Tim Lincecum‘s 2012 regular season was so poor that many folks believed he had to be hiding an injury. The speculation began in April, after just two rough starts that followed a rocky spring training, and intensified through June and July, as the Giants’ erstwhile ace lugged a 6.42 ERA into the All-Star Break. As far as I’ve heard, no injury was ever disclosed; Lincecum never missed a start, and his second half was passable, with a 3.83 ERA. But his final numbers remained unsightly enough — a 5.18 ERA despite a friendly home park — that I wondered:
“Was that the worst full year by a multi-award-winning pitcher?”
Pretty clearly, the answer is yes.
Nineteen pitchers have won multiple Cy Young or MVP Awards. In order of their most recent awards:
- Tim Lincecum
- Roy Halladay
- Johan Santana
- Roger Clemens
- Randy Johnson
- Pedro Martinez
- Tom Glavine
- Greg Maddux
- Bret Saberhagen
- Steve Carlton
- Gaylord Perry
- Jim Palmer
- Tom Seaver
- Bob Gibson
- Denny McLain
- Sandy Koufax
- Hal Newhouser (MVP)
- Carl Hubbell (MVP)
- Walter Johnson (MVP)
To be sure, a few of these guys had an injury-shortened year with worse numbers than Lincecum posted this year. But we’re approaching this question assuming that Lincecum was not injured. So I put together the following table showing the worst season ERA+ for each multi-award pitcher, in a season of 20+ starts. I’ve included the bWAR and age for that season; note that, in one or two cases, the pitcher’s worst WAR season did not make this list, due to the 20-start minimum. The seasons listed all occurred either before or after the award-winning years; none came in between.
[table id=72 /]
Lincecum’s 67 ERA+ is tied with the worst of Seaver, who made just 21 starts in ’82 before injury shut him down. Seaver was also 37 years old, although he proved good for four more solid seasons. Pedro had a 75 ERA+ pitching with nothing but guile in his last full year, and the rookie Maddux had a 76 with a poor defensive team and before he found his control.
Considering their career arcs along with their numbers, just one of those 18 other pitchers is remotely similar to Lincecum. Like The Freak, he was an offbeat right-hander with a musical bent, who won his awards back-to-back at age 24 and 25. His name is Denny McLain.
There are important differences between them. One, McLain helped sink his career with childish behavior not yet evidenced by Lincecum. Two, McLain’s early workload may have led to the injuries that finished him by age 28; he hurled over 1,500 innings in the majors through age 25, plus over 200 IP in the minors at age 19. Lincecum had about 600 IP through age 25; he didn’t top 180 IP in a season until age 23, and has never thrown 230 in a regular season.
The bigger point is that none of the multi-award pitchers just lost the magic in mid-career and later got it back. Almost to a man, once they started having good years, they never had a truly bad one except when injured or old.
This study is far too small to say much about Tim Lincecum’s prospects for regaining his All-Star form, but it does heighten curiosity about his next season, which is the last of his current contract.