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  #1  
Old 07-14-2004, 09:26 PM
kranepool kranepool is offline
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Doc Gooden...Not-a-doubter!!

Over his first ten seasons (before his troubles caught up to him, finally stealing from him the almost supernatural talent he displayed consistently) he put up the following numbers:

154 Wins 81 Losses (.655 Winning Pct.)
3.03 ERA
1.04 Baserunners/IP
1800+ SO vs. less than 500 BB

DOMINATING!

Any Ideas???
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  #2  
Old 07-14-2004, 09:30 PM
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maybe if he'd blown out his arm without the help of drugs, he'd get more of a look at the hall. as it is, he's not getting in without a ticket.
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  #3  
Old 07-14-2004, 09:46 PM
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tibster, think again...

the Doc will soon be elected:

the numbers are as good or better than some already in;
world series champ with the metsies AND the yanks;
overcame his problems and although only a shadow of his old self he threw a no no and pitched in the world series for the eventual champion yanks

by 2010...there will be a doctor in the house!

what say you?
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  #4  
Old 07-14-2004, 09:54 PM
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No. No how, no way, no chance. Not ever. Never ever never never ever never. Not gonna happen.

And I'm a fan of his.
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  #5  
Old 07-14-2004, 09:55 PM
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all the voters are going to see is the cocaine problem. that's why dave parker and keith hernandez aren't getting in anytime soon. it's probably not fair (wasn't the soon to be inducted paul molitor also implicated in the pittsburgh drug trial?) but that's the way it is.
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  #6  
Old 07-14-2004, 09:59 PM
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I always always a fan of the mid 1980's New York Mets with Doc pitching and Darryl hitting life was good.

I have read somewhere a post about how Doc Gooden getting hurt in 1988-89 leading to his early decline more so than the drugs.

Doc was awesome but he will never make the Hall of Fame.

Put Gooden in with the sometimes great sometimes awesome pitchers - aka Cone, Saberhagen, Appier, Stewart and Hershiser.
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  #7  
Old 07-14-2004, 10:19 PM
kranepool kranepool is offline
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Gooden far far better than the Appier-Sabes crowd

My friend,

Gooden sports a lifetime .634 winning pct. (194 - 112)
2293 Lifetime K's in 2800 2/3 IP
Only Lifetime 954 BB
13 Seasons with ERA at least .90 runs lower than league average!
1985 Season: 24 - 4, 1.53 ERA - more than 2.00 runs lower than NL Avg, 276.67 IP (268 K w/69 BB)...one of the best 25 seasons ever!!

Dave
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  #8  
Old 07-14-2004, 10:36 PM
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Sorry, it's not happening.

Gooden was awesome at the beginning of his career, sure... but after 1987 (when he was all of 22 years old), he NEVER had a qualifying season with an ERA+ better than 114. Not one. At all.

You're flat out wrong on him having 13 seasons with an ERA 0.90 less than league average... he had TWO such seasons, 1984 and 1985... and that's it. He never did it again (except 1998, when he didn't pitch enough innings to qualify).

He's 111th among pitchers in grey ink. He was never in the top 10 in W, ERA, or K rate after 1991... when he was 26.

Sorry, buddy. Doc was a great pitcher. But when your career is effectively over by age 26... you're not going to the Hall.
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  #9  
Old 07-14-2004, 11:57 PM
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start or finish?

i am not an expert, but i think that koufax was below average for several years, until he put it all together and dominated for five or six years in the early and mid-sixties. do not misunderstand me about this, koufax at his best was significantly better than doc at his best. what i AM saying is that doc was one of the best pitchers for six or seven years (out of 13ish) and koufax was stunningly amazing (better than doc) for six or seven seasons (out of 13ish). if you do not agree with me that were doc's numbers exactly the same for the second part of his career as they were for the first, he would be HOF bound, then how does koufax get in if he only dominated for a relatively short amount of time??
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  #10  
Old 07-15-2004, 12:01 AM
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part 2

i may be reading the stats incorrectly, but goodens stat line indicates that his era was indeed better than the nl-average for the number of years i suggest...if i am wrong, please help me read the info correctly.

thanks,
dave
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  #11  
Old 07-15-2004, 12:31 AM
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--Gooden was more than a run better than the league era his first two years, .70 better his third year and his best year over the next 13 was .48 better than league (in a year when he pitched enough innings to qualify).
--His rookie year was excellent for anyone and amazing for a teenager. His second season was one of the great seasons ever and he was very good for two more. Years 5-9 he was 1% better than league, 13% better, 2% worse, 1% better and 5% worse. For his career he ended up 10% better than the league in ERA+ (era relative to league and adjusted for park effects). With his modest career totals that is not nearly dominant enough. Maybe, but probably not, he would have a chance had his decline not been at least partly self inflicted.
--He really only had the one season of truely dominant play that you need to make the Hall with less than 200 wins. I just can't see it happening for Doc. Its a shame, for a brief moment he was the best I ever saw pitch.
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  #12  
Old 07-15-2004, 06:54 AM
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It always helps to look at the voting support for similar players to determine how your guy might fare. Ron Guidry is about as close to a ringer for Gooden as you'll find: one big year, 3-4 more really good years, played in NY, great W-L pct, short of 200 wins.

