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Thursday, November 01, 2007

The 2007 Internet Baseball Awards

AL MVP: Alex Rodriguez
AL CYA: C.C. Sabathia
AL ROY: Dustin Pedroia
AL MOY: Eric Wedge

NL MVP: Matt Holliday
NL CYA: Jake Peavy
NL ROY: Ryan Braun
NL MOY: Clint Hurdle

DCW3 * Posted: November 01, 2007 at 05:28 PM | 25 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralBostonClevelandColoradoMilwaukeeNY YankeesSan DiegoAwards

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   1. Cowboy Popup Posted: November 01, 2007 at 07:57 PM (#2602895)
Pretty poor year for AL rookies if a slap hitting mediocre defender with nothing but an empty batting average is the best rookie.
   2. neknhaM yrraL Posted: November 01, 2007 at 08:02 PM (#2602897)
He also has a ring.

There, I beat you all to it.
   3. ekogan Posted: November 01, 2007 at 08:16 PM (#2602905)
He also walks and hits a lot of doubles. He's no Neifi Perez
   4. zoperino,if youre not into the whole brevity thing Posted: November 01, 2007 at 08:21 PM (#2602912)
He also walks and hits a lot of doubles. He's no Neifi Perez

I'll grant you the walks, but in a neutral park he don't hit too many doubles. His away-split this year was .282/.349/.380, with only 14 2B's. Pedroia's "power", such as it is, is a creation of Fenway Park and its friendly environment for high BIP, low-power hitters.
   5. Shock Posted: November 01, 2007 at 08:29 PM (#2602923)
Rafael Betancourt agrees with dzop.
   6. Joe C isn't Posted: November 01, 2007 at 08:30 PM (#2602926)
Pretty poor year for AL rookies if a slap hitting mediocre defender with nothing but an empty batting average is the best rookie.

Just dangling it out there, huh?
   7. Cowboy Popup Posted: November 01, 2007 at 08:38 PM (#2602931)
Just dangling it out there, huh?

What fun would this place be if I didn't?
   8. Ryan Posted: November 01, 2007 at 09:02 PM (#2602962)
Kansas City's version of Ryan Braun got nine first place votes for Rookie of the Year. Nice!
   9. Vaux, A.B.D. Posted: November 01, 2007 at 09:12 PM (#2602973)
Those people didn't do well on their SRAs.
   10. Jack of Arcades Posted: November 01, 2007 at 09:14 PM (#2602974)
Chipper was robbed!

Well, not really, but he had such a fantastic year. Highest EqA in baseball (non-Bonds division) and 3rd in the NL in VORP. Sure, Matt Holliday was worth more when you consider defense, but Chipper should be better than ninth.
   11. BeanoCook Posted: November 01, 2007 at 09:18 PM (#2602980)
Pretty poor year for AL rookies if a slap hitting mediocre defender with nothing but an empty batting average is the best rookie.


Quite funny. True. The NL had a banner year for rookies.

Chipper was robbed!

Well, not really, but he had such a fantastic year. Highest EqA in baseball (non-Bonds division) and 3rd in the NL in VORP. Sure, Matt Holliday was worth more when you consider defense, but Chipper should be better than ninth.


Agreed. Chipper is quickly becoming a forgotten 1st ballot HOF 3rd basemen. If you haven't checked out his resume lately, take a look. He might start making a case for best 3B ever, if not, certainly top 3.
   12. andrewberg Posted: November 01, 2007 at 10:04 PM (#2603008)
Ryan Braun totaled 666 first place votes for NLROY. Beware. Ned Yost may not be the most evil thing in a Milwaukee uniform after all.
   13. Joe C isn't Posted: November 01, 2007 at 10:04 PM (#2603009)
What fun would this place be if I didn't?

Well, I took your Cano bait, didn't I? :-)
   14. Marmaduchscherer Posted: November 01, 2007 at 10:16 PM (#2603016)
Just dangling it out there, huh?

Option J?
   15. Jurgen Posted: November 01, 2007 at 10:58 PM (#2603061)
He might start making a case for best 3B ever, if not, certainly top 3.


Holy crap! Did Marty McFly and his DeLorean accidentally destroy all trace of Mike Schmidt, Eddie Matthews, George Brett, and Brooks Robinson? Doc Brown said that could happen!
   16. zoperino,if youre not into the whole brevity thing Posted: November 01, 2007 at 11:00 PM (#2603063)
Rafael Betancourt agrees with dzop.

