Do you want big names? Big numbers? Big personalities? Welcome to All-Time #MLBRank, our ranking of the top 100 players in baseball history.

To create our list, an ESPN expert panel voted on thousands of head-to-head matchups of 162 players, based on both peak performance and career value.

The top 100 will roll out next week. This week, we bring you the top 10 at each position. Thursday brings the top 10 infielders by position of all time, followed by pitchers and catchers on Friday.

Have fun!

TOP 10 LEFT-HANDED PITCHERS

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10. Madison Bumgarner

Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Teams

San Francisco Giants (2009-present)

Honors

Four-time All-Star (2013-16), World Series MVP ('14), two Silver Sluggers ('14-15)

Championships

3 - San Francisco (2010, '12, '14)

Career stats*

W-L: 95-62, 6 shutouts, 1,300.2 innings pitched, 2.93 ERA, 1,276 strikeouts, 1.096 WHIP

*Stats as of July 10, 2016

The player

He's having his best season yet and he has the legendary 2014 postseason that will live forever, but he has pitched in a low-scoring era (until this season) in a pitcher's park, so he really shouldn't be a serious candidate for the top 100 just yet. If his first half of 2016 is a new level and he can pitch close to this level for five more years, then we'll start talking. -- David Schoenfield, ESPN senior writer

Bumgarner's regular-season numbers don't suggest he's going to be good enough for the Hall of Fame when his career is over. His 24.3 WAR is far off pace for typical HOF standards. That being said, his postseason accolades will at least get him a foot in the door for the discussion. It could be argued that his 2014 was the best postseason put up by any athlete in any major professional sport. -- Kenneth Woolums, ESPN Stats & Information

Bumgarner's 2014 Game 7 performance was just par for the course for one of the most intense pitchers in the game. As a 21-year-old rookie in 2010, he threw eight shutout innings on the road in the World Series. Bumgarner doesn't have a Cy Young award or a no-hitter yet, but both seem inevitable for a pitcher who has a chance at something historic every time he pitches. -- Sarah Langs, ESPN Stats & Infomation

9. Tom Glavine

Focus on Sport/Getty Images

Teams

Atlanta Braves (1987-2002, '08), New York Mets (2003-07)

Honors

10-time All-Star (1991-93, '96-98, 2000, '02, '04, '06), two Cy Youngs ('91, '98), four Silver Sluggers ('91, '95-96, '98), World Series MVP ('95), Hall of Fame ('14)

Championships

1 -- Atlanta (1995)

Career stats

W-L: 305-203, 25 shutouts, 4,413.1 innings pitched, 3.54 ERA, 2,607 strikeouts, 1.314 WHIP

The player

Glavine pitched 22 seasons and made 25 starts in all but two of them -- his first and his last. He wasn't just durable, he was the fifth lefty to reach 300 wins, a two-time Cy Young winner. Glavine was calm on the mound, the quiet villain. The 1995 World Series MVP, he pitched eight one-hit innings in the deciding game. -- Langs

8. Carl Hubbell

AP Photo

Teams

New York Giants (1928-43)

Honors

Two-time MVP (1933, '36), nine-time All-Star ('33-38, '40-42), Hall of Fame ('47)

Championships

1 -- New York (1933)

Career stats

W-L: 253-154, 36 shutouts, 3,590.1 innings pitched, 2.98 ERA, 1,677 strikeouts, 1.166 WHIP

The player

First off, he had one of the best nicknames ever: The Meal Ticket. He threw the best screwball in the game's history -- sorry, Fernando! -- and during 1933-1937 went 115-50 with a 2.52 ERA, including 10 shutouts in 1933 when he won the first of his two MVP awards and helped the Giants win the World Series with two complete game wins. Not bad for a guy the Tigers gave up on as a minor leaguer because Ty Cobb told him not to throw the screwball. -- Schoenfield

7. Whitey Ford

MLB Photos/Getty Images

Teams

New York Yankees (1950, 1953-67)

Honors

10-time All-Star (1954-56, '58-61*, '64), Cy Young ('61), World Series MVP ('61), Hall of Fame ('74)

*Named to two All-Star teams in '60 and '61

Championships

6 -- New York (1950, '53, '56, '58, '61-62)

Career stats

W-L: 236-106, 45 shutouts, 3,170.1 innings pitched, 2.75 ERA, 1,956 strikeouts, 1.215 WHIP

The player

He was 5-foot-10, 175 pounds, and was famous for his curveball more than his fastball -- and for scuffing the ball, throwing a spitball and even a mudball he said he learned from Lew Burdette. His .690 career winning percentage is the best ever for a pitcher with 200 wins, even though Casey Stengel, in the days before a rigid rotation, often saved him for the Yankees' toughest opponents. He was a superlative World Series pitcher, with a 2.71 ERA in 22 starts, and in the 1960 and 1961 World Series started four games without giving up a run. -- Schoenfield

6. Lefty Grove

AP Photo

Teams

Philadelphia A's (1925-33), Boston Red Sox ('34-41)

Honors

MVP (1931), six-time All-Star ('33, '35-39), Hall of Fame ('47)

Championships

2 -- Philadelphia (1929, '30)

Career stats

W-L: 300-141, 35 shutouts, 3,940.2 innings pitched, 3.06 ERA, 2,266 strikeouts, 1.278 WHIP

The player

Robert Moses Grove should be on the short list for greatest left-hander of all time, or greatest pitcher of either hand for that matter. He won nine ERA titles, the most ever, and his .680 career winning percentage trails only Whitey Ford and Pedro Martinez among pitchers who won 200 games since 1900. He threw hard and was known as one mean S-O-B. He once went 31-4. Look him up. -- Schoenfield

5. Steve Carlton

Focus on Sport/Getty Images

Teams

St. Louis Cardinals (1965-71), Philadelphia Phillies ('72-86), San Francisco Giants ('86), Chicago White Sox ('86), Cleveland Indians ('87), Minnesota Twins ('87-88)

Honors

10-time NL All-Star (1968-69, '71-72, '74, '77, '79-82), four NL Cy Youngs ('72, '77, '80, '82), NL Gold Glove ('81), Hall of Fame ('94)

Championships

2 -- St. Louis (1967), Philadelphia ('80)

Career stats

W-L: 329-244, 55 shutouts, 5,217.2 innings pitched, 3.22 ERA, 4,136 strikeouts, 1.247 WHIP

The player

The most inconsistent great pitcher ever. He went 27-10 with an awful Phillies team in 1972, on the short list of best individual seasons ever, then lost the feel for his slider the next three seasons. He then had a late-career peak in his mid-30s, winning two more Cy Young Awards at ages 35 and 37. He was an iconoclast in many ways, the best-conditioned pitcher of his era and notorious for not speaking to the media. He hung on too long. But when the slider was crackling, few were better. -- Schoenfield

4. Warren Spahn

Robert Riger/Getty Images

Teams

Boston Braves (1942, '46-52), Milwaukee Braves ('53-64), New York Mets ('65), San Francisco Giants ('65)

Honors

17-time All-Star (1947, '49-54, '56-59*, '61-63*), Cy Young ('57), Hall of Fame ('75)

*Played in two All-Star Games in '59, '61 and '62

Championships

1 -- Milwaukee (1957)

Career stats

W-L: 363-245, 63 shutouts, 5,243.2 innings pitched, 3.09 ERA, 2,583 strikeouts, 1.195 WHIP