The following are excerpts from MLB writer Jayson Stark. I think he has it correct.
Tim Lincecum has been getting way too little play in this debate for way too long, anyway. But Webb's mini-funk has helped bring Lincecum back into the conversation. And it's about time.
True, Lincecum has four fewer wins (19 to 15). But how much of that is his fault? He's 15-3, with five blown saves and six CUS (?Criminally Unsupported Starts -- games in which he pitched at least six innings and his team scored one run or none while he was in the game). Webb has one blown save and only two CUS. So that accounts for your gap in wins, gang.
Toss wins out of the discussion, and Lincecum looks as if he has clearly outpitched Webb by most standards. Lincecum leads in ERA by more than three-quarters of a run (2.43 to 3.19), leads in strikeouts by 50 (210 to 160) and tops the league in both categories. Lincecum also leads the NL in OPS allowed (.609), quality-start percentage (22 of 27, 81 percent) and strikeout ratio (10.2 per 9 IP). And unlike Sabathia, you may have noticed that he has been in the same league, on the same team, all season.
if you look seriously at the big picture -- not just win totals or the last two months -- I believe that pitcher is Tim Lincecum.
For the full Jayson Stark story and comparisons please see the following: http://proxy.espn.go.com/chat/chatESPN?event_id=22202
The Butchermasters: The Top 10 Worst Fielding Seasons in Giants History
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*From 1901-2010 I’m in love with the new Baseball-Reference WAR data. WAR,
or Wins Above Replacement, is the uber-stat that attempts to encompass the
total...
2 hours ago
1 comments:
While I am not the biggest fan of Jason Stark, I think he's pretty right on with this article. Timmy cannot control the Giants offense, not can he help out the bullpen behind him. Statistically he has been dominant all year long.
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