FanGraphs Staff Awards

This week, we asked our writers to cast their vote for who they believe should win each of the major post-season awards. The results of those votes are below. We did not cast full ballots and use a points system as the BBWAA will – we just asked everyone to select the player they would cast a first place vote for. As you’ll see, a few of the awards had general consensus, but there was also quite a spread of opinions at some of the more open races.

American League MVP: Jose Bautista (16), Jacoby Ellsbury (9)

I was actually surprised that these two were the only ones who got votes. The staff apparently isn’t buying into the Justin Verlander narrative, and no one decided that Curtis Granderson was having a better year than Ellsbury. Still, I think you could make a decent case for either of those guys, and I would have expected them to each get a couple of votes.

National League MVP: Matt Kemp (11), Ryan Braun (9), Roy Halladay (4), Justin Upton (1)

Far less agreement, as Kemp just edges out Ryan Bruan in the voting. The two outfielders are both having great years, and there’s nothing wrong with either as a selection. Halladay also got less support than I would have expected, but he probably did better here than he will on the actual ballot.

American League Cy Young: Justin Verlander (21), CC Sabathia (3)

Not surprisingly, Verlander wins in a landslide. You can make a case for it being close and either one being a deserving winner, but you can make a stronger case that Verlander has just been better.

National League Cy Young: Roy Halladay (21), Clayton Kershaw (3), Cliff Lee (1)

Also a landslide over in the National League, but a more surprising one than in the AL. The staff clearly prefers Halladay’s method of getting outs to Kershaw’s. I think Kershaw will probably win the actual award, but the Phillies ace will be able to console himself with his eventual plaque in Cooperstown, I’m sure.

American League ROY: Michael Pineda (12), Brett Lawrie (4), Jeremy Hellickson (2), Mark Trumbo (2), Desmond Jennings (1)

No one gets the majority of the votes, but Pineda beats the field in a race with a lot of viable candidates. Toss in Eric Hosmer, Dustin Ackley, Jordan Walden, and Ivan Nova, and I have a feeling we might see an even more diverse ballot when the BBWAA votes. There are no shortage of guys who had decent-but-not-amazing rookie seasons in the AL this year.

National League ROY: Craig Kimbrel (21), Brandon Beachy (2)

Braves pitchers run away with the voting here, with the staff shunning the Nationals pair of rookie position players. I would have thought Espinosa and Ramos would have each gotten a vote or two, but it’s hard to argue with Kimbrel’s dominance this season.

The complete list of votes is below. A few writers abstained from voting for a few of the awards, and Klaassen’s vote of Bruce Chen for AL Cy Young was rejected. He’s currently being flogged at FanGraphs headquarters as we speak.




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Dave is a co-founder of USSMariner.com and contributes to the Wall Street Journal.

115 Responses to “FanGraphs Staff Awards”

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  1. Steve says:

    Very interesting. Fangraphs staff gave the awards to exactly who I would have.

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  2. Jon Weisman says:

    Honestly, I think the races are so close in the NL MVP and Cy Young that there is something to be said for waiting until the season’s over to vote.

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  3. gosensgo101 says:

    Two of you voted Mark Trumbo and his .296 OBP for AL ROY? Ugh.

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    • Oscar says:

      2.4 WAR in a still incomplete season is perfectly respectable for ROY. Not going to win, obviously.

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      • Tom B says:

        Respectable is one thing, undercutting other rookies that were more productive is another.

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      • Oscar says:

        Lawrie only had 171 PA. Hellickson has 1.7 WAR thanks to a 4.33 FIP. Pineda is clearly better but I could see Trumbo as a reasonable choice for second place.

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      • Avon Navi says:

        Ivan Nova also has 2.4 WAR on the season and received no votes.

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      • Sandy Kazmir says:

        Though I agree with your larger point to look beyond OBP, I wish everyone would look beyond simply shouting a WAR value.

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      • Oscar says:

        I’m not “simply shouting a WAR value”. Those guys are all close enough together in value (which we know from looking at WAR) that there’s room for disagreement without someone being definitely wrong.

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      • ettin says:

        I disagree. Yes is OBP is below average but his, currently, 29 HR and 87 RBI’s, have been invaluable to the Angel’s this year. If he wasn’t providing a big chunk of the lost production of Kendrys Morales the Angel’s wouldn’t even be in the Wild Card chase.

        Throw in a handful of SB’s and the rookie deserves to be in the top 2 consideration.

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    • Navin says:

      You should be thanking me for not picking J.P. Arencibia!

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    • ecp says:

      And I can’t see voting for Lawrie, who played all of six weeks, over equally productive players who were around longer.

