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Being Jerry Koosman


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Posted


We'll be Koosmen together soon.

So Jerry Koosman is another Met before my time. I always thought he was underappreciated standing in the shadow of Seaver, so its good he's ranked the #3 Met of all time to give him some props.

I find it interesting that he finished second in Cy Young Award voting in 1976 to Randy Jones, mainly because I have no frickin' clue who Randy Jones is (especially since he eventually became a Met too).


Of course the cool trivia is that Koosman was on the mound for the final out of the 1969 World Series. He was trade for Jesse Orosco who was on the mound for the final out of the 1986 World Series. I think there's some more interesting trivia in the trade chain too, but that's Dickshot's territory.


Posted


I always liked Jerry Koosman. And I'm glad he's hanging in there in the UMDB Top Twenty lookups. I think he's the best of the most likely to be forgotten Mets.

I remember 1976, and Randy Jones was one of the most untouchable pitchers in baseball that year. There was no chance that anyone but him would win the Cy Young award.

I don't think Jerry belongs in Cooperstown, but he deserved more consideration than he got. I don't think Don Sutton was all that better than Koosman, and he's in. (Although he shouldn't be.)


Posted


I remember 1976 too, and Jerry got screwed. He came on strong in the last half of the season, but I think everyone had already assumed that Jones would get the award. I think another consideration was that Jones had had a strong season the year before but had lost out to Seaver (who of course deserved it).


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


I'm not saying he's a Hall of Famer either, but I imagine that showing how Seaver and Koosman match up against their peers in a run-support neutral envirnoment would blow your mind, sweep it up, stuff it back into your head, and then blow it again.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


As it is, a quick addition shows that Seaver and Koosman won at least 307 games together --- probably one to three more, depending on how Seaver did during Koos's brief time on the roster in 1967. That probably stacks up well with any post-war pairing, offense or no offense.

Koosman had won five games at the point of Seaver's departure on June 15, 1977 (and Kingman's also, it should be said), but notched only three more wins during the remaining three and a half months of the season, and three total during his disastrous 1978 campaign.


Guest Johnny Dickshot
Guests
Posted


My Mom's favorite Met. What else needs to be said?


Posted


Kooz defintinely suffered from Seaver-shadow a couple of times.

He lost the '68 ROY one year after Seaver won it. Now losing to Johnny Bench is no disgrace but I always wondered how many writers said; 'aw, we gave it to a Met pitcher last year'

In '75, Randy Jones - who had 3 speeds: slow, slower, slowest - lost the CY to Seaver when some thought that the difference in their twos reps played a part. So then in '76, Jones gets out to a 16-1 (or something like that) start *by the All-Star Break* and is the talk of baseball as visions of a 30-game winner dance through folks' heads. He then had a very mediocre 2nd half as Koosman "caught up" and maybe surpassed him but the die was already cast and the vote wasn't particularly close. And again, it seemed a bit like; Jones loses out to Seaver so let's not out-Met him again this year


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


1991 Total ballots cast: 443 Necessary for election: 333


NameVotesPCT
Rod Carew 40190.52
Gaylord Perry34277.20
Fergie Jenkins33475.40
Rollie Fingers29165.69
Jim Bunning28263.66
Orlando Cepeda19243.34
Tony Oliva16036.12
Bill Mazeroski14232.05
Ron Santo11626.19
Harvey Kuenn10022.57
Jim Kaat6214.00
Maury Wills6113.77
Dick Allen5913.32
Ken Boyer5813.09
Joe Torre419.26
Bobby Bonds398.80
Minnie Minoso388.58
Mickey Lolich337.45
Luis Tiant327.22
Vada Pinson306.77
Thurman Munson286.32
Rusty Staub286.32
Curt Flood235.19
Al Oliver194.29
Sparky Lyle153.39
Larry Bowa112.48
Jerry Koosman40.90
Jeff Burroughs10.23
Mike Hargrove10.23
Richie Hebner10.23
Burt Hooton10.23
Mike Jorgensen10.23
John Lowenstein10.23
Ellis Valentine10.23
Bob Bailor00.00
Al Bumbry00.00
Rich Dauer00.00
Oscar Gamble00.00
Larry Gura00.00
Art Howe00.00
Bruce Kison00.00
Steve Rogers00.00
John Wathan00.00
Pat Zachry00.00
Geoff Zahn00.00


Posted


No way does Sutton deserve 65 times as many votes as Koosman.

Sutton's numbers are sexier, and he has a better Hall of Fame case. But Koosman deserved more than 4 votes.

He won 324 and lost 256 with 3,574 strikeouts. Career ERA of 3.26. He pitched from 1966 through 1988.

Koosman was 222 and 209, with 2,556 strikeouts. Career ERA of 3.36. Pitched from 1967 through 1985.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Maybe, but arguing that he wouldn't get your vote, but he deserved more votes than he got, is a tough one to sustain. If you agree with the ultimate result, what matter whether he got four votes or 40?

The Hall of Fame is a Pass/Fail class.


Posted


I think Koosman was as good as quite a number of Hall of Fame pitchers, and with a little better luck in the teams he played for--or just reasonable run support in 1977 and 1978--he might have been a candidate. But those are the breaks. There are a lot of guys you could say that about. I don't know if Sutton was actually a better pitcher, but 100 wins is a huge difference. It makes him an obvious Hall of Famer. And for Koosman, 13 games over .500 for his career just won't do it. So it's not that Sutton deserved 65 times more votes, it's that the dividing line clearly runs somewhere between them.

There are some other guys on that list that deserved a lot more respect than they got, like Tony Oliva.


Posted


I know. It is a bit of a conundrum.

I guess I can best explain it by saying that Hall of Fame voters have had lower standards than I have, and more of these people with lower standards should have seen that Jerry met their lower standards.

Or, in other words, it's a respect thang, yo.


Posted


How do they fill out the ballot? My guess would be a player needs a certain amount of service time.

And how many years after retirment before a player is eligible?


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Ten years minimum service and five years after playing your last game.

Some minor exceptions are out there, but that's the drill.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


That's a totally do-able metadesignation!

Unless somebody beats you there.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


Ive always been a big Kooz fan.
Never took him for granted.
When we had Koosman and Seaver, no matter what shape the team was in, there were two games a week worth going to.



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