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Fewest decisions in 30 game starts

Posted by Andy on March 10, 2009

Here are the fewest total decisions a pitcher received in a season with at least 30 starts since 1901:

  Cnt Player            **Dec**  GS Year Age Tm  Lg  G  CG SHO GF  W  L  W-L% SV   IP   H   R   ER  BB  SO   ERA  ERA+ HR  BF   AB  2B 3B IBB HBP  SH  SF GDP  SB CS Pk BK WP   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS  OPS+  Pit  Str
+----+-----------------+-------+---+----+---+---+--+---+--+---+--+--+--+-----+--+-----+---+---+---+---+---+------+----+--+----+----+--+--+---+---+---+---+---+---+--+--+--+--+-----+-----+-----+-----+----+----+----+
    1 Odalis Perez         13    31 2004  27 LAD NL  31  0   0  0  7  6  .538  0 196.1 180  76  71  44 128   3.25  126 26  787  721 35  5   4   3  16   3  25  14  5  2  2  2  .250  .294  .420  .714   90 2819 1833 
    2 Kenny Rogers         14    31 1999  34 TOT ML  31  5   1  0 10  4  .714  0 195.1 206 101  91  69 126   4.19  108 16  845  749 36  1   1  13   7   7  24   6  8  9  1  4  .275  .344  .390  .734   92           
    3 Elmer Dessens        15    30 2002  31 CIN NL  30  0   0  0  7  8  .467  0 178   173  70  60  49  93   3.03  142 24  737  673 33  1   8   7   7   1  19   8  8  1  1  3  .257  .314  .416  .730   92 2690 1667 
    4 Dave Mlicki          15    30 1998  30 TOT NL  30  3   1  0  8  7  .533  0 181.1 188 102  92  63 117   4.57   89 23  789  704 43  3   5   7   8   7  10  10  8  0  0 10  .267  .330  .435  .765  108           
    5 Joey Hamilton        15    30 1995  24 SDP NL  31  2   2  1  6  9  .400  0 204.1 189  89  70  56 123   3.08  132 17  850  767 22  5   5  11  12   4  22   8  8  3  0  2  .246  .305  .355  .660   80           
    6 Matt Chico           16    31 2007  24 WSN NL  31  0   0  0  7  9  .438  0 167   183  96  86  74  94   4.63   91 26  747  652 38  4   3   5   6  10  12   9  6  2  0  7  .281  .354  .471  .825  122 2819 1740 
    7 Chris Young          16    31 2006  27 SDP NL  31  0   0  0 11  5  .688  0 179.1 134  72  69  69 164   3.46  117 28  735  649 20  5   4   6   8   3   8  41  4  1  1  6  .206  .287  .382  .669   82 3024 1923 
    8 John Patterson       16    31 2005  27 WSN NL  31  2   1  0  9  7  .563  0 198.1 172  71  69  65 185   3.13  130 19  817  738 33  1  11   5   5   4   8  26 11  2  1  9  .233  .298  .358  .656   80 3174 2047 
    9 Elmer Dessens        16    30 2003  32 ARI NL  34  0   0  1  8  8  .500  0 175.2 212 107  99  57 113   5.07   92 22  781  708 43  2   6   4   9   3  18   7  4  0  2  3  .299  .354  .459  .813  109 2903 1783 
   10 Rick Reed            16    30 2000  35 NYM NL  30  0   0  0 11  5  .688  0 184   192  90  84  34 121   4.11  108 28  768  721 31  5   3   5   3   5  17   9  4  0  1  2  .266  .302  .440  .742   93 2756 1836 
   11 Scott Kamieniecki    16    30 1997  33 BAL AL  30  0   0  0 10  6  .625  0 179.1 179  83  80  67 109   4.01  109 20  764  686 38  3   2   4   1   6  15  25  4  6  0  5  .261  .328  .413  .741   95           
   12 Omar Olivares        16    31 1997  29 TOT AL  32  3   2  0  6 10  .375  0 177.1 191 109  98  81 103   4.97   91 18  794  691 42  3   4  13   2   7  22   3  4  1  0  5  .276  .360  .424  .784  106           
   13 Doug Drabek          16    30 1996  33 HOU NL  30  1   0  0  7  9  .438  0 175.1 208 102  89  60 137   4.57   85 21  786  699 35  6   5   7  12   8  16  19  7  0  0  9  .298  .355  .455  .810  125           
   14 Oil Can Boyd         16    31 1990  30 MON NL  31  3   3  0 10  6  .625  0 190.2 164  64  62  52 113   2.93  125 19  774  702 39  2  10   3  12   4   9  25  6  0  3  3  .234  .288  .376  .664   90           
   15 Jay Tibbs            16    31 1986  24 MON NL  35  3   2  2  7  9  .438  0 190.1 181  96  84  70 117   3.97   94 12  797  706 36  6   3   3  13   4  18  11 13  2  2  7  .256  .324  .375  .699   98           
   16 Wayne Twitchell      16    30 1977  29 TOT NL  34  2   0  3  6 10  .375  0 184.2 166  98  88  74 130   4.29   90 21  776  678 29  7   4   5  13   5   8  15 11  0  0  7  .245  .322  .401  .723   98           

