Steven Strasburg

  1. General
  2. Awards
  3. Career Stats
 
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Stephen Strasburg had an intriguing career that set the precedent for managing pitcher's arms in the modern era. He was the First Overall Pick in 2009 and debuted for the Nationals the following year, in what was arguably the most highly anticipated pitching debut by an American player. However, he only appeared in 17 games in his first two years as he underwent Tommy John Surgery. Despite this, he was effective in his limited work and showed what he was capable of.

In 2012, the Nationals made it known that they would be monitoring Strasburg’s innings. He went on to be an All-Star that year, going 15-6 with 197 strikeouts. It could have been a lot more, but Washington shut him down on September 12, including the playoffs, where the Nats were eliminated in the Divisional Round. Strasburg had a decent 2013 (8-9, 191 SO, 3.00 ERA) and 2014, he was ninth in Cy Young voting and led the National League in strikeouts with 242.

Strasburg continued to show why he was worth the investment, and he was an All-Star again in 2016 and 2017, with the latter being the better season. He led the NL in FIP (2.72), had a career-low ERA (2.52), and was third in Cy Young voting. After another solid season, Strasburg went 18-6, fanned 251 batters, and was fifth in Cy Young balloting. Even better, Strasburg led the Nationals to their first World Series win, going 5-0 in the playoffs, including two wins in the Fall Classic, where he was named the World Series MVP. He signed what was then the largest contract for a pitcher (7 years/$245 million), but disaster was about to strike.

Strasburg succumbed to a nerve issue in his pitching hand that held him to only three batters in 2020. Diagnosed with thoracic outlet syndrome, Strasburg managed only 21.2 innings in 2021. It was even worse for Strasburg, who had to be shut down after one game, and he never pitched again.

As promising as his talents were, Strasburg was a hell of a talent when he was healthy, but sometimes it is not meant to be.

The Bullet Points

  • Country of Origin: San Diego, California, U.S.A.
  • Eligible In: Saturday, 01 January 2028
  • Position: Pitcher
  • Played For: Washington Nationals
  • Major Accolades and Awards:

    World Series Rings (1) (Washington Nationals, 2019)
    All-MLB Team 1 (2019)
    All-Star (3) (2012, 2016 & 2017)
    Babe Ruth Award (2019)
    World Series MVP (1) (2019)
    Silver Slugger (1) (NL) (2012)
    Most Wins (1) (NL) (2019)
    Most Innings Pitched (1) (NL) (2019)
    Most Strikeouts (1) (NL) (2014)
    Most Games Started (1) (NL) (2014)
    Lowest FIP (1) (NL) (2017)
    Highest Fielding Percentage by a Pitcher (1) (NL) (2013)

  • Other Points of Note:

    Other Top Ten Cy Young Finishes
    NL (2014, 9th, 2017 3rd & 2019 5th)
    2 Top Ten Finishes (bWAR for Pitchers)
    3 Top Ten Finishes (ERA)
    6 Top Ten Finishes (Wins)
    4 Top Ten Finishes (WHIP)
    3 Top Ten Finishes (H/9)
    2 Top Ten Finishes (BB/9)
    4 Top Ten Finishes (SO/9)
    2 Top Ten Finishes (Innings Pitched)
    5 Top Ten Finishes (Strikeouts)
    2 Top Ten Finishes (Games Started)
    1 Top Ten Finish (Complete Games)
    2 Top Ten Finishes (Shutouts)
    3 Top Ten Finishes (ERA+)
    4 Top Ten Finishes (FIP)
    2 Top Ten Finishes (Win Probability Added)
    1 Top Ten Finish (Championship Win Probability Added)

  • Notable All Time Rankings:

    7.   SO/9: 10.549
    23. WHIP: 1.096
    38. H/9: 7.451
    66. ERA+: 127

Should Steven Strasburg be in the Hall of Fame?

Definitely put him in! - 0%
Maybe, but others deserve it first. - 0%
Probably not, but it wouldn't be the end of the world. - 0%
No opinion. - 0%
No way! - 0%
More in this category: « Sergio Romo Steve Cishek »

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