panda said:
Adrian The Cal Bear said:
Vogelsong > Kershaw
Still true to this day in the rings column
It isn't just true in the "rings" column. It is true in the "quality of post-season performance" column.
The OP in this 7+ year old thread came in 2012 when Vogelsong was a 34 year old journeyman about to turn 35, in the midst of a run of 16 consecutive quality starts. Nice. But Kershaw was following up his 2011 Cy Young season with a second place Cy Young season, to be followed by Cy Young seasons the next two years and an MVP in 2014. In the snapshot moment of the 2012 regular season, it was fair to compare how Vogelsong and Kershaw were doing, even if one was a true journeyman and the other a future Hall of Famer who are not comparable, regular season career-wise.
But post-season performance? The journeyman wins. In 2012, the 35 year old Vogelsong had one of the best post-seasons of the division series era, with a 3-0 record and a 1.09 ERA in 24 2/3 innings. And the one game he didn't win was the most crucial performance, allowing only 1 run in 5 innings against the Reds in game 3 of the 2012 NLDS in a game the Giants had trouble scoring in, needing an unearned run in extra innings to win 2-1 and avoid a sweep. If Vogey has a Kershaw-like post-season performance in that game, we're not talking about 3 World Series wins in 5 years. If Vogey has a Kershaw-like performance in either of his 2 games against the Cardinals in the NLCS, we're probably not talking about 3 World Series rings in 5 years. And who knows what happens if Vogelsong doesn't pitch 5 2/3 shut out innings in the World Series, instead of winning 2-0 to go up 3-0 in the series, maybe the Giants lose, and it is a different series.
Vogey had only one good start out of 3 in the 2014 post-season, but by then he was really a washed up 37 year old who pitched reasonably well in the clinching game against the "superior" Nationals in the NLDS, didn't pitch so well in the NLCS and had decent stuff but had what Bochy called "buzzard's luck" in game 4 of the World Series, but the team was able to win all three games. His team was 7-0 in games he started over those two post-seasons.
Kershaw has had the occasional good post-season game, but he can only dream of having a string of 4 starts like Vogey did in 2012. Kershaw, a 4.43 career post-season ERA. Vogelsong, a 2.92 career post-season ERA. Vogelsong > Kershaw is still true to this day in the post-season performance column, rings or no.
Kershaw appears to be a good guy. Giants fans certainly should appreciate that he was very classy in his whole handling of Bumgarner's at bat on the last day of the season. If he was on any team other than the Dodgers, I'd root for him.
The good news for Kershaw is that Vogelsong was 35 when he had his outstanding post-season. Kershaw is only 31, there's still time. When it comes to post-season, he just needs to somehow find his inner 2012 Vogelsong.