MLB pitchers with 3,000 strikeouts: Where Clayton Kershaw ranks on baseball's all-time career Ks list

Dan Treacy

MLB pitchers with 3,000 strikeouts: Where Clayton Kershaw ranks on baseball's all-time career Ks list image

The 3,000-strikeout club remains a holy grail for pitchers.

While strikeouts have risen over the last two decades and pitchers seem to have as many advantages over hitters as ever before, the 3,000 mark requires a kind of consistency and durability that is hard to find across baseball.

An era of increased velocity also brings an era of increased arm injuries. To reach 3,000 strikeouts, a starting pitcher has to consistently miss bats while still staying healthy enough to remain available year-in and year-out for the bulk of his career. Naturally, the 3,000-strikeout club is an exclusive one.

Here's a look at each pitcher with at least 3,000 strikeouts and how far Clayton Kershaw can climb on the all-time list. 

MORE: Will MLB have another 3,000 Ks club member after Clayton Kershaw?

How many pitchers are in the 3,000 strikeouts club?

There are 20 MLB pitchers who have reached the 3,000-strikeout milestone now that Kershaw has joined the club.

Reaching 3,000 strikeouts in this era of baseball might be more difficult than ever, despite strikeout rates being so high. Only 12 pitchers with at least 3,000 strikeouts threw less than 5,000 innings, which is virtually unattainable in modern baseball. 

Here's the complete list of pitchers who have reached the 3,000-strikeout milestone.

MLB pitchers with 3,000 strikeouts

Prior to Kershaw joining the 3,000-strikeout club in 2025, Max Scherzer was the last MLB pitcher to record his 3,000th strikeout, becoming part of the exclusive list in 2021.

Stats through July 2, 2025

RankPitcherStrikeoutsInningsYears
1Nolan Ryan5,7145,386.01966-93
2Randy Johnson4,8754,135.11988-2009
3Roger Clemens4,6724,916.21984-2007
4Steve Carlton4,1365,217.21965-88
5Bert Blyleven3,7014,970.01970-92
6Tom Seaver3,6404,783.01967-86
7Don Sutton3,5745,282.11966-88
8Gaylord Perry3.5345,350.01962-83
9Walter Johnson3,5095,914.11907-27
10Justin Verlander*3,4973,5102005-present
11Max Scherzer*3,4512,9192008-present
12Greg Maddux3,3715,008.11986-2008
13Phil Niekro3,3425,404.01964-87
14Fergie Jenkins3,1924,500.21965-83
15Pedro Martinez3,1542,827.11992-2009
16Bob Gibson3,1173,884.11959-75
17Curt Schilling3,1163,261.01988-2007
18CC Sabathia3,0933,577.12001-19
19John Smoltz3,0843,473.01988-2009
20Clayton Kershaw*3,0102,8082008-present

* — Active

Most MLB strikeouts all time

Nolan Ryan holds the record for most strikeouts in MLB history with 5,714, coming in at 839 more strikeouts than second-ranked Randy Johnson.

Ryan's record is almost certainly unbreakable. He spent 27 seasons in the major leagues, which would be extraordinarily difficult for any pitcher to do in this era or any era, and he recorded five seasons of more than 280 innings; no pitcher will be doing that again, at least under the current structure of the MLB season.

Nolan Ryan

Ryan pitched in four different decades, debuting with the Mets in 1966 before emerging as a regular part of their rotation in 1968. He spent the bulk of the 1970s with the Angels and 1980s with the Astros before finishing his career with the Rangers and throwing the final of his record seven no-hitters.

Health, longevity and durability allowed Ryan to shatter the all-time strikeout record. Ryan made 773 career starts and tossed 5,386 innings, both of which are marks that would be stunning to see reached in this era. While major elbow surgery has become part and parcel of being a starting pitcher in today's MLB, Ryan was able to make at least 20 starts in 22 consecutive seasons, including at least 30 in 15 of those seasons.

Ryan's career strikeout rate of 9.5 per nine innings actually comes in below many recent aces, including Blake Snell (11.2), Chris Sale (11.1), Jacob deGrom (10.8), Gerrit Cole (10.4) and Kershaw (9.7). Three of those pitchers have had Tommy John Surgery, while Snell rarely lasts beyond six innings in a start and Kershaw has dealt with numerous late-career injuries.

Compared to today's pitchers, Ryan is a unicorn — and his durability will allow him to hold onto the record indefinitely at the very least.

MORE: Who are MLB's 50-50 club members?

MLB 2,000 strikeout club

Ninety MLB pitchers are in the 2,000-strikeout club, including six active pitchers: Justin Verlander, Max Scherzer, Clayton Kershaw, Chris Sale, Gerrit Cole, and Charlie Morton. 

