No cheating by looking this up. I am copying the game log from a pitcher in the last 5 years. Tell me what this pitchers record should resemble. By the way, instead of ERA, I'm using all runs scored while this pitcher was on the mound. April game 1- 7 innings, 1 run April game 2- 7 innings , 0 runs April game 3- 7 innings, 0 runs April game 4- 7 innings, 0 runs April game 5- 7 innings, 3 runs 5 starts in April, 4 runs given up. What should this pitchers record be? 4-1 or maybe even 5-0? No argument from me on either one. May game 1- 7 innings, 2 runs May game 2- 7 innings, 0 runs May game 3- 8 innings, 1 run May game 4- 6 innings, 3 runs May game 5- 5 innings, 0 runs May game 6- 8 innings, 2 runs 6 starts in May, 8 total runs given up. Combined with April, this guys Runs Averaged per start is just a hair over 1 run a game. Dominant. What should this guys record be at this stage? Just for fun, let's give him 2 losses, to make him 4-2 for the month. 8-3 so far for the year? June was just as strong as April and May. This pitcher gave up 4 runs in his first start in June, but only 1, 0, 2, and 1 in his other 4. In other words, I'm not going to continue this chirade. By the end of June, Roger Clemens (in 2005) had an ERA of 1.50 and his record after 16 starts was 6-3, when arguably he could or should have had at least 12 wins. Of those 16 starts, he gave up more than 2 runs only 3 times. Wins are a metric of of evaulating a pitcher, but a very poor one. Look at Roger's April once again. He ended up going 1-1 for the month with a 1.03 ERA. After May, he was 3-3. Yes, 3-3. He didn't even have a winning record with his 1.30 ERA. That's just ridiculous. That's because Houston's offense sucked when he was on the mound. So, the theory that a good pitcher knows how to win is inaccurate. A pitcher cannot control how well or how poorly his team will hit and score. There have been dominant pitchers that always pitched for bad teams who don't have good winning records because the offense didn't put him in enough positions to win games. Roger Clemens was the best pitcher in the NL last year, and it's not even arguable. Yet, he only won 13 games. In April, Clemens threw 3 straight shut outs, and he ended up with no record at all in those 3 games, as his team lost all 3 games 1-0 after he left the game. Can you arguably say a good pitcher knows how to win when the greatest pitching in the world will not guarantee him a win? His offense has too much of an impact of whether he wins or loses.