Randy Johnson leads all players in career Box-Toppers points and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future.
Top 100 ‘All-Time’ Players
Here are the 100 players with the most career Box-Toppers points since record keeping began in 1995. Players are listed in order of their career Box-Toppers point total. Also shown is their Box-Toppers point total for 2019 and their career ranking in Box-Toppers points at the end of the 2018 season.Player | Pos | Team | All BTP |
19 BTP |
18 rank |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Johnson, randy | pi sp | retired | 278.8 | 1 | |
2 | Martinez, Pedro J. | pi sp | retired | 244.8 | 2 | |
3 | Kershaw, Clayton 2494 | pi sp | lad nl | 227.5 | 12.7 | 3 |
4 | Greinke, Zack 1871 | pi sp | hou al | 207.1 | 17.9 | 7 |
5 | Verlander, Justin 2112 | pi sp | hou al | 205.6 | 27.5 | 10 |
6 | Sabathia, CC 1492 | pi sp | nyy al | 203.4 | 3.0 | 4 |
7 | Pujols, Albert 1438 | 1b | ana al | 201.8 | 11.0 | 6 |
8 | Scherzer, Max 2588 | pi sp | dc nl | 197.2 | 15.4 | 9 |
9 | schilling, curt | pi sp | retired | 194.1 | 5 | |
10 | Rodriguez, Alex | 3b | retired | 187.0 | 8 | |
11 | Hernandez, Felix 2064 | pi sp | sea al | 175.1 | 1.0 | 11 |
12 | Hamels, Cole 2135 | pi sp | chi nl | 174.2 | 9.7 | 17 |
13 | Lester, Jon 2173 | pi sp | chi nl | 172.6 | 8.0 | 16 |
14 | Halladay, Roy 1178 | pi sp | retired | 170.7 | 12 | |
15 | Ramirez, manny | lf | retired | 167.2 | 13 | |
16 | Santana, Johan 1448 | pi sp | retired | 166.6 | 14 | |
17 | clemens, roger | pi sp | retired | 164.8 | 15 | |
18 | smoltz, john | pi sp | retired | 160.9 | 18 | |
19 | Hudson, Tim 1231 | pi sp | retired | 157.0 | 19 | |
20 | Colon, Bartolo | pi sp | free agent | 155.9 | 20 | |
21 | mussina, Mike | pi sp | retired | 155.6 | 21 | |
22 | bonds, barry | lf | retired | 153.2 | 22 | |
23 | maddux, greg | pi sp | retired | 151.7 | 23 | |
24 | Cabrera, Miguel 1776 | dh | det al | 150.9 | 3.0 | 26 |
25 | jones, chipper | 3b | retired | 149.0 | 24 | |
26 | Vazquez, Javier 1146 | pi sp | retired | 148.3 | 25 | |
27 | thome, jim | 1b dh | retired | 146.7 | 27 | |
28 | Ortiz, David | dh | retired | 145.9 | 28 | |
29 | Sale, Chris 2806 | pi sp | bos al | 142.6 | 11.0 | 32 |
30 | Peavy, Jake 1635 | pi sp | retired | 141.8 | 29 | |
31 | pettitte, andy | pi sp | retired | 138.5 | 30 | |
32 | giambi, jason | 1b | retired | 133.4 | 31 | |
33 | Strasburg, Stephen 2736 | pi sp | dc nl | 132.8 | 20.7 | 58 |
34 | Price, David 2593 | pi sp | bos al | 131.0 | 5.7 | 40 |
35 | hoffman, trevor | pi cp | retired | 129.4 | 33 | |
36 | Guerrero, Vladimir | rf | retired | 128.3 | 34 | |
37 | Weaver, Jered 2178 | pi sp | retired | 127.8 | 35 | |
38 | Burnett, A.J. 1300 | pi sp | retired | 127.8 | 36 | |
39 | Lackey, John 1640 | pi sp | retired | 127.2 | 37 | |
40 | Oswalt, Roy 1469 | pi sp | retired | 127.2 | 38 | |
41 | Wainwright, Adam 2150 | pi sp | stl nl | 126.6 | 7.4 | 42 |
42 | rivera, mariano | pi cp | retired | 126.4 | 39 | |
43 | Bumgarner, Madison 2753 | pi sp | sf nl | 124.4 | 10.0 | 52 |
44 | sheffield, gary | lf | retired | 124.1 | 41 | |
