1908 American League
MATHEWSON AWARD
for Pitching Excellence
This was the Year Of The Pitcher for the deadball era. Offensive totals
were very low around this time, and this year they reached their lowest
point of the century. Many pitchers in both leagues had ERAs under 2.00;
the Cleveland Indians as a team had an ERA of only 2.02. The Detroit Tigers
won their second straight pennant, and lost their second straight World Series.
They were a team built mostly on offense; the best pitchers in the league
were in Cleveland and Chicago.
1908 American League Pitchers
| | | WN | LS | GP | GS | CG | SH | SV | IP | HIT | BB | SO | ERA |
| E WALSH | CHI | 40 | 15 | 66 | 49 | 42 | 11 | 6 | 464 | 343 | 56 | 269 | 142 |
| A JOSS | CLE | 24 | 11 | 42 | 35 | 29 | 9 | 2 | 325 | 232 | 30 | 130 | 116 |
| C YOUNG | BOS | 21 | 11 | 36 | 33 | 30 | 3 | 2 | 299 | 230 | 37 | 150 | 126 |
| E SUMMERS | DET | 24 | 12 | 40 | 32 | 23 | 5 | 1 | 301 | 271 | 55 | 103 | 164 |
| W JOHNSON | WAS | 14 | 14 | 36 | 29 | 23 | 6 | 1 | 257 | 194 | 53 | 160 | 164 |
| H HOWELL | STL | 18 | 18 | 41 | 32 | 27 | 2 | 1 | 324 | 279 | 70 | 117 | 189 |
| B RHOADS | CLE | 18 | 12 | 37 | 30 | 20 | 1 | 0 | 270 | 229 | 73 | 62 | 177 |
Big Ed Walsh was the last pitcher of the 20th century to win 40 games in
a season. His 464 innings are also a 20th century record, and he was the
last pitcher to break the 400 mark. His season certainly deserves to rank
among the greatest ever; no other pitcher in the league won more than 24
games. Walsh pitched for the White Sox, who at this time were still the
"Hitless Wonders", one of the worst hitting teams in the league.
Walsh is in the Hall Of Fame, and in
his prime was a great pitcher. He led the AL in wins just once, but consistently
led the league in innings, games, shutouts, and saves. He had a strange career;
he had seven big years in a row from 1906-1912, and won almost all of his career
195 wins in that period. He won 20+ games four times, but this was the only year
he would pass the 30-win plateau. He threw a spitball, worked harder than
any other pitcher this century, had great control, and got plenty of strikeouts.
He is worthy member of the Hall Of Fame, his career ERA was a record low 1.82.
Addie Joss' career ERA of 1.89 ranks just behind Walsh's. Joss'
1.16 ERA this year was the lowest of his career; he also threw a perfect
game during the season, defeating Walsh 1-0 while his team was battling for
the pennant. Like Walsh, Joss had a short career, pitching only nine years.
It would have lasted much longer, but Joss died in 1911 from a form of meningitis.
If you like to look at old pictures, you have probably seen a great one taken
at a benefit game played for Joss' widow. It has many of the greatest stars
of the era, including Johnson, Speaker, Jackson, Collins, Baker, and Ty
Cobb in the wrong uniform.
I think that Walsh and Joss were clearly the
best two pitchers in the league this year. In the third spot, I will take
Cy Young, who had his last great year. Young was 41 years old, and had his
last 20+ win season. Young hung on three more years, and retired with 511 wins,
a record that has not even been challenged. He led the league in wins only
twice, but had five 30+ win seasons and fifteen 20+ win seasons. He also
holds records for games started (815), complete games (749), innings pitched (7354.2),
and losses (316).
After Young, I will take Ed Summers, who was
Detroit's best pitcher. This was Summers' rookie year, and it was the best
of a short five-year career. Summers' nicknames were "Chief" and "Kickapoo Ed",
so I assume he was of Native descent. This was also the first full year for
another pitcher, Walter Johnson, who at age 20 was already one of the
nastiest pitchers in the league.
TOP FOUR 1908 AL MATHEWSON AWARD
Ed Walsh
Addie Joss
Cy Young
Ed Summers
1908