Tommy John at 26 seasons.
1) 1963-1964: Cleveland Indians
2) 1965-1971: Chicago White Sox
3) 1972-1974: Los Angeles Dodgers
4) 1975 - Out of baseball due to surgery replacing a ligament in his pitching (left) elbow. The surgery, which was the first of its kind, was successful and has been renamed Tommy John Surgery.
5) 1976-1978: Los Angeles Dodgers
6) 1979-1981: New York Yankees
7) 1982: New York Yankees and California Angels
8) 1983-1984: California Angels
9) 1985: California Angels and Oakland Athletics
10) 1986-1989: New York Yankees
Smoltz
Phil Neikro
Tied for third longest MLB career as a pitcher are Charlie Hough (1970-1994 for the Dodgers, Rangers, White Sox, and Marlins) and Jim Kaat (1959-1983 for the Senators, Twins, White Sox, Phillies, Yankees, and Cardinals) each at 25 seasons.
As of 2009, Bernie Williams is second in career postseason hits with 128.
Steve Carlton. 144 picks
Cy Young, who pitched between 1890-1911, holds the MLB record for career victories by a pitcher with 511.
Cy Young, who pitched between 1890-1911, holds the MLB record for career wins by a pitcher with 511. He also holds the MLB record for career losses by a pitcher with 316.
banks
For an MLB career, that would be Cy Young with 815 starts between 1890-1911.
45 consecutive outs by Mark Buehrle in 2009
Jamie Moyer gave up 511 home runs in his career, more than any other MLB pitcher.
The MLB pitcher that was nicknamed the "Rocket" was Roger Clemens.
For the first four seasons of his MLB career, Pete was primarily a second baseman. His career stats show 628 games played at second base.