sule wrote:anyone think he has a chance to make it to 300 wins?
He would have to get around 5 motr 20+ win seasons. Assuming he gets 10 more this year.Brings him to 190. another 100 or so? it would be tough. have to pitch into 40's...
Moderator: TyCobb
sule wrote:anyone think he has a chance to make it to 300 wins?

BritneysBestBet wrote:sule wrote:anyone think he has a chance to make it to 300 wins?
He would have to get around 5 motr 20+ win seasons. Assuming he gets 10 more this year.Brings him to 190. another 100 or so? it would be tough. have to pitch into 40's...
GYBE wrote:2100 innings is...a ton of innings. Of course I would expect Halladay to dominate stats with that benchmark. Look at the other names you mentioned; Wakefield, Hernandez and Moyer. Entirely average pitchers with longevity. Halladay deserves credit for his longevity and health, but that doesn't mean he's been the been the best pitcher by far.
Most of his peers in talent are significantly younger, they've never had the chance to be in this discussion. Lincecum already has 2 Cy Young's and a World Series title in 3 full seasons. Felix Hernandez threw 240 innings of 2.49 ERA ball two years ago and 250 innings of 2.27 ERA last year. Neither have had any injury problems so far.
Parataxis wrote:GYBE wrote:2100 innings is...a ton of innings. Of course I would expect Halladay to dominate stats with that benchmark. Look at the other names you mentioned; Wakefield, Hernandez and Moyer. Entirely average pitchers with longevity. Halladay deserves credit for his longevity and health, but that doesn't mean he's been the been the best pitcher by far.
Most of his peers in talent are significantly younger, they've never had the chance to be in this discussion. Lincecum already has 2 Cy Young's and a World Series title in 3 full seasons. Felix Hernandez threw 240 innings of 2.49 ERA ball two years ago and 250 innings of 2.27 ERA last year. Neither have had any injury problems so far.
Yeah, but Halliday should have significantly more Cys. He was robbed at least three times, IMNAAHO.
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Zeitgeister wrote:Parataxis wrote:GYBE wrote:2100 innings is...a ton of innings. Of course I would expect Halladay to dominate stats with that benchmark. Look at the other names you mentioned; Wakefield, Hernandez and Moyer. Entirely average pitchers with longevity. Halladay deserves credit for his longevity and health, but that doesn't mean he's been the been the best pitcher by far.
Most of his peers in talent are significantly younger, they've never had the chance to be in this discussion. Lincecum already has 2 Cy Young's and a World Series title in 3 full seasons. Felix Hernandez threw 240 innings of 2.49 ERA ball two years ago and 250 innings of 2.27 ERA last year. Neither have had any injury problems so far.
Yeah, but Halliday should have significantly more Cys. He was robbed at least three times, IMNAAHO.
Who robbed him? He's never lead any league in WHIP, ERA or Strikeouts all of which most Cy Young winners win. He's a classic inning eater, control guy who happens to be very good at it. I don't think he's ever been robbed of a Cy Young though.
The Phillies are now 40-15 in games that Roy Halladay has started. They have won more than 70 percent of his starts and broken a record that has stood for more than 100 years. The Phillies' .727 win percentage behind Halladay is the best team win percentage in a pitcher's starts among those who debuted since 1900 (min. 50 starts).