45 | Lee, Cliff 1798 | pi sp | retired | 119.1 | 43 | |
46 | Delgado, Carlos | 1b | retired | 118.7 | 44 | |
47 | Zito, Barry 1415 | pi sp | retired | 117.4 | 45 | |
48 | Beltre, Adrian 1141 | 3b | retired | 116.8 | 46 | |
49 | Buehrle, Mark 1407 | pi sp | retired | 116.7 | 47 | |
50 | Helton, Todd 1060 | 1b | retired | 116.4 | 48 | |
51 | Hunter, Torii 1190 | cf | retired | 115.9 | 49 | |
52 | Lincecum, Tim 2288 | pi sp | retired | 115.0 | 50 | |
53 | Beckett, Josh 1544 | pi sp | retired | 114.9 | 51 | |
54 | Santana, Ervin 2005 | pi sp | nym nl | 113.4 | 53 | |
55 | Carpenter, Chris | pi sp | retired | 113.3 | 54 | |
56 | Haren, Danny 1787 | pi sp | retired | 113.2 | 55 | |
57 | sosa, sammy | rf | retired | 113.2 | 56 | |
58 | brown, kevin j. | pi sp | retired | 112.8 | 57 | |
59 | glavine, tom | pi sp | retired | 110.6 | 59 | |
60 | kent, jeff | 2b | retired | 109.7 | 60 | |
61 | Kluber, Corey 3200 | pi sp | cle al | 109.1 | 61 | |
62 | Wagner, Billy | pi cp | retired | 108.7 | 62 | |
63 | Gonzalez, Gio 2626 | pi sp | mil nl | 108.6 | 4.7 | 72 |
64 | Beltran, Carlos 1194 | cf | retired | 108.6 | 63 | |
65 | Millwood, Kevin | pi sp | retired | 108.3 | 64 | |
66 | Berkman, Lance 1261 | 1b lf rf | retired | 108.1 | 65 | |
67 | Shields, James 2157 | pi sp | free agent | 106.4 | 66 | |
68 | Liriano, Francisco 2104 | pi cp sp | pit nl | 106.2 | 1.0 | 69 |
69 | thomas, frank | dh 1b | retired | 106.2 | 67 | |
70 | Ramirez, Aramis 1364 | 3b | retired | 105.8 | 68 | |
71 | Kazmir, Scott 1947 | pi sp | free agent | 105.1 | 70 | |
72 | Cueto, Johnny 2400 | pi sp | sf nl | 104.8 | 1.0 | 73 |
73 | moyer, jamie | pi sp | retired | 104.0 | 71 | |
74 | Tejada, Miguel | ss | retired | 102.3 | 74 | |
75 | griffey, ken jr. | cf | retired | 102.2 | 75 | |
76 | wakefield, tim | pi sp | retired | 101.4 | 76 | |
77 | Teixeira, Mark 1738 | 1b | retired | 101.3 | 77 | |
78 | schmidt, jason | pi sp | retired | 101.2 | 78 | |
79 | Holliday, Matt 1836 | dh 1b lf | free agent | 100.8 | 79 | |
80 | Cain, Matt 2081 | pi sp | retired | 100.7 | 80 | |
81 | Konerko, Paul 1107 | 1b | retired | 100.7 | 81 | |
82 | bagwell, jeff | 1b | retired | 100.4 | 82 | |
83 | walker, larry | rf | retired | 100.1 | 83 | |
84 | edmonds, jim | cf | retired | 99.8 | 84 | |
85 | Braun, Ryan J. 2300 | lf | mil nl | 98.7 | 2.0 | 88 |
86 | Howard, Ryan 2040 | 1b | retired | 98.7 | 85 | |
87 | Rolen, Scott | 3b | retired | 97.6 | 86 | |
88 | Wolf, Randy 1235 | pi sp | retired | 97.4 | 87 | |
89 | deGrom, Jacob 3343 | pi sp | nym nl | 96.7 | 19.1 | 141 |
90 | Jones, Andruw | cf | retired | 96.5 | 89 | |
91 | piazza, mike | ca | retired | 95.7 | 90 | |
92 | Abreu, Bobby | rf | retired | 95.5 | 91 | |
93 | nomo, hideo | pi sp | retired | 95.5 | 92 | |
94 | Dempster, Ryan 1109 | pi sp | retired | 95.2 | 93 | |
95 | Carrasco, Carlos 2885 | pi sp | cle al | 95.1 | 7.7 | 110 |
96 | Ordonez, Magglio | rf | retired | 94.5 | 94 | |
97 | Dunn, Adam 1512 | lf | retired | 94.3 | 95 | |
98 | williams, bernie | cf | retired | 93.8 | 96 | |
99 | Lilly, Ted 1452 | pi sp | retired | 93.3 | 97 | |
