One thing you have to think about though, is what statisitcs the show's creators used to determine this list. While it seems unlikely that the MLB Network delved very deep into advanced sabermetrics, wins are not a very good indicator of how good a pitcher is by himself. A hurler's wins and losses are largely dependent on the defensive and run-scoring capabilities of the team behind him.
No doubt the editors are racially biased in this regard, as they bumped Pedro to the top. But ideally a list like this would implement some of today's advanced baseball statistics, such as Defense Independent Pitching Statistic (DIPS, or FIP, Fielding Independent Pitching).
In baseball, defense-independent pitching statistics (DIPS) measure a pitcher's effectiveness based only on plays that do not involve fielders: home runs allowed, strikeouts, hit batters, walks, and, more recently, fly ball percentage, ground ball percentage, and (to a lesser extent) line drive percentage. Those plays are under only the pitcher's control in the sense that fielders (not including the catcher) have no effect on their outcome.
Let's have a look at Pedro and Randy Johnson's lines from that 2000 season, and try to find some whopping difference:
RJ: 248.2 IP, 347K = 12.56 K/9 IP
PM: 217.0 IP, 284K = 11.78 K/9 IP
RJ: 2.53 DIPS
PM: 2.17 DIPS
No huuuuuuge differences here.
Another stat to consider is BABIP. Batting average on balls in play (abbreviated BABIP) is a statistic measuring the percentage of plate appearances ending with a batted ball in play (excluding home runs) for which the batter is credited with a hit.
BABIP can show that a pitcher had a fluky season; consistently high or low BABIP are hard to maintain.
RJ: 2000: (.336) 2001: (.283)
PM: 2000: (.253) 2001: (.322)
Pedro had a good fluky season; Randy had a bad fluky season. Simple as that in this particular regard.
Much can be gleaned by looking past the "sexy" numbers like Wins and ERA. The deeper you go, the more bias you can uncover in a list like this.
Sorry for that. I've become a little bit of a baseball nerd in the past year. Numbers like this are fun to me (how sick is that?
)!
Edited by: PhillyBirds