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Showing posts with label Astros. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Astros. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

THE WHOLE NINE: SERIES 2- MISSING IN ACTION: 1964 JOE MORGAN

Today's blog post has my "not really missing" 1964 card for all-time second baseman Joe Morgan, who made his Major League debut for the Houston Colt .45's in 1963:





Morgan appeared in eight games for the Colt .45's that season, hitting .240 with the first six hits of his illustrious career over 25 at-bats, also stealing a base and scoring five runs.
For Mr. Morgan, the man was just beginning a run that would send him straight to the Hall of Fame, still with his original team before eventually helping to build a juggernaut of a team forever known as the "Big Red Machine" when he was dealt to the Cincinnati Reds before the 1972 season in a blockbuster trade.
Those Reds teams would win two straight World Series in 1975 and 1976, and field teams with the likes of Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, George Foster and Ken Griffey Sr.
By the time he retired after the 1984 season at the age of 40, he finished with two MVP Awards, 10 All-Star nods, five Gold Gloves, 2517 hits, 1650 runs scored, 268 homers and a cool 689 stolen bases with 1865 walks.
One of the all-timers right there at second base!

 

Thursday, October 10, 2024

"CLASSIC BASEBALL" CUSTOM WTHBALLS SET: J.R. RICHARD

Today on the blog, we go and add J.R. Richard to my future custom "Classic Baseball" set, which I hope to release in five series in the near future as a "monster" WTHBALLS set on high-end card stock:


Just a wonderful image of the fire-balling Astros ace flashing that great smile as he tortured National League batters with his overpowering stuff.
Richard was just becoming the great formidable pitcher mowing down N.L. batters around the time this photo was taken.
From 1976 to 1979, Richard was down-right nasty, striking out 200 or more batters, including 300+ in both 1978 and 1979 (leading the N.L. in K's each time), as well as posting 18 or more wins and 3+ shutouts each season. 
1980 was shaping up to be more of the same, as Richard was 10-4 with a 1.90 E.R.A. and 119 K's through only 113.2 innings.
But on July 30th, 1980, while playing a game of catch before a game, Richard suffered a stroke that ended his career in an instant, requiring emergency surgery to remove a life-threatening blood clot in his neck.
Though he tried a comeback once he recovered, the stroke caused enough damage to prevent him from ever playing in another Major League game.
A tragic end to one of the most promising careers in the Majors at the time.
It would have been incredible to see Richard team up with new Astros pitcher Nolan Ryan and see how many K's they could have racked up.
That would have been some 1-2 punch to watch through the 1980s, but sadly we did not have the pleasure.
Rest in Peace J.R.

 

Friday, October 4, 2024

NOT REALLY MISSING IN ACTION: 1977 ART HOWE

On the blog today, we post up my "not really missing in action" 1977 card for Art Howe, who appeared in 21 games for the Houston Astros in 1976 after parts of two seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates:


Howe hit .138 over those 21 games, with four hits in 29 at-bats along with six walks while putting in time at third and second base.
His 11-year career as a player would really hit its stride after joining the Astros, as he'd play pretty much full-time between 1977 and 1982 before a couple of part-time years in St. Louis in 1984 and 1985 (he didn't play Major League ball in 1983).
As you all know, he'd really find his niche on the Major League level as a manager, guiding the Astros, Oakland A's and New York Mets between 1989 and 2004.
His real success was leading the young studs in Oakland in the late-90's/early-00's, winning 100-games in two seasons (2001 and 2002), but never being able to get past the N.Y. Yankees (remember the now-famous "Jeter-Flip"?).
All told, Howe would win 1129 games as a manager in the Big Leagues, finishing 2nd in "Manager of the Year" voting four years in a row from 1999-2002.

Monday, June 17, 2024

OPC IMAGE VARIATION: 1977 JOE FERGUSON

Up on the blog today, we take a closer look at the OPC and Topps image variation for Joe Ferguson's 1977 cards:

OPC version

Topps version

Whereas the Topps card has the catcher with the St. Louis Cardinals, for whom he suited up in 1976, the OPC card has him airbrushed into a Houston Astros uniform, reflecting his recent trade to the team.
After putting in half a season with the Cardinals in 1976, Ferguson was part of a multi-player trade that also saw former All-Star pitcher Larry Dierker head to St. Louis.
Ferguson would have a decent year for the Astros in 1977, hitting .257 over 132 games with 16 homers and 61 runs batted in.
He'd start 1978 with the Astros before finding himself where it all began, the Los Angeles Dodgers, where he started his career in 1970 and where he played up until 1976.
He had himself a nice 14-year Major League career, really acting as a back-up or platooning catcher, with only two seasons seeing him get as many as 500 plate appearances: 1973 with L.A. and 1977 with Houston.
His 1973 season with the Dodgers got him some MVP consideration, as he hit .263 with 25 homers and 88 runs batted in, along with 87 walks and 84 runs scored. Not bad at all!
For his career, he finished with a .240 average with 122 homers and 445 RBIs, with 719 hits over 3001 at-bats.

