Rookie of the Year: Evan Longoria and Geovanny Soto
The American League and National League Rookies-of-the-Year will be announced later today. Before that occurs, here are the results of the voting by Fake Teams readers.
The winner in the AL is Evan Longoria of the Tampa Bay Rays and the NL winner is Geovanny Soto of the Chicago Cubs. Neither is a surprise, and both won handily over the competiton.
What will be interesting to see how how different the Faketeams results are further down the ballot.
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NL MVP, Cy Young & ROY Leaders
This is the week I am going (want?) to start giving more credence to the standings of a player's team when considering the MVP barring just sick efforts by a player on a non-contender. With the standings too close to call. To see last week's American league results, visit Rotojunkie. The top three was quite a surprise.
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Nl MVP, CY Young & ROY leaders
Rotojunkie has taken over the dynamic feature started by Baseball Happenings that draws on the collective knowledge of the blogging community to provide intelligence on which players are currently considered the leading contenders for the big three baseball awards - MVP, Cy Young and ROY - for the American and National leagues. This week's NL voting should be available on Friday at lunch time.
NL Cy Young:
1. Ben Sheets Milwaukee Brewers
2. Tim Lincecum San Francisco Giants
3. Edinson Volquez Cincinnati Reds
NL MVP:
1. Chase Utley Philadelphia Phillies
2. Albert Pujols, St. Louis Cardinals
3. Dan Uggla, Florida Marlins
NL ROY:
1. Geovanny Soto Chicago Cubs
2. Kosuke Fukudome Chicago Cubs
3. Jair Jurrjens, Atlanta Braves
These essentially qualify as my mid-season winners. I don't like giving Top 3 votes to non-play-off teams in CY Young and MVP voting, but Lincecum and Volquez are so much better statistically than Cole Hamels of Philadelphia, Carlos Zambrano of Chicago and Brandon Webb of Arizona that I had to put them in the top 3. For my own cognitive dissonance, I hope this does not remain so.
MVP also is tough because there are players on sub-.500 teams leading the NL. Chipper Jones in Atlanta and Lance Berkman in Houston are having better overall seasons than Chase Utley, but I can't look past Chippers' time off or Berkman's less challenging defensive position.
At the last minute, I dropped Reds' 1B Joey Votto and replaced him with Atlanta Braves' SP Jair Jurrjens. With a top 10 NL ERA and eight wins so far, Jurrjens is more valuable on the open market than a 1B with an .800 OPS would be.
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NL MVP, CY Young and ROY Leaders
Rotojunkie has taken over the dynamic feature started by Baseball Happenings that draws on the collective knowledge of the blogging community to provide intelligence on which players are currently considered the leading contenders for the big three baseball awards - MVP, Cy Young and ROY - for the American and National leagues. This week's NL voting should be available later today/early tomorrow.
NL Cy Young:
1. Edinson Volquez Cincinnati Reds
2. Tim Lincecum San Francisco Giants
3. Ben Sheets Milwaukee Brewers
This is the first time I have left Diamondback's starter Brandon Webb entirely out of the voting. He has not pitched well for a couple weeks while Volquez and Lincecum continue to do so. The Wins are a big difference, but, at this point in the season, the ratios have enough innings behind them that an excellent winning record can overcome a couple Wins difference.
NL MVP:
1. Chase Utley Philadelphia Phillies
2. Lance Berkman Houston Astros
3. Dan Uggla Florida Marlins
This one was more challenging than either of the other two votes because Utley has been slumping and doesn't have the 1.000+ OPS of several other hitters. Heck, he doesn't even have the highest OPS on the Phillies. (Pat Burrell does.) I stayed with Utley based on his season's work and his team's perch atop the NL East.
Sure, the Houston Astros wouldn't be ahead of the Reds without Lance Berkman, but finishing 6th in the NL Central rather than 5th is a difference without significance.
