300-Win Club

In Major League Baseball, the 300-win club is the group of pitchers who have won 300 or more games.

Twenty-four pitchers have reached this milestone. This list does not include Bobby Mathews who won 297 in the major leagues plus several more in 1869 and 1870 before the major leagues were established in 1871. The San Francisco Giants are the only franchise to see four players reach 300 wins while on their roster: Tim Keefe in the Players' League, Christy Mathewson and Mickey Welch while the team was in New York, and most recently Randy Johnson. Early in the history of professional baseball, many of the rules favored the pitcher over the batter; the distance pitchers threw to home plate was shorter than today, and pitchers were able to use foreign substances to alter the direction of the ball. Moreover, pitchers started games far more frequently than modern pitchers do; in the second half of the 1884 season Old Hoss Radbourn started every other game. The first player to win 300 games was Pud Galvin in 1888. Seven pitchers recorded all or the majority of their career wins in the 19th century: Galvin, Cy Young, Kid Nichols, Keefe, John Clarkson, Charles Radbourn, and Welch. Four more pitchers joined the club in the first quarter of the 20th century: Mathewson, Walter Johnson, Eddie Plank, and Grover Cleveland Alexander. Young is the all-time leader in wins with 511, a mark that is considered unbreakable. If a modern-day pitcher won 20 games per season for 25 seasons, he would still be 11 games short of Young's mark.

300-Win Club
Cy Young is the all-time leader in wins.

Only three pitchers—Lefty Grove, Warren Spahn, and Early Wynn—joined the 300-win club between 1924 and 1982, which may be explained by a number of factors: the abolition of the spitball; World War II military service, such as Bob Feller's; and the growing importance of the home run in the game. As the home run became commonplace, the physical and mental demands on pitchers dramatically increased, which led to the use of a four-man starting rotation. Between 1982 and 1990, the 300-win club gained six members: Gaylord Perry, Phil Niekro, Steve Carlton, Nolan Ryan, Don Sutton, and Tom Seaver. These pitchers benefited from baseball's increase from a 154-game schedule to a 162-game schedule in 1961, and expansion of the league from 16 teams in 1960 to 26 by 1977. The increased use of specialized relief pitchers, an expanded strike zone, and new stadiums, including Shea Stadium, Dodger Stadium and the Astrodome, that were pitcher's parks all also suppressed offensive production. Also, the increasing sophistication of training methods and sports medicine - such as Tommy John surgery - allowed players to maintain a high competitive level for a longer time. Randy Johnson, for example, won more games in his 40s than he did in his 20s.

Since 1990, only four pitchers have joined the 300-win club: Roger Clemens, Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, and Randy Johnson. Changes in the game in the last decade of the 20th century have made attaining 300 career wins difficult, perhaps more so than during the mid-20th century. The four-man starting rotation has given way to a five-man rotation, which gives starting pitchers fewer chances to pick up wins. No pitcher reached 20 wins in a non-strike-shortened year for the first time in 2006; this was repeated in 2009 and 2017.

Recording 300 career wins has been seen as a guaranteed admission to the Baseball Hall of Fame. All pitchers with 300 wins have been elected to the Hall of Fame except for Clemens, who received only half of the vote total needed for induction in his first appearance on the Hall of Fame ballot in 2013 and lost votes from that total in 2014. Clemens fell off the ballot in 2022 and can only be elected via the players' Contemporary Baseball Era ballot of the Veterans Committee. Clemens' future election is seen as uncertain because of his alleged links to use of performance-enhancing drugs. Many observers expect the club to gain few, if any, members in the foreseeable future. Ten members of the 300-win club are also members of the 3,000 strikeout club.

Members

300-Win Club 
Kid Nichols was the youngest pitcher to win 300 games, achieving the feat at age 30.
300-Win Club 
Randy Johnson is the most recent member of the 300-win club.
Key
Pitcher Name of the pitcher
Wins Career wins
Date Date of the player's 300th win
Team The pitcher's team for his 300th win
Seasons The seasons this player played in the major leagues
Elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame
Members of the 300-win club
Pitcher Wins Date Team Seasons Ref
Cy Young 511 July 3, 1901 Boston Americans 1890–1911
Walter Johnson 417 May 14, 1920 Washington Senators 1907–1927
Grover Cleveland Alexander 373 September 20, 1924 Chicago Cubs 1911–1930
Christy Mathewson 373 July 5, 1912 New York Giants 1900–1916
Pud Galvin 365 September 4, 1888 Pittsburgh Alleghenys 1875, 1879–1892
Warren Spahn 363 August 11, 1961 Milwaukee Braves 1942, 1946–1965
Kid Nichols 362 June 13, 1900 Boston Beaneaters 1890–1901, 1904–1906
Greg Maddux 355 August 7, 2004 Chicago Cubs 1986–2008
Roger Clemens 354 June 13, 2003 New York Yankees 1984–2007
Tim Keefe 342 June 4, 1890 New York Giants (PL) 1880–1893
Steve Carlton 329 September 23, 1983 Philadelphia Phillies 1965–1988
John Clarkson 328 September 21, 1892 Cleveland Spiders 1882–1894
Eddie Plank 326 September 11, 1915 St. Louis Terriers 1901–1917
Nolan Ryan 324 July 31, 1990 Texas Rangers 1966, 1968–1993
Don Sutton 324 June 18, 1986 California Angels 1966–1988
Phil Niekro 318 October 6, 1985 New York Yankees 1964–1987
Gaylord Perry 314 May 6, 1982 Seattle Mariners 1962–1983
Tom Seaver 311 August 4, 1985 Chicago White Sox 1967–1986
Charles Radbourn 310 May 9, 1891 Cincinnati Reds 1880–1891
Mickey Welch 307 August 11, 1890 New York Giants 1880–1892
Tom Glavine 305 August 5, 2007 New York Mets 1987–2008
Randy Johnson 303 June 4, 2009 San Francisco Giants 1988–2009
Early Wynn 300 July 13, 1963 Cleveland Indians 1939–1944, 1946–1963
Lefty Grove 300 July 25, 1941 Boston Red Sox 1925–1941

See also

Notes

Sources

  • "Career Leaders & Records for Wins". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved August 6, 2010.
  • "300 Wins Club". Baseball-Almanac.com. Baseball Almanac. Archived from the original on 26 July 2010. Retrieved August 6, 2010.

References

Tags:

300-Win Club Members300-Win Club Sources300-Win ClubBobby MathewsCharles RadbournChristy MathewsonCy YoungEddie PlankGrover Cleveland AlexanderJohn ClarksonKid NicholsList of Major League Baseball records considered unbreakableMajor League BaseballMickey WelchNew York Giants (baseball)Old Hoss RadbournPitcherPud GalvinRandy JohnsonSan Francisco GiantsTim KeefeWalter JohnsonWin (baseball)

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