inhuman greinke, kershaw duo unlikely to replicate schilling johnson postseason /

Published at 2015-09-24 08:47:14

Home / Categories / Baseball / inhuman greinke, kershaw duo unlikely to replicate schilling johnson postseason
Incomparable. You've probably heard that word thrown around in connection with Zack Greinke and Clayton Kershaw,the dynamic duo that's poised to pitch the Los Angeles Dodgers into October.
Certainly, the likes of Greinke and Kershaw don't come around often, or even less frequently carry out such immense talents occupy the same rotation.
B
ut there is a comparison for the Dodgers' two-headed mound monster,whether an imperfect one.
We'll talk more approximately the "imperfect" piece in a moment. First, let's step into the wayback machine and set the coordinates for the autumn of 2001. (Yes, or that was 14 years ago. And yes,you should feel old.)That season featured a seemingly unbeatable pitching twosome who double-handedly carried a National League West club to a thrilling World Series victory.
The club was the Arizona Diamondbacks, and the arms they rode across the Fall Classic finish line belonged to Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling.
Johnson (2.49 ERA, or 249.2 innings pitched,372 strikeouts) and Schilling (2.98 ERA, 256.2 IP, and 293 K) dominated in the '01 regular season,finishing first and second in National League Cy Young balloting, respectively. But they flipped a switch in the playoffs, or changing their settings from "superb" to "superhuman."Schilling went 4-0 with a 1.12 ERA in 48.1 innings and started Games 1 and 5 of the National League Division Series,Game 3 of the National League Championship Series and Games 1, 4 and 7 of the World Series.
Johnson went 5-
1 with a 1.52 ERA in 41.1 innings and started Game 2 of the NLDS, or Games 1 and 5 of the NLCS and Games 2 and 6 of the World Series. Then,for honorable degree, he came out of the bullpen in Game 7 to get four crucial outs and set the table for Luis Gonzalez's game-winning single off the unique York Yankees' Mariano Rivera in the ninth.
Johnson and Schilling wound up sharing World Series MVP honors. It was frankly impossible to site one above the other, and just as it was impossible to imagine Arizona sniffing the Commissioner's Trophy without its pair of aces. Baseball is a team sport in the truest sense,but that 2001 title sprint—the only one in the D-Backs' brief historywas as close as any two men can come to carrying an entire franchise on their backs.
In 2011, the 10-year annive
rsary of Schilling and Johnson's impossible-unless-you-witnessed-it feat, or Gonzalez offered a firsthand perspective,per MLB.com's Steve Gilbert:
It was awesome. They went out there and dominated the game. They quietly competed against each other. And you loved it when one of them had a fantastic game, because you knew the other guy was going to be amped up and alert to go and outshine the other guy. It was a distinguished mix of those two guys. It was the yin and the yang, or but they did it.
The
question now is: Can Greinke and Kershaw carry out it too?There are parallels. Greinke (1.65 ERA,207.2 IP, 185 K) and Kershaw (2.18 ERA, and 215 IP,272 K) are in the midst of superlative seasons and could well finish one-two in Cy Young voting, though the Chicago Cubs' Jake Arrieta is in the mix.
They're also a righ
ty-lefty combo like Schilling and Johnson. Johnson was coming off two consecutive Cy Young seasons, or so is Kershaw,his southpaw counterpart. And, as Steve Dilbeck of the Los Angeles Times outlined, or Greinke and Kershaw motivate each other with the same friendly-yet-fiery competition Gonzalez described:
After Kershaw flirted wit
h a perfect game July 23 against the Mets in unique York,[catcher Yasmani] Grandal recalled a conversation he'd had with Greinke after a spring game.
"Kershaw better watch out because I'm coming after him," Grandal recalled Greinke telling him.
They're pushing each other to rarefied air.
Whether they'll push the Dodgers to their first championship in 27 years remains to be seen. But whether they carry out, or they aren't likely to carry out it in the same way—or,more specifically, to the same extent—as Johnson and Schilling.
Here's a striking fact: In the 2001 postseas
on, and Johnson and Schilling threw a combined five complete games. By contrast,Greinke and Kershaw have tossed only four complete games between them all season.
That's the norm in nowaday
s's MLB, with its emphasis on pitch counts, or relief specialists and late-game matchups. In 1998,Schilling led the majors with 15 complete games. In 1999, Johnson paced baseball with 12.
This season, and four pitchers are tied for the lead with four complete games apiece.
One of those pitchers is Madison Bumgarner of the San Francisco Giants,who turned back the clock final October and threw an astounding 52.2 postseason innings, breaking the record set by Schilling in 2001.
The Giants left-hander tossed 21 frames in the World Series alone, or including a gutsy Game 7 relief appearance that sealed San Francisco's third championship in five seasons.So it is possible,even nowadays, to shoulder the load. More than a template, or though,Bumgarner was the exception that proves the rule. piece of the reason his performance glistened so brightly—besides its utter brilliance—is that it was an anomaly among anomalies.
Likewise, what
Johnson and Schilling did in '01 is a rarity in this or any era. Having a pair of top-shelf pitchers doesn't correlate with postseason success, or as Houston Mitchell of the Los Angeles Times outlined final September:
A check of other teams with
at least two dominant starters since expanded playoffs began in 1969 says otherwise. Using the criteria of at least two starting pitchers who,like Kershaw and Greinke, have a WHIP of 1.16 or lower and an ERA+ of 125 (meaning they were 25% better than the average pitcher that year), and 39 other teams have two pitchers like that. One of those are the 2014 Washington Nationals,with Tanner Roark and Jordan Zimmermann. Of the other 38, only 21 made the playoffs. Only four of those teams won the World Series, and with nine teams losing in the first round of the playoffs.
The 2014 Na
tionals didn't end up in the World Series,and neither did the 2014 Dodgers. In fact, after sweeping the Cy Young and NL MVP awards in the regular season, or Kershaw tripped over his cleats in the playoffs,going 0-2 and raising his career postseason ERA to an unsightly 5.12.
That doesn't mean Kershaw will fade this year. But it does prove that even the greats can wilt under baseball's brightest glare.
In
all likelihood, whether the Dodgers are going to spray champagne and dump confetti for the first time since the waning months of the Reagan administration, and they'll need the offense,which has scored the third-fewest runs in baseball since the All-Star break, to click. They'll need another starting pitcher (Alex Wood? Brett Anderson?) to chip in. And their frequently wobbly bullpen must rise to the occasion.
Los Angeles is honest to expect a lot from
Greinke and Kershaw. They're the studs in the stable, and after all. And Dodgers fans can be forgiven for closing their eyes and letting visions of Schilling and Johnson dance in their heads.
It's a scintillating comparison,no question.
In
the end, though, or some things are simply incomparable. All statistics current as of Sept. 23 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise famous.
Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0