• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Larry Brown Sports

Larry Brown Sports

Brown Bag it, Baby

  • Home
  • Blog View
  • NFL
  • NCAAF
  • NBA
  • MLB
  • Media
  • Headlines
  • Podcast
Baseball, Pedro Martinez

Pedro Martinez 1999: Best Season Ever

February 22, 2008 by Larry Brown • Comments
FacebookTweetLinkedInRedditThreadsWhatsAppEmail

I’ve been meaning to write something about this for quite a while, and thankfully all the Mitchell Report madness has given impetus to this very post. Just last week, Pedro Martinez proclaimed he dominated the Steroids Era cleanly, and added that he’s damn proud of it. I’ll gladly note that he’s the second Hall of Famer to recently say he dominated the Steroid Era cleanly. While I haven’t gone through every outstanding individual season of all-time, I have a pretty solid foundation for the history of the game. That being said, given the context of the era in which Pedro peaked, his 1999 season could very well be the most dominant season in the history of the game. Allow me to make my argument.

In 1999, names like Rafael Palmeiro, Juan Gonzalez, Jason Giambi, and Ivan Rodriguez dominated the offensive categories, just to give you some context. In 1999, Pedro Martinez went 23-4 in 29 starts. He threw five complete games over 213.3 innings, walking a measly 37 batters the entire season. Oh yeah, he also set a career high with 313 strikeouts — a nice 8:1 ratio for those of you keeping score at home. In those 213.3 innings, a year in which 2,635 home runs were belted (the 2nd most in AL history according to my calculations), Pedro gave up just nine of them. His ERA was only 2.07, almost three full runs lower than the league average of 5.02 (also the 2nd highest in AL history according to my calculations).

The second closest pitcher to Pedro in ERA was David Cone at 3.44, almost a run and a half lower. Pedro had a 2.07. Three players with ERAs in the 4’s made it in the Top 10 of the league that year. Get that? An ERA in the 4’s meant you were having a really good season. Pedro’s WHIP was 0.92 — the next closest wasn’t even sub 1.2 — it was Eric Milton at 1.22. Pedro struck out over 13 batters per nine innings pitched. The next closest was Chuck Finley at not quite eight and a half.

I remember watching Pedro pitch that year and knowing it was special. It was news only when he lost; you always expected him to win that year. Pedro’s pitching prowess was unrivaled during his prime. Some people may say other pitchers had more dominant seasons, or that certain batters had more impressive years. Rather than fawn over the way Barry Bonds cartoonishly made a mockery of the record books in his super-human (steroids-aided) form of 2001 and 2002, I’d rather marvel at the 5’11” 170lb specimen of a man who made all those hulking roiders look foolish like nobody else did.

If you have a suggestion as to what the best individual season was in history, please feel free to add it and defend it in the comments. I’m going with Pedro Martinez in 1999.

Other baseball posts you might enjoy:
The End of the 300 Game Winners
Johan Santana Doesn’t Make the Mets a World Series Winner

  • i want more great stories!

Sign up today for free and get the best sports content sent to your inbox.

You can unsubscribe anytime. For more details, review our Privacy Policy.

.

Follow Us

Get instantly notified of the most viral news stories via Google!

  • Trending stories

Aldon Smith (99) on the sideline

Former 49ers star Aldon Smith dies at 36

2 days ago
LeBron James in a Lakers jersey

LeBron James reportedly has ‘curiosity’ about playing with 1 fellow superstar

4 days ago
James Harden warming up

James Harden arrested on weapons charge

2 days ago
Kyrie Irving in his Mavericks uniform

Kyrie Irving is being linked to 4 teams in trade rumors

6 days ago
LeBron James looks on

LeBron James takes a profane shot at San Antonio

5 days ago

Sidebar


  • don’t miss these

Manny Machado in the dugout

Manny Machado compares his lengthy slump to ‘being tortured’

22 hours ago141
Mike Yastrzemski error off the pole

Braves’ Mike Yastrzemski makes the most bizarre error of the MLB season

23 hours ago534
Jose Ramirez in helmet and uniform

Guardians hit with brutal Jose Ramirez injury news

2 days ago345
Mookie Betts after his error

Mookie Betts blows Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s perfect game in unbelievable fashion

2 days ago462
Giancarlo Stanton in warmups

Yankees All-Star suffers injury setback

2 days ago399
Aaron Boone in Yankees gear

Aaron Boone: Yankees don’t owe Aroldis Chapman squat

2 days ago413
  • popular stories

Stacey King giving a speech

Possible cause of death for Bulls icon Stacey King is revealed

Victor Wembanyama walking to the Spurs' locker room after losing Game 5 of the NBA Finals to the Knicks

Fans slammed Victor Wembanyama for his disrespectful move after losing Game 5

Larry David reacts to a missed shot by Josh Hart

Video: Larry David had an outrageous reaction to Josh Hart’s missed layup

Spurs guard De'Aaron Fox in transition against Knicks forward OG Anunoby in Game 4 of the NBA Finals

De’Aaron Fox made the most catastrophic mental mistake to lose Game 4

Phil Mickelson in golf gear

Phil Mickelson banned from golf club after misconduct accusation

Pat McAfee doing his show

Pat McAfee’s stunning new ESPN salary has been revealed

Get the App

© 2026 · LB Sports Media Group Inc · Powered by Springwire.ai

  • X
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • RSS Feed
  • About Larry Brown Sports
  • Contact
  • Editorial Process
  • Staff Writers
  • Privacy Policy
Dedicated to the memory of Nevil Vega
Team/Player Stats