Pitcher, Atlanta Braves
Age: 27 (Apr. 14)
1st season
with Braves
Bats – Right,
Throws – Right
Height: 6’0” Weight: 170
Prior to 1993:
Maddux was born
in Texas, where his father was stationed in the Air Force at the time. Growing
up in several different locations due to his father’s postings, Maddux played
football and basketball as well as baseball during his youth. Later his father transferred
to Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas where he retired from the USAF and
settled down. Maddux began to concentrate on his pitching at Valley High
School. Not possessed of overwhelming speed, he concentrated on developing his
control, which came to serve him well. Chosen by the Cubs in the second round
of the 1984 amateur draft, Maddux passed up on college to accept a bonus
contract from the Cubs. Initially assigned to Pikeville of the Rookie-level
Appalachian League, he appeared in 14 games (12 of them starts) and produced a
6-2 record with a 2.63 ERA and 62 strikeouts over 85.2 innings. With Peoria of
the Class A Midwest League in 1985 he was 13-9 with a 3.19 ERA and 125
strikeouts. Maddux jumped from Class AA to AAA in 1986 and was a combined 14-4
with a 2.91 ERA, earning a September call-up to the Cubs. Back in Class AAA
with Iowa of the American Association in 1987 he was soon recalled to the Cubs
where he was a rocky 6-14 with a 5.61 ERA. A strong first half in his breakout
season of 1988 garnered Maddux his first All-Star selection on the way to a
record of 18-8 with a 3.18 ERA. He started slower in 1989 but finished at 19-12
with a 2.95 ERA, placing third in NL Cy Young Award voting. The Cubs won the NL
East and Maddux lost his only NLCS decision in his first taste of postseason
action. He was a .500 pitcher at 15-15 with a fourth-place club in 1990,
registering a 3.46 ERA and 144 strikeouts. Maddux topped the NL with 263
innings pitched in 1991 as he compiled a 15-11 record with a 3.35 ERA and 198
strikeouts. With command of a large repertoire of pitches, including a
fastball, circle change-up, slider, sinker, and curve, Maddux was known for his
intelligent and fearless approach to pitching, in which he would throw any
pitch in any situation. He was the NL Cy Young recipient in 1992 after posting
a 20-11 record with a 2.18 ERA, again leading the circuit in innings pitched
with 268. In addition, he recorded 199 strikeouts. A highly sought free agent
following his Cy Young Award-winning season, Maddux turned down a large
contract offer that would have kept him with the Cubs and signed with the
Atlanta Braves for $28 million. He also resisted a larger offer from the
Yankees to go to Atlanta. In 1993 he stepped into a solid pitching rotation
that already included LHP Tom Glavine, RHP John Smoltz, and LHP Steve Avery.
1993 Season Summary
Appeared in 36
games
[Bracketed
numbers indicate NL rank in Top 20]
Pitching
Games – 36
Games Started –
36 [1, tied with Tom Glavine & Jose Rijo]
Complete Games
– 8 [1]
Wins – 20 [4]
Losses – 10
PCT - .667 [8]
Saves – 0
Shutouts – 1 [14,
tied with nineteen others]
Innings Pitched
– 267 [1]
Hits – 228 [6]
Runs – 85
Earned Runs – 70
Home Runs – 14
Bases on Balls
– 52
Strikeouts – 197
[3]
ERA – 2.36 [1]
Hit Batters – 6
Balks – 1
Wild Pitches – 5
League-leading complete
games were +1 ahead of five runners-up
League-leading innings
pitched were +9.2 ahead of runner-up Jose Rijo
League-leading
ERA was -0.12 lower than runner-up Jose Rijo
Midseason
Snapshot: 8-8, ERA - 2.83, SO - 113 in 146.1 IP
---
Most
strikeouts, game – 10 (in 8.2 IP) vs. NY Mets 9/18
10+ strikeout
games – 1
Fewest hits
allowed, game (min. 7 IP) – 3 (in 9 IP) vs. NY Mets 6/16, (in 7 IP) at Houston
5/10
Batting
PA – 102, AB – 91,
R – 5, H – 15, 2B – 1, 3B – 0, HR – 0, RBI – 4, BB – 1, SO – 32, SB – 0, CS –
0, AVG - .165, GDP – 0, HBP – 0, SH – 10, SF – 0
Fielding
Chances – 105
Put Outs – 39
Assists – 59
Errors – 7
DP – 5
Pct. - .933
Postseason
Pitching: (NLCS vs. Philadelphia)
G – 2, GS – 2,
CG – 0, Record – 1-1, PCT – .500, SV – 0, ShO – 0, IP – 12.2, H – 11, R – 8, ER
– 7, HR – 2, BB – 7, SO – 11, ERA – 4.97, HB – 0, BLK – 0, WP – 0
Awards & Honors:
NL Cy Young
Award: BBWAA
NL Pitcher of
the Year: Sporting News
Gold Glove
13th
in NL MVP voting (17 points, 4% share)
NL Cy Young
voting (Top 5):
Greg Maddux, Atl.:
119 pts. – 22 of 28 first place votes, 85% share
Bill Swift, SF:
61 pts. – 2 first place votes, 44% share
Tom Glavine,
Atl.: 49 pts. – 4 first place votes, 35%
share
John Burkett,
SF: 9 pts. – 6% share
Jose Rijo, Cin.:
8 pts. – 6% share
---
Braves went 104-58
to finish first in the NL Western Division by 1 game over the San Francisco
Giants, for their third consecutive division title. The pitching staff led the
league in ERA (3.14) & shutouts (16). As many as 10 games behind the Giants
in July, the Braves caught fire and passed San Francisco on Sept. 11. Lost NLCS
to the Philadelphia Phillies, 4 games to 2.
Aftermath of ‘93:
Maddux won
another Cy Young Award following the strike-shortened 1994 season when he went
16-6 with a 1.56 ERA. 10 complete games, and 3 shutouts. An excellent fielding
pitcher, he also won his fifth consecutive Gold Glove. In 1995 he made it four
straight Cy Young Awards with a 19-2 record, 1.63 ERA, 10 complete games, and
209.2 innings pitched. The Braves won the NL pennant and Maddux was 3-1 in the
postseason as they went on to win the World Series. The cerebral pitcher known
as “the Professor” remained with the Braves through 2003, continuing to be one
of the National League’s best pitchers throughout his tenure. In 2004 he
returned to the Cubs as a free agent and was 16-11 with a 4.02 ERA. He had a
losing 13-15 record in 2005 and was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers during
the 2006 season. He signed with San Diego in 2007, and after posting a 14-11
record at age 41, Maddux was 6-9 in 2008 when he was dealt back to the Dodgers
in August, where he finished out his career. Overall, Maddux compiled a 355-227
major league record with a 3.16 ERA and 3371 strikeouts over 5008.1 innings
pitched. He also hurled 109 complete games that included 35 shutouts. With the Braves
he was 194-88 with a 2.63 ERA and 1828 strikeouts. In 35 postseason games, his
record was 11-14 with a 3.27 ERA and 125 strikeouts over 198 innings. In
addition to winning four Cy Young Awards, Maddux was an eight-time All-Star and
18-time Gold Glove recipient. The Cubs retired his #31 as did the Braves. He
was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2014. Maddux was also inducted into
the Braves Hall of Fame in 2009. His brother Mike pitched for nine major league
teams over 15 years.
--
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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