According to results generated using Baseball-Reference’s Play Index, Josh Donaldson of the A’s led the majors with 90 games in which he played the entire game and his team won. The leaders in that category in 2013:
Josh Donaldson, 90 complete game wins
Ben Zobrist, 88 complete game wins
John Jay, 87 complete game wins
Andrelton Simmons, Andrew McCutchen and Matt Carpenter, 86 complete game wins
More on this odd statistic after the jump.
Dustin Pedroia is somewhat further down this list, having played 83 complete games in 2013 that his team won. Pedroia led the majors in 2013 in starts that his team won, with 95 such starts, ahead of Donaldson’s 93. But Pedroia was replaced late in games much more often than Donaldson, so Josh emerges ahead of Dustin and everyone else in complete games won in 2013.
Here are the year-by-year leaders in complete games won for each season since 2000:
2013 Josh Donaldson, 90
2012 Adam Jones, Jason Heyward, J.J. Hardy, Danny Espinosa and Robinson Cano, 90
2011 Ryan Howard, 90
2010 Robinson Cano 91
2009 Robinson Cano 98
2008 Ryan Howard and Chase Utley 89
2007 Robinson Cano 92
2006 Justin Morneau and Brandon Inge 91
2005 Chone Figgins and David Eckstein 90
2004 Hideki Matsui 96
2003 Hideki Matsui 95
2002 Alfonso Soriano 98
2001 Bret Boone 110
2000 Andruw Jones 95
Bret Boone’s total of 110 complete game wins in 2001 is the largest season total that the Play Index (which goes back to 1916) produces, one more than Lou Gehrig’s 109 in 1927. The Yankees won 110 games in the AL in 1927, but on September 29, with just a couple of games left in the season and the first place Yankees 18 games ahead of the second place Athletics, and with the Yankees leading the Senators 15-4 going into the 9th inning, Miller Huggins put Cedric Durst in at first base in place of Gehrig. That ninth inning was one of only two innings Gehrig sat that season: Durst also replaced him at the end of a 14-4 loss to the Tigers in the second game of a July doubleheader. Looking back at the September 29 win, Huggins’ decision to give Lou a well-earned, late season break that that day turns out to have allowed Bret Boone to break, 74 years later, Gehrig’s record (presumably heretofore unknown) for most complete game wins in a season.