100 | Cole, Gerrit 3232 | pi sp | hou al | 93.1 | 32.2 | 244 |
What are those numbers after players' names?
About Box-Toppers’ team abbreviations
This chart is sortable! Click or tap any of the headers to sort. For example, click the Player header to sort players alphabetically by last name, click again to sort in reverse alphabetical order. Refresh the page to return to standard order.
Johnson earned 278.8 Box-Toppers points from the time Box-Toppers record keeping began in 1995 until he retired in 2009.
The most likely rival to Johnson’s throne at the moment is Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw who has 227.5 career Box-Toppers points, third among all players since 1995 and most among active players.
Kershaw, who will be 32 when the 2020 season starts, is 51.3 points behind Johnson. In his past five seasons, he has averaged 18.8 points per season and at that pace, would pass Johnson toward the end of the 2022 season, when he will be 34 years old.
There are a few caveats, including:
Kershaw had a drop-off in points in 2018 and 2019. After earning at least 20 points for a record seven straight seasons (2011 to 2017), Kershaw earned just 8.0 points in 2018 and 12.7 points in 2019 (ranked 25th overall). If he earns 12.7 points per season, he would catch Johnson in 2024 when he is 36.
Even if he reaches Johnson’s 278.8 point total, he still wouldn’t match Johnson’s actual career total. Since Box-Toppers didn’t track Johnson’s career from 1988 to 1994, he would likely have many more career Box-Toppers points. A rough projection puts his actual career Box-Toppers point total at about 380. Kershaw would need at least eight more seasons with more than 20 points a season to reach that total.
Kershaw is 17.3 points behind the second-place player on the career Box-Toppers points list, Pedro Martinez (244.8) and would pass that total this year if he exceeds his five-year average (18.8). (However, Martinez also began his career in 1992, prior to Box-Toppers tracking, and is projected to have 270 points if his entire career were tracked.)
Box-Toppers points are a measure of how much a player provides key contributions to his team’s wins. Specifically, Box-Toppers tracks who most helps their team win the most games. Using standard box score statistics, Box-Toppers uses a simple formula to determine a Player of the Game for each Major League Baseball game played. That player is the person who contributed most to his team’s win. In regular season games, players earn 1.0 Box-Toppers point for being named Player of the Game and can earn bonus points for being Player of the Day or top player or batter in their league for the day.
The chart here shows the rankings of the top 100 players since record keeping began in 1995, along with their career Box-Toppers point total and, where applicable, their Box-Toppers points for 2019. The chart also shows each player’s roster status as of the end of the 2019 season and players’ rank in career Box-Toppers points at the end of the 2018 season, to show their rise or fall in rankings since last season.
