Friday, September 4, 2020

Tom Seaver vs. Steve Blass


 




As Marilyn and I were laying in bed on Wednesday night listening to the Pirates game and hearing the Pirates announcers reminiscing about Tom Seaver, I said that this would have been a good night if Steve Blass were still in the booth.  A contemporary of Seaver's, I was sure that Blass would have had some good tales to tell about going up against him over the years.  "Do you think that they never pitched against each other?" Mrs. Grandstander asked.

Well, I'm sure that they did, but I could offer no specific memories of such games.  So, I turned to my friends at SABR for help, and sure enough, within twenty four hours, I heard from Sean Holtz of Baseball Almanac, and he provided me with links to the box scores for the six times that Tom Seaver and Steve Blass faced each other over the years.  I figured that this called for a Grandstander Spreadsheet:

8/13/67; NY 3 - P 0, @ NY

IP

H

R

ER

BB

K

Decision

Blass

7.2

8

3

3

4

4

L

Seaver

9.0

4

0

0

3

5

W









8/17/67; NY 6 - P 5, @ PGH

IP

H

R

ER

BB

K

Decision

Blass

3.2

7

3

3

2

2

ND

Seaver

2.0

6

4

4

1

2

ND









4-7-70; NY 5 - P 3; @ NY

IP

H

R

ER

BB

K

Decision

Blass

10

9

3

3

2

9

ND

Seaver

8.0

9

3

3

0

5

ND









6/29/70; NY 3 - P 2; @ NY

IP

H

R

ER

BB

K

Decision

Blass

8.0

10

3

3

2

5

L

Seaver

9.0

5

2

2

1

9

W









9/26/70; P 4 - NY 3; @ PGH

IP

H

R

ER

BB

K

Decision

Blass

4.1

8

3

2

1

3

ND

Seaver

6.2

12

3

3

2

5

ND









9/26/71; NY 3 - P 1; @ NY

IP

H

R

ER

BB

K

Decision

Blass

8.0

10

3

3

3

7

L

Seaver

9.0

1

1

1

1

10

W


The final tallies showed Seaver at 3-0, 2 CG, 43.1 IP, 2.70 ERA (slightly below than his career ERA of 2.86), and Blass at 0-3, 1 CG, 41.2 IP, 3.67 ERA (slightly above his career ERA of 3.63).

In 1967, the Pirates were probably a better team than the Mets.  In 1970 and 1971, the Pirates won the Eastern division both of those years, and were no doubt better, if only slightly, than the Mets. 

It's hard to imagine that the two would not have squared off face-to-face in 1968 or 1969.

Oh, and note that game from September 26, 1971.  Seaver pitched a complete game one-hitter that day against a team that, 21 days later, would win Game Seven of the World Series against Baltimore.  Care to guess who got the lone hit against Seaver that day?  This was a team that included Roberto Clemente, Willie Stargell, Al Oliver, Manny Sanguillen, Richie Hebner, and Bob Robertson.  If you guessed any of those obvious choices, you would be wrong!  If you tell me that you guessed Vic Davillio, you would be correct, but I also wouldn't believe you.

We all remember how Steve Blass' career came to an end, which is unfortunate, because for a period of years in the late '60s through 1972, he was a damn good pitcher, one of the best in the National League.  Tom Seaver, however, was in another world - worlds better than Steve Blass, and just about every other pitcher of his or anyone else's era.  

And I am guessing that Steve Blass would be the first person to tell you that.

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