- Born
- Died
- Birth nameGeorge Thomas Seaver
- Nicknames
- Tom Terrific
- The Franchise
- Height6′ 1″ (1.85 m)
- Twelve-time All-Star Tom Seaver was, arguably, the greatest pitcher in the major leagues between the retirement of Sandy Koufax and the blossoming of Roger Clemens, who was his teammate on the 1986 Boston Red Sox. Seaver, who won 311 games in his career, likely would have won more if he had been on a powerhouse team like the Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox, or Cincinnati Reds during the heyday of the Big Red Machine. (He did pitch, and very well, for the Reds towards the end of the Big Red Machine dynasty.) However, he pitched for the anemic hitting Mets, and helped pitch them into two World Series: 1969, which the Mets won in five games over the dynastic Baltimore Orioles of manager Earl Weaver, and 1973, which the Mets lost in seven to the dynastic Oakland A's of owner Charles O. Finley.
A five-time 20-game winner, "Tom Terrific" won a then-record three Cy Young awards, in 1969 (the year he came in #2 in MVP voting), 1973 and 1975. (He ranked in the top five in Cy Young voting eight times). Nine times in his 20-year career he had an Earned Run Average of 2.59 or less, which placed him in the top four of National League pitchers with the lowest E.R.A.s seven times. He led the National League in E.R.A. in 1970, 1971 and 1973, in wins three times ('69, '75 and '79) (he came in second four other times) and in strikeouts five times.
Tom Seaver finished his career with a 311-205 Won-Loss record for a .603 winning percentage, with 61 shutouts and 231 complete games, 3,640 strikeouts and a 2.86 E.R.A. However, that was not the sum of Seaver the player or the man. He was emblematic of new type of player, classy and erudite, with progressive views, rather than the skirt-chasing, drunken troglodytes of the post-dead ball era. (During the Dead Ball era, gentlemanly college graduates like Christy Mathewson were common in baseball.) Seaver helped usher in a new kind of ballplayer, and a new kind of ballgame. It helped make baseball reposition itself as America's past time, until the disastrous strike of 1994 derailed the sport into an era of steroids and souped-up baseballs in an attempt to get more American fannies into the seats under the commissionership of former used-card salesman Bud Selig.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Jon C. Hopwood
- SpouseNancy Lynn McIntyre(June 9, 1966 - August 31, 2020) (his death, 2 children)
- Was the National League's Rookie of the Year in 1967.
- Three-time Cy Young Award winner (1969, 1973, and 1975).
- Struck out 200 or more batters in nine consecutive seasons (1968-1976), a major league record.
- Struck out 19 San Diego Padres on April 22, 1970 including the last 10 in a row, the latter a new major league record.
- Won his 300th career game on August 4, 1985 over the Yankees in Yankee Stadium.
- I drink beer, I swear, but I keep my hair short, so I guess that makes me an All-American boy.
- That was nice, but it's only the first step. I want to pitch on a Mets pennant winner and I want to pitch the first game in the World Series. I want to change things around here. The Mets have been a joke long enough. It's time to start winning, to change the attitude, to move on to better things. I don't want the Mets to be laughed at anymore. [commenting on being selected to the All-Star team in 1967]
- My job isn't to strike guys out, it's to get them out - sometimes by striking them out.
- To an early '70s fan who noted his accomplishments: "Yeah, but you forgot one thing: I'm the only pitcher in the history of the Mets who's lost a ball game in the World Series."
- In baseball, my theory is to strive for consistency, not to worry about the numbers. If you dwell on statistics you get shortsighted; if you aim for consistency, the numbers will be there at the end.
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