 

Saturday, April 13, 2024

"CLASSIC BASEBALL" CUSTOM WTHBALLS SET: NELLIE FOX

The next baseball legend to get a card in my future custom "Classic Baseball" set is Hall of Fame second baseman Nellie Fox, shown here at the end of his career when he was a member of the Houston Astros (or Colt .45's):


Fox put together a brilliant Major League career, first as a Hall of Fame second baseman mainly for the Chicago White Sox, then as a coach later on, a true baseball life before sadly passing away at the young age of 47 in 1975.
He led the AL in hits four times in the 1950’s, and of course would lead the Chicago White Sox to the 1959 World Series, taking home the league’s MVP Award for his efforts.
By the time he retired as a player after two years with the Houston Astros in 1964-65, he finished with 2663 hits and a .288 batting average, with twelve all-star nods and three Gold Gloves.
Defensively, it’s incredible to see he led the American League in putouts every single season between 1952 and 1961, while leading the league’s second basemen in fielding percentage six times, double-plays five times and assists six times.
In 1997, the Veteran’s Committee selected Fox for the Hall of Fame, joining former teammates Luis Aparicio and Early Wynn from that 1959 pennant winning team.

 

Monday, March 18, 2024

1969 "DO-OVER" SET: JOE MORGAN

Good day everyone!

On the blog today, we spotlight my 1969 "redo" for the great Joe Morgan, from my recent "1969 Gimmie a Do-Over" set from a few months back:




Just a nice image of the great second baseman that wasn't a reused image like Topps had out there way back when!
For Mr. Morgan, the man was just beginning a run that would send him straight to the Hall of Fame, still with his original team before eventually helping to build a juggernaut of a team forever known as the "Big Red Machine" when he was dealt to the Cincinnati Reds before the 1972 season in a blockbuster trade.
Those Reds teams would win two straight World Series in 1975 and 1976, and field teams with the likes of Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, George Foster and Ken Griffey Sr.
By the time he retired after the 1984 season at the age of 40, he finished with two MVP Awards, 10 All-Star nods, five Gold Gloves, 2517 hits, 1650 runs scored, 268 homers and a cool 689 stolen bases with 1865 walks.
One of the all-timers right there at second base!

Friday, November 10, 2023

1971 "BASEBALL'S GREATEST MOMENTS": DON WILSON

Today on the blog, we celebrate former Houston Astros hurler Don Wilson and his 1967 no-hitter against the Atlanta Braves with this "missing" 1971 "Baseball's Greatest Moments" card:


On June 18th of the 1967 season, the 22-year-old dominated the Braves, on his way to what would be the first of two career no-no's with a 15 strikeout performance, even striking out Hank Aaron for the final out of his gem at the Astrodome.
It turned out to be the first no-hitter tossed under a roof, as well as the first on artificial turf, unique in quite a few ways!
Two years later he'd repeat the feat, this time against the Cincinnati Reds, striking out 13 on his way to history yet again.
Wilson would go on to have arguably his best season in the Big Leagues in 1969, finishing up with a record of 16-12 with an ERA at 4.00 with 235 strikeouts over 34 starts.
He’d match those 16 wins a couple of years later, his high-water mark for a season, with another 15 wins the following year, with ERA’s under 3.00 each time.
A bright star on the Houston Astros team, tragically, on January 5th of 1975 he passed away under mysterious circumstances in his home of carbon monoxide poisoning in his car, which also took the life of his 5-year-old son who was sleeping upstairs above the garage. Wilson was only 29-years-old.

