The Baseball-Reference.com Play Index Stat of the Day

Create Your Own Stats of the Day!
Try the Play Index tools for Free! Create Custom Reports from 51 years of searchable play-by-play and gamelog data and 137 years of full-season data. You can also save your reports to share with others. Subscriptions with full reports are $29/year or $5/month. Examples:
   Most Home Runs in a season by a Shortstop
   Longest Batting Streak in games played as a Catcher
   All 89 HR allowed by Anaheim vs. LHB in 2006

April 30, 2008

Consecutive complete game losses

Filed under: Game Finders, Streak FindersAndy @ 11:36 am

Thanks to my buddy Eric for this idea. (Not you, Eric H, this time it’s Eric P.)

Last night, Roy Halladay lost his third straight complete game. I am willing to bet than in the early 1900s, such a streak was very common since most starts were CGs. But, it’s rare these days. Here are the longest such streaks since 1956:

                   StreakStart  Streak End Games   W   L   GS  CG SHO  GF  SV   IP     H    R   ER   BB   SO   HR   ERA  HBP  WP  BK Teams
+-----------------+-----------+-----------+-----+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
 Mickey Lolich      1975-07-17  1975-08-15     7    0   7   7   7   0   0   0   59     59   30   26   15   31   6   3.97   0   1   0 DET                                  

 Rick Langford      1980-06-03  1980-06-30     6    0   6   6   6   0   0   0   52.2   51   25   23   13   22   8   3.93   0   2   1 OAK                                  

 Jack Harshman      1958-05-17  1958-06-07     5    0   5   5   5   0   0   0   43     42   20   19   10   40   6   3.98   1   2   0 BAL                                  

 Curt Schilling     1998-05-17  1998-06-07     4    0   4   4   4   0   0   0   33.2   31   13   11    7   36   1   2.94   1   2   0 PHI
 Phil Niekro        1978-09-21  1979-04-06     4    0   4   4   4   0   0   0   33     28   10    9   12   21   1   2.45   1   1   0 ATL
 Ken Brett          1976-06-20  1976-07-06     4    0   4   4   4   0   0   0   35.1   29   13   12   15   17   0   3.06   1   1   0 CHW
 Clyde Wright       1974-07-20  1974-08-02     4    0   4   4   4   0   0   0   33     37   14   13    7    9   1   3.55   0   1   0 MIL
 Bob Gibson         1965-05-25  1965-06-08     4    0   4   4   4   0   0   0   35.2   26   15   13   15   21   5   3.28   1   1   1 STL                                  

Halladay is tied with roughly 60 other streaks at 3 games, although the last one was by Randy Johnson in 1999. See here for the full list.

6 Comments »

  1. Over those three games, Randy Johnson gave up only three runs. Even more remarkable, though, is that he was shut out twice, 1-0 each time, by José Jimenez. These two starts, a no-hitter and a two-hitter, were the only complete games that Jimenez ever threw.

    Comment by BunnyWrangler — April 30, 2008 @ 11:45 am

  2. So those aren’t quite complete-game losses in consecutive starts, though. This list shows the greatest number of consecutive losses in complete games, which is not quite the same thing. Take a look at Schilling in ‘98, for example - he had two complete game losses, followed by a five-inning start on May 28, followed by two more complete game losses. Not quite sure how to use the streak finder to find this exact streak (consecutive starts resulting in complete game losses) - anybody know?

    Comment by jokeeffe — April 30, 2008 @ 3:28 pm

  3. jokeeffe the reason that Schilling and Ken Brett are on the list is because the only games in between are no decisions.

    If you want to find consecutive games that are all complete game losses, you would do the same search, but select “any” under “pitcher decision” .
    http://www.bb-ref.com/pi/shareit/32Bv

    Comment by Raphy — April 30, 2008 @ 4:21 pm

  4. Using pitching streak finder, look for streaks by a starting pitcher in which Complete Games = 1 and Losses = 1. I think that does it, right? Only Schilling is eliminated from the list above.

    Comment by Johnny Twisto — April 30, 2008 @ 4:23 pm

  5. Yeah–you guys found my mistake exactly. Thanks.

    Comment by Andy — April 30, 2008 @ 5:37 pm

  6. Speaking of the Jimenez no-hitter - I wonder how many times a pitcher has had an ERA of over 6.00 for the
    season after pitching one.

    Comment by Mike Minetti — May 1, 2008 @ 12:20 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Powered by WordPress