logo
Clayton Kershaw and Max Scherzer Illustrious Careers By The Numbers

Clayton Kershaw and Max Scherzer Illustrious Careers By The Numbers

Fox Sports2 days ago
National Football League Clayton Kershaw and Max Scherzer Illustrious Careers By The Numbers
Published
Aug. 8, 2025 12:23 p.m. ET
share
facebook
x
reddit
link
Clayton Kershaw, 37, and Max Scherzer, 41, are two of the greatest pitchers MLB has seen. They were once teammates briefly in 2021, but on Friday the future Hall of Famers, on the first-place Dodgers and Blue Jays respectively, will face off for a fifth time.
Here's a look at the numbers behind each of their illustrious careers.
1. Scherzer and Kershaw are separated by just one regular-season win, with Scherzer having recorded 218 and Kershaw getting 217. Kershaw has led MLB in wins twice, while Scherzer did so once.
2: The number of seasons in which Scherzer and Kershaw both hit a home run and won a Cy Young award: both of accomplished this once, which is all the more incredible because they each have just one career dinger.
2.85: The combined ERA of Scherzer and Kershaw, across over 5,700 innings, is just 2.85 – Kershaw leads all active players at 2.52, but Scherzer has been no slouch himself, at 3.18 despite pitching in plenty of offense-heavy parks in his career.
ADVERTISEMENT
3: Between Kershaw and Scherzer, they've led the league in strikeouts on three occasions: Kershaw in 2015 when he logged his lone 300-strikeout campaign with 301, and Scherzer in 2016 with 284, and in 2018 with his own 300-K showing, with exactly that many. The two have also led at least their respective league in strikeouts a combined six times, three each.
4: Kershaw has two World Series rings – 2020 and 2024 – and Scherzer has a pair to match, from 2019 with the Nationals and 2023 with the Rangers after a midseason trade from the Mets.
6. Kershaw and Scherzer have each won three Cy Young awards, for a total of six. They won the award in the same season in 2013, which was Scherzer's first and Kershaw's second. Kershaw won it the following year, too, and then Scherzer went back-to-back in 2016 and 2017.
7. The number of teams Scherzer has played for across his 18-year career. Those seven teams include Arizona, Detroit, Washington, the Dodgers, the Mets, Texas and now Toronto. Kershaw is the opposite, having played all 18 of his seasons with the Dodgers, who also drafted him.
8. Scherzer is an eight-time All-Star, and seven of those appearances came consecutively between 2013-2019. He made the Midsummer Classic as recently as 2021.
11. Kershaw is an 11-time All-Star and made his latest appearance during the 2025 season, as commissioner Rob Manfred's "Legend Pick" for the game.
18. Both Kershaw and Scherzer have played 18 seasons each in MLB.
21. The highest number of wins both Kershaw and Scherzer have achieved in a single regular season. Kershaw hit that mark twice in 2011 and 2014, while Scherzer did it in 2013 while with the Tigers when he led all of MLB in wins and winning percentage (.875).
2008: The year that both Kershaw and Scherzer broke into MLB. They were also selected in the same MLB Draft, 2006, though Kershaw was picked out of high school and Scherzer out of college – hence their age discrepancies.
3,000: Kershaw and Scherzer are two of the three current MLB pitchers to have eclipsed the 3,000-strikeout mark, with the other being another former teammate of Scherzer's, Justin Verlander. This is a testament to both their consistent greatness and the longevity of their careers. Scherzer actually achieved this when he was a member of the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2021, and four years later is up to 3,451 strikeouts, good for 11th all-time. Kershaw surpassed 3,000 earlier this season, during the Dodgers game against the White Sox on July 2nd, and is now at 3,010 Ks.
Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!
share
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mets waste early five-run advantage, walked off by Brewers for seventh straight loss
Mets waste early five-run advantage, walked off by Brewers for seventh straight loss

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Mets waste early five-run advantage, walked off by Brewers for seventh straight loss