 

Monday, July 3, 2023

970 "20-WIN CIRCLE": LARRY DIERKER

On the blog today, we add former Houston Astros ace Larry Dierker to my 1970 "20-Win Circle" sub-set, celebrating the 20-game winners of the 1969 season:


Dierker had himself an excellent year in 1969, his sixth in the Majors while still only 22 years of age!
He posted a record of 20-13 over 39 appearances, 37 of them starts, with a brilliant 2.33 earned run average in 305.1 innings.
He completed 20 of those starts and tossed four shutouts along the way, striking out 232 batters, garnering him his first All-Star berth as well.
Incredibly Dierker made his Big League debut at the age of 17 with the (tehn) Houston Colt .45's, appearing in three games and going 0-1 with a 2.00 ERA over three games and nine innings pitched.
He’d finish his playing career in 1978 with the St. Louis Cardinals, his only season outside of Houston, going 2-6 with a 4.58 ERA over 11 appearances before retiring with a record of 139-123 with a very nice 3.31 ERA over 356 games and 2333.2 innings pitched.

Sunday, May 28, 2023

EXPANDED LEAGUE LEADERS: 1979 N.L. STRIKEOUTS

Good day all!

On the blog today, we have the top three National League strikeout pitchers of 1978 proudly displayed on a 1979 “expanded league leader” card, featuring three studs of the mound:

 

We begin with Houston Astros ace J.R. Richard, who had himself quite a season in 1978, reaching the 300 strikeout plateau for the first time with 303 total over 275.1 innings of work.

Richard was just getting better and better at this point, reaching the 300 strikeout mark after two seasons of 214, winning 18 games each year between 1977 and 1979 with a 20-win season in 1976.

He was a beast on the mound, and would follow up his 1978 campaign with an even better 1979 season, striking out 313 batters while leading the league with a 2.71 earned run average while completing 19 of his 38 starts, throwing 292.1 innings.

I cannot even imagine how the 1980’s could have gone for him had not a tragic stroke strike him during the 1980 season, ending his career just like that.

In second place with 248 strikeouts, the 1977 K-leader in the N.L., Atlanta Braves pitcher Phil Niekro, who started 42 games while completing 22 of them, both league high marks, as well as his whopping 334.1 innings.

He went 19-18 with a very nice 2.88 ERA, tossing four shutouts and even winning the first of his five Gold Gloves, this at the age of 39! Amazing.

In third place with 226 strikeouts, a man who at that point was already a five-time K-King, Cincinnati Reds ace Tom Seaver, who had a very nice first full-season after his shocking trade to the team during the 1977 season.

“Tom Terrific” went 16-14 over 36 starts, posting an ERA of 2.88 over 259 innings, tossing one shutout while completing eight, making his eleventh All-Star team on his way to an easy Hall of Fame selection years later, in my opinion THE best pitcher of the 1970’s.

Quite the trip of arms here!

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

1977 N.L. CENTENNIAL: J.R. RICHARD

On the blog today, we add Houston Astros ace J.R. Richard to my 1977 "N.L. Centennial" sub-set, celebrating the Senior League's 100th anniversary of the year before:


As part of the celebration, the league wore special patches on their sleeves, so I made sure to use photos that showed them on every card.
Luckily for me there were countless photos taken that season of the players and the league's games, so it wasn't nearly as difficult for me to create the set (slated for a two-series release later this year!).
As for the great J.R., he was just becoming the great formidable pitcher mowing down N.L. batter around this time.
From 1976 to 1979, Richard was down-right nasty, striking out 200 or more batters, including 300+ in both 1978 and 1979 (leading the N.L. in K's each time), as well as posting 18 or more wins and 3+ shutouts each season. 
1980 was shaping up to be more of the same, as Richard was 10-4 with a 1.90 E.R.A. and 119 K's through only 113.2 innings.
But on July 30th, 1980, while playing a game of catch before a game, Richard suffered a stroke that ended his career in an instant, requiring emergency surgery to remove a life-threatening blood clot in his neck.
Though he tried a comeback once he recovered, the stroke caused enough damage to prevent him from ever playing in another Major League game.
A tragic end to one of the most promising careers in the Majors at the time.
It would have been incredible to see Richard team up with new Astros pitcher Nolan Ryan and see how many K's they could have racked up.

Sunday, March 5, 2023

EXPANDED LEAGUE LEADERS: 1979 N.L. BATTING

Good day everyone!

Up on the blog today, we move on to 1979 in my on-going “Expanded League Leaders” thread, showcasing the top three players in each category on a league leader card, beginning with the top three hitters in the National League for 1978:

 

We begin with Pittsburgh Pirates slugger Dave Parker, who took home his second straight batting title with a .334 average, following his .338 number the year before.

