Pitcher, New
York Mets
Age: 24
3rd season
with Mets
Bats – Right,
Throws – Right
Height: 6’1” Weight: 195
Prior to 1969:
A native of
Fresno, California, Seaver started in Little League at age 9 as a
pitcher/outfielder. Performing well in high school, he moved on to Fresno City
College, where he won 11 straight games in his second year and transferred to
USC. In his first season at USC Seaver was 10-2 with 100 strikeouts in 100
innings pitched. He was selected by the Braves in the 1966 amateur draft. The
Braves signed him while his college season was in progress, which was in
violation of major league rules. Commissioner William Eckert voided the
contract and allowed three teams, the Mets, Indians, and Phillies, to
participate in a lottery for Seaver since they were willing to match the
$51,500 offer made by the Braves. The Mets won the lottery. Seaver was assigned
to the Jacksonville Suns of the Class AAA International League and compiled a
12-12 record with a 3.13 ERA and 188 strikeouts in 210 innings pitched in ‘66.
Seaver advanced to the perennially-losing Mets in 1967. He posted a 16-13
record with a 2.76 ERA and received NL Rookie of the Year as well as All-Star recognition.
Seaver followed up with another solid season in 1968, going 16-12 with a 2.20
ERA and again gaining All-Star recognition. With the Mets undergoing a
transition that would pay dividends in another year, Seaver was joined in the
pitching rotation by rookie LHP Jerry Koosman, to good effect.
1969 Season Summary
Appeared in 39
games
P – 36, PR – 3
[Bracketed
numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]
Pitching
Games – 36
Games Started –
35 [13, tied with six others]
Complete Games
– 18 [7, tied with Bill Hands]
Wins – 25 [1]
Losses – 7
PCT - .781 [2]
Saves – 0
Shutouts – 5 [6,
tied with Bill Stoneman]
Innings Pitched
– 273.1 [11]
Hits – 202
Runs – 75
Earned Runs – 67
Home Runs – 24 [6,
tied with Tony Cloninger, Gary Gentry & Ron Reed]
Bases on Balls
– 82 [17]
Strikeouts – 208
[10]
ERA – 2.21 [4]
Hit Batters – 7
[11, tied with six others]
Balks – 1 [20,
tied with many others]
Wild Pitches – 8
[18, tied with seven others]
League-leading
wins were +2 ahead of runner-up Phil Niekro
Midseason
Snapshot: 14-5, 2.59 ERA, SO – 131 in 160 IP
---
Most
strikeouts, game – 14 (in 7 IP) at San Diego 6/8
10+ strikeout
games – 4
Fewest hits
allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 1 (in 9 IP) vs. Chi. Cubs 7/9
Batting
PA – 104, AB – 91,
R – 7, H – 11, 2B – 3, 3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 6, BB – 7, SO – 34, SB – 1, CS – 0,
AVG - .121, GDP – 0, HBP – 2, SH – 4, SF – 0
Fielding
Chances – 68
Put Outs – 18
Assists – 48
Errors – 2
DP – 7
Pct. - .971
Postseason
Pitching:
G – 3, GS – 3
(NLCS vs. Atlanta – 1 G; World Series vs. Baltimore – 2 G)
CG – 1, Record
– 2-1, PCT – .667, SV – 0, ShO – 0, IP – 22, H – 20, R – 10, ER – 10, HR – 3,
BB – 6, SO – 11, HB – 1, BLK – 0, WP – 0, ERA – 4.09
Awards & Honors:
NL Cy Young
Award: BBWAA
NL Pitcher of
the Year: Sporting News
All-Star
2nd in
NL MVP voting (243 points, 11 first place votes, 72% share)
NL Cy Young
Voting:
Tom Seaver,
NYM.: 23 of 24 votes, 96% share
Phil Niekro,
Atl.: 1 vote, 4% share
---
Mets went 100-62
to finish first in the NL Eastern Division by 8 games over the Chicago Cubs.
The pitching staff led the league in shutouts (28) and fewest hits allowed (1217).
The Mets came from 9.5 games behind to overtake the Cubs on Sept. 10 and
cruised to the NL East title in the first season of divisional play in the
major leagues. It was also the first winning record in franchise history. Won NLCS
over the Atlanta Braves, 3 games to 0. Won World Series over the Baltimore
Orioles, 4 games to 1.