NL ROY:
1. Geovanny Soto Chicago Cubs
2. Joey Votto Cincinnati Reds
3. Kosuke Fukudome Chicago Cubs
The NL ROY voting remains unchanged. I gave consideration to Atlanta Braves pitcher Jair Jurrjens, but decided Fukudome's OBP is a more integral part of his team's 1st place standings than Jurrjens efforts are for his team's 4th place standings. Unlike Berkman and the Astros, the Braves would still be ahead of the Nationals even if Jurrjens never pitched for them.
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NL MVP, CY Young and ROY Leaders
Rotojunkie has taken over the dynamic feature started by Baseball Happenings that draws on the collective knowledge of the blogging community to provide intelligence on which players are currently considered the leading contenders for the big three baseball awards - MVP, Cy Young and ROY - for the American and National leagues. This week's NL voting should be available later today/early tomorrow. Here are the results from last week's AL voting .
Here is the way I voted. My biases for voting in the Cy Young and MVP awards lean towards those hitters and pitchers playing on contending teams. ROY determination is not tied are strongly to his team's record, but good rookies on expected paly-off contenders will get additional consideration.
NL Cy Young:
1. Brandon Webb Arizona Diamondbacks
2. Edinson Volquez Cincinnati Reds
3. Tim Lincecum San Francisco Giants
I sat down ready to switch my 1st place vote from Webb to Volquez. This meant ignoring Webb's 11 Wins for a 1st place team, but a closer look kept me from doing it. Webb has pitched 15 more innings and more than half the walks. Brandon Webb is the better pitcher.
NL MVP:
1. Chase Utley Philadelphia Phillies
2. Lance Berkman Houston Astros
3. Albert Pujols St. Louis Cardinals
This was an easy choice. Chase Utley plays for a 1st place team and the more challenging defensive position. I don't think it is even close right now.
NL ROY:
1. Geovanny Soto Chicago Cubs
2. Joey Votto Cincinnati Reds
3. Kosuke Fukudome Chicago Cubs
The Chicago Cubs, like the Tamp Bay Rays last week, get their 1st place in the standings props from the voters in Rookie-OF-The-Year. Fukudome's OBP contribution keeps in ahead of starting pitchers like Jair Jurrjens of Atlanta, John Lannnan in Washington and Hiroki Kuroda in Los Angeles.
I wouldn't be surprised to see Reds' 1B Joey Votto out-produce all NL rookies by season's end. Will it be enough to take the award from Geovanny Soto though?
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National League CY Young, MVP and Rookie Of The Year Leaders
Here are my votes in Baseball Happenings' Rotojunkie in-season NL voting for the Big Three Awards. The total votes should be available later this week.
NL CY Young:
1. Brandon Webb, Arizona Diamondbacks
2. Edinson Volquez, Cincinnati Reds
3. Carlos Zambrano, Chicago Cubs
The third place vote was the hardest. It came down to Zambrano or Tim Lincecum. Lincecum has more strikeouts and a better ERA, but I went with Zambrano for three reasons. 1.) He has allowed just one more run in 10.2 more innings 2.) he has pitched more innings and 3.) The Cubs are in 1st place
NL MVP:
1. Lance Berkman, Houston Astros
2. Albert Pujols, St. Louis Cardinals
3. Chipper Jones, Atlanta Braves
This strays from my general rule of selecting MVPs from play-off teams, but the leading hitters from the 1st place clubs pale in comparison to these top three. Chase Utley, Hanley Ramirez and Derreck Lee just don't compare to the overall production of Berkman, Pujols and Jones.
NL ROY:
1. Geovany Soto, Chicago Cubs
2. Jair Jurrjens, Atlanta Braves
3. Joey Votto, Cincinnati Reds
The first two choices were easy. Soto has an OPS of .970 at a demanding defensive position, and Jurrjens is 6th in ERA as a rookie. The final spot came down to Joey Votto and Kosuke Fukudome. I went with Votto because his OPS is 46 points higher than Fukudome's OPS. While the .407 OBP that Kosuke has given the Cubs is exactly what the team needed, I couldn't look past the middle-infielder-esque .420 OPS from the right fielder.
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Top Position Players By VORP
There has certainly been an outage of offense in the American League this season. The questions of why and for how long remain unanswered. Here is a list of the Top 3 players by position using Baseball Prospectus' VORP statistic. Note how much difference there is just between the top player and the third-best one. This would lead me to believe a Stars & Scrubs versus a balance approach may be the best fantasy strategy. Agree?
