Verlander joins list of oldest Cy Young winners
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Winning a Cy Young Award at any age or stage in one¡¯s career is, of course, always a monumental achievement. Being among the oldest pitchers to be honored for such prowess? That¡¯s even more impressive.
Here¡¯s a look at the six oldest Cy Young Award winners, by age on the last day of the season.
2004 Roger Clemens (HOU): 42 years, 60 days old
Clemens¡¯ final of his record seven Cy Young Awards came in the ¡®04 season, when he turned 42 in August. He received 23 of 32 first-place votes, with a 41-year-old Randy Johnson finishing in second ¨C so the record for oldest would¡¯ve been set either way. Clemens went 18-4, with that .818 winning percentage leading the Majors and likely factoring into the voting results. He struck out 218 batters for his 12th 200-strikeout season of his career, third-most all-time behind Nolan Ryan (15) and Johnson (13).
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1978 Gaylord Perry (SD): 40 years, 17 days old
Perry won two Cy Young Awards in his career, each in his first season with a team. In 1972, it was his first season with Cleveland following an offseason trade. In ¡®78, he was in his first year with the Padres, also following another offseason trade. Perry had a 2.73 ERA along with 21 wins, with the latter leading the NL. He received 22 of 24 first-place votes, finishing ahead of Burt Hooton in second.
1959 Early Wynn (CHW): 39 years, 267 days old
Wynn¡¯s was just the fourth Cy Young ever awarded, in the days when there was one for both leagues. Wynn led the AL with 255 2/3 innings and 37 starts. He faced a whopping 1,076 batters, which, of course, also led the AL. His 22 wins led the Majors. He received 13 of 16 votes, finishing ahead of the Giants¡¯ Sam Jones in second.
2022 Justin Verlander (HOU): 39 years, 227 days old
Verlander did not pitch in 2021 while recovering from Tommy John surgery, becoming the first pitcher to win a Cy Young after throwing zero MLB innings the year prior. And he became the fourth-oldest, too. Verlander led all qualified starters with a 1.75 ERA, 0.83 WHIP and 220 strikeouts. Verlander was the second-oldest pitcher to lead MLB in ERA, behind only Clemens in 2005.
2001 Roger Clemens (NYY): 39 years, 64 days old
When you win seven Cy Young Awards, it stands to reason you¡¯d appear on this list twice. This was Clemens¡¯ sixth of seven. He led the Majors with an .870 winning percentage, going 20-3. He struck out 213 batters and compiled a 3.51 ERA. Clemens received 21 of 28 first-place votes, winning over Oakland¡¯s Mark Mulder in second place.
2002 Randy Johnson (ARI): 39 years, 19 days old
This was the Big Unit¡¯s fourth of four Cy Young Awards in a row. He won unanimously, and here¡¯s why: He led MLB with 334 strikeouts, eight complete games, 260 innings and 24 wins. It was his fourth straight year leading everyone in strikeouts ¨C and 334 was actually his lowest total of the four. His 2.32 ERA led the NL.