a couple of good articles arguing the unimportance of W-L... Let’s Hope Wins Don’t Cost Clayton Kershaw His Rightful Recognition by Mike Petriello | August 7, 2013 Clayton Kershaw won the 2011 Cy Young Award, and he did so because he had both the traditional stats and the advanced metrics, despite a razor-thin race with Roy Halladay and Cliff Lee. He didn’t win it in 2012, though he very arguably should have, because R.A. Dickey had both “wins” and a very compelling “old knuckleballer” narrative. In 2013, Kershaw is again among the best pitchers in baseball, leading the game with a 1.91 ERA and currently standing at fourth with a 2.46 FIP, but his record is merely 10-8. It’s not too difficult to understand why:Buster Olney @Buster_ESPN 4h Clayton Kershaw ranks 88th out of 91 qualified starters in run support, with 3.12 per game. http://espn.go.com/mlb/stats/pitching5:24 AM - 7 Aug 13 · Details David Schoenfield/ESPN: That’s now seven games this year in which Kershaw has allowed two runs or fewer and not earned a win. He has no wins in any starts in which he has allowed three or more runs. Compare that to, say, Detroit’s Max Scherzer, who has five wins when allowing three or more runs.While I think most baseball fans have done a decent job of accepting the “wins are bogus” line of thinking over the last few years, and it’s even allowed Zack Greinke & Felix Hernandez to win Cy Youngs that they might not have received in years past, the fact remains that there’s still a sizable portion of the public (and voters) who still rely on that as some sort of indication of pitching success. For example, Rick Sutcliffe noted on the broadcast of Monday night’s game that he felt Adam Wainwright was in the lead for the award simply because he has 13 wins, which is of course ridiculous. That’s not to demean Wainwright, who has been unbelievable this year (156/21 K/BB!), or Mets sensation Matt Harvey, who has a better K/9, BB/9, and FIP than Kershaw (albeit over 27 fewer innings). You could probably make a pretty good case for any of the trio right now — no, not you, Francisco Liriano — and obviously we’ll need to revisit this once the final two months of the season are in the books. But with a 10-7 record, what can Kershaw realistically end up with? The Dodgers have 50 games remaining, so let’s call that 46 by the time his next start comes up. That gives him about nine starts remaining in the regular season, and we’ll go with that for now, even though I’m not entirely convinced that we won’t see Stephen Fife back up to give everyone an additional day or two of rest, especially if the NL West is all but wrapped up in September. He’s won 10 of his 24 starts, roughly ~41%, and if that pace keeps up he’d win 3.6 of his remaining nine, so let’s say four. Toss in a loss or two and a few no-decisions, and if 14-9 sounds familiar, well, that’s exactly what he had last year. It’s not unprecedented to win a Cy Young with that — Felix Hernandez was 13-12 when he win the AL award in 2010 — but Hernandez’ 2.27 ERA made him the only candidate that year even under three. Really, that’s the answer here. Kershaw’s not going to top Wainwright in wins, and he’s not likely to lead the league in K/9 or BB/9 or FIP, either. (He may get “raw strikeouts,” because he’ll pitch more than Harvey, and that is valuable in itself.) But he does carry that sub-2 ERA, and that’s a number that remains eye-popping despite the well-known flaws in that stat. If Kershaw finishes with an ERA that begins with a “one”, it will be one of just ten similar pitcher-seasons in the last 30 years, and the first since Roger Clemens in 2005. That’s the stat that’s going to help Kershaw overcome what’s likely to be a decent-but-not-great record, and while I’d love it if we never even had to discuss his wins ever, we all know that it’s going to be present in the minds of voters. If his ERA starts with a one, he wins. If it doesn’t, even if it’s 2.03 or 2.11 or something? I’m not so sure. Besides, Kershaw has to win the Cy Young, because it will be incredibly awkward if he doesn’t — as Schoenfield rightfully points out, Kershaw’s greatness plus a lack of a Miguel Cabrera / Mike Trout standout star in the National League puts him squarely in the conversation for Most Valuable Player. Imagine if a pitcher won MVP but not the Cy Young? As a fan of chaos — if you follow me on Twitter, you’ll note that I’ve been rooting for Alex Rodriguez to hit 28 homers this week — that’s a pretty fun idea, I have to admit. But personally, I’d rather Kershaw just win every award that he deserves. Wins be damned, as usual. __