Guidry's HOF voting record:

Code:
Year Election Votes Pct 
1994  BBWAA  24  5.27  
1995  BBWAA  25  5.43  
1996  BBWAA  37  7.87  
1997  BBWAA  31  6.55  
1998  BBWAA  37  7.82  
1999  BBWAA  31  6.24  
2000  BBWAA  44  8.82  
2001  BBWAA  27  5.24  
2002  BBWAA  23  4.87
Never had 10% support and doesn't carry the baggage that Dwight has.

Gooden will be lucky to get the 5% needed to continue. Valenzuela is another that comes to mind and he was bounced off after his 2nd year.
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  #13  
Old 07-15-2004, 09:16 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kranepool
the Doc will soon be elected:

the numbers are as good or better than some already in;
world series champ with the metsies AND the yanks;
overcame his problems and although only a shadow of his old self he threw a no no and pitched in the world series for the eventual champion yanks

by 2010...there will be a doctor in the house!

what say you?
Gooden is not the only one on crack. That's what I think.
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  #14  
Old 07-19-2004, 07:52 AM
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Man,I was third row next to the Pirate dugout the night in Sept. when Doc needed 16 k's to bust Herb Scores rookie record.I had chills watching him.16 Buccos down and I remember telling my girlfriend( who I am sure could not have cared less ) on the way home from Shea that we were seeing the greatest pitcher we'd ever see.The next year he was unreal and in 86 I got to see him and Ryan( with a broken foot it turned out!) go to ten innings until Darryl won it with a dinger in the playoffs.My feelings on Doc were so utterly dissapointed in his life choices. He was unreal and could have made us all forget the rest but he'd rather hit the pipe. Do not forget that after Steinbrenner gave him a reprieve he ignored his agreement with the Yankees ,broke curfew in Texas, stayed late at a strip bar(despite his daily AA agreement) and punched out a taxi driver over a fare.Stupid? Yes.Arrogant? Way over the line.His and Straws drug use kept his teamates from being a special franchise in the late 80's but both had a finger pointed at someone else
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  #15  
Old 06-15-2006, 06:47 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kranepool
i am not an expert, but i think that koufax was below average for several years, until he put it all together and dominated for five or six years in the early and mid-sixties. do not misunderstand me about this, koufax at his best was significantly better than doc at his best. what i AM saying is that doc was one of the best pitchers for six or seven years (out of 13ish) and koufax was stunningly amazing (better than doc) for six or seven seasons (out of 13ish). if you do not agree with me that were doc's numbers exactly the same for the second part of his career as they were for the first, he would be HOF bound, then how does koufax get in if he only dominated for a relatively short amount of time??
(A) Koufax went out on top. He could have still pitched, but doctors told him that if he continued to pitch, over time, his arthritis would get worse to where he would not have been able to straighten his arm. (It's possible that today, his prognosis would not have been as bad, due to advances in sports medicine, and Koufax would have continued to pitch.) Gooden went out on the bottom, AFTER hurting his arm, and getting into problems with substance abuse.

(B) Gooden gets SOME credit for being a star at 19, but it was his undoing in the end. Koufax's early mediocre years were due to a rule that required the Dodgers to keep a pitcher on the roster for two years if he received a signing bonus of such and such amount. Koufax spent age 19 and 20 on the big league roster not really ready for the show, but stuck there because of a rule. Had Koufax come up in 1958, and had he pitched one more year, we would not hear as much carping about his "short" career.

I'm a bit of a fan on this issue, but I love Sandy Koufax. Sandy is the kind of athlete that I wish every athlete were. Quiet. Unassuming. Not attention seeking. Practical and rational, not egomaniacal. (His decision to retire while on top showed uncommon good sense; how many jocks play 2-3 more years and end up cripples at 50?) He was a winner, and he was the main reason the Dodgers won three pennants and two world championships in 4 years in the sixties. He was the best player on the Dodgers, and the best by a lot. If that's not a great player, well . . .
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  #16  
Old 06-15-2006, 04:44 PM
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While his career value or consistency certainly doesn't stack up, I would not be opposed at all to Gooden in the HOF. I wouldn't endorse him, but if he got in (which he won't, BTW) I would have no problem. Gooden in 1985 had what was IMO the best season a pitcher ever had (check archives for my reasoning). That fact alone, it could be argued, is enough to put him in the HOF. Considering he did have a few other very good years, and spent quite a bit of time as a big leaguer, I could see a case here.
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  #17  
Old 06-15-2006, 05:22 PM
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Fuzzy, you must have some time on your hands today.
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  #18  
Old 06-15-2006, 05:24 PM
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I'm of the strong belief that the drugs were NOT the primary reason for Gooden's downfall. It was the blantant overuse from ages 19-23 that destroyed his arm. By age 25 he was a league average pitcher.
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Old 06-15-2006, 05:56 PM
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^I agree with the above.
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Old 06-15-2006, 07:25 PM
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Gooden in the Hall of Fame -- not a chance.

