Mark Mulder entered the league with massive expectations as the second overall pick in 1998 out of Michigan State. The smooth-throwing lefty didn't waste time, fast-tracking his way to the Coliseum by 2000.
That rookie campaign was rough around the edges, yielding a 5.44 ERA over 27 starts, but it served as the necessary baseline for what would become a rapid transformation.
Everything clicked in 2001. Mulder anchored the rotation with a league-leading 21 wins, commanding the strike zone with an aggressive sinker-splitter combination that kept hitters completely off-balance. He finished as the American League Cy Young runner-up to Roger Clemens—the highest point of award recognition he would reach, but far from his only productive summer in the green and gold.
As the southpaw component of Oakland’s famed "Big Three" alongside Tim Hudson and Barry Zito, Mulder became a model of efficiency. He rattled off three consecutive seasons of at least 15 wins following his breakout year, earning back-to-back All-Star selections in 2003 and 2004.
During his five-year peak with the Athletics, Mulder was an absolute workhorse, pitching to an 81-42 record with 668 strikeouts and leading the league in complete games twice.
Because the front office operated under strict small-market financial constraints, the roster churn was inevitable. Before his arbitration costs could skyrocket, Oakland traded Mulder to the St. Louis Cardinals prior to the 2005 season. He delivered one final, stellar 16-win campaign in the National League, helping push the Cardinals into the postseason.
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