Ignore win total, Kershaw is MVP candidate By David Schoenfield | ESPN.com August, 7, 2013 | 12:07am ET Wins still matter. Well, of course wins matter, you know that. That's why we play the game. I mean wins for pitchers still matter in things such as Cy Young or MVP votings. Which gets us to Clayton Kershaw. With about 50 games remaining, the National League MVP race is as wide open as we've seen in years. Andrew McCutchen may be the favorite right now, but he's not an on-paper landslide candidate just yet as he's on pace to drive in fewer than 100 runs (MVP voters love RBIs) and voters often overlook defensive value. Yadier Molina was a strong candidate until his recent knee injury. Joey Votto has the sabermetric numbers but not the RBIs. Paul Goldschmidt has the RBIs but the Diamondbacks may not make the playoffs. Carlos Gomez may have been the best all-around player in the league so far but players from losing teams rarely win MVP awards (the last one was Alex Rodriguez in 2003). So, Kershaw. Only one starting pitcher in the past 25 years has won the MVP award, Justin Verlander in 2011, and he won 24 games. As dominant as Kershaw has been with that fancy 1.91 ERA, he has only 10 wins. Not his fault, of course. On Tuesday, he pitched six solid innings against the Cardinals; not a classic Kershaw effort, but he gave up just two runs, leaving in the seventh when Don Mattingly pinch-hit for him with a runner on first base and one out, removing Kershaw after just 90 pitches. I thought it was an inning early to hit for him; Kershaw was working on five days of rest, he'd thrown just 97 pitches his previous start, the Dodgers were down just one run, and it wasn't really that high leverage of a scoring situation. Anyway, Kershaw left trailing 2-1 and ended up with the loss as the Cardinals won 5-1. That's now seven games this year in which Kershaw has allowed two runs or fewer and not earned a win. He has no wins in any starts in which he has allowed three or more runs. Compare that to, say, Detroit's Max Scherzer, who has five wins when allowing three or more runs. Anyway, my argument is this: Ignore Kershaw's 10-8 record. He not only should be the Cy Young favorite right now, he should also be in the MVP discussion. His chances, however, are probably slim. __
One group is gonna say he doesn't deserve it cause of W-L, another is going to day solely cause of FIP he doesn't deserve it, but they are both wrong. Well, he needs to close out the season strong first before anything happens, but he's been the best pitcher in the NL and it's been enough of him giving up accolades to NY Mets for emotional reasons
totally agree doyer he's been the best pitcher on the hottest team in the nl but unless he goes 8-1/9-0 the rest of the way they'll probably give it to someone much less deserving like wainwright, corbin, lynn or zimmerman
Kershaw will get it this year and i'll tell you why. he'd get overlooked yet again if it weren't for the fact that he's doing things like having the lowest ERA of anybody ever by the time they reached 1,000 Ks and he's also probably having his best year, so they'll recognize that he's been even better than the year he won it. that being said...i'm gettin pretty pissed off about this team taking days off at the plate when Kershaw is on the mound. i know yesterday was the 1st time in a while, but fuck that. one of these years, maybe when Seager, Joc, and maybe Alex Guerrero join Puig and whoever's left, Kershaw is going to get 25+ wins. one day
20 quality starts in 24 games... and those 4 games that weren't QS's he was off by just 1 run or 1 IP.
20 QS out of 24 is all anyone needs to know about Kershaw. By the way old man Colon is doing great this season lol.
Imo 15 wins and a low 2 era locks kemp in as cy winner,anything under 15 or f his era should skyrocket and I think it's up in the air.as for mvp,I'm a firm believer that pitchees should not win mvp unless its a very rare occasion(aka 25 wins in todays game).