Parker was in the prime of his career, also chipping in 30 home runs and 117 runs batted in with 23 stolen bases to take home the league MVP Award.

He would not disappoint in 1979 either, as he would hit .310 with 25 homers and 94 RBIs while collecting 193 hits and scoring 109 runs, helping the team to a World Championship with the fan favorite “We Are Family” club.

This is a Hall of Famer in my book! I will never waiver on this.

In second place with a .316 batting average, another guy who I feel is a Hall of Famer, Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Steve Garvey, who put in another “Garvey-esque” season with 202 hits, 89 runs scored, 21 homers and 113 runs batted in.

It was the fourth of his six 200-hit seasons, while also posting his third 20+ homer campaign, as well as third 100+ RBI campaign.

Analytics be damned, there is no way anyone can convince me this guy isn’t a Hall of Famer considering for the better part of a decade he was THE N.L. first baseman, which carries a lot of weight in my eyes.

Just behind Garvey with a .315 batting average in 1978, underrated Houston Astros star Jose Cruz, who put in another great under-the-radar year with 178 hits, 83 runs batted in and 79 runs scored.

A quiet yet steady hitter for over 10 years, Cruz gave the Astros an anchor in the middle of their line-up who could hit for average, show some “pop” in his bat, and drive in runs until the late-80’s.

A great trio of batters here, two of which I believe should have their place in Cooperstown, while all three collected over 2000 hits over their careers.

Thursday, February 16, 2023

1960'S DEDICATED ROOKIE: 1965 JOE MORGAN

Today's blog post has a spotlight on my 1965 "dedicated rookie" for Hall of Fame second baseman Joe Morgan, from my special set produced a couple of years ago:



For Mr. Morgan, the man was just beginning a run that would send him straight to the Hall of Fame, while helping eventually build a juggernaut of a team forever known as the "Big Red Machine" when he was dealt to to Cincinnati before the 1972 season.
Those Reds teams would win two straight World Series in 1975 and 1976, and field teams with the likes of Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, George Foster and Ken Griffey Sr.
By the time he retired after the 1984 season at the age of 40, he finished with two MVP Awards, 10 All-Star nods, five Gold Gloves, 2517 hits, 1650 runs scored, 268 homers and a cool 689 stolen bases with 1865 walks.
One of the all-timers right there at second base!

 

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

REVISITING A BLOG POST FROM 2015: 1972 J.R. RICHARD DEDICATED ROOKIE

On the blog today, thought it'd be fun to revisit a post from eight years ago, my 1972 "Dedicated Rookie" for Houston Astros great J.R. Richard:



Here's the original write-up for the post way back when:
"Richard appeared in his first four games during the 1971 season, and blew the MLB world wide-open when he struck out 15 batters in his first start.
It would take a few years, but he'd become the power-arm all-star by the 1975 season, and would go on to post two 300+ strikeout campaigns, four straight 200+ K years,  four straight seasons of 18+ wins (1976-1979), and an E.R.A. crown in 1979 before tragically having his career cut short in 1980 by a stroke.
His final numbers are indicative of what we could have expected well into the 1980's had he not been cut down at the age of 30: a 107-71 record with 1493 strikeouts and a 3.15 ERA in 238 games and 1606 innings.
It really would have been something to see Richard and Nolan Ryan team up to rack-up incredible numbers together.
One of the ultimate "what could have been" stories in baseball during my childhood for sure…"

 

Monday, February 13, 2023

1960'S CAREER-CAPPERS: 1966 NELLIE FOX

On the blog today, we have my 1966 career-capper for Hall of Famer Nellie Fox, from my "1960's Career-cappers" set released a few years ago:



Fox put together a brilliant Major League career, first as a Hall of Fame second baseman mainly for the Chicago White Sox, then as a coach later on, a true baseball life before sadly passing away at the young age of 47 in 1975.
He led the AL in hits four times in the 1950’s, and of course would lead the Chicago White Sox to the 1959 World Series, taking home the league’s MVP Award for his efforts.
By the time he retired as a player after two years with the Houston Astros in 1964-65, he finished with 2663 hits and a .288 batting average, with twelve all-star nods and three Gold Gloves.
Defensively, it’s incredible to see he led the American League in putouts every single season between 1952 and 1961, while leading the league’s second basemen in fielding percentage six times, double-plays five times and assists six times.
In 1997, the Veteran’s Committee selected Fox for the Hall of Fame, joining former teammates Luis Aparicio and Early Wynn from that 1959 pennant winning team.