Here's the complete list, with Kershaw ranking 20th:

Stats through July 1, 2025.

RankPitcherStrikeouts
1Nolan Ryan5,714
2Randy Johnson4,875
3Roger Clemens4,672
4Steve Carlton4,136
5Bert Blyleven3,701
6Tom Seaver3,640
7Don Sutton3,574
8Gaylord Perry3.534
9Walter Johnson3,509
10Justin Verlander*3,497
11Max Scherzer*3,451
12Greg Maddux3,371
13Phil Niekro3,342
14Fergie Jenkins3,192
15Pedro Martinez3,154
16Bob Gibson3,117
17Curt Schilling3,116
18CC Sabathia3,093
19John Smoltz3,084
20Clayton Kershaw*3,010
21Zack Greinke2,979
22Jim Bunning2,855
23Mickey Lolich2,832
24Mike Mussina2,813
25Cy Young2,803
26Frank Tanana2,773
27David Cone2,668
28Chuck Finley2,610
29Tom Glavine2,607
30Warren Spahn2,583
31Bob Feller2,581
32Tim Keefe2,564
33Cole Hamels2,560
34Jerry Koosman2,556
35Javier Vazquez2,536
36Bartolo Colon2,535
37Chris Sale*2,528
38Felix Hernandez2,524
39A.J. Burnett2,513
40Christy Mathewson2,507
41Jon Lester2,488
42Don Drysdale2,486
43Jack Morris2,478
44Mark Langston2,464
45Jim Kaat2,461
46Sam McDowell2,453
47Andy Pettitte2,448
48Jamie Moyer2,441
49Luis Tiant2,416
50Dennis Eckersley2,401
51Kevin Brown2,397
52Sandy Koufax2,396
53Charlie Hough2,362
54Robin Roberts2,357
55Early Wynn2,334
56Rube Waddell2,316
57Juan Marichal2,303
58John Lackey2,294
59Dwight Gooden2,293
60Lefty Grove2,266
61Gerrit Cole*2,251
62Eddie Plank2,246
63Tommy John2,245
64James Shields2,234
65Jim Palmer2,212
66Jake Peavy2,207
67Adam Wainwright2,202
68David Wells2,201
69Grover Alexander2,198
70Vida Blue2,175
71Camilo Pascual2,167
72Tim Wakefield2,156
73Dennis Martinez2,149
74Charlie Morton2,124
75Roy Halladay2,117
76Kevin Millwood2,083
77Bobo Newsom2,082
78Tim Hudson2,080
79David Price2,076
80Ryan Dempster2,075
81Fernando Valenzuela2,074
82Madison Bumgarner2,070
83Dazzy Vance2,045
84Yu Darvish*2,030
85Lance Lynn2,015
86Rick Rueschel2,015
87Orel Hersheiser2,014
88Dan Haren2,013
89Catfish Hunter2,012
90Andy Benes2,000

* — Active

MORE: Everything to know about history of Tommy John surgery in baseball

Will there be another 3,000-strikeout pitcher?

MLB teams averaged eight strikeouts per game for the first time ever in 2016, and the figure has remained higher than eight per game each season since. While the increase has slowed since the late 2010s, shouldn't it be easier than ever to reach 3,000 strikeouts?

Because of durability issues and innings limits, it isn't. Many of the all-time strikeout leaders pitched in an era of lower velocity, when a career with 4,000 or 5,000 innings was attainable and Tommy John Surgery wasn't as common. Increases in velocity and spin have resulted in more strikeouts, but they have also resulted in higher risk of injury. Not only do pitchers' careers tend to be a bit shorter, but teams are incentivized to be extra cautious with their arms. All of those factors naturally limit a pitcher's path to a milestone like 3,000 strikeouts. 

That doesn't mean Kershaw will be the last pitcher to reach the milestone. As long as strikeouts are high, there is always a realistic chance for the right pitcher to stay healthy long enough to reach 3,000 strikeouts. In fact, Chris Sale's late-career surge could put him on track for 3,000 strikeouts despite him making just 11 starts from 2020-2022. Sale won the NL Cy Young Award with 225 strikeouts in 2024, and he is now less than 500 strikeouts away from the milestone. If he pitches until he's 39 and stays mostly healthy, 3,000 is within reach, even if it's far from a guarantee.

Still, 3,000 strikeouts will be a monumental task for any pitcher going forward — and that's probably the way it should be, given the size of the club. 

Dan Treacy

Dan Treacy is a content producer for Sporting News, joining in 2022 after graduating from Boston University. He founded @allsportsnews on Instagram in 2012 and has written for Lineups and Yardbarker.