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      • gabriel says:

        Not equally productive; equally valuable perhaps. Lawrie beats everybody on rate stats, and put up a very comparable WAR.

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      • jim says:

        so punish lawrie for getting hit in the wrist? if he’s been better, he’s been better, and that’s it.

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      • Oscar says:

        What does “punish” have to do with anything? I don’t think it makes him a worse player, but I don’t think a month of play justifies the ROY. In the same way that I wouldn’t vote a hyper-talented player with a few 10 WAR seasons and a six-year career into the HOF.

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      • jim says:

        you don’t think sandy koufax belongs in the hall of fame?

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  4. Santos says:

    I can’t believe Edinson Volquez got no love in the NL ROY voting. For shame Fangraphs.Do you guys even watch baseball!!!!1!!

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  5. novaether says:

    I’m going to need to hear some CC voters back up their choice for the AL Cy.

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    • Dave says:

      Apparently CC’s .16 superiority in HR rates trumps Verlander’s advantage in K/9, BB/9, and IP for them.

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      • jake says:

        I just assume some writers wanted to hammer home the (true) point that CC’s season has been ALMOST as good as Verlander’s.

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    • Erik H says:

      Tied in WAR, better FIP and xFIP, pitches in the tougher division and tougher ball park.

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      • jake says:

        Competition and park are already accounted for in WAR, try again.

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      • novaether says:

        FIP is already factored into WAR. Verlander has the supreme SIERA.

        In terms of which pitcher has the more “outstanding” season, it’s got to be Verlander.

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      • Jeff says:

        The stats that have CC as better (just FIP and xFIP by my browsing, and xFIP has no place in awards discussion because it’s predictive rather than descriptive) are marginally different, with the FIP difference being 0.05. The stats that have Verlander ahead often have a pretty substantial difference. Verlander leads in tERA by a huge amount and in SIERA by a larger amount than any of CC’s advantages

        The DIPS stats generally favor Verlander, Verlander pitched more innings and if you’re of the mindset that pitchers DO have some control over BIP, Verlander is almost indisputably harder to hit. Hell, even his WPA is better!

        It’s really hard to argue in an unbiased way that CC deserves the Cy Young this year.

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      • cwendt says:

        I have thought at length about this, and both “sides” here are wrong.

        First, WAR makes a league adjustment, and a park adjustment. The AL is a little tougher, NYY is a slight hitters park and DET a slight pitchers park. The former benefits neither, and Sabathia benefits a bit from the later when WAR is calculated.

        However, these adjustments in no way account for “competition”.

        Verlander made 15 starts against the AL Central, with a -325 run differential excluding DET. Verlander made his most starts against CHW, which has a -52 run differential and an 89 wRC+. He went 4-1 with 14 ER.

        Sabathia made 14 starts against the AL East, with a +61 run differential excluding NYY. TBR and BAL are the 3rd best offense in the Central; TOR is 2nd, BOS is 1st by a country mile. Sabathia made his most starts against BOS, which has a 116 wRC+ and a +138 run differential. They walk more, . Sabathia went 1-4 with 22 ER.

        Please indicate where WAR accounts for this difference in “strength of schedule”.

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      • cwendt says:

        Or ERA-, for that matter.

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    • Cliff Lee's Changeup says:

      Easy, the real question is why did CC get so few votes. Compare LOB% and BABIP and one can easily see Verlander has had a lot more luck this season. The additional edge in FIP, X-FIP and the fact the he has been dealing with an awkward 6-man rotation gives the impression CC is undervalued here.

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      • jake says:

        Putting the BABIP difference all on luck is misguided, especially considering CC’s superior defense (compared to what the Tigers have been putting behind Verlander).

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  6. TK says:

    Editing note: Pineda got the majority of the votes (12/21)

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  7. Matt H says:

    Confused about how Espinosa got ZERO votes. I mean, Kimbrel’s been dominant and all, but I figured someone would vote for the rookie leader in WAR. I guess not.

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    • Tom B says:

      Pitcher WAR. Tee Hee.

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    • Navin says:

      I think the consensus on Kimbrel as ROY suggests that while Espinosa has certainly been good, great even, for a rookie, Kimbrel’s been on — and I believe this is the scientific term — “some next shit.”

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    • JT Grace says:

      I am more shocked that Freddie Freeman didn’t get any votes than I am that Espinosa didn’t get any votes. Espinosa is hitting .238/.324/.420……a lot worse than Freddie’s .281/.351/.452.

      In any event, Kimbrel does deserve the award.

