Not only are we comfortable saying that Warren Spahn was the greatest Pitcher in Braves history, but he is also in the top ten all-time and the greatest left-hander ever.
Calling anyone the greatest Braves Pitcher of all time is no small statement considering the legends who took the mound. A Cy Young winner in 1957 (the inaugural winner), Spahn had a later start: he debuted for the Boston Braves in 1942 but missed the next three years due to military service. The southpaw would emerge as an All-Star for the Boston Braves, winning 21 Games and the ERA and WHIP titles while also eating the most Innings. This would become a pattern for the next decade and a half.
21 must have been his favorite number as he would win exactly that amount of Games seven times with two other 20 Win seasons. Leading the NL in Wins eight times, 356 of his 363 Wins were with the Braves, and whether it was in Boston or Milwaukee (where they moved to in 1953), it could always be counted on that Spahn would win a lot, strikeout his share of batters, and keep his ERA down. This is also a 17-time All-Star, a three-time ERA leader, and a four-time Strikeout leader. He won the 1957 Cy Young Award when it was awarded to the best in both leagues, and he was also runner-up for it the next three years. Let’s not forget that he was the ace of the staff that won the 1957 World Series.
Sabremetrically speaking, Warren Spahn never finished first among Pitchers but he was second four times, third twice, fourth once, and was fifth four times. From 1949 to 1959, he never finished outside the top five! We haven’t even mentioned that he hit 35 Home Runs over his career.
Spahn would enter the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1973, his first year on the ballot, and he will not be dislodged from this spot at #2 for decades to come. His number 21 was inducted by the Braves in 1965, and in 1999, he was one of four former players enshrined in the Braves Hall of Fame.
We need to bring this up as much as we can…
Regardless of the era Hank Aaron is one of the greatest baseball players that ever existed.
Period.
A Super Bowl Champion in his rookie season (although he did not do that much), Ed Podolak would work his way to become a dependable cog of the Kansas City offense. Podolak was a dual-threat Running Back who would rush for 4,451 Yards and catch another 288 passes for 2,456 Yards contributing 40 Touchdowns in total in his career, which were all spent in Kansas City. When he wasn’t on offense he was used on Special Teams where he would use his athleticism to become an adept returner who in 1970 was the league leader in All-Purpose Yards.
If our list of Top 50 Kansas City Chiefs were to be based on the excitement they brought onto the field then Dwayne Bowe would be in the top five, but as such, this is a pretty solid ranking for the dynamic Wide Receiver.