But here's an idea. A "reality TV" show based around the life of Doc Gooden. They Yanks could give him another chance. He'd be a minor league instructor for a while. He could meet with "King George" every now and then. And then of course sink into another drug induced collapse -- running from the police, trying to score dope, getting high, trying to get sober, failing, repeat.

I'm thinking HBO.

The show would be called "Cracked".
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Old 06-15-2006, 07:45 PM
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Doc Gooden had enormous potential and showed his greatness in his first few years. But the HOF is based on what someone can do over a full career not just potential. Ive been told this many times about Smokey Joe

Its sad to see such a great pitcher who could have been one of the best wasted because of drugs.
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  #22  
Old 06-15-2006, 07:57 PM
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Gooden's ineffectiveness the 2nd half of his career was more due to the Mets' huge overusage of him, not nearly as much about his drug problems. Of course the drugs played some role, but it's been made into far more than it really was. The Mets should have been smarter with their young stud pitcher than to pitch him 200+ innings a year in his late teens and early 20s.

I think many here are being way too hard on Gooden, he had what is IMO the best season by a pitcher ever in 1985, it could be argued that that feat alone is enough to make him a HOFer. Outside of that he had about 5 more solid years and lasted quite a long time in the big leaguers. His rocord is not necessarily that of a HOFer, but it isn't that far away, and add into the fact he had such an awesome season, perhaps the best ever, and I think you have a decent HOF case. I wouldn't be outraged with the idea of Dwight Gooden in the Hall.
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Old 06-15-2006, 08:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 538280
Gooden's ineffectiveness the 2nd half of his career was more due to the Mets' huge overusage of him, not nearly as much about his drug problems. Of course the drugs played some role, but it's been made into far more than it really was. The Mets should have been smarter with their young stud pitcher than to pitch him 200+ innings a year in his late teens and early 20s.

I think many here are being way too hard on Gooden, he had what is IMO the best season by a pitcher ever in 1985, it could be argued that that feat alone is enough to make him a HOFer. Outside of that he had about 5 more solid years and lasted quite a long time in the big leaguers. His rocord is not necessarily that of a HOFer, but it isn't that far away, and add into the fact he had such an awesome season, perhaps the best ever, and I think you have a decent HOF case. I wouldn't be outraged with the idea of Dwight Gooden in the Hall.
I know what you're saying, and on one level, I'm OK with it. But then what about Roger Maris? He had one heck of a season, and without PEDs. And then when I think about all the pitchers I'd hear arguments about having "similar" careers to Gooden and therefore they belong in the Hall (and don't think a couple of them wouldn't slither in to join Haines and Marquard), I blanch at the mere idea of Gooden in the Hall. I have to draw the line above him and staunchly defend that line against the likes of him.

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  #24  
Old 06-15-2006, 08:34 PM
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Maybe Doc Gooden and Denny McLain can go in together... with their parole officers.

Both of them were great pitchers at very young ages. Both looked like they were bound for the Hall of Fame in their early twenties. Both were the staff aces of World Champion teams. And, unfortunately, both of them will be most remembered for not fulfilling their early promise, and for being serious law-breakers after their baseball careers are over.

Eddie Cicotte will make the Hall of Fame before Doc Gooden does - and I don't expect him there soon - mainly because there is virtually nobody alive today who remembers seeing Cicotte pitch, while every adult remembers Doc in the mid-80's, and what he did afterwards.
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Old 06-15-2006, 08:47 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jalbright
I know what you're saying, and on one level, I'm OK with it. But then what about Roger Maris? He had one heck of a season, and without PEDs.
Did Roger Maris have the best hitting season of all time, or anything close to it? No, he hit the most HRs, that doesn't make that season even near the level of probably at least 50 other seasons that have came before it. If I were to rank the top 100 offensive seasons of all time by a formal methology, I doubt Roger Maris 1961 would make it. He hit 61 HRs, but his BA was relatively low vs. other all time great seasons, his OBP was nothing to write home about, and neither was his slugging because of the low BA and he hit very few doubles. Gooden's 1985 was a truly amazing pitching season, and has to be mentioned with the best single seasons of all time. Certainly it has just as good an argument as any other as the best single season ever. The same cannot be said for Roger Maris, his season did not have nearly the same impact.

Quote:
And then when I think about all the pitchers I'd hear arguments about having "similar" careers to Gooden and therefore they belong in the Hall (and don't think a couple of them wouldn't slither in to join Haines and Marquard), I blanch at the mere idea of Gooden in the Hall. I have to draw the line above him and staunchly defend that line against the likes of him.
What other pitcher has a career like Gooden? What other pitcher came up at 19 and 20, had a few very, very good seasons and one that may be the best ever, and then the rest of their career wasn't all that much. I can't really think of any other pitchers like that. A few others may have had one great season and only one or two other ones, but none have the great season nearly as great as Gooden's was.
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