Catfish Hunter wins 1974 AL Cy Young Award
Ask anyone who played with him or against him, and Jim “Catfish” Hunter will rank as one of the greatest clutch hurlers ever to toe the rubber.
On Oct. 30, 1974, Hunter was named the American League’s Cy Young Award winner by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. Hunter went 25-12 that season with a league-best 2.49 earned-run average and a league-low WHIP (walks + hits / innings pitched) 0.986.
More importantly, Hunter led his Oakland Athletics to a third straight World Series title, winning one Fall Classic game and saving another in the A’s 4-games-to-1 victory over the Dodgers.
Signed as a bonus baby by the Kansas City A’s in 1964 – the year before the creation of the MLB Draft – Hunter debuted in the big leagues as a 19-year-old in 1965, going 8-8 in 32 appearances. The next season, Hunter was named to the first of his eight All-Star Games.
But it wasn’t until the A’s moved to Oakland in 1968 that Hunter really blossomed. As Athletics’ owner Charlie Finley assembled what would become a dynasty, Hunter became a veteran leader on a team often agitated by their win-at-all-costs owner.