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From Russia with love indeed!  The good doctor loves the women of Russia, and while the hockey team is not on part with the Canadians, they destroy them in the looks department.  Another example is Svetlana Komylkova.  Da Da Da!
Al Oliver was only with Montreal for two seasons but those were excellent offensive campaigns, which saw him win the National League Batting Title and lead the league in Hits.  Oliver was an All-Star both years and also led the NL in doubles both times.  Had he been a better defensive player (or at least not a liability as he led the NL in errors for a First Basemen both years) he would have been ranked much higher.

When Stephen Strasburg was selected first overall out of San Diego State in 2009, he arrived with a level of hype unmatched by any pitching prospect in the modern era. His highly anticipated 14-strikeout major league debut in 2010 solidified that mythos, but the intense spotlight quickly shifted toward organizational caution. Following his recovery from Tommy John surgery, the front office famously instituted a strict innings limit that shut him down prior to the 2012 postseason. While that decision ignited fierce national debate, the meticulous, long-term preservation of their prized ace ultimately paved the way for an unforgettable era of championship contention.

The careful workload management produced spectacular front-line rewards, transforming Strasburg into a dominant, high-leverage force atop the rotation. Weaponizing an explosive four-seamer, a devastating 12-to-6 curveball, and a heavy, diving changeup, he earned three All-Star selections and recorded five 15-win campaigns for Washington.

Returning to the mound in 2013 with the training wheels completely off, Strasburg silenced doubts about his durability by establishing himself as a true workhorse. He eclipsed the 180-innings mark for the first time, racking up 191 strikeouts and throwing his first career complete-game shutout, proving his elite arsenal remained intact post-surgery.

In 2017, he achieved a top-tier regular-season performance, posting an impressive 15–4 record with a 2.52 ERA. During that summer, he set a franchise record by recording 34 consecutive scoreless innings, led the National League with a strong 2.72 FIP, and finished as the runner-up for the NL Cy Young Award behind teammate Max Scherzer. His reputation for performing in high-stakes games was reinforced in October when he pitched seven outstanding, scoreless innings with 12 strikeouts in a crucial Game 4 of the NLDS against Chicago, despite battling illness.

That steady escalation culminated in a legendary, unforgettable 2019 masterpiece. Strasburg commanded the league with a career-high 18 wins, logged 209 innings with 251 strikeouts, and then orchestrated one of the most dominant individual postseasons in baseball history. With the Nationals facing elimination multiple times, Strasburg became the franchise's savior. He went an unblemished 5–0 with a microscopic 1.98 ERA over 36.1 postseason innings. His defining moment came in Game 6 of the World Series against Houston, where he gritted out 8.1 magnificent frames under maximum pressure to force a Game 7. Winning the World Series MVP trophy, he became the first player in modern baseball history to log five pitching wins in a single postseason without a loss, delivering Washington its coveted world championship.

Following that global triumph, Strasburg signed a massive seven-year, $245 million extension to remain a lifelong National. Tragically, the deal immediately turned into a catastrophic anchor for the franchise. The tremendous physical toll of his high-velocity mechanics caught up to him almost instantly, as he was diagnosed with severe, chronic nerve damage from thoracic outlet syndrome.

Over the remaining four years of his career, Strasburg made just eight painful, ineffective appearances, totaling only 31.1 innings on the mound after signing the contract. Because the $245 million was fully guaranteed, the massive luxury-tax hit severely hampered the front office’s ability to rebuild or pursue premium free agents, crippling the organization's financial flexibility as they tumbled into the basement of the NL East.

Despite an arduous, multi-year rehabilitation process that included the surgical removal of a rib and neck muscles, his body simply refused to cooperate. Realizing he could no longer perform at the major league level, Strasburg officially closed his playing chapter and announced his retirement from baseball in April 2024.

Strasburg made 247 starts, posting a 113–62 record with a 3.24 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, pitching 1,470 innings, and striking out 1,723 batters.

Gio Gonzalez had a great first season with the Washington Nationals in 2012 where he would become the second runner up for the National League Cy Young Award and lead the league in Wins, FIP and SO/9.  While he has not yet replicated that All Star season he has been earned his rotation spot earning double digit Wins every year since joining the Nats.  In 2017 he would again finish in the top ten in Cy Young voting (sixth) while going 15 and 9 with a 2.96 ERA.  Gonzalez would be traded in 2018 to the Milwaukee Brewers but his run in Washington was strong and he deserves this high spot on the list.