Baseball names its best pitcher award after a man who won 511 games — a number so far beyond anything possible in the modern era that it functions less as a benchmark and more as a monument. Cy Young pitched until he was 44 years old, threw complete games the way today’s starters throw four-inning outings, and retired in 1911 having done things to the record book that no pitcher will ever approach again.
The award bearing his name has been given out since 1956. For the first eleven years, one winner was named across both leagues. Starting in 1967, the American League and National League each crowned their own. That means two pitchers have shared the honor every season for more than half a century, and the names on that list read like a catalog of the sport’s most dominant arms across seven decades.
Seven times, one man has won it. Three times, a pitcher has won unanimously three years running. The award has gone to relievers, knuckleballers, a guy who had never won more than six games the year before, and a 21-year-old rookie who made every other pitcher in baseball look amateur by comparison. It has been given to pitchers who later had their reputations complicated, and to some of the cleanest and most beloved figures the sport has ever produced.
Every winner since 1956 is in the chart below.
Updated 2025
Cy Young Award Winners by Year: Complete List
Every AL and NL winner from 1956 through 2025, multi-time winners, records, unanimous picks, and the eras that defined the award.
1956 to 1966: One winner for both leagues
The first eleven years — a single Cy Young awarded across all of MLB
| Year |
Winner |
Team |
Lg |
W-L |
Note |
| 1956 |
Don Newcombe |
Brooklyn Dodgers |
NL |
27-7 |
First-ever Cy Young winner. Also won the MVP that year. |
| 1957 |
Warren Spahn |
Milwaukee Braves |
NL |
21-11 |
One of the greatest lefties in history. Won his only Cy Young at age 36. |
| 1958 |
Bob Turley |
New York Yankees |
AL |
21-7 |
Won the World Series and the Cy Young in the same season. |
| 1959 |
Early Wynn |
Chicago White Sox |
AL |
22-10 |
Wynn went on to win 300 games in his career. |
| 1960 |
Vern Law |
Pittsburgh Pirates |
NL |
20-9 |
Won the Cy Young and World Series with the Pirates. |
| 1961 |
Whitey Ford |
New York Yankees |
AL |
25-4 |
The Chairman of the Board. Later inducted into the Hall of Fame. |
| 1962 |
Don Drysdale |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
NL |
25-9 |
Drysdale and Koufax formed one of the most feared rotations ever. |
| 1963 |
Sandy Koufax |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
NL |
25-5 |
Unanimous First of three unanimous wins. Also won the World Series MVP. |
| 1964 |
Dean Chance |
Los Angeles Angels |
AL |
20-9 |
Shocked the baseball world by beating out Koufax for the award. |
| 1965 |
Sandy Koufax |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
NL |
26-8 |
Unanimous Struck out 382 batters — a record at the time. |
| 1966 |
Sandy Koufax |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
NL |
27-9 |
Unanimous Retired at 30 after the season due to arthritis. Three straight unanimous wins. |