Aftermath of ‘69:
In 1970 Seaver
tied the then-major league record with 19 strikeouts in a game against San
Diego, the last 10 in succession. He went on to compile an 18-12 record while
leading the NL in both ERA (2.82) and strikeouts (283). The Mets placed third
in the NL East and Seaver finished seventh in voting for the NL Cy Young Award.
In 1971 he again led the NL with a 1.76 ERA and 289 strikeouts while posting a
20-10 tally with the 83-79 Mets. The perfectionist pitcher known as “Tom
Terrific” or “The Franchise”, with his excellent fastball and slider, continued
to excel in 1972, going 21-12 with a 2.92 ERA and 249 strikeouts for an 83-73
club that finished last in NL team batting (.225). He tied for fifth in NL Cy
Young voting. In 1973 the Mets rode a September surge to win the NL East with
an 82-79 tally. Seaver went 19-10 with a league-leading 2.08 ERA, 251
strikeouts, and 18 complete games, and received his second NL Cy Young Award.
He further contributed the NLCS-clinching win against Cincinnati to give the
Mets the league pennant. He was 0-1 in the seven-game World Series loss to the
Oakland A’s. Seaver was rewarded with a $172,000 contract that made him the
highest-paid pitcher at the time but was dogged by shoulder and hip pain in
1974 and dropped to an 11-11 record with a 3.20 ERA and 201 strikeouts over 236
innings pitched. He missed being an All-Star for the first time in his career
but came back strong in 1975 with a 22-9 tally and 2.38 ERA, leading the NL
with 243 strikeouts. For his performance he won his third Cy Young Award. In a
September game he took a no-hitter into the ninth inning against the Cubs in
Chicago, gave up a hit, and the scoreless contest went into extra innings with
the Mets losing in the eleventh (Seaver pitched 10 shutout innings,
surrendering three hits in all in his second no-hit near-miss against the Cubs). 1976 was a relative down year for Seaver in
which he produced a 14-11 record for the light-hitting Mets with a respectable
2.59 ERA and NL-leading 235 strikeouts. Seaver became embroiled in a contract
dispute with board chairman M. Donald Grant that became highly publicized in
the media and led to his being traded to the Cincinnati Reds for four players
in the so-called “Midnight Massacre” in June of 1977. Seaver was 7-3 with a
3.00 ERA at the time of the deal and finished up the year with a 21-6 record
and 2.58 ERA and 196 strikeouts, tying for third in NL Cy Young balloting. He
followed up with a 16-14 tally in 1978 with a 2.88 ERA and 226 strikeouts.
Battling injuries in 1979 Seaver went 16-6 with a 3.14 ERA and 131 strikeouts
for the division-topping Reds. Arm trouble limited him to 168 innings in 1980
and a 10-8 record with a 3.64 ERA and 101 strikeouts. He bounced back to 14-2
with a 2.54 ERA in the strike-interrupted 1981 season and placed second in NL
Cy Young Award voting. Suffering from a respiratory infection during spring
training in 1982, Seaver’s record dropped to a dismal 5-13 with a 5.50 ERA for
the last-place Reds, with a sore shoulder finishing his season in August. In
the offseason, the 38-year-old fading star was traded back to the Mets. The
result was a 9-14 mark in 1983 with a 3.55 ERA and 135 strikeouts in 231
innings pitched. He changed teams again in the ensuing offseason when the
Chicago White Sox took him as a free agent compensation selection. He spent two
ordinary years with the White Sox, producing a 15-11 record with a 3.95 ERA in
1984 and going 16-11, including his 300th career win, in ‘85 with a
3.17 ERA. During the 1986 season he was dealt to the Boston Red Sox, who were
on the way to their first pennant since 1975, where his long career came to an
end. Overall for his major league
career, Seaver compiled a 311-205 record with a 2.86 ERA and 3640 strikeouts in
4783 innings pitched. He pitched over 250 innings ten times and reached 200
strikeouts also on ten occasions, leading the NL five times. With the Mets
Seaver was 198-124 with a 2.57 ERA and 2541 strikeouts. He was a 12-time
All-Star (9 with the Mets) and won three Cy Young Awards (all with the Mets).
In the postseason Seaver was 3-3 with a 2.77 ERA and 51 strikeouts in 61.2
innings pitched. The Mets retired his #41 and he was elected to the Baseball
Hall of Fame in 1992 by receiving 98.84 % of votes cast (a record at the time).
--
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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