Feb 14, 2019

Cy Young Profile: Randy Johnson, 2001

Pitcher, Arizona Diamondbacks


Age:  38 (Sept. 10)
3rd season with Diamondbacks
Bats – Right, Throws – Left
Height: 6’10” Weight: 225

Prior to 2001:
A native of California, Johnson starred in baseball and basketball in high school. He received a scholarship to USC for both sports and was originally drafted as an amateur by the Braves in 1982, without signing a contract. Johnson spent three seasons playing college baseball and was drafted by Montreal in 1985, this time signing. With his great pitching speed, he moved up quickly through the minor league system, where he worked on his control. Johnson made his first major league appearance with the Expos late in the 1988 season, after having gone 8-7 with a 3.26 ERA for Class AAA Indianapolis, and started four games, compiling a 3-0 record and 2.42 ERA with 25 strikeouts in 26 innings pitched. Off to an 0-4 start in 1989, “The Big Unit” was traded to Seattle in May and went 7-9 in 22 starts with his new club and had a 4.40 ERA. In 1990, Johnson pitched the first no-hitter in franchise history against Detroit as part of a breakout season in which he compiled a 14-11 record with 3.65 ERA and continued to struggle with his control while leading the AL with 120 walks to go along with 194 strikeouts in 219.2 innings. He was also chosen to his first All-Star game. Continuing to improve, Johnson accumulated over 200 strikeouts for the first time in 1991 (228) and led the league for the first of four consecutive years with 241 in ’92 (the last of three straight seasons in which he topped the circuit in walks). He was again an All-Star in 1993, a year in which he compiled a 19-8 record and was 13-6 during the strike-abbreviated 1994 season. In 1995 the Mariners reached the postseason for the first time in franchise history and Johnson contributed an 18-2 record and AL-leading 294 strikeouts and 2.48 ERA. He received the AL Cy Young Award for his performance. In 1996 major back surgery limited “The Big Unit” to eight games, but he rebounded with a 20-4 record and 291 strikeouts in ’97. With talk of a trade swirling throughout the 1998 season, Johnson got off to a 9-10 record and 4.33 ERA before being dealt to the Houston Astros at the trade deadline. He helped his new club to a division title with a 10-1 record and 1.28 ERA. Entering the free agent market, Johnson signed a four-year contract worth $52 million with the second-year Diamondbacks in 1999. He had an excellent season for Arizona in ’99, posting a 17-9 record while leading the NL in ERA (2.48), strikeouts (364), innings pitched (271.2), and complete games (12), garnering another Cy Young Award. The team topped the NL West, although the Diamondbacks lost to the Mets in the NLDS. Johnson followed up with another Cy Young Award-winning season in 2000, compiling a 19-7 record with 347 strikeouts and a 2.64 ERA for the 85-77 Diamondbacks. He created a productive tandem with RHP Curt Schilling, who was acquired midway through the 2000 season.

2001 Season Summary
Appeared in 35 games

[Bracketed numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]

Pitching
Games – 35
Games Started – 34 [4, tied with twelve others]
Complete Games – 3 [7, tied with six others]
Wins – 21 [3]
Losses – 6
PCT - .778 [2]
Saves – 0
Shutouts – 2 [3, tied with Randy Wolf, Todd Ritchie & Albie Lopez]
Innings Pitched – 249.2 [2]
Hits – 181
Runs – 74
Earned Runs – 69
Home Runs – 19
Bases on Balls – 71 [20]
Strikeouts – 372 [1]
ERA – 2.49 [1]
Hit Batters – 18 [3]
Balks – 1 [12, tied with many others]
Wild Pitches – 8 [9, tied with six others]

League-leading strikeouts were +79 ahead of runner-up Curt Schilling
League-leading ERA was -0.49 lower than runner-up Curt Schilling

Midseason Snapshot: 11-5, ERA - 2.71, SO - 202 in 132.2 IP

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Most strikeouts, game – 20 (in 9 IP) vs. Cincinnati 5/8 (Tied MLB record)
10+ strikeout games – 23
Fewest hits allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 1 (in 7.1 IP) vs. San Diego 7/24, (in 7 IP) at San Diego 7/18

