THE BIG UNIT is our second pitcher inducted into the Showdown Hall of Fame. The winner of four consecutive Cy Youngs during Showdown's hey day made him the most logical choice; his amazingly cool looking, original MLB Showdown 2000 card made him a lock! Randy pitched for 22 seasons and accumulated over 4,000 K: good for second all-time! As his high IP totals suggest, Johnson was known for pitching late into games and finished his career with a remarkable 100 CGs. Enjoy this run through the Randy Johnson era, especially his dominant late 90s to early 00s run that earned him several Cy Youngs!
Greatest MLB Showdown League
Showing posts with label Randy Johnson Houston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Randy Johnson Houston. Show all posts
Monday, April 10, 2017
Monday, March 27, 2017
1998 Houston Astros
While the 2004-2005 seasons may stand out as the most successful in Astros history because of the late playoff runs those teams made, the 1998 Astros stands out as the best overall team. In the midst of prime Bagwell-Biggio seasons, with Moises Alou, Carl Everett, and Derek Bell forming a lethal outfield, the Astros offense was potent. And in 1998, after trading for eventual Hall of Famer Randy Johnson, the Astros starting rotation was incredibly lethal as well. Johnson would go 10-1 with a 1.28 ERA in his 11 starts for Houston, leading a Houston pitching staff that had a remarkable 3.50 team ERA while playing in the same division as HR titans Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa!
Houston won a franchise record 102 games and the NL Central by 12 games. Unfortunately, they were unceremoniously bounced by an inferior (and soon coming) Padres team in the NLDS. They would lose Randy Johnson to the upstart Diamondbacks during the offseason and (despite making the '99 playoffs) would never be quite as lethal as that 98 team again.
Houston won a franchise record 102 games and the NL Central by 12 games. Unfortunately, they were unceremoniously bounced by an inferior (and soon coming) Padres team in the NLDS. They would lose Randy Johnson to the upstart Diamondbacks during the offseason and (despite making the '99 playoffs) would never be quite as lethal as that 98 team again.
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