Carolina Speed
Hall of Famer
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2011
- Messages
- 5,775
Of course it's unlikely. That's why I'm mentioning it. But it's possible. More possible than it ever happening again, ever. Kershaw is the closest of any active pitcher within reach of 300 wins. He has 207 wins at 35 years old.Unless he plays well into his 40's, that's unlikely to happen.
The next closest is:
Justin Verlander at 40 he has 246 wins.
Zac Greinke 224 wins at 39 years old
Max Scherzer 208 wins at 39 years old
Kershaw 207 wins at 35 years old
Verlander, Greinke, or Scherzer will likely not make it because of age and current win total. After Kershaw there's no one close.. The next pitcher, Cole Hamels only has 163 wins at 39 years old.
Depending on how many more games Kershaw wins this season, he may not have to pitch well into his 40's. Possibly into his early 40's without any serious injury.. If he gets to 215 wins this season, he would only have to average 12 wins a season to age 42 to get to 300.
Randy Johnson won 86 games from age 36-40. Greg Maddux won 90 games from age 36-41 and Tom Glavine won 79 games from age 35 -41. ...and the biggest question other than injury, is how much longer will he want to play.
No matter the odds, I'm pulling for him, because we may never see another 300 game winner, ever. It would be a remarkable accomplishment based on modern day rules and changes in MLB.