Notables
The 2019 season saw unprecedented movement among the overall top 10 players in career points with three players reaching the 200-point threshold in Box-Toppers’ 25th season of tracking. Only four players reached 200 points in Box-Toppers’ first 24 seasons. Also, five of the six active players in the career points top 10 list are within just 10 Box-Toppers points of each other, making it a very tight race at the top. Here is a look at some of those other notable players:
4. Zack Greinke of the Astros rose from seventh place at the end of 2018 to fourth place at the end of 2019 with 207.1 career Box-Toppers points. Greinke, 36, had 17.9 Box-Toppers points in 2019, seventh among all players.
5. Justin Verlander of the Astros rose from 10th place at the end of 2018 to fifth place at the end of 2019 with 205.6 career Box-Toppers points. Verlander, 36, had 27.5 Box-Toppers points in 2019, second among all players.
6. CC Sabathia of the Yankees fell from fourth place at the end of 2018 to sixth place at the end of 2019 with 203.4 career points. Sabathia, 38, had 3.0 Box-Toppers points in 2019 and retired at the end of 2019, which will reduce the active number of players in the overall career points top 10 from six to five.
7. Albert Pujols of the Angels fell from sixth place at the end of 2018 to seventh place at the end of 2019 with 201.8 career points, the most of any batter since 1995. Pujols, 40, had 11.0 Box-Toppers points in 2019, third among AL batters and the most points he’s earned in a season since 2011 (12.5 with the Cardinals).
8. Max Scherzer of the Nationals rose from ninth place at the end of 2018 to eighth place at the end of 2019 with 197.2 career Box-Toppers points. Scherzer, 35, had 15.4 Box-Toppers points in 2019, 15th among all players and ninth among NL pitchers.
Rising and falling
These six players made the biggest jump up the career Box-Toppers points list this year:
Astros pitcher Gerrit Cole rose 144 spots, most of any player, from 244th at the end of 2018 to 100th at the end of 2019. Cole, 29, has 93.1 career Box-Toppers points, earning 32.2 in 2019, first among all players and the fourth-highest single-season total in Box-Toppers’ 25 years of tracking. Cole is one of three players to rise into the career points top 100 list in 2019. Cole signed a free agent deal with the Yankees for 2020.
Mets pitcher Jacob deGrom rose 52 spots from 141st at the end of 2018 to 89th at the end of 2019 with 96.7 career Box-Toppers points, earning 19.1 in 2019, fourth among all players and second among NL pitchers. DeGrom, 31, is one of three players to rise into the career points top 100 list in 2019.
Nationals pitcher Stephen Strasburg, 31, rose 25 spots from 58th at the end of 2018 to 33rd at the end of 2019 with 132.8 career Box-Toppers points, earning 20.7 in 2019, third among all players and first among NL pitchers.
Indians pitcher Carlos Carrasco rose 15 spots from 110th at the end of 2018 to 95th at the end of 2019 with 95.1 career Box-Toppers points. Carrasco, 32, earned 7.7 Box-Toppers points in 2019, 28th among AL pitchers, in a season in which he was out three months being treated for leukemia and returned in September, earning his final 2.0 Box-Toppers points of the season. Carrasco is one of three players to rise into the career points top 100 list in 2019.
Giants pitcher Madison Bumgarner rose nine spots from 52nd at the end of 2018 to 43rd at the end of 2019 with 124.4 career Box-Toppers points. Bumgarner, 30, had 10.0 Box-Toppers points in 2019, 20th among NL pitchers. Bumgarner signed a free agent deal in the offseason with the Diamondbacks.
Brewers pitcher Gio Gonzalez rose nine spots from 72nd at the end of 2018 to 63rd at the end of 2019 with 108.6 career Box-Toppers points. Gonzalez, 34, had 4.7 Box-Toppers points in 2019. He signed a free agent deal in the offseason with the White Sox.
