Gossage
Gwynn
Morris
Ripken
Sorry Doc, but I just don't think Morris makes the cut...254 wins is solid, but a 3.90 ERA is just not HOF worthy, IMO, especially since it was pre-offensive explosion era baseball...
In fact, in the 11 seasons between his 25 year old seasonand his 35 year old season, he had a worse than league average ERA 4 times...
Gets points for his 91 series performance, but overall postseason #s are a solid but unspectacular 7-4, 3.80 ERA...
I'd put Blyleven in the Hall over Morris...
Alright I'm ready. Jack Morris should be in the Hall of fame for the following reasons:
He won 254 games more than Gibson, Ford, Hubbell, and Marichal . You can compare him to Blyleven but Blyleven pitched 22 years won 20 only once (that year he lost 17) and Bert had a bunch of middling seasons for 22 years. Morris threw 175 complete games and had 28 shutouts in five less years wining just 35 less games, and making the all star game five times
Morris finished in the top five in the Cy Young in 1981, 1983, 1991, and 1992.
2500 Ks (more than HOF Jim Palmer, Marichal, Grove and Catfish Hunter among others)
Lead the league in wins in 1981 and 1992
He won 15 games 12 times. He won 20 twice and never finished higher than 3rd in the Cy Young because of his ERA. Again you take the league av ERA and although Morris was only at +100 to +126 you have to consider the ballpark he played in and his road vs home ERA. Blyleven I believe suffers from his career ERA as well because he has similar ERA numbers.
But most importantly Jack Morris had his biggest games on baseball's biggest stage:
Take away the three losses in his final year with Toronto and he was 7-1 with dominate performances in two different World Series in 1984 and in 1991. In those two series' he had four wins, no losses, three complete games, and one of the three most memorable games in World Series history in game seven of the 1991 World Series throwing a CG shutout over ten freakin innings. It is the greatest pitching performance in World Series history because of that one extra inning and it was a game seven. Morris>Larson
Was he the best pitcher in the regular season? No. He played in two small ballparks for most of his career in Detroit and Minnesota and was expected to pitch deep into games. He had 15, 17, 9, 20,13, 15, 13 complete games in the prime of his career.
Also factor in things like how many innings he was having to pitch. IN 1986 he threw six CG shutouts and completed seven of his eight final games in a pennant race winning all but one of them of them. The only game he didn't complete he went 8.67 allowing six runs and eight hits. He got pulled because he got in trouble and for Jack Morris getting in trouble was six runs in the 9th. :X
In 1984 he threw a no hitter on three days rest against the White Sox in the first week of the season. He started that season 10-1 with 8 complete games! Tigers started 35-5 and he was a huge reason. He was 3-0 in the playoffs giving up five earned runs in 25 innings and the Tigers won all three games.
In 1991 he was 4-0 giving up nine runs in 36 innings including a 10 inning shutout in game seven of the World Series.
In 1992 a older Jack Morris was 10-2 from August 1st on helping the Blue Jays win their division.
His overall numbers are of the Palmer, Hunter, and Phil Niekro variety. Niekro won 318 and was an automatic selection just because he pitched so damn long. Morris dominated hitters and was one of the best pitchers in the game from 1982 to 1992 if not the best during those years. Moreover Blyleven and Niekro who has similar numbers pitched longer and never lead a decade of consistent and very above average pitching. You can name better pitchers from one or two years in this period but not better pitchers over that many years. Morris was never the best pitcher in any one season but he was the best over a decade.
He also perfected the split fingered fastball making him a modern day trailblazer and a clutch performer on baseball's biggest stage. He's no Carlton, Maddux, or Cy Young but what he was is one of the best pitchers of his generation if not the best over an entire decade. This was playing in a very hitter friendly parks in Detroit and Minnesota. Unlike Rice, Trammell, or any of the other candidates to include even Gossage who I love, Jack Morris was better than almost all of his peers during a ten to twelve year stretch and his career numbers although not eye popping, are good enough under the circumstances to get a bust in Cooperstown.
JACK F'N MORRIS TO THE HALL OF FAME BABY!
edited for effect