Denny McClain’s finished the 1968 season win a record of 31-6 becoming the last pitcher to win 30+ games. Will that milestone ever be reached again?
November 23, 2025
Denny McClain’s finished the 1968 season win a record of 31-6 becoming the last pitcher to win 30+ games. Will that milestone ever be reached again?
22 comments
Never gonna happen your average starting pitcher pitches only 32-33 games a season and goes five or six innings only.
Denny led such a crazy life after this season and is still alive and kicking today. I’d love to hear some stories that anybody else here might have about him
We barely see 20 wins anymore. We won’t see 30 again.
If anyone hasn’t treated themselves to his Wikipedia page, his life is crazy. I love that he put out two albums of organ music on top of all the baseball and crime.
No, for many reasons. The biggest is the move from a 4-man rotation to 5 (or more). The next-biggest is the ever-ahortening average innings per start leading to even fewer win opportunities.
Of course not. Star pitchers only go six deep in elimination games now.
Nope
I think it could, actually. Not by a starting pitcher, but if a team employed a strategy where a long reliever was consistently brought in for tie games in the 4/5/6/7 innings, it’s certainly possible.

With perfect games being hurled & the pitchers yanked at 98 pitches? Please
No
I’m pretty sure ‘Ole Nollie will hold quite a few records that will never be beaten
I have a baseball signed by McClain, for what its worth.
No and Denny McClain’s what?
30 will never be seen again. Skubal getting 20 would be an incredible MVP season.
McClain made the bigs at age 18 in 1963 and was a full time starter at 19. He won the Cy Young in 1968 and 1969 (shared the latter with Mike Ceullar). Those were his age 24 and 25 seasons.
Those 2 seasons he averaged 41 starts, 26 CG, 330 IP.
He was done as an effective pitcher at 26, and out of MLB at 29. He didn’t take the best care of himself (he drank a case of Pepsi a day!) but with that workload is it really a surprise his arm gave out before he was 30?
So no, we’ll never see anything like that again.
no. pitchers are used differently now. need to save the starters to extend their arms.
He ended up going 0-2 in the World Series while Mickey Lolich went 3-0, all complete games.
No
Keep in mind that JV was the closest anyone has gotten to even 25 in 35 years now, and even that was already almost 25 years ago. Without changes to the rule book or some absurd combinations of extreme luck, I’d say even 25 won’t happen again.
32 starts or so for your top pitcher not going to happen
That jersey needs to make a comeback. The new one sucks.
22 comments
Never gonna happen your average starting pitcher pitches only 32-33 games a season and goes five or six innings only.
Denny led such a crazy life after this season and is still alive and kicking today. I’d love to hear some stories that anybody else here might have about him
We barely see 20 wins anymore. We won’t see 30 again.
If anyone hasn’t treated themselves to his Wikipedia page, his life is crazy. I love that he put out two albums of organ music on top of all the baseball and crime.
No, for many reasons. The biggest is the move from a 4-man rotation to 5 (or more). The next-biggest is the ever-ahortening average innings per start leading to even fewer win opportunities.
Of course not. Star pitchers only go six deep in elimination games now.
Nope
I think it could, actually. Not by a starting pitcher, but if a team employed a strategy where a long reliever was consistently brought in for tie games in the 4/5/6/7 innings, it’s certainly possible.

With perfect games being hurled & the pitchers yanked at 98 pitches? Please
No
I’m pretty sure ‘Ole Nollie will hold quite a few records that will never be beaten
I have a baseball signed by McClain, for what its worth.
No and Denny McClain’s what?
30 will never be seen again. Skubal getting 20 would be an incredible MVP season.
McClain made the bigs at age 18 in 1963 and was a full time starter at 19. He won the Cy Young in 1968 and 1969 (shared the latter with Mike Ceullar). Those were his age 24 and 25 seasons.
Those 2 seasons he averaged 41 starts, 26 CG, 330 IP.
He was done as an effective pitcher at 26, and out of MLB at 29. He didn’t take the best care of himself (he drank a case of Pepsi a day!) but with that workload is it really a surprise his arm gave out before he was 30?
So no, we’ll never see anything like that again.
no. pitchers are used differently now. need to save the starters to extend their arms.
He ended up going 0-2 in the World Series while Mickey Lolich went 3-0, all complete games.
No
Keep in mind that JV was the closest anyone has gotten to even 25 in 35 years now, and even that was already almost 25 years ago. Without changes to the rule book or some absurd combinations of extreme luck, I’d say even 25 won’t happen again.
32 starts or so for your top pitcher not going to happen
That jersey needs to make a comeback. The new one sucks.