Zeitgeister wrote:Never led the NL or AL in strikeouts, never led the NL or AL in ERA, never led the NL or AL in WHIP.
Zeitgeister wrote:Never led the NL or AL in strikeouts, never led the NL or AL in ERA, never led the NL or AL in WHIP. He's a great pitcher.
Dirk_diggler_41 wrote:Zeitgeister wrote:Never led the NL or AL in strikeouts, never led the NL or AL in ERA, never led the NL or AL in WHIP. He's a great pitcher.
Being near the lead almost every season should count for something?
Going by baseball reference,
In the AL in 2002, Halladay was 1st in bWAR for pitchers, 5th in ERA, 6th in strikeouts.
In the AL in 2003, 1st in bWAR for pitchers, 5th in ERA, 2nd in WHIP, 3rd in strikeouts.
In the AL in 2004, he didn't pitch enough innings to qualify.
In the AL in 2005, he didn't pitch enough innings to qualify for the lead in pitching stats, but was still 2nd in bWAR.
In the AL in 2006, 3rd in bWAR for pitchers, 2nd in ERA, and 2nd in WHIP.
In the AL in 2008, 2nd in bWAR for pitchers, 2nd in ERA, 1st in WHIP, 3rd in strikeouts.
In the AL in 2009, 2nd in bWAR for pitchers, 3rd in ERA, 2nd in WHIP, 5th in strikeouts.
In the NL in 2010, 2nd in bWAR for pitchers, 3rd in ERA, 2nd in WHIP, 2nd in strikeouts.
In the NL in 2011, 1st in bWAR for pitchers, 4th in ERA, 2nd in WHIP, 3rd in strikeouts.
bWAR: 1st, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 2nd, 2nd, 2nd, 1st
ERA: 5th, 5th, 2nd, 2nd, 3rd, 3rd, 4th.
WHIP: 2nd, 2nd, 1st, 2nd, 2nd, 2nd.
Ks: 6th, 3rd, 3rd, 5th, 2nd, 3rd.
Terrible
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Zeitgeister wrote:Dirk_diggler_41 wrote:Zeitgeister wrote:Never led the NL or AL in strikeouts, never led the NL or AL in ERA, never led the NL or AL in WHIP. He's a great pitcher.
Being near the lead almost every season should count for something?
Going by baseball reference,
In the AL in 2002, Halladay was 1st in bWAR for pitchers, 5th in ERA, 6th in strikeouts.
In the AL in 2003, 1st in bWAR for pitchers, 5th in ERA, 2nd in WHIP, 3rd in strikeouts.
In the AL in 2004, he didn't pitch enough innings to qualify.
In the AL in 2005, he didn't pitch enough innings to qualify for the lead in pitching stats, but was still 2nd in bWAR.
In the AL in 2006, 3rd in bWAR for pitchers, 2nd in ERA, and 2nd in WHIP.
In the AL in 2008, 2nd in bWAR for pitchers, 2nd in ERA, 1st in WHIP, 3rd in strikeouts.
In the AL in 2009, 2nd in bWAR for pitchers, 3rd in ERA, 2nd in WHIP, 5th in strikeouts.
In the NL in 2010, 2nd in bWAR for pitchers, 3rd in ERA, 2nd in WHIP, 2nd in strikeouts.
In the NL in 2011, 1st in bWAR for pitchers, 4th in ERA, 2nd in WHIP, 3rd in strikeouts.
bWAR: 1st, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 2nd, 2nd, 2nd, 1st
ERA: 5th, 5th, 2nd, 2nd, 3rd, 3rd, 4th.
WHIP: 2nd, 2nd, 1st, 2nd, 2nd, 2nd.
Ks: 6th, 3rd, 3rd, 5th, 2nd, 3rd.
Terrible
No one said he was terrible, just that he's not "the best pitcher of the last decade by far". He's an elite pitcher, very good in many ways but I haven't seen the individual dominant seasons that I've seen from some other pitchers. He's sustained success for a long time which is great too, but it depends on where you put your value.



Pharmcat wrote:im not taking anything away from him, he is great SP
but the NL is a joke, no dh, pitcher has to bat, and a lot of terrible teams in that league
Pharmcat wrote:im not taking anything away from him, he is great SP
but the NL is a joke, no dh, pitcher has to bat, and a lot of terrible teams in that league
Duffman100 wrote:Pharmcat wrote:im not taking anything away from him, he is great SP
but the NL is a joke, no dh, pitcher has to bat, and a lot of terrible teams in that league
But again, the majority of years in the past decade he pitched in the AL and dominated.

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