Sunday, February 5, 2023

EXPANDED LEAGUE LEADERS: 1978 N.L. STRIKEOUTS

On the blog today, we have a 1978 “expanded league leader” card celebrating the top three strikeout pitchers of the 1977 season in the National League, featuring three solid pitchers of the era:
 

We begin with Hall of Famer Phil Niekro, who was an absolute BEAST in 1977, leading the league with 262 strikeouts, a career-best for him, while putting in a workhorse of a year for the Atlanta Braves.
Over the course of that year Niekro started 43 games, completed 20 of them, tossed 330.1 innings while going 16-20 with a 4.03 earned run average, tossing two shutouts while allowing 315 hits while walking 164 batters!
If you can believe it he’d top those innings pitched in each of the next two seasons, throwing 334.1 and 342 in 1978 and 1979 respectively, while winning 19 and 21 games, completing 22 and 23 as well.
Just the definition of “workhorse” while throwing his knuckleball on his way to the Hall of Fame, winning 318 games while striking out 3342 batters along the way, with 45 shutouts over 864 games in his 24-year career.
Behind him with 214 strikeouts in 1977, the pitcher who would go on to lead the league in K’s the following two seasons, Houston Astros fire-baller J.R. Richard, who matched his previous season’s strikeout total while winning 18 games along with three shutouts and a 2.97 ERA.
Richard would eclipse the 300-strikeout threshold in the 1978 and 1979, with 303 and 313 before a stroke during the 1980 season tragically cut his career short after a brilliant 10-4 start with a 1.90 ERA, including four shutouts.
The man was well on his way to a dominant decade in the 1980’s, now teamed up with Nolan Ryan who arrived in 1980 to form what could have been one of the great 1-2 pitching tandems of all-time.
In third place with 206 strikeouts, overlooked ace Steve Rogers of the Montreal Expos, who had a fine year in 1977 with 17 wins and a 3.10 ERA over 40 starts, completing 17 and tossing four shutouts.
Rogers would go on to post some solid years for the Expos into the 1980’s, winning as many as 19 games (1982) and even leading the league that year with a 2.40 ERA, and shutouts in 1983 with five.
A victim of some bad Expos teams in the early part of the 1970’s, he’d finish with a record of 158-152 over 13 seasons, with a very nice 3.17 ERA and 37 shutouts over 399 appearances, all for the Montreal franchise between 1973 and 1985.
 

Saturday, January 28, 2023

1977 N.L. CENTENNIAL SPECIAL: CESAR CEDENO

On the blog today, continuing with my 1977 "National League Centennial" special set, we have my card for Cesar Cedeno, one of THE talents of the league through the decade:


Cedeno had the speed, the power, and the talent to put together a five-year stretch where he brought home 5 straight Gold Gloves, get named to four all-star teams while topping the 20/50 mark three years in a row.
In 1974 he had a monster season that saw him hit a career-high 26 homers AND steal a career-high 57 stolen bases along with, you guessed it, a career-high 102 runs batted in.
I would love to know the numbers he could have put up had he not played in the cavernous Astrodome for the first 12 years of his career!
By the time he was done after the 1986 season, he retired with 199 homers and 550 stolen bases, along with a very nice .285 batting average and 2087 hits.
An excellent player who was easily overshadowed by contemporaries of the era.

Monday, January 16, 2023

1977 N.L. CENTENNIAL: BOB WATSON

On the blog today, we have Bob Watson in my on-going 1977 "National League Centennial" sub-set that I started recently, celebrating the 100th season of N.L. ball in 1976:


Watson was in the prime of his career when this card would have come out, putting in consistent seasons year in and year out for the Houston Astros, with whom he came up with back in 1966 as a 20-year-old.
After 14 seasons in the Houston sun (under a dome), he’d move on to the Boston Red Sox for half a year in 1979, then on to the Yankees, where I got to see him play for two-and-a-half-years until he moved on to the Atlanta Braves for the last 2+ years of his 19-year career.
He’d finish with a very nice .295 career average, with 184 homers and 989 runs batted in, while collecting 1826 hits with two All-Star nods.
Later on, he moved into coaching and then became GM of the Yankees in 1993, helping the team draft wisely, refrain from dumb trades (ala George Steinbrenner), helping the team build up their young core that would lead to World Series titles in 1996, 1998-2000.
Truly a baseball lifer and underrated player in my book.

