Rookie year Koosman was discovered by the son of a Shea Stadium usher, John Lucchese, who caught Koosman when he pitched in the
United States Army at
Fort Bliss,
Texas. The
Mets offered Koosman a contract after his discharge from the military. Koosman was about to be cut from the Mets in 1966, when
Joe McDonald, the assistant farm director, requested Koosman be retained at least until his first payday, as he owed the Mets money they had wired him after his car broke down en route to
spring training. After leading all
International League pitchers in
strikeouts in , Koosman broke into the Mets’ rotation in . He posted a 19–12 record with seven
shutouts, 178 strikeouts, and a 2.08
earned run average. The wins, shutouts, and ERA set franchise records, breaking those set by teammate
Tom Seaver the year prior. Koosman also made the first of two
All-Star teams in his career. The
National League won the game 1–0 (to date, the only All-Star Game to end in a 1–0 score) in the "Year of the Pitcher." Koosman pitched a scoreless ninth for the
save, striking out
Carl Yastrzemski for the final out. Koosman was named to the 1968
Topps All-Star Rookie Roster and finished runner-up to
Johnny Bench for the National League
Rookie of the Year honors.
The Miracle Mets In Koosman posted a 17–9 record with a 2.28 ERA and 180 strikeouts in another All-Star season. That year, he was a member of the Mets team that unexpectedly won the
National League East title (both leagues had split into two divisions after expanding from ten teams to 12) after finishing last in five of their first seven seasons, as well as trailing the
Chicago Cubs for much of the season, and by as many as 9 games. After Koosman lost to the
Houston Astros to fall to 9–8, he won eight of his final nine decisions. In Game Two of the
NLCS against the
Atlanta Braves, Koosman was shelled for six runs in 4 innings (including a
Hank Aaron three-run homer). The Mets won 11–6, however, then won the next game to complete the series sweep. Koosman was the pitching star of the
1969 World Series against the
Baltimore Orioles. After Seaver was defeated in Game One, Koosman, leading 1–0, held the Orioles hitless until
Paul Blair singled to lead off the bottom of the seventh inning, eventually scoring on
Brooks Robinson's only hit in 19 Series' at-bats. The Mets regained the lead in the top of the ninth; Koosman got two outs in the bottom of the frame, then walked the next two batters. He was relieved by
Ron Taylor, who induced Robinson to ground out to end the game. With the Series shifting from
Memorial Stadium to
Shea Stadium for the next three games, the Mets won Games Three and Four, and Koosman took the mound for Game Five. He fell behind 3–0 in the third inning after giving up home runs to his mound opponent,
Dave McNally, and
Frank Robinson. The Mets, however, cut into the Oriole lead on
Donn Clendenon's two-run home run in the sixth, then tied the game in the seventh on a homer by
Al Weis, who had hit only six career homers at that point—none of which had been in a home game. The Mets scored two runs in the eighth to take the lead, and after walking Frank Robinson to lead off the ninth, Koosman retired the next three hitters to end the game and complete the Mets’ improbable World Series win.
Game ball for game 5 After catching
Davey Johnson's fly ball for the final out of the World Series, left fielder
Cleon Jones gave the game ball to Koosman. That ball, as well as the game ball from Game 2, was stored in a safe in Koosman's residence. In the early 1990s, Koosman sold the ball from Game 5. The Game 5 ball's whereabouts are unknown.
"Ya Gotta Believe!" and "It Ain’t Over 'til It's Over" In Koosman posted a 12–7 record with a 3.14 ERA. Over the next two seasons, however, he posted losing records: 6–11 in (a season in which he was beset by arm woes) and 11–12 in with a 4.14 ERA—more than a run and a half above his career ERA to that point. In he went 5–0 in his first six starts, but ended the season 14–15. In late August/early September of that year, he set a Mets' record by pitching 31 consecutive scoreless innings (
R. A. Dickey broke his mark by pitching 32 consecutive scoreless innings in ). As in 1969, the Mets unexpectedly won the NL East title—once again overtaking the Cubs, whom they had trailed this time by as many as nine games—on the strength of the pitching of Koosman, Seaver and the previous year's NL Rookie of the Year,
Jon Matlack. This comeback gave rise to two slogans:
Tug McGraw's "Ya Gotta Believe!" and manager
Yogi Berra's "It ain’t over 'til it's over." In Game Three of the
NLCS against the
Cincinnati Reds, Koosman pitched a complete game for a 9–2 victory in a game that was headlined by
Pete Rose's altercation with Mets' shortstop
Bud Harrelson. The victory gave the Mets a 2–1 lead in the NLCS; they won the pennant two days later in five games. Koosman was the winning pitcher in Game Five of the
World Series against the defending champion
Oakland Athletics, holding Oakland scoreless for 6 innings. This victory gave the Mets a 3–2 lead in the Series; however, Oakland won the next two games to repeat as World Champions.
Later Met years Koosman posted a 15–11 record in and 14–13 record in . In he had possibly his best season ever, establishing career bests with 21 wins (against 10 losses) and 200 strikeouts. He also finished runner-up to
Randy Jones for the National League
Cy Young Award. In , the Mets traded Seaver to the Reds. The remainder of the team deteriorated, especially Koosman who slumped to 8–20, finishing tied with
Phil Niekro for most losses in the NL. After a 3–15 season in Koosman, seeing no imminent improvement to the team, was traded to the Minnesota Twins at his request. His departure left
Ed Kranepool as the last remaining member of the 1969 Miracle Mets (although Seaver returned to the Mets for the 1983 season). The Mets acquired
Jesse Orosco in the trade that sent Koosman to the Twins. (Orosco had been the
player to be named later who went to the Mets to complete the deal, which had been made two months earlier, in December 1978.) ==Later career==