Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counting

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Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counting

Post by agrudez » Mon Dec 24, 2012 10:52 am

On June 7th, 2008, Barnstormer starter Jay Lee put yet another feather in his Hall of Fame cap as only 9 months after recording his 3500th career strikeout (a feat only recorded twice prior since 1995 by Hayden Finch and John Ross Riles, Jr.) he went into Seattle sitting at 249 wins and delivered the type of solid 7.1IP win that has come to define the latter stages of the ace’s career for his 250th career win in the MBBA (a feat only recorded twice prior since 1995 by Ken Howell and John Ross Riles, Jr. [again]) .

After a rocky start to the season for the 37 year old hurler (5.17 ERA in 38.1IP in April), Omaha brass began to discuss a transition to the bullpen for the future HOFer; however, a stark turnaround in May (3.41 ERA, 2.8 K:BB ratio) reminded them both what was at stake for the career 165 ERA+ aces’ career metrics as well as what he was capable of during any given stretch (with 3 straight 8IP performances with a total of 4ER to close out the month of May – a stretch that will no doubt give playoff hopeful teams with holes in their rotation pause come the trade deadline). The decision to keep Lee in the rotation allowed the righty to reach this prestigious mark, as well as it will allow him to reach the 500 games started mark sometime in July should he avoid injury.

Lee came to the Barnstormers already at the precipice of the twilight of his career at age 32; however, he provided legitimacy for Omaha in championship hopeful discussions for at least the following 2 seasons post-trade. The price; however, was a borderline exorbitant one made out of desperation as the Barnstormers’ modest streak of playoff appearances (2 in a row) was threatened in ’03. In response, the Omaha brass elected to deal away the #6 Cory Warr, #52 Maxwell Johnson, #53 Fraser Dodson and #63 Pepe Molina (at the time) prospects in the league to acquire the still in prime ace along with a complimentary offensive piece in Ian Botham whom, to his credit, posted a career year (.944 OPS – 160 points above his career average) the season after the deal before plummeting back to Earth.

Over the past season and a half as the Barnstormers have languished in sub-mediocrity most fans recognize by looking back on this deal that it was what ushered in this depressing era (at least Molina busted and Johnson regressed from ace to average at a young age, but still 2-sure fire youngish pieces are on other teams because of it); however, a more hotly debated topic is whether or not it was “worth it”. The deal certainly didn’t help the team in ’03 as Lee provided 3 subpar starts, Botham hit just above the Mendoza line in 40+ games and the Barnstormers missed the playoffs despite the gutting of their farm. The next 2 seasons saw Omaha in the playoffs; however, with a bare cabinet leaving them little flexibility for further deadline gutting they limped into the playoffs both seasons on the WC and never made it past the 2nd round. The argument could plausibly be made that without Botham’s career year and Lee’s 158 ERA+ in ’04 that the Barnstormers may not have had the opportunity to be swept by Vancouver in the first round (though they did win the WC comfortably by 9 games) and their magical run in ’05 to game 6 of the second round would have most definitely been ripped from their grasp without Lee’s 23-5 record (as Omaha only edged California by 1 game for the WC); however, does a few years of such showings followed by the gutter really make it “worth it”?

Perhaps that is a question best answered by the tens and hundreds of thousands of young kids around the Nebraska Little League scene whom spend hours a day trying to imitate the HOFers’ patented curveball – one that they would never have seen had this deal not be done. While both at the end of the day and on paper the deal was a heart-wrenching one, the intrinsic effect of having a player such as Lee in ones’ organization cannot be measured with statistics. And, when he retires and eventually becomes a first ballot HOFer – if the legend decides to don an Omaha cap on inauguration day then almost everyone in Omaha will consider it having been “worth it” in its own way.
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Re: Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counti

Post by 7teen » Mon Dec 24, 2012 11:24 am

Lee has won 5 Nebraska Golden Arm Awards. And if I'm not mistaken, the only pitcher to have ever won the award in both the Frick League and Johnson League.