While three players reached 200 career Box-Toppers points in 2019, there were no players during 2019 who reached 100 career points to join the 83 players on the career points list to reach the century mark.
With three players joining the career points top 100 in 2019—Cole, deGrom and Carrasco—three players fell from the list:
Pitcher Yovani Gallardo fell from 98th in 2018 to 101st in 2019 with 92.7 career Box-Toppers points. Gallardo, 33, listed as a free agent, last earned Box-Toppers points in 2018 with the Rangers.
Outfielder Brian Giles fell from 99th in 2018 to 102nd in 2019 with 92.5 career Box-Toppers points. Giles last earned Box-Toppers points in 2008.
Pitcher Kerry Wood fell from 100th in 2018 to 103rd in 2019 with 92.4 career Box-Toppers points. Wood last earned Box-Toppers points in 2011.
Biggest drop: Curt Schilling
Curt Schilling had the biggest drop among all players on the career Box-Toppers points list, falling four spots from fifth place at the end of 2018 to ninth place at the end of 2019 with 194.1 career points.
Schilling was passed by Greinke, Verlander, Pujols and Scherzer during 2019.
Schilling is the highest-ranked retired player on Box-Toppers career points list who is not in the Baseball Hall of Fame. If Schilling’s entire pitching career were tracked from 1988, rough projections put his career Box-Toppers point total at 232.
Top 100 for 2019 & ‘All-time’
There are 13 players on the “all-time” top 100 who also appeared in Box-Toppers top 100 player list for 2019. They are shown in the chart below, listed in order by their Box-Toppers career player ranking.
Those 13 players include five of the top seven players on the 2019 list—Cole (first with 32.2 points), Verlander (second with 27.4), Strasburg (third with 20.7), deGrom (fourth with 19.1) and Greinke (seventh with 17.9).
Only two players—Verlander and Greinke—are in the top 10 in both 2019 and “all-time” lists: Verlander ranks fifth in the “all-time” list and second in the 2019 list, while Greinke ranks fourth in the “all-time” list and seventh in the 2019 list.
Last year, there were 11 players who made both the 2018 top 100 list and the “all-time” career points top 100 list. Six of those players are the same as last year—Verlander, Greinke, Scherzer, Kershaw, Hamels and Red Sox pitcher Chris Sale.
Breakdown: Active vs. Inactive
Of the 100 players on the “all-time” list, 72 of them ended the season as retired. That is the same number of retired players among the top 100 as there were at the end of 2018. Additionally, one player on the list, Sabathia (203.4 points, ranked sixth), announced his retirement at end of the season.
Four players among the 100 were listed as free agents during the 2019 season and none of them played during the season (so all had 0.0 Box-Toppers points for 2019)—pitchers Bartolo Colon, James Shields and Scott Kazmir and outfielder Matt Holliday.
Top teams
With 76 players listed as inactive at the end of 2019 (72 retired and four free agents), only 24 of the top 100 were listed as active.
The Houston Astros had three active players on the list, most of any team:
Pitcher Zack Greinke, fourth place with 207.1 career Box-Toppers points.
Pitcher Justin Verlander, fifth place with 205.6 points.
Pitcher Gerrit Cole, 100th place with 93.1 points. (Cole has since signed a free agent deal in the offseason with the New York Yankees).
Seven teams have two active players on the top 100 career points list: Red Sox, Cubs, Nationals, Brewers, Mets, Giants and Indians. There are 15 teams that have at least one representative among the top 100.
Breakdown by position
Pitchers outnumber batters on the “all-time” list. There are 62 pitchers and 38 batters (at the end of 2018, there were 61 pitchers and 39 batters among the top 100 “all-time” career points list.) For comparison, on the top 100 list for the 2019 season, there were 71 pitchers and 29 batters.)