1967 to 2025: AL and NL winners
Two awards per year starting in 1967 — every winner listed
| Year |
NL Winner |
NL Team |
NL W-L |
AL Winner |
AL Team |
AL W-L |
| 1967 |
Mike McCormick |
San Francisco Giants |
22-10 |
Jim Lonborg |
Boston Red Sox |
22-9 |
| 1968 |
Bob Gibson |
St. Louis Cardinals |
22-9 |
Denny McLain |
Detroit Tigers |
31-6 |
| 1969 |
Tom Seaver |
New York Mets |
25-7 |
Mike Cuellar / Denny McLain |
Baltimore / Detroit |
co-winners |
| 1970 |
Bob Gibson |
St. Louis Cardinals |
23-7 |
Jim Perry |
Minnesota Twins |
24-12 |
| 1971 |
Ferguson Jenkins |
Chicago Cubs |
24-13 |
Vida Blue |
Oakland A’s |
24-8 |
| 1972 |
Steve Carlton |
Philadelphia Phillies |
27-10 |
Gaylord Perry |
Cleveland Indians |
24-16 |
| 1973 |
Tom Seaver |
New York Mets |
19-10 |
Jim Palmer |
Baltimore Orioles |
22-9 |
| 1974 |
Mike Marshall |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
15-12 / 21 SV |
Catfish Hunter |
Oakland A’s |
25-12 |
| 1975 |
Tom Seaver |
New York Mets |
22-9 |
Jim Palmer |
Baltimore Orioles |
23-11 |
| 1976 |
Randy Jones |
San Diego Padres |
22-14 |
Jim Palmer |
Baltimore Orioles |
22-13 |
| 1977 |
Steve Carlton |
Philadelphia Phillies |
23-10 |
Sparky Lyle |
New York Yankees |
13-5 / 26 SV |
| 1978 |
Gaylord Perry |
San Diego Padres |
21-6 |
Ron Guidry |
New York Yankees |
25-3 |
| 1979 |
Bruce Sutter |
Chicago Cubs |
6-6 / 37 SV |
Mike Flanagan |
Baltimore Orioles |
23-9 |
| 1980 |
Steve Carlton |
Philadelphia Phillies |
24-9 |
Steve Stone |
Baltimore Orioles |
25-7 |
| 1981 |
Fernando Valenzuela |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
13-7 |
Rollie Fingers |
Milwaukee Brewers |
6-3 / 28 SV |
| 1982 |
Steve Carlton |
Philadelphia Phillies |
23-11 |
Pete Vuckovich |
Milwaukee Brewers |
18-6 |
| 1983 |
John Denny |
Philadelphia Phillies |
19-6 |
LaMarr Hoyt |
Chicago White Sox |
24-10 |
| 1984 |
Rick Sutcliffe |
Chicago Cubs |
16-1 |
Willie Hernandez |
Detroit Tigers |
9-3 / 32 SV |
| 1985 |
Dwight Gooden |
New York Mets |
24-4 |
Bret Saberhagen |
Kansas City Royals |
20-6 |
| 1986 |
Mike Scott |
Houston Astros |
18-10 |
Roger Clemens |
Boston Red Sox |
24-4 |
| 1987 |
Steve Bedrosian |
Philadelphia Phillies |
5-3 / 40 SV |
Frank Viola |
Minnesota Twins |
17-10 |
| 1988 |
Orel Hershiser |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
23-8 |
Frank Viola |
Minnesota Twins |
24-7 |
| 1989 |
Mark Davis |
San Diego Padres |
4-3 / 44 SV |
Bret Saberhagen |
Kansas City Royals |
23-6 |
| 1990 |
Doug Drabek |
Pittsburgh Pirates |
22-6 |
Bob Welch |
Oakland A’s |
27-6 |
| 1991 |
Tom Glavine |
Atlanta Braves |
20-11 |
Roger Clemens |
Boston Red Sox |
18-10 |
| 1992 |
Greg Maddux |
Chicago Cubs |
20-11 |
Dennis Eckersley |
Oakland A’s |
7-1 / 51 SV |
| 1993 |
Greg Maddux |
Atlanta Braves |
20-10 |
Jack McDowell |
Chicago White Sox |
22-10 |
| 1994 |
Greg Maddux |
Atlanta Braves |
16-6 |
David Cone |
Kansas City Royals |
16-5 |
| 1995 |
Greg Maddux |
Atlanta Braves |
19-2 |
Randy Johnson |
Seattle Mariners |
18-2 |
| 1996 |
John Smoltz |
Atlanta Braves |
24-8 |