A no doubt Hall of Famer when he retires. The HOF ballots over the next 10 years should be fun to look at as we get more players that I'm familiar with (1995 to present)
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Re: Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counti

Post by 7teen » Mon Dec 24, 2012 11:27 am

agrudez wrote:On June 7th, 2008, Barnstormer starter Jay Lee put yet another feather in his Hall of Fame cap as only 9 months after recording his 3500th career strikeout (a feat only recorded twice prior since 1995 by Hayden Finch and John Ross Riles, Jr.) he went into Seattle sitting at 249 wins and delivered the type of solid 7.1IP win that has come to define the latter stages of the ace’s career for his 250th career win in the MBBA (a feat only recorded twice prior since 1995 by Ken Howell and John Ross Riles, Jr. [again]) .
Those feats have only occurred three times in all of history. Riles and Finch in what I call the "modern" era ('95 to present) and once before by some guy named Steve Nebraska. Steve Nebraska skews the pitching record book.
Chris Wilson

LB Surfers 95-96
FL Pac Champs: 95

Madison Wolves 99-2039
JL MW: 99-2009, 17, 20, 21
JL WC: 12
JL: 01, 04, 09, 12
FL H-land: 32
FL WC: 31, 33
BBA: 04, 09

Portland Lumberjacks 2040-
FL Pacific: 50, 59
FL WC: 49, 51, 60
FL: 49, 51, 59
BBA: 59

Caleca Award 2046

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Re: Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counti

Post by agrudez » Mon Dec 24, 2012 12:34 pm

Yeah, the HTML Reports only went back to '95 which is why I only cited the "modern" era - to steal a phrase. :P

So is it safe to say that Riles, Nebraska and Lee are the only 3 pitchers to ever record both 3500 Ks and 250 Ws?
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Re: Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counti

Post by jcrmoon42 » Mon Dec 24, 2012 12:43 pm

agrudez wrote: So is it safe to say that Riles, Nebraska and Lee are the only 3 pitchers to ever record both 3500 Ks and 250 Ws?
It is indeed safe to say. Only Huertas and Finch have 3500 Ks besides those three. Huertas finished with 242 wins, and Finch was Finch.

Allen Izatt is likely to join them. Amen Mitrani has a shot as well.

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Re: Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counti

Post by agrudez » Mon Dec 24, 2012 2:07 pm

I knew he was a special player, but I didn't know he was MBBA royalty! I'm really going to get blasted by Greeney after I sell him off for spare parts now, haha.
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Re: Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counti

Post by 7teen » Mon Dec 24, 2012 5:27 pm

agrudez wrote:Yeah, the HTML Reports only went back to '95 which is why I only cited the "modern" era - to steal a phrase. :P

So is it safe to say that Riles, Nebraska and Lee are the only 3 pitchers to ever record both 3500 Ks and 250 Ws?
You do know the 1973-1994 stats are found in the "Original MBBA CATO" link at the top of the page, right? These players were before my time in the league, but are fun to dig through when writing historical pieces.
Chris Wilson

LB Surfers 95-96
FL Pac Champs: 95

Madison Wolves 99-2039
JL MW: 99-2009, 17, 20, 21
JL WC: 12
JL: 01, 04, 09, 12
FL H-land: 32
FL WC: 31, 33
BBA: 04, 09

Portland Lumberjacks 2040-
FL Pacific: 50, 59
FL WC: 49, 51, 60
FL: 49, 51, 59
BBA: 59

Caleca Award 2046

agrudez
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Re: Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counti

Post by agrudez » Mon Dec 24, 2012 8:45 pm

7teen wrote:
You do know the 1973-1994 stats are found in the "Original MBBA CATO" link at the top of the page, right? These players were before my time in the league, but are fun to dig through when writing historical pieces.
Now I do. Thanks for the direction.
League Director: Kyle “agrudez” Stever*
*Also serves as chief muckraker
-Ron, 2025 media guide

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Al-Hoot

Re: Jay Lee Achieves Another Milestone - 250 Wins and Counti

Post by Al-Hoot » Sat May 04, 2013 1:21 pm

Wow! What a spotlight! Thanks for taking the time to research and present the material.

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