Sunday, December 25, 2022

EXPANDED LEAGUE LEADERS: 1978 N.L. STOLEN BASES

Up on the blog today, we go ahead and move on to the top three stolen base guys in the National league for 1977, with a 1978 "expanded league leader" card in my long-running thread:


We begin with the Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Frank Taveras, who topped the league with his 70 stolen bases, this after stealing 58 bases the previous year.
Taveras had a nice run of four seasons between 1976 and 1979 where he topped 40+ steals every year, with the league-leading 70 his career high.
In second place with 61 steals, the perennial "top-3" stolen bases player in the N.L. during the 1970's, Houston Astros All-Star outfielder Cesar Cedeno.
The man was simply a machine through the 1970's, with six straight seasons of 50+ steals, with the 61 his career-best, on his way to 550 steals over his very nice 17-year career.
In third place, rookie Gene Richards of the San Diego Padres who set a Major League record with his 56 steals over the 1977 season.
Richards would finish in third place in the N.L. Rookie of the Year race for his efforts, hitting .290 with 152 hits and 79 runs scored, adding 11 triples.
Though he ended up having a short 8-year career, he'd finish with a career .290 average with 247 stolen bases and 502 runs, stealing as many as 61 bases in a season, that total in 1980 when he set career-bests across the board, including 193 hits and 91 runs scored for the Padres.
There you go! The top stolen base guys in the N.L. for 1977, celebrated on an "expanded league leader" card in 1978.
Next up, the A.L.!!!

Monday, November 7, 2022

NOT REALLY MISSING IN ACTION: 1979 BO McLAUGHLIN

Up on the blog today, we have a "not so missing" 1979 card for former Houston Astros pitcher Bo McLaughlin, who appeared in only a dozen games during the 1978 season:

 
McLaughlin just completed his third year in the Majors, going 0-1 over those 12 games with a 5.01 earned run average, picking up two saves along the way.
He would go on to split the 1979 season between Houston and the Atlanta Braves, appearing in a career-high 49 games, pitching to an ERA of 5.05 over 66 innings, though he did have one start that year.
After spending 1980 in the Minors, he was back in the Big Leagues in 1981, now with the Oakland A's, where he would play his last two seasons, appearing in 32 games total, with two starts, going 0-4 and getting hit hard, picking up a save while striking out 36 batters over 60 innings of work.
All told, he'd finish his six-year career with a record of 10-20 over 156 appearances, starting 21 games and picking up nine saves.

Sunday, October 2, 2022

EXPANDED LEAGUE LEADERS: 1977 N.L. STRIKEOUTS

Today on the blog, we move on in my on-going “expanded league-leaders” thread to the top three strikeout pitchers of the National league for 1976, proudly displayed on a 1977 expanded card:
 
 
We begin with the strikeout king of the N.L. Tom Seaver, New York Mets uber-star, who paced the league with his 235 strikeouts, 21 more than the runner-up in the league.
It was the fifth title for “Tom Terrific” since coming up in 1967, and the ninth straight season of 200+ strikeouts, a career which was already Hall of Fame worthy even though he was far from done.
By the time he retired after the 1986 season, he finished with 3640 K’s over his illustrious career, along with 311 wins, a brilliant 2.86 ERA and 61 shutouts, with three Cy Young Awards.
In second place with 214 strikeouts, young Houston Astros phenom J.R. Richard, who also turned in his first 20-win season along with a very nice 2.75 ERA over 39 starts, with three shutouts among his 14 complete games.
He would also K 214 the following season before posting two straight 300+ strikeout campaigns in 1978 and 1979, becoming a towering force on the mound before a stroke tragically ended his career in his prime halfway into the 1980 season, after starting the All-Star game that year for the N.L.
Though he did try to make it back, he could never quite get back to a Big League mound, leaving us to wonder “what could have been” ever since.
In third place with 200 strikeouts on the nose, another New York Met, underappreciated hurler Jerry Koosman, who reached the 200-strikeout mark for the only time in his excellent Big League tenure, putting in arguably the best year of his career by also posting a record of 21-10 with a very nice 2.69 ERA over 34 games, with three shutouts and 17 complete games.
By the time he retired after the 1985 season, he finished with a record of 222-209 over 612 games, with a 3.36 ERA and 33 shutouts, with 2556 strikeouts.
There you have it! Onto the American League next week!

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