You Are Here > Baseball-Reference.com > Blog >

SITE NEWS: We are moving all of our site and company news into a single blog for Sports-Reference.com. We'll tag all B-R content, so you can quickly and easily find the content you want.

Also, our existing B-R blog rss feed will be redirected to the new site's feed.

Baseball-Reference.com ยป Sports Reference

For more from Andy and the gang, check out their new site High Heat Stats.

Consecutive Postseason Starts Without a Win

Posted by Raphy on October 20, 2009

Tonight's mlb Game Notes mentions that Scott Kazmir has not won in his last 5 post-season starts. UPDATE: Make that 6. (Teammate John Lackey snapped a six game streak at the start off this year's playoffs.) This made me wonder who had the longest win-less postseason streak. Here are the results from the PI streak finder.

                   StreakStart  Streak End Games   W   L   GS  CG SHO  GF  SV   IP     H    R   ER   BB   SO   HR   ERA  HBP  WP  BK Teams
+-----------------+-----------+-----------+-----+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 Al Leiter          1997-10-01  2000-10-26    11    0   3  11   0   0   0   0   66     60   37   32   31   58   6   4.36   3   2   0 FLA-NYM

 Dwight Gooden      1986-10-08  1998-10-10     9    0   4   9   0   0   0   0   52     51   24   22   23   46   6   3.81   2   2   1 NYM-NYY-CLE
 Gary Nolan         1970-10-10  1976-10-12     9    0   2   9   0   0   0   0   43.2   37   20   20    9   24  10   4.12   0   1   0 CIN

 Randy Johnson      1995-10-13  2001-10-10     8    0   7   8   1   0   0   0   58.2   52   28   25   15   66   9   3.84   0   0   0 SEA-HOU-ARI
 Charles Nagy       1995-10-13  1997-10-21     8    0   2   8   0   0   0   0   49     53   30   28   21   34  11   5.14   3   0   0 CLE

Clearly to own such a streak, your team has to be winning and to keep pitching you have to be doing pretty well also. However, a combination of inconsistency and bad luck left these players on this undistinguished list. As a group, during these games they made 45 starts and went 0-18 with 27 no decisions. They averaged 5.96 innings per start and had an ERA of 4.26 and a WHIP of 1.31. Yet their teams won a lot of pennants and championships during these streaks. (I'm not putting a number on it because there are too many variables to know what to count). A few more interesting fact come to light when you take a closer look.:

  • Al Leiter recorded more postseason wins as a reliever for the Blue Jays and Yankees (1 each) than he did as a starter for the Mets and Marlins (0).
  • Doc Gooden never won a postseason game. In the '86 playoffs he went 0-3 with a no decision.
  • Gary Nolan won his first postseason game and his last (the '76 clincher), but none in between.
  • From when he broke the Yankees hearts in '95 until the LCS before he dominated the Yankees in 2001, Randy Johnson went 0-7 with 1 no decision. The 7 losses were in consecutive starts.
  • Charles Nagy pitched in 5 postseasons. In each one he earned a decision in the first game he started. He only earned 1 more decision in any of the other nine postseason game that he started.

Related posts:

    Consecutive Games with an RBI in the Postseason
    Consecutive postseason games with an RBI
    No BBs in consecutive starts
    2 consecutive games, both starts 0 IP
    Cliff Lee and two consecutive post-season starts without allowing a walk

This entry was posted on Tuesday, October 20th, 2009 at 8:12 pm and is filed under Postseason, Streak Finders. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

2 Responses to “Consecutive Postseason Starts Without a Win”

  1. It's too bad that Baseball-Reference.com's Play Index doesn't have an Umpire Game Finder. I think Tim McClelland tied an all-time record for the most errors tonight.

  2. "Charles Nagy pitched in 5 postseasons. In each one he earned a decision in the first game he started. He only earned 1 more decision in any of the other nine postseason game that he started."

    Although it wasn't a start he was saddled with the loss in the infamous extra inning game 7 of the '97 WS. Well infamous for me, I guess if you're a Marlins fan it was glorious. Looking at Nagy's game logs it seems he's had mostly mediocre playoff appearances where the offense didn't show up until the late innings. In his NDs, the Indians went 4-4. The only really hard luck game was '97 ALCS game 6. He had 7.1 IP of shoutout baseball (with 9 hits!) but his counterpart Mike Mussina had 8 IP with 1 H 0 R. Nobody scored until a Tony Fernandez solo shot in the 11th won the game and the series for the Indians.