Here is a breakdown of players by their primary position on the “all-time” list:
58—Starting pitcher
16—Outfield (6 CF, 5 LF, 5 RF)
10—First base
5—Third base
4—Designated hitter
4—Closing pitcher
1—Second base
1—Catcher
1—Shortstop
Pitchers tend to dominate Box-Toppers statistics especially in the short term. Over the longer term, batters tend to do better in Box-Toppers points because top batters tend to have longer, more productive careers than top pitchers. Also, in the first 15 years of Box-Toppers record keeping from 1995 to about 2009, batters in general did a lot better, earning 50 percent or more of all Box-Toppers points awarded. In fact, batters share of Box-Toppers points earned collapsed precipitously during the decade of the 2010s from the previous decade, as batters share of points earned fell from 51.7 percent during the 2000s down to 42.4 percent in the 2010s. During the 2010s, batters made year-end overall top 10 lists 23 times, while in the 2010s, there was only one such instance. Further, there were 35 times in the decade of the 2000s when a batter reached 15.0 or more Box-Toppers points in a season; during the 2010s, there were just seven such instances.
Box-Toppers methodology
Keep in mind that these are only statistics since 1995. For many players who debuted before then (such as Johnson, Pedro Martinez, Roger Clemens and Greg Maddux), their career Box-Toppers totals would likely be far higher if the years before 1995 were tracked. On the other hand, for a player like Chipper Jones (ranked 25th), Box-Toppers covers virtually his entire career—he only played in eight games before 1995, so Box-Toppers covers 2,491 games of his 2,499-game career.
About Box-Toppers—Box-Toppers tracks who most helps their team win the most games. Using standard box score statistics, Box-Toppers uses a simple formula to determine a Player of the Game for each Major League Baseball game played. That player is the person who contributed most to his team’s win. In regular season games, players earn 1.0 Box-Toppers point for being named Player of the Game and can earn bonus points for being Player of the Day or top player or batter in their league for the day.
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Overlapping players
Here are the 13 players who are on both the Box-Toppers’ top 100 list of “all-time” (above) and the Box-Toppers top 100 list for the 2019 season. Players are listed here in order of career Box-Toppers points with their predominant position played during the 2019 season and the team with which they finished the 2019 season. Shown are their career Box-Toppers point (BTP) total, their rank among players in career points, their Box-Toppers point total for 2019 and their rank among players in 2019.All-time | 2019 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Player | Pos | Team | BTP | Rank | BTP | Rank |
Kershaw, Clayton 2494 | pi sp | lad nl | 227.5 | 3 | 12.7 | 25 |
Greinke, Zack 1871 | pi sp | hou al | 207.1 | 4 | 17.9 | 7 |
Verlander, Justin 2112 | pi sp | hou al | 205.6 | 5 | 27.5 | 2 |
Pujols, Albert 1438 | 1b | ana al | 201.8 | 7 | 11.0 | 37 |
Scherzer, Max 2588 | pi sp | dc nl | 197.2 | 8 | 15.4 | 15 |
Hamels, Cole 2135 | pi sp | chi nl | 174.2 | 12 | 9.7 | 53 |
Lester, Jon 2173 | pi sp | chi nl | 172.6 | 13 | 8.0 | 80 |
Sale, Chris 2806 | pi sp | bos al | 142.6 | 29 | 11.0 | 36 |
Strasburg, Stephen 2736 | pi sp | dc nl | 132.8 | 33 | 20.7 | 3 |
Bumgarner, Madison 2753 | pi sp | sf nl | 124.4 | 43 | 10.0 | 47 |
deGrom, Jacob 3343 | pi sp | nym nl | 96.7 | 89 | 19.1 | 4 |
Carrasco, Carlos 2885 | pi sp | cle al | 95.1 | 95 | 7.7 | 90 |
Cole, Gerrit 3232 | pi sp | hou al | 93.1 | 100 | 32.2 | 1 |
What are those numbers after players' names?
About Box-Toppers’ team abbreviations
This chart is sortable! Click or tap any of the headers to sort. For example, click the Player header to sort players alphabetically by last name, click again to sort in reverse alphabetical order. Refresh the page to return to standard order.