It's interesting to consider why these guys got so few decisions. I suspect it varies from case to case. In general, a pitcher fails to get a decision when he either leaves the game with a lead and his bullpen blows it, or he leaves the game with a deficit and his offense comes back and wins. So, if you look at individual guys on that list, you'll probably find some from teams with bad bullpens as well as some on very good offensive teams.

One thing to notice, though, is that if you read down the column of ERA+, these were mostly average pitchers. Only 7 of the 16 have ERA+ values below 100, and only 2 are below 90. Similarly, only 5 guys are above 120, and only 3 above 130. Of course, it's to be expected that a guy allowed to make 30 starts in a season must be pretty decent--in other words, if his ERA+ had been 70, he probably would have been pulled from the rotation before making 30 starts. However, my larger point is that these guys probably pitched in relatively low-scoring games since their ERAs were fairly good. It's much easier for a bullpen to blow a 1-run lead, or for your own team to come back from a 1-run deficit, than it is to lose or erase a 4-run differential. So I think that's why the guys on the list with the fewest decisions tend to be pretty decent pitchers.

I calculated a weighted average ERA+ of these guys and it's 108.6. We'll compare that to anotehr group of players tomorrow.

9 Responses to “Fewest decisions in 30 game starts”

  1. cboone21 Says:

    It was excruciating to watch Patterson's great season. Felt so bad for the guy who threw great game after game only to have his leads lost. Even worse, his career may be over.

  2. mrbaseballcard Says:

    Another thing I noticed is that you tend not to be a work horse. Only 1 of these guys (Joey Hamilton) had 200 innings pitched, and none had more than 205. Makes sense as if you leave the gamein the 6th, there are more innings for your bullpen to either give up or blow a lead. Also, makes sense since now adays babies, excuse me, pitchers pitch fewer innings that all of these seasons are post-1976 and all but two are post 1994.

  3. gerry Says:

    It would be interesting to have another column for the team's W-L record in the games the pitcher started. That might tell us whether it's the bullpen blowing leads or the offense saving the day.

  4. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    Bert Blyleven had a notable season when he went just 12-5 in 37 starts for the 1979 world champion Pirates. 17 decisions so he's just off this list, but he made a lot more starts and IP than anyone on it.

  5. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    Actually, that would be 20 no-decisions. Has anyone had more? Can PI check that? .... It doesn't appear that you can directly search for no-decisions, but in doing a few searches for fewest decisions with at least X starts, I'm pretty sure Blyleven has the record.

  6. Raphy Says:

    Johnny-

    You can use the game finder for seasons since 1956. Blyleven does lead.
    http://www.bb-ref.com/pi/shareit/ptp2

  7. tomepp Says:

    I think Mr. Baseballcard hit upon the key characteristic – these guys may be decent pitchers, but they aren't workhorses. The fewer innings you pitch per start, the more chances you leave for the lead to change; not to mention that when you don't go at least 5 innings as a starter, you automatically get no decision, no matter what the score. I ran their IP/GS (subtracting the 21 innings they pitched in 14 relief appearances). Over half the list (9 of the 16) averaged less than 6 innings per start for the season in question, and only two – Hamilton (6.76 IP/GS) and Patterson (6.40) – had more than 6 1/3 innings per start. None averaged more than 7 innings per start. As a group, the average was 6.02 IP/GS.

    With the modern trend of increased reliance on the bullpen in the middle innings, I would not be surprised to see Blyleven’s 20 NDs challenged or even equaled or broken in the near future - even with just 30-34 starts in a season!

  8. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    Of course the average start in 2008 was only 5.81 innings. For those who managed 30+ starts, I'm sure it was higher. Still I'm not so sure the record will be broken soon. There would have to be a major rethinking in how starting pitchers are used, especially in relation to the rest of the staff. That may well happen, as pitcher usage has evolved constantly since the beginning of time. But right now, teams still want to get innings out of their starters (even if those innings are relatively puny compared to yesteryear). As long starters need 5 IP for a win and people are beholden to that stat, it's hard to see starter innings dropping much further.

  9. cboone21 Says:

    -Gerry: Select a particular pitcher and then "game log" their season in question. At the bottom, the site lists 'team record in player's starts' for that season.