Johan Santana is an eventual Hall of Famer, right?

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  • NAHSTE
    Probably owns the site
    • Feb 2009
    • 22233

    Johan Santana is an eventual Hall of Famer, right?

    Full disclosure, I went into this exercise looking for a pitching equivalent to Chase Utley, because I enjoyed that particular debate (like I enjoy most hall of fame debates). I looked at some active pitching leaders in a few random categories, and Johan stood out due to his age (just played his age 33 season, same as Utley) and the durability questions each faces headed into the latter stage of their career.

    What I found though is that Johan should pretty much be a no-brainer. Two-time Cy winner, three-time ERA champ, three-time strikeout champ, is the current ERA+ leader among active starters*, and the black ink checks out.

    I think he's more of a certainty than Chase Utley at this point, and thus a poor pitcher equivalent for the purposes of this exercise. But if you disagree with Johan Santana being a lock for the HOF, feel free to dissent here.









    *- With another average year he could likely be overtaken by Roy Halladay as the two are very close (134, 132) but it's not like that would hurt his case given Roy is also a no-brainer HOFer
  • Warner2BruceTD
    2011 Poster Of The Year
    • Mar 2009
    • 26142

    #2
    yes.

    Comment

    • FedEx227
      Delivers
      • Mar 2009
      • 10454

      #3
      The issue with him will be longevity. He had an awesome peak, really, really, REALLY awesome. If people can take that into account and not worry that once that peak was over he was essentially worthless and injured (unless of course he puts together 2-3 more decent years) then he's a shoe-in.

      He has better peaks than the likes of Mussina and Glavine but they destroy him on longevity. Me personally, yeah, I'd put him in.
      VoicesofWrestling.com

      Comment

      • jms493
        Junior Member
        • Feb 2009
        • 11248

        #4
        yes....next

        Comment

        • SuperKevin
          War Hero
          • Dec 2009
          • 8759

          #5
          Wow. Crazy to realize how dominant he was considering how average he's been over the past few years

          Comment

          • ThomasTomasz
            • Nov 2024

            #6
            I remember him being that dominant, as I am always a sucker for Santana in fantasy baseball now, hoping he'll step up and even be 70% of his old self. If he can put together at least two full seasons of solid pitching, I could see it happening for sure.

            Comment

            • PG24
              Noob
              • Mar 2011
              • 111

              #7
              Agreed with TT's post. He's certainly close to being a Hall of Famer, but he's got to have at least two full seasons of decent pitching to finish his career off in order to make it for sure. Just not sure you can induct him because he at one point in his career was dominant and then wasn't even able to pitch full seasons down the stretch. Certainly should be a HOF'er in my mind, but we'll see.

              Comment

              • SuperKevin
                War Hero
                • Dec 2009
                • 8759

                #8
                The no hitter in the nation's biggest media market certainly helps his cause

                Comment

                • Warner2BruceTD
                  2011 Poster Of The Year
                  • Mar 2009
                  • 26142

                  #9
                  I think we all agree that he was elite for five seasons ('04-'08). Like, upper level all time elite. Three ERA titles, three strikeout titles, two Cy Youngs, four times led the league in WHIP (thee of those years under 1.000), a true workhorse with 230 innings per year.

                  But this idea that he's been average since is just not true. 2009 & 2010 he was still one of the best pitchers in baseball. ERA of under 3.00 in 2010, ERA+ of 130 for the two seasons.

                  The last two years he's been hurt.

                  So he has five super elite all time great seasons, plus two other good seasons with Mets, plus the one season in 2003 where he burst onto the scene late in the year as a starter and ended up 12-3 with 3.07 ERA.

                  He could retire today and i'm fine with his resume, because during his five year peak he was the best in the game and the definition of dominant.

                  You know who else had a similar five year dominant peak, but not much else?

                  Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Sandy Koufax. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com

                  Comment

                  • NAHSTE
                    Probably owns the site
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 22233

                    #10
                    I think CC Sabathia has a more borderline case than Johan, his black ink numbers are not good. He'll get in easily with a few more years of 200+ IP due to the metric fuckton of bulk numbers he'll amass, and the shiny pieces of flair (playoff winz, AS appearances, likeable guy on the Yankees, etc.) will put him over, but I was surprised at how flimsy his case is at the moment. Has only led the league in three categories (wins twice with the Yankees and IP in his lone Cy Young season, his last full year with Cleveland).

                    Comment

                    • EmpireWF
                      Giants in the Super Bowl
                      • Mar 2009
                      • 24082

                      #11
                      More to W2B's point, he's never had a real stretch in New York where he was bad. Especially in his first two years here, he legitimately had at least 10 wins knocked off because of the bullpen. Obviously, if they get him those W's, his basic numbers look much better here.


                      edit.....If he doesn't run into shoulder issues, he most likely has 6 consecutive seasons with 200+ strikeouts (Tom Seaver has the record with 9...Randy fucking Johnson would've had 12 consecutive years if not for his injury-riddled 1996 season ffs).

                      nevermind this point, let's all bow to Randy Johnson.


                      Comment

                      • Goober
                        Needs a hobby
                        • Feb 2009
                        • 12271

                        #12
                        Originally posted by EmpireWF
                        More to W2B's point, he's never had a real stretch in New York where he was bad. Especially in his first two years here, he legitimately had at least 10 wins knocked off because of the bullpen. Obviously, if they get him those W's, his basic numbers look much better here.


                        edit.....If he doesn't run into shoulder issues, he most likely has 6 consecutive seasons with 200+ strikeouts (Tom Seaver has the record with 9...Randy fucking Johnson would've had 12 consecutive years if not for his injury-riddled 1996 season ffs).

                        nevermind this point, let's all bow to Randy Johnson.
                        How does the Mets bullpen make Johan's numbers look much worse?

                        Comment

                        • SuperKevin
                          War Hero
                          • Dec 2009
                          • 8759

                          #13
                          He explained it in the post. Curse him for using a basic stat like wins though

                          Comment

                          • Goober
                            Needs a hobby
                            • Feb 2009
                            • 12271

                            #14
                            Originally posted by NAHSTE
                            I think CC Sabathia has a more borderline case than Johan, his black ink numbers are not good. He'll get in easily with a few more years of 200+ IP due to the metric fuckton of bulk numbers he'll amass, and the shiny pieces of flair (playoff winz, AS appearances, likeable guy on the Yankees, etc.) will put him over, but I was surprised at how flimsy his case is at the moment. Has only led the league in three categories (wins twice with the Yankees and IP in his lone Cy Young season, his last full year with Cleveland).
                            If I could only vote for one or the other (Santana or Sabathia) I would vote for C.C. But I don't put much weight into black/grey ink when thinking about the Hall of Fame. Plus CC is hurt by the fact that his best season (2008) was split between two leagues. Sabathia's time in Milwaukee was probably the greatest pitching performance of his generation.

                            Comment

                            • Goober
                              Needs a hobby
                              • Feb 2009
                              • 12271

                              #15
                              Originally posted by SuperKevin
                              He explained it in the post. Curse him for using a basic stat like wins though
                              So Johan Santana with 139 career wins is borderline HOFer, but Johan Santana with 149 career wins (all else equal!) is HOLY SHIT PUT THIS MAN IN THE HALL RIGHT NOW?

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