve McCatty |
A’s |
14-7 |
2.33 |
0 |
Rich Gossage |
Yankees |
3-2 |
0.77 |
20 |
Rollie Fingers |
Brewers |
6-3 |
1.04 |
28 |
Dave Righetti |
Yankees |
8-4 |
2.05 |
0 |
Ken Forsch |
Angels |
11-7 |
2.88 |
0 |
Bert Blyleven |
Indians |
117 |
2.88 |
0 |
Jack Morris |
Tigers |
14-7 |
3.05 |
0 |
Larry Gura |
Royals |
11-8 |
2.72 |
0 |
Ron Guidry |
Yankees |
11-5 |
2.76 |
0 |
Rick Honeycutt |
Rangers |
11-6 |
3.31 |
0 |
And against team performances, we
get this list:
Bert Blyleven |
Above |
|
|
|
Dave Steib |
Blue Jays |
11-10 |
3.19 |
0 |
Ken Forsch |
Above |
|
|
|
Rollie Fingers |
Above |
|
|
|
Steve McCatty |
Above |
|
|
|
John Denny |
Indians |
10-6 |
3.15 |
0 |
Lary Gura |
Above |
|
|
|
Rich Gossage |
Above |
|
|
|
Dennis Leonard |
Royals |
13-11 |
2.99 |
0 |
Jack Morris |
Above |
|
|
|
Combining, consolidating and calculating
brings us this final top ten American League pitchers list:
Steve McCatty |
2nd in Cy Young, 13th in MVP |
Rollie Fingers |
Cy Young Award, MVP Award |
Rich Gossage |
5th in Cy Young, 9th in MVP |
Dave Righetti |
Rookie of the Year |
Ken Forsch |
No votes |
Bert Blyleven |
No votes |
Larry Gura |
9th in Cy Young |
Jack Morris |
3rd in Cy Young, 15th in MVP |
Rick Honeycutt |
No votes |
Dennis Leonard |
No votes |
As for post season awards in the
National League, as mentioned earlier, Mike Schmidt of the Phillies won the
National League Most Valuable Player, and Fernando Valenzuela won the Cy Young
Award. It was definitely a better pitching year than offense, but my vote would
have been:
Mike
Schmidt
NL
Player of the Year
Nolan
Ryan
NL
Pitcher of the Year
Tom
Seaver
Steve
Carlton
George
Foster
And in the American League, where
the pitching stars outpaced the batting stars, I have this top five list:
Steve
McCatty
AL
Player of the Year
Rollie
Fingers
Rich
Gossage
Dave
Righetti
Eddie
Murray
AL
Offensive Player of the Year