Pat Hentgen |
Toronto Blue Jays |
20-10 |
| 1997 |
Pedro Martinez |
Montreal Expos |
17-8 |
Roger Clemens |
Toronto Blue Jays |
21-7 |
| 1998 |
Tom Glavine |
Atlanta Braves |
20-6 |
Roger Clemens |
Toronto Blue Jays |
20-6 |
| 1999 |
Randy Johnson |
Arizona Diamondbacks |
17-9 |
Pedro Martinez |
Boston Red Sox |
23-4 |
| 2000 |
Randy Johnson |
Arizona Diamondbacks |
19-7 |
Pedro Martinez |
Boston Red Sox |
18-6 |
| 2001 |
Randy Johnson |
Arizona Diamondbacks |
21-6 |
Roger Clemens |
New York Yankees |
20-3 |
| 2002 |
Randy Johnson |
Arizona Diamondbacks |
24-5 |
Barry Zito |
Oakland A’s |
23-5 |
| 2003 |
Eric Gagne |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
2-3 / 55 SV |
Roy Halladay |
Toronto Blue Jays |
22-7 |
| 2004 |
Roger Clemens |
Houston Astros |
18-4 |
Johan Santana |
Minnesota Twins |
20-6 |
| 2005 |
Chris Carpenter |
St. Louis Cardinals |
21-5 |
Bartolo Colon |
Los Angeles Angels |
21-8 |
| 2006 |
Brandon Webb |
Arizona Diamondbacks |
16-8 |
Johan Santana |
Minnesota Twins |
19-6 |
| 2007 |
Jake Peavy |
San Diego Padres |
19-6 |
CC Sabathia |
Cleveland Indians |
19-7 |
| 2008 |
Tim Lincecum |
San Francisco Giants |
18-5 |
Cliff Lee |
Cleveland Indians |
22-3 |
| 2009 |
Tim Lincecum |
San Francisco Giants |
15-7 |
Zack Greinke |
Kansas City Royals |
16-8 |
| 2010 |
Roy Halladay |
Philadelphia Phillies |
21-10 |
Felix Hernandez |
Seattle Mariners |
13-12 |
| 2011 |
Clayton Kershaw |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
21-5 |
Justin Verlander |
Detroit Tigers |
24-5 |
| 2012 |
R.A. Dickey |
New York Mets |
20-6 |
David Price |
Tampa Bay Rays |
20-5 |
| 2013 |
Clayton Kershaw |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
16-9 |
Max Scherzer |
Detroit Tigers |
21-3 |
| 2014 |
Clayton Kershaw |
Los Angeles Dodgers |
21-3 |
Corey Kluber |
Cleveland Indians |
18-9 |
| 2015 |
Jake Arrieta |
Chicago Cubs |
22-6 |
Dallas Keuchel |
Houston Astros |
20-8 |
| 2016 |
Max Scherzer |
Washington Nationals |
20-7 |
Rick Porcello |
Boston Red Sox |
22-4 |
| 2017 |
Max Scherzer |
Washington Nationals |
16-6 |
Corey Kluber |
Cleveland Indians |
18-4 |
| 2018 |
Jacob deGrom |
New York Mets |
10-9 |
Blake Snell |
Tampa Bay Rays |
21-5 |
| 2019 |
Jacob deGrom |
New York Mets |
11-8 |
Justin Verlander |
Houston Astros |
21-6 |
| 2020 |
Trevor Bauer |
Cincinnati Reds |
5-4 |
Shane Bieber |
Cleveland Indians |
8-1 |
| 2021 |
Corbin Burnes |
Milwaukee Brewers |
11-5 |
Robbie Ray |
Toronto Blue Jays |
13-7 |
| 2022 |
Sandy Alcantara |
Miami Marlins |
14-9 |
Justin Verlander |
Houston Astros |
18-4 |
| 2023 |
Blake Snell |
San Diego Padres |
14-9 |
Gerrit Cole |
New York Yankees |
15-4 |
| 2024 |
Chris Sale |
Atlanta Braves |
18-3 |
Tarik Skubal |
Detroit Tigers |
18-4 |
| 2025 |
Paul Skenes Unanimous |
Pittsburgh Pirates |
— |
Tarik Skubal Back-to-back |
Detroit Tigers |
— |
Felix Hernandez (2010) remains the only pitcher to win the Cy Young Award with a losing record in wins. He went 13-12 but led the AL in ERA, innings, and strikeouts behind a weak Mariners offense. One of the most deserved wins in award history.