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    • Trotter76 says:

      Espinosa had 16 HR’s at the all-star break, and, incl. his 2 this week, has 5 since. He’s batting .232 with a .310 OBP since the break. I think Espinosa’s award was making the all-star team, as he’s crashed back to earth since then. No ROY for you!!

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    • jim says:

      could be because espinosa isn’t very good.

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    • mw says:

      had the same reaction. If FG believes in its stats, then you would think that Espinosa would at least merit a few votes. Currently, he leads Kimbrel in WAR by .4, not an insignificant margin. Moreover, FG writers are constantly telling us that relievers are not very valuable. My guess is that the result has more to do with how these players were perceived coming into the year rather than their actual performances. (See jim’s analysis-free “he isn’t any good” comment below)

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  8. Vin says:

    Surprised no one voted for Ackley, not even Dave. That’s who I’d pick.

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  9. Tom B says:

    Ellsbury is so overrated it’s ridiculous. Downfalls of WAR are becoming glaringly obvious. When Gardner makes the Top25 with a .260 BA and no power… you know something is wrong with the speed guys WAR numbers.

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  10. Dekker says:

    Klaassen really voted Bruce Chen for Cy Young. God bless you, sir.

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  11. newsense says:

    No love for of Joey Votto? He’s tried with Braun for second in WAR and leads the NL in WPA for the second year in a row (repeatable skill?)

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    • phoenix2042 says:

      true. kind of an under the radar amazing season. maybe his lack of HR compared to kemp and braun hide his value, even though his OBP is nuts.

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  12. thalooch says:

    i think this is a pointless exercise until the season is over, especially with the mvp races being so close. At a glance this mostly reads like a WAR leaderboard.

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    • GiantHusker says:

      As it should.

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    • phoenix2042 says:

      maybe that’s because WAR tends to correlate very well with the best players in the league. maybe not in this exact order, but guys who place high in award races tend to have some performance to back it up. not always the absolute best performance, but at least enough to get a nice place near the top of the WAR leaderboards. would you rather the authors/voters simply ignore WAR or any kind of statistical or performance based leader board and simply vote on gut feeling?

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  13. phoenix2042 says:

    AL MVP and CY: Verlander
    NL MVP and CY: Hallday
    AL ROY: Pineda
    NL ROY: Kimbrel

    can you imagine an all pitchers awards ballot? Won’t happen, but that would be fantastic.

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    • Blueyays says:

      Almost happened back in ’68 (year of the pitcher). Gibson and Maclain doubled up, and Stan Bahnsen (!?!) was the AL ROY. If not for Johnny Bench, it would have happened, as the NL second-place finisher was Jerry Koosman.

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  14. Marc Hulet says:

    I voted for Trumbo for a few reasons… It came down to him and Pineda for me and I went with the everyday guy. He’s probably going to hit 30 homers as a rookie, and there are only 20 guys in the majors this year that have met or surpassed that mark. That’s pretty big, legit power. Plus, all reports have him as a very good defender, so he’s not a one-trick pony. If he can mature enough as a hitter to get his walk rate up to even 6-7% then he could have a nice future ahead.

    As for Sabathia vs Verlander, the numbers are so similar you really could go either way and come out with a worthy winner.

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    • ettin says:

      Additionally he has 9 steals… He moves well for his size and his defense at 1B is above average. He really deserves more credit than he is getting and I hope that he either wins ROY or is in the top 2.

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      • Josh says:

        Come on. Ok, ROY is one thing, but arguing that Trumbo is ever going to be good is ridiculous.

        Among qualifying 1B – Trumbo is LAST in OBP. wOBA he’s above Loney and below Carlos Lee. The guy is also 25. He’s not going to ‘mature’ as a hitter and nearly double his BB% rate.

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      • HPJoker says:

        Lets point and laugh at Josh

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  15. DonCoburleone says:

    Wow the ROY voting really surprised me. I think Pineda and Kimbrel are the right choices, but not a single vote for Eric Hosmer or Freddie Freeman?

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    • ecp says:

      Yeah, I’d vote for both of them over several guys who did get votes – Trumbo, Lawrie, Jennings, Beachy. People will cite WAR on Hosmer and Freeman, but both are downrated because of their dWAR, which is a horrible measure for first basemen.

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      • Paul says:

        Surprised this dead-on comment took so long into the comments. Lawrie, whose defense has been widely panned to the point where some still think he’ll have to move to the OF, has a huge positive dWAR, while Hosmer, whose defense is lauded far and wide, has a huge negative. Lawrie was basically Jesus Guzman.

