José Quintana’s Graceful Reinvention

The top nine pitchers by WAR since 2012 have a combined 54 All-Star Game appearances, 13 Cy Young Awards, and two MVP Awards in their careers. Most of them, including Max Scherzer, Clayton Kershaw, Gerrit Cole, Zack Greinke, and Stephen Strasburg, have signed nine-figure contracts that earn each of them over $30 million annually. Then, at number 10, there’s the ever underrated one-time All-Star José Quintana, just ahead of Yu Darvish and David Price:
Name | WAR | |
---|---|---|
1 | Max Scherzer | 60.2 |
2 | Clayton Kershaw | 55.9 |
3 | Justin Verlander | 46.3 |
4 | Chris Sale | 43.8 |
5 | Jacob deGrom | 41.1 |
6 | Corey Kluber | 39.1 |
7 | Gerrit Cole | 38.5 |
8 | Zack Greinke | 38.4 |
9 | Stephen Strasburg | 33.2 |
10 | José Quintana | 32.7 |
Quintana, 33, has accumulated 32.7 WAR over an 11-season career that looks wildly different from those of his peers on this list. He started with the White Sox from 2012-17, signing a $21 million extension in 2014 and posting a 3.51 ERA in over 1,000 innings. In 2017, the Cubs took an interest, parting with their top two prospects, Eloy Jiménez and Dylan Cease, and two others to get Quintana’s talents to the North Side.
From there, he wavered. His fastball velocity declined year to year from 2016 to ’20, and while he was still capable of making 30 starts each season, he wasn’t able to get outs as effectively. In his contract year in 2020, COVID-19 and two stints on the IL limited Quintana to just one start and three relief outings. His struggles would continue in 2021, when attempts to catch on with the Angels and Giants resulted in a pair of DFAs. Read the rest of this entry »