Multi-time Cy Young winners
Every pitcher who has won the award more than once
| Pitcher |
Wins |
Years |
League(s) |
Notes |
| Roger Clemens |
7 Record |
1986, 1987, 1991, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2004 |
AL/NL |
Record holder. Won across four decades with four different teams. His legacy has been complicated by the Mitchell Report. |
| Randy Johnson |
5 |
1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 |
AL/NL |
Four straight in the NL from 1999-2002 with Arizona. The Big Unit is second all-time in strikeouts. |
| Greg Maddux |
4 |
1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 |
NL |
Four straight — the only pitcher with four consecutive Cy Youngs. His 1994-95 seasons had ERAs of 1.56 and 1.63. |
| Steve Carlton |
4 |
1972, 1977, 1980, 1982 |
NL |
Won his 1972 award going 27-10 for a Phillies team that won 59 games all season. The most lopsided team context ever. |
| Max Scherzer |
3 |
2013, 2016, 2017 |
AL/NL |
Won in both leagues. One of four pitchers ever to win in different leagues. |
| Clayton Kershaw |
3 |
2011, 2013, 2014 |
NL |
Won the MVP in 2014 alongside his Cy Young — the only pitcher since 1986 to win both in the same season. |
| Sandy Koufax |
3 |
1963, 1965, 1966 |
NL |
All three were unanimous. Retired at 30. Arguably the most dominant three-year run by any pitcher ever. |
| Pedro Martinez |
3 |
1997, 1999, 2000 |
AL/NL |
His 1999-2000 seasons are the statistical benchmark for dominance in the live-ball era. WHIP under 0.74 in 2000. |
| Jim Palmer |
3 |
1973, 1975, 1976 |
AL |
All three with Baltimore. Never allowed a grand slam in his career. Hall of Famer. |
| Tom Seaver |
3 |
1969, 1973, 1975 |
NL |
Three Cy Youngs with the Mets. Won his first during the Miracle Mets 1969 World Series run. |
| Tarik Skubal |
2 |
2024, 2025 |
AL |
Active Back-to-back AL Cy Youngs — the most recent entrant on this list. |
| Justin Verlander |
3 |
2011, 2019, 2022 |
AL |
Won across 12 years. The 2022 win came at age 39 after Tommy John surgery. One of the great career arcs in the sport. |
| Jacob deGrom |
2 |
2018, 2019 |
NL |
Back-to-back with the Mets. Won with a 10-9 record in 2018. Zero margin for error behind a bad offense every start. |
Cy Young records and milestones
The marks that define 70 years of the award
| Record |
Detail |
| Most Cy Young wins, career |
Roger Clemens — 7 (1986, 1987, 1991, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2004) |
| Most consecutive wins |
Greg Maddux — 4 straight (1992–1995) |
| Most unanimous wins |
Sandy Koufax — 3 (1963, 1965, 1966). Only pitcher with 3 unanimous selections. |
| Only pitcher, both leagues |
Gaylord Perry, Roger Clemens, Randy Johnson, Max Scherzer, Roy Halladay |
| Worst W-L by a winner |
Felix Hernandez — 13-12 in 2010. Led AL in ERA, innings, and strikeouts. |
| Fewest wins by a winner (starter) |
R.A. Dickey — 20 wins in 2012; Rick Sutcliffe — 16-1 in 1984 (16 wins) |
| Only knuckleballer to win |
R.A. Dickey — New York Mets, 2012 |
| First relief pitcher to win |
Mike Marshall — 1974 (15-12, 21 saves). Only reliever in early era. |
| Most saves by a winner |
Eric Gagne — 55 saves in 2003. Went 55 for 55 in save opportunities. |
| Youngest winner |
Dwight Gooden — 20 years old in 1985. 24-4 record, 1.53 ERA. |
| Oldest winner |
Roger Clemens — 41 years old in 2004 with Houston. |
| First Pirate to win |
Paul Skenes — 2025. Pittsburgh’s first Cy Young winner in franchise history. |
| Consecutive years same team won |
Atlanta Braves — 5 straight NL Cy Youngs (1991-95): Glavine, Maddux x4. |
| Team with most total winners |
Los Angeles Dodgers — 12 total Cy Young Awards across their history. |
Sources: Baseball-Reference, BBWAA, MLB.com. W-L records are regular season only. 2025 full stats pending season completion. — Legion Report
The eras that shaped the award
The 1990s and early 2000s belonged to a small group of pitchers who turned the Cy Young into something close to a personal trophy. Greg Maddux won four straight from 1992 to 1995. Randy Johnson won four straight in the NL from 1999 to 2002 while also winning the AL in 1995. Roger Clemens collected seven across four different decades. Pedro Martinez had two of the most statistically dominant seasons in the award’s history back to back in 1999 and 2000.
The analytics era brought new names and more competition. Max Scherzer won three times across two leagues. Clayton Kershaw won three in a four-year stretch and remains the last pitcher to win the award and the MVP in the same season. Jacob deGrom won back to back while pitching for a Mets team that routinely scored one or two runs behind him — perhaps the most impressive two-year stretch for a pitcher who didn’t win 20 games either year.
The 2025 award went to Tarik Skubal in the AL, who repeated from 2024, and Paul Skenes in the NL, making him just the third pitcher in history to win both the Rookie of the Year and the Cy Young Award in consecutive seasons, joining Fernando Valenzuela and Dwight Gooden.
The bottom line
The Cy Young Award is 70 years old. In that time it has been won by Hall of Famers, one-time wonders, relievers, starters who went 20 innings in October and starters who barely got through April. The one thing every winner has in common is that for at least one season, no pitcher in their league was better. That’s the whole standard, and it’s the right one.
— Legion Report