        This particular vote is really embarrassing for FG. Lawrie essentially got a cup of coffee and won based solely on an unreliable and probably fatally flawed WAR component. The BBWAA is laughing, and toasting their long-term outlook.

        Hosmer will win this award because baseball writers will see that Hosmer was moved to cleanup over a month ago, is being pitched around, and has completely dominated during that time. Someone here will mock the BBWAA for their ROY vote for Hosmer based on WAR, setting a new high water mark for unintentional irony.

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      • Paul says:

        I mean on Lawrie, got votes… not won. Although Pineda’s limp to the finish line will keep him from receiving the award when people who watch baseball cast their votes.

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      • keyser soze says:

        It’s really kind of funny you make a comment about “those who watch baseball” casting their votes, supposedly for your preferred award candidate – Hosmer – because you hate Lawrie and his defense sucks because you read it somewhere.

        Apparently you don’t watch much baseball yourself because anyone who has actually watched Lawrie play knows how good his defense at third base has been. Anyone still believing he will need to move to the OF in the near future is wrong.

        As for Hosmer, I’d have no serious complaint with him winning, or Trumbo or Pineda for that matter. I haven’t seen Hosmer enough to rate his defense overall – although he did make errors when I did see him play so his defensive rating may be legit. I’ve seen Trumbo make some great plays. All of the candidates have arguments for and against, this award does not have a clear winner so voting will probably be close.

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  16. Jay says:

    You mean FG writers are allowed to have an opinion beyond the fwar leaderboard? Why?

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    • jim says:

      well dave cameron sure doesn’t feel like varying that much. so much for WAR not being all you should use…

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      • juan pierre's mustache says:

        i mean, with 21 people voting, you would expect a few would line up with WAR just coincidentally, and i imagine that in the absence of good reasons to think WAR is off in any specific case you would expect most saber writers to end up voting with it. just because it can be wrong doesn’t mean it always is

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      • jim says:

        it just seems awfully hypocritical for the FG staff to, in almost every case, vote the WAR leader as the winner of the respective concerned award right after the “official position” fiasco

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  17. sam spade says:

    WHY ARE STATS RUIN BASEBALL? I CANT FUCKING BELIEVE ANYONE WOULD TAKE THESE BASEMENT DWELLING ASSHATS SERIOUSLY. HERP DERP THESE NUMBURS SHOW DAT THIS PLAYER SUX WHILE THAT PLAYER WITH A SHITTIER BATTING AVERAGE IS TEH WIN! FUCK YOU SABERMETRICIANS FOR RUINING A SPORT I LOVE. THE HISTORY OF THE GAME NEEDS TO BE PRESERVED, AND THAT IS JUST BY GOING OUT THERE AND SMELLING THE GRASS WHILE HITTING SOME BOMBS INTO THE UPPER DECK. GOD BASEBALL WOULD BE SO MUCH FUCKING BETTER WITHOUT MATH GEEKS AROUND TO RUIN IT.

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  18. jim says:

    where’s jonah keri’s vote? for that matter, what happened to him at all? he hasn’t written here since 8/8

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  19. Jonathan Aicardi says:

    I’m pretty surprised Bautista went over Ellsbury. Bautista seems like the “stathead” pick to make given how he led in WAR most of the year, but even that fails with Ellsbury now leading the pack. He’s not as heavy with the bat as Bautista but he is the leader of a successful team and offers a much wider array of skills. It’s like, would you rather have the greatest bat or the guy who was great at everything?

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    • Eric says:

      It all depends on the offensive gap between your theoretical greatest bat and 5 tool player. In this specific case, I think Bautista has built a big enough gap to offset Ellsbury’s speed and defense. It’s not like Bautista is a slouch in other categories either.

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      • joe says:

        Ellsbury is NOT a 5 tool player… why in the world does everyone just use an athletic defender with power and 5 tool player interchangeably?.

        Or perhaps I’m underestimating Ellbsury’s cannon of an arm?

        ESPN not too long ago were talking about how Crawford and Elsbury were two of the top 5 tool players in the game (Crawford at best is a 4 tool player, and depending on how you view his power, he might be a 3 tool player)

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      • Jeff says:

        Who is a 5 tool player nowadays? Longoria? He has okay speed, but I don’t know if it’s “plus”. Obviously his BABIP is keeping his average down this year.

        I hear Kemp’s name thrown around, but he definitely doesn’t have the glove. Definitely at least average though.

        A-Rod doesn’t have the speed. Neither does Tulo.

        Maybe CarGo? I don’t really watch him play, so I can’t really comment. He passes the “look at said player’s fangraphs page for a moment” test though.

        There certainly aren’t as many as there have been in the past.