The Mets were walked off the Milwaukee Brewers 7-6 on Sunday afternoon at American Family Ballpark. Here are some takeaways... - Quinn Priester has been dominant for the Brewers this season, but the Mets' offense was able to jump all over him in this one, putting a run on the board in each of his five innings of work. Juan Soto and Jeff McNeil got things started with run scoring knocks in the top of the first. Brett Baty led off the second with an opposite-field blast, Ronny Mauricio delivered a two out RBI single in the third, Cedric Mullins went the other way for his first home run as a Met leading off the fifth, then Pete Alonso drove in Soto with a double in the fifth. - Sean Manaea pitched well after being handed the early advantage. He danced around a one out double in the first and then a two out walk in the second, before putting together his first clean inning of work. As was the case in his last outing, though, the lefty showed some signs of fatigue late. William Contreras got the Brewers on the board with a solo shot in the fourth. Milwaukee then loaded the bases with a double, single and two out walk and Joey Ortiz cut further into the deficit with a two-run single. Manaea came back for the fifth, but was pulled after allowing a leadoff hit. Reed Garrett entered and immediately allowed a two-run shot to Contreras to cut into the lead and close Manaea's line with four runs allowed on six hits and two walks. No Mets starter (or bulk arm) completed five innings during the three-game weekend set. - New York's offense wasn't able to get much of anything going against the Brewers' bullpen after they chased Priester. Lefty D.L. Hall allowed just two walks across 3.2 stellar innings then Nick Mears followed that with a hitless inning of his own in the ninth. - New York's bullpen was very strong behind Garrett and Manaea, but again broke down late. Brooks Raley put together an easy sixth, Tyler Rogers then worked his way out of a first and third one out jam with some help from an inning-ending double play ball. Ryan Helsley also pushed the tying run into scoring position in the eighth, and he got a big eight-pitch strikeout, but Ortiz came through with a two out opposite-field RBI single off of Alonso's glove. Edwin Diaz battled some command issues but escaped with things evened at six. Diaz then allowed a walk-off homer to Isaac Collins leading off the bottom of the ninth. Game MVP: Isaac Collins Collins had three knocks on the day, the last of which was the walk-off blast. Highlights What's next The Mets return to Citi Field to start a homestand against the Braves on Monday at 7:10 p.m. Clay Holmes (9-6, 3.46 ERA) takes the mound against Atlanta ace Spencer Strider (5-9, 4.04 ERA).

Aaron Boone ejected for MLB-leading 5th time in Yankees' 7-1 defeat to Astros
Aaron Boone ejected for MLB-leading 5th time in Yankees' 7-1 defeat to Astros

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Aaron Boone ejected for MLB-leading 5th time in Yankees' 7-1 defeat to Astros

Perhaps New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone was trying to fire up his team that had lost six of its past eight games. Maybe he was showing frustration over alternating pitching and hitting struggles as the Yankees slide further down the AL East standings. Whatever the reason, Boone gave himself an early exit from Sunday's 7-1 defeat to the Houston Astros by getting ejected in the third inning. It was his fifth ejection of the season, leading all MLB managers. Boone began arguing with home plate umpire Derek Thomas after he called a low sinker to Ryan McMahon a strike. Judging from strike-zone graphics, the pitch was borderline but was out of the zone. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Apparently, that was one low strike too many for Boone's liking and he shouted at Thomas from the dugout. Thomas called timeout and warned Boone, saying, "that's enough" before tossing him from the game. That prompted Boone to come out of the dugout to confront Thomas, saying "You f***in' need to fix it." At that point, the Yankees were down 2-0 on a first-inning home run by Jose Altuve, his 21st of the season, and an RBI double from Christian Walker in the third. Even worse, the Yankees hadn't gotten a hit off Astros starter Jason Alexander (cue your George Costanza "Seinfeld" jokes). Alexander, making his fifth start of the season, didn't allow a hit until the sixth inning when he gave up a single to Ben Rice on a 92 mph sinker in the outer middle of the strike zone. The Yankees finally broke through with a run in the seventh on a sacrifice fly by McMahon, scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr., but still trailed 4-1. One highlight for the Yankees may have been Devin Williams allowing no hits or runs in the fifth inning with three strikeouts. It was the first time in his past six outings that the embattled closer didn't allow a run. Boone had already been ejected, so perhaps it wasn't his decision to use Williams in a low-leverage situation. But using Williams under such circumstances was important for him to regain some confidence amid a terrible season, most recently typified by serving up a two-run homer to Taylor Trammell in Friday's loss to the Astros. Max Fried allowed four runs and eight hits over five innings for the second consecutive start. Since returning from a blister injury, the left-hander has yielded 17 earned runs in 22 innings. Tim Hill put any chances for a Yankees comeback out of reach by getting blitzed for three runs and four hits in the ninth inning, including a home run by Carlos Correa. "I wholeheartedly believe that we are going to get rolling and turn this thing around," Boone said after the game. "When it does, then you start to really build that next layer of confidence."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store