Wednesday, November 15, 2017

In Memorium: Roy Halladay

You probably heard by now that former star pitcher Roy Halladay died in a plane crash in the Gulf of Mexico last week at the age of 40.   From the onset of his career, it looked like Halladay was destined for stardom.  On the last day of the regular season and in his second big league start in 1998 Halladay was one out away from a no hitter against the Detroit Tigers.  Pinch hitter Bob Higginson hit a opposite field home run to ruin the no no.
2006 Topps Allen & Ginter
The future looked very bright for "Doc" Halladay.  After a rather pedestrian 1999 season where he went 8-7 with a 3.92 ERA, the bottom fell out on Halladay in 2000.   Halladay pitched 67 2/3 innings with an awful ERA of 10.64.  That 10.64 ERA with a minimum of 50 innings pitched is the worst season for any pitcher in history.  Halladay was subsequently sent all the way down to single A to work on his mechanics with Blue Jays pitching guru Mel Queen.

It worked and by the end of the 2002 season he made his first of eight All Star teams.  His career accomplishments also include 2 Cy Young awards, a perfect game and the second career post season no hitter in MLB history.  He had compiled a 203-105 record with 2,117 strikeouts , 67 career complete games and an ERA of 3.38 while pitching for the Blue Jays and Phillies.
2013 Topps
Dig a little deeper in his stats. Halladay's career .659 is 12th all time among pitchers with at least a hundred decisions and 6th with 200 decisions.  But complete games is what Halladay was known for.  He led the league in the category seven times.  If want to put his career 67 complete games in context with today's superstar pitchers, it is impressive. Halladay accomplished it with 390 games started, Meanwhile Justin Verlander has 23 career complete games in 385 starts.  If you combine  Verlander, Clayton Kershaw and Max Scherzer career complete games, it comes out to 56 CG in 971 starts.  Or if you combine the career games of Zack Greinke, Johnny Cueto, Jon Lester and Madison Bumgarner, it is just 4 more than Halladay in 853 more starts.  Yes we live in the era of more bullpens but the above pitchers are all legitimate aces that are known to go deep in games and some are future Hall of Famers.

Halladay's work ethic and competitiveness while staying humble gained the respect from every dugout in MLB. Halladay was known to get there so early for workouts in the morning he would be waiting for clubhouse attendants and had his work done before his teammates would start what they would think is their early workouts. Halladay was also quick to praise all his teammates and team staff members when he accomplished an individual award stating that we all did it together. Of all the tributes and statements since Halladay's passing, Dodger pitcher Brandon McCarthy probably summed it up the best in his tweet: "He is your favorite player's favorite player".

Halladay is eligible for the Hall of Fame in 2019 and only if you are curious only two players have had the standard five year waiting period for Hall of Fame consideration lifted and they are Roberto Clemente and Lou Gehrig.  It is very unlikely that Halladay will be the third but his plaque will be there one day in Cooperstown.

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