All these years later, there is no way to overstate the accomplishments of Dwight Gooden in the mid-1980s. The brilliant numbers Doc put up at age 19 and 20 were unprecedented and now even more eye-popping given today’s era of six-inning starters, yet his legacy was even bigger than that.
He wasn’t so much a pitcher as a phenomenon known as Dr. K.
Simply put, Gooden’s talent mesmerized New York City and made his every start more of an event than a ballgame. Though his career never quite lived up to the Hall of Fame promise of those early years, due in large part to his well-documented drug problems, nothing could ever diminish the magnitude of what he meant to the Mets.
It was his arrival in 1984, after all, which dramatically changed the direction of a franchise that had endured years of hopelessness and, in turn, launched what is still the most celebrated period in Mets history, including the 1986 world championship, thereby creating a permanent special place for Doc in the hearts of Mets fans.
As such, it is fitting that Gooden’s No. 16 will be retired by the ballclub next season, as the Mets announced today, an honor that will not only recognize his impact but reward him with a visible place in team history forever.
It is another in a series of moves by owner Steve Cohen, following last year’s unveiling of the Tom Seaver statue, the retirement of Keith Hernandez’s number, and the return of Old Timers’ Day, that no doubt will be applauded by fans who have long wanted the team to do more to embrace its history.
The ceremony is sure to be emotional for fans and especially Doc himself, in part because of what he has been through in his life, battling an addiction that not only damaged his career but haunted him for years in retirement, even sending him to prison for seven months in 2006.