Right, and Yadier Molina is a slugger.
   17. Bicycle RepairMan Posted: November 01, 2007 at 11:02 PM (#2603069)
Think we have had this discussion before.
Chipper is ahead of Robinson if you grade his defence as average to slightly below average, not horrendous like BPro makes it out to be.
On rate stats, he is ahead of Schmidt, but he still has to hit his "decline" phase. Having the best OPS by 3B for 2 years running helps.
He is already on par with Brett/Matthews, and how you rank them depends on who you grew up watching.
Still, thats pretty select company.
   18. IronChef Chris Wok Posted: November 01, 2007 at 11:09 PM (#2603074)
Dustin Pedroia also had 7 SB and 1 CS, compared to some anonymous 5-tool all-around star second basemen in the AL East. We'll call him RXXXXXXX CXXX. That guy with his blazing speed had 4SB and 5 CS.
   19. Jurgen Posted: November 01, 2007 at 11:22 PM (#2603082)
Larry is only ahead of Schmidt if you believe the NL in 2007 is the same kind of scoring environment as the NL in 1985... not to mention the whole issue of the former's durability plus his mediocre glovework.

A-Rod's transition to 3B is also going to gum the whole thing up, too.
   20. BeanoCook Posted: November 02, 2007 at 12:39 AM (#2603109)
Larry is only ahead of Schmidt if you believe the NL in 2007 is the same kind of scoring environment as the NL in 1985... not to mention the whole issue of the former's durability plus his mediocre glovework.


Jones is more durable than given credit for. I realize this subject is entirely what have you done lately. But Chipper had +600 PA in 2007. He also went 9 straight seasons with +153 games played starting with his first full season in the majors.

2005 and 2006 were his only seasons he missed significant time.

He is starting to make a case for best 3rd basemen of all time as he has entered the top 5-6 grouping.
   21. Jurgen Posted: November 02, 2007 at 02:12 AM (#2603143)
There's Boggs, too.

And if Santo isn't in the HoF I'm not sure you can say Jones a slam dunk first rounder.... or will be five years after he retires and Rodriguez is still playing and Wright, Cabrera, Braun, Zimmerman, Gordon are all still in their (relative) primes.

As for the "controversy"... if Utley doesn't miss those 20 games there's no contest. He'd be as unanimous as Rodriguez in the AL.
   22. DCW3 * Posted: November 02, 2007 at 03:21 AM (#2603155)
Well, not really, but he had such a fantastic year. Highest EqA in baseball (non-Bonds division) and 3rd in the NL in VORP.

Led the league in RCAA and RCAP, too.
   23. Walt Davis Posted: November 02, 2007 at 08:04 AM (#2603188)
I've pointed this out before ... Jones is George Brett.

Through age 35:

Jones: 1895 g (1436 at 3B), 425 doubles, 386 HR, 1296 R, 1299 RBI, 134/43 SB, 307/403/546, 143 OPS+
Brett: 2013 g (1688 at 3B), 488 doubles, 255 HR, 1233 R, 1231 RBI, 161/80 SB, 312/378/505, 142 OPS+

Brett had 1 very good, one outstanding and 3 league average years left in him. He hadn't really been a 3B since 33.

Chipper is about 500 games behind Schmidt & Mathews (nearly 750 behind them as a 3B) and 800 (!) behind Brett. So he needs at least 4 pretty full seasons with minimal decline to catch those guys in career value as a hitter. Schmidt presumably kicks his butt on defense but Brett was no whiz and I've always assumed (just cuz he was a slugger) that Mathews was nothing special with the glove.

Brooks is a whole other beastie and I don't think we can possibly compare them without good historical defensive stats. Boggs I will leave to someone else.

Chipper's certainly in the discussion ... but he's a lot of games behind those guys so can't match their career value. And those guys all had great peaks as well so he makes up little if any there. He's certainly not as bad as BPro says but he's likely not making up any ground on any of these guys defensively. And he's well behind Schmidt and Mathews in games played at 3B and it seems unlikely he'll catch them there. So right now, I don't think you can make an argument for the top 3 all time, though he is getting very close to Brett's career value as a 3B.

Jones vs. Santo is all about the defensive difference too. It's almost certainly not large enough for Santo to beat him on peak (at least anything beyond a few years) but might be enough to roughly equalize them in career value. But when we looked at that last year, they were maybe even so Jones should be ahead even on career value at this point despite the gap in games.
   24. BeanoCook Posted: November 02, 2007 at 04:19 PM (#2603891)
excellent summary.
   25. jwb Posted: November 03, 2007 at 12:28 AM (#2604246)
Pretty poor year for AL rookies if a slap hitting mediocre defender with nothing but an empty batting average is the best rookie.

But look at his age 23 comps. He has a 10% chance of making the Hall of Fame and a 10% chance of rooming with Yogi Berra!
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