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Committee Chairman

Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .

48. Chris Young

After two years with the Texas Rangers, Chris Young was traded to the San Diego Padres, the team he had his longest tenure.

Young threw over 170 Innings and struck out at least 160 batters in both of his first two seasons as a Padre, going to the All-Star Game in 2007 when he had a 9-8 Record with a 3.12 ERA.  Young dealt with injuries over the next three seasons and only appeared in 36 Games in this stretch.  He left San Diego for the Mets as a Free Agent in 2011.

With San Diego, Young went 33-25 with a 3.60 ERA and 489 Strikeouts.

44. Kevin McReynolds

Kevin McReynolds was among the most highly regarded prospects nationwide, a first-round pick who proved his significant raw talent by winning the 1983 Pacific Coast League MVP while with Triple-A Las Vegas. Once he secured his spot on the major-league roster, this composed, powerfully built center fielder displayed a distinctive paradox: an easy, smooth running style that sometimes unfairly criticized his effort, combined with a notably heavy, high-impact skill set that added strength to the young team's lineup.

In 1984, upon becoming a full-time regular, McReynolds immediately contributed a crucial combination of defensive prowess and power hitting in the middle of the lineup. He adopted a disciplined approach to managing the expansive gaps of Jack Murphy Stadium as his designated territory, which was reflected in his leading the entire league's senior circuit center fielders with an impressive 2.76 Range Factor per Game and maintaining the league's top position with 18 Total Zone Runs. Offensively, he co-led the 1984 pennant-winning team with 20 home runs and 75 RBIs, establishing a highly dynamic and youthful outfield partnership with Carmelo Martinez known as the 'M&M Boys.'

Tragically, his postseason contributions ended when he suffered a severely broken wrist during Game 4 of the NLCS against the Cubs while sliding to break up a double play. This injury sidelined him for October, and he watched from the dugout as his teammates reached the Fall Classic, where the Detroit Tigers defeated them.

He bounced back beautifully from the wrist fracture to deliver two more durable, productive summers under the Southern California sun. He swiped a career-high 26 home runs and drove in 96 runs during a spectacular 1986 offensive breakthrough, elevating his career total to 65 round-trippers and posting a rock-solid .790 franchise OPS. 

Surprisingly, the front office executed an explosive, eight-man blockbuster deal in December 1986—shipping their homegrown outfielder to Shea Stadium in exchange for a package headlined by Kevin Mitchell. Because the trade materialized just two months after the Mets had captured their famous 1986 world title, McReynolds arrived right after the party concluded.

With the Padres, McReynolds accumulated 467 total appearances, 456 hits, 85 doubles, 65 home runs, and 241 runs batted in.

39. Will Venable

Will Venable didn't just seamlessly enter the major leagues. Drafted in the seventh round of 2005, this graceful, left-handed outfielder spent nearly four years developing in the minors before securing a regular spot on the main roster in August 2008. During his respected seven-and-a-half seasons with the team in Southern California, he acted as a key backup—an elite athlete offering essential depth, occasional powerful hits, and efficient base running to a team in transition.

Although he exhibited top-tier athleticism at the forefront of his position, his early development was limited by elevated strikeout rates and deficiencies in structural contact, which initially confined his playing time to platoon roles or late-innings defensive positions. It demanded considerable patience; however, he remarkably exceeded the three-digit hit mark for the first time during the 2012 season, recording 101 hits, 26 doubles, and a career-high of eight triples, thereby cementing his role defensively.

In 2013, Venable experienced a significant career milestone. Due to multiple everyday starters being sidelined by injuries, he assumed a prominent role and systematically weakened National League defenses, utilizing a rapid pull-side swing to achieve personal bests across various statistical categories: 129 hits, 22 doubles, and a commendable .268 batting average. Notably, his power-hitting ability combined with high-velocity base-stealing contributed to a historic season; he hit a remarkable 22 home runs and stole 22 bases, becoming only the eighth player in San Diego Padres history to record a 20-20 season, an achievement that earned him the team's local Most Valuable Player award.

As good as he could be, Venable was an aggressive swinger whose advanced efficiency filters were routinely hindered by a sub-.300 career on-base percentage (.249 batting average / .315 OBP as a Padre), meaning he spent large portions of his career functioning as a high-quality fourth outfielder who insulated the primary starters.

While he still had value, the Padres traded Venable to the Texas Rangers in exchange for a prospect package. He had 694 hits, 119 doubles, 33 triples, 81 home runs, and 130 stolen bases in a Padres uniform.

42. Kevin Brown

When building an objective, data-driven framework to evaluate a historical ledger, you inevitably encounter the ultimate philosophical puzzle: how do you weigh a single, volcanic season of absolute transcendence against decades of steady, standard compilation? For a franchise that has handed the ball to iconic multi-year Cy Young winners like Gaylord Perry, Jake Peavy, and Blake Snell, the concept of elevating a one-year mercenary above them feels almost sacrilegious.

Kevin Brown did not just have a good year down in Southern California; his lone summer on the grass represents the most ruthlessly dominant, high-leverage single-season pitching masterpiece in the history of the organization—and it isn't particularly close.

The scenario was driven by straightforward small-market economics. After winning the 1997 world title, the Florida Marlins conducted a major corporate fire sale, trading their formidable ace to San Diego in December. Like in Miami, Brown quickly changed the dynamics of his new rotation. Instead of relying on subtlety, he showcased a relentless display of raw power with a high-velocity 96 mph sinking fastball and a deadly slider, which often forced veteran hitters to hit ground balls into the infield dirt.

His 1998 regular-season performance showcased exceptional durability on the front line, breaking local records. Brown made consuming deep, high-stakes frames a disciplined routine, starting 35 games and finishing with an impressive 18–7 record. He systematically dominated National League lineups, leading the league with an outstanding 2.23 FIP, and set a franchise record with 257 strikeouts in 257.0 innings. Advanced analytics strongly confirm his efficiency, as he topped all Major League pitchers with an 8.6 pitching bWAR (9.1 including batting), a benchmark that remains the standard for any season in San Diego history.

While traditional BBWAA voters overlooked his difficult clubhouse demeanor, placing him third in the Cy Young voting behind Tom Glavine and Trevor Hoffman, other baseball circles recognized his excellence. The Sporting News honored him by naming Brown its Major League Pitcher of the Year.

More significantly, his fierce competitive drive was the key force behind the underdogs reaching the 1998 pennant. He delivered an outstanding performance in his first two postseason series, including an iconic 11-strikeout complete-game shutout against the strong Houston Astros in the NLDS, and then dominated the Atlanta Braves in the NLCS. However, his final performance lacked that elite consistency; he showed signs of physical exhaustion in the World Series, where the formidable New York Yankees ultimately defeated him as they swept to the championship.

Brown orchestrated a definitive, earth-shaking departure by signing a historic seven-year, $105 million contract with the regional rival Los Angeles Dodgers—becoming the first player in professional sports history to cross the elusive $100 million threshold.