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      • Steve says:

        If he starts to produce with the bat then maybe Heyward. Justin Upton? He’s not particularly fast but Jay Bruce could have double digit steals.

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      • Eric says:

        I used the phrase “theoretical tool 5 tool player” for a reason. Whether Ellsbury is a 2, 3, 4, or 5 tool player was immaterial to the point I hoped to make. In my opinion Bautista’s offensive performance trumps any argument that Ellsbury is more valuable because he is the more well rounded player.

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    • jake says:

      Fear of UZR fluctuations.

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  20. Chris says:

    I feel like this is fairly close to the way things will actually shake down. If I had to guess, I’d say:

    Granderson – AL MVP
    Verlander – AL Cy Young
    Hellickson – AL ROY

    Braun – NL MVP
    Kerhsaw – NL Cy Young
    Kimbrel – NL ROY

    For all the exposure WAR has had among mainstream writers in regard to the MVP and Cy Young awards, for some reason I feel like they’ll fall back on more traditional stats for ROY, and Hellickson’s 13-10, 2.90 season seems like something for which they’d vote.

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  21. Hurtlocker says:

    WAR is obscure and ill defined, even the two major stats sites (fangraphs and Baseball Reference) differ in the value. I like it when it makes Willie Mays look like the greatest baseball player ever (and he was) but I hate it when it makes Bautista look like a great player when he’s not. The traditional stats and the traditional attitudes will make the choices, which is not a bad thing.

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  22. Tim says:

    Why is “narrative” a bad word? Baseball is a leisure activity for 99.9999999999999999999999% of the world. Let’s denigrate interesting/compelling stories about a GAME.

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  23. cs3 says:

    Shocked that Granderson didnt get a single vote, and equally shocked that Kershaw only got three 1st place votes

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    • bawfuls says:

      I’m less surprised by Granderson being omitted by the FG staff, but I really don’t understand how it can be so lopsided in favor of Halladay over Kershaw.

      Is it really just as simple as “he leads in (FG) WAR (because of FIP) and therefore he wins” or what? Even the FG glossary page for FIP says it’s a better predictor than descriptor. Shouldn’t other metrics come into consideration for an end-of-season award like the Cy Young?

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    • scrumothy, esquire says:

      I think it’s just a small sample size issue… if there were 46 fangraphs voters instead of 23, I’m sure the Kershaw/Halladay split would look more normal, and Granderson would get some votes.

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  24. SeanP says:

    Hmm, I’m surprised that Ogando and Britton didn’t get any votes, while Hellickson got two.

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    • joe says:

      Or how Hellickson got votes over Ivan Nova (in addition to Ogando and Britton). I know there’s an aversion to wins, but Nova’s got better advanced #’s than Hellboy. I’m surprised to see ERA having that much weight on this site for some votes, and not so much for others…

      I can understand both outlooks but it’s interesting to see the inconsistent application of these outlooks over different awards.

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    • Adam says:

      Ogando is not a rookie. Service time.

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  25. Rufio Magillicutty says:

    This is merely a public masterbation session to fWAR

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  26. Jess Lemont says:

    MR. AY- tA-Tn (K)B r(E) a(M) u(P)N for MVP(s)

    -or-

    (R)m(Y)a(A)t(N)t b(Kemp)raun

    *So, okay. I think they both need to win, because the similarities will make this impossible. True, we have not witnessed Ryan’s first season without Fielder.
    But, like Kemp, Ryan isolates himself and his talent in much the same way a pitcher looks at fip.

    They can find ways around some of the worst offensive environments.

    Braun-Kemp, (MrAyTaTn)

    They win the thing!

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  27. Paul says:

    I’m probably missing something here, but in all the Halladay for CY/MVP chat that I’ve seen, I’ve not noticed anyone pointing out that his HR rate is unusually low compared to his carrer and say last year (same team)

    Is it the case that Halladay is ‘lucky’ that fWAR counts his lucky HR rate in 2011 whereas Verlander (or Kerhaw etc..) is shit out of luck because it is deemed he has no effect on his hit rate.

    Thats not to say that I’m not worried that Verlander’s GB rate is low and he won’t sustain quite the low hit rate going forward, iI just i think he deserves (at least some) credit for it this year

    So with fWAR having CC = Verlander, and every other advanced stat preferring Verlander, and the fact that he has a great shot of a triple crown, i don’t see how you can pick CC for the AL CY without it being some kind of ‘contrarian attention seeking pick’

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  28. William says:

    I’m sure more people would vote for ellsbury after his monster final week, even if the red sox collapsed and missed the playoffs

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