Batting
PA – 91, AB – 80, R – 2, H – 8, 2B – 0, 3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 2, BB – 3, SO – 38, SB – 0, CS – 0, AVG - .100, GDP – 3, HBP – 1, SH – 7, SF – 0

Fielding
Chances – 33
Put Outs – 2
Assists – 27
Errors – 4
DP – 1
Pct. - .879

Postseason Pitching:
G – 6 (NLDS vs. St. Louis – 1 G; NLCS vs. Atlanta – 2 G; World Series vs. NY Yankees – 3 G)
GS – 5, CG – 2, Record – 5-1, PCT – .833, SV – 0, ShO – 2, IP – 41.1, H – 25, R – 7, ER – 7, HR – 2, BB – 8, SO – 47, ERA – 1.52, HB – 0, BLK – 0, WP – 0 World Series co-MVP

Awards & Honors:
NL Cy Young Award
All-Star (starting P for NL)
11th in NL MVP voting (23 points, 5% share)

NL Cy Young voting:
Randy Johnson, Ariz: 156 pts. – 30 of 32 first place votes, 98% share
Curt Schilling, Ariz.: 98 pts. – 2 first place votes, 61% share
Matt Morris, StL.: 31 pts. – 3 first place, 19% share
Jon Lieber, ChiC.: 2 pts. – 1% share
Roy Oswalt, Hou.: 1 pt. – 1% share

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Diamondbacks went 92-70 to finish first in the NL Western Division by 2 games over the San Francisco Giants. The pitching staff led the league in complete games (12), and fewest hits allowed (1352). A 9-game August winning streak advanced the Diamondbacks from third to first in the division, a position that they never relinquished the rest of the way. Won NLDS over the St. Louis Cardinals, 3 games to 2. Won NLCS over the Atlanta Braves, 4 games to 1. Won World Series over the New York Yankees, 4 games to 3. In Game 7 the Diamondbacks overcame a 2-1 9th inning deficit as New York’s star closer Mariano Rivera gave up 2 runs as Johnson, who relieved Series co-MVP Curt Schilling a day after starting and winning Game 6 came away with a 3-2 Series-clinching win. Johnson became the first pitcher since Detroit’s Mickey Lolich in 1968 to win three games in a single Series.

Aftermath of ‘01:
Johnson was recipient of another Cy Young Award in 2002 following a 24-5 tally and 2.32 ERA with 334 strikeouts. The Diamondbacks fell short in the postseason but “The Big Unit” was re-signed. Knee surgery cut short his 2003 season and Johnson dropped to 6-8 with a 4.26 ERA.  Off to a 3-4 start at age 40 in 2004, Johnson pitched a perfect game against Atlanta. He went on to a 16-14 record and 2.60 ERA and league-leading 290 strikeouts. Looking to shed salary in 2005, the Diamondbacks dealt Johnson to the New York Yankees where he won another 34 games over two seasons before returning to Arizona in 2007. Johnson spent 2007 and ’08 with the Diamondbacks before finishing out his career with San Francisco in 2009. For his major league career, Johnson appeared in 618 games, 603 of which were starts, and compiled 303 wins and 166 losses with a 3.29 ERA and 4875 strikeouts, the second highest total in MLB history to date. His record with Arizona alone was 118-62 with a 2.83 ERA and 2077 strikeouts.  He added another 14 wins in the postseason against 18 losses. He compiled five 300-strikeout seasons, was chosen to ten All-Star Games and won five Cy Young Awards (one in the AL and 4 in the NL with the Diamondbacks). Johnson was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2015. His #51 was retired by the Diamondbacks.

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Cy Young Profiles feature pitchers who were recipients of the Cy Young Award by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (1956 to present). The award was presented to a single major league winner from its inception through 1966 and from 1967 on to one recipient from each major league.  

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