Also, note how poorly the OF VORP leaders due relative to the other position players. The top VORP is lower. This supports the contention that the OF is "shallow" relative to the other positions. However, the drop-off is not as dramatic. There could be more depth in the OF relative to other positions. This supports a strategy that focuses on acquiring the top positions player at the expense of OFs. Agree?
Finally, look at the top three DHs. This helps epxlain the drop in AL production this season. That extra hitter has struggled mightily. I bet the answer to this question goes a ways to explaining the production outage in the AL.
| NAME | TEAM | POS | AVG | OBP | SLG | VORP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brian McCann | ATL | c | 0.331 | 0.393 | 0.606 | 21.6 |
| Geovany Soto | CHN | c | 0.314 | 0.414 | 0.601 | 20.2 |
| Ryan Doumit | PIT | c | 0.35 | 0.382 | 0.573 | 12.4 |
| Lance Berkman | HOU | 1b | 0.382 | 0.463 | 0.763 | 44.7 |
| Albert Pujols | SLN | 1b | 0.351 | 0.479 | 0.602 | 31.1 |
| Kevin Youkilis | BOS | 1b | 0.32 | 0.386 | 0.584 | 20.4 |
| Dan Uggla | FLO | 2b | 0.323 | 0.402 | 0.695 | 32.2 |
| Chase Utley | PHI | 2b | 0.31 | 0.387 | 0.63 | 27.8 |
| Brandon Phillips | CIN | 2b | 0.299 | 0.342 | 0.531 | 16.5 |
| Rafael Furcal | LAN | ss | 0.366 | 0.448 | 0.597 | 26.1 |
| Hanley Ramirez | FLO | ss | 0.304 | 0.392 | 0.515 | 23 |
| Miguel Tejada | HOU | ss | 0.34 | 0.373 | 0.518 | 20.6 |
| Chipper Jones | ATL | 3b | 0.41 | 0.482 | 0.687 | 37.8 |
| David Wright | NYN | 3b | 0.287 | 0.388 | 0.52 | 16 |
| Aramis Ramirez | CHN | 3b | 0.285 | 0.406 | 0.513 | 14.4 |
| Ryan Ludwick | SLN | rf | 0.336 | 0.418 | 0.733 | 24.8 |
| Josh Hamilton | TEX | cf | 0.328 | 0.375 | 0.599 | 23.8 |
| Nate McLouth | PIT | cf | 0.298 | 0.382 | 0.602 | 23.1 |
| Matt Holliday | COL | lf | 0.324 | 0.414 | 0.528 | 19.5 |
| Carlos Quentin | CHA | lf | 0.294 | 0.408 | 0.588 | 19 |
| Pat Burrell | PHI | lf | 0.271 | 0.413 | 0.542 | 16.4 |
| Milton Bradley | TEX | dh | 0.317 | 0.425 | 0.566 | 19 |
| Hideki Matsui | NYA | dh | 0.297 | 0.381 | 0.458 | 12.5 |
| David Ortiz | BOS | dh | 0.249 | 0.353 | 0.469 | 11.8 |
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Will Geovany Soto Be The #1 Ranked Catcher In 2009 And Other Baseball Notes
With David Cook's bio on American Idol in the background, I checked the evening's boxscores and noted the number of HRs hit. The AL had gone deep seven times with one game yet to start. The NL had gone deep eleven times with two games yet to begin.
Despite #3 hitter Derek Jeter's 0-4 with two ks, the New York Yankees managed to eke out a 2-1 win over the 1st place Tampa Bay Rays behind an excellent pitching effort by Mike Mussina. In 6.1 innings, he allowed just five hits while striking out five and walking just one. Mussina is now 6-3 with a 3.99 ERA.
2006 MVP Ryan Howard hit his 8th HR of the season against Braves' lefty Royce Ring. Did his previous 0-3 mark the nadir of his 2008 season?
C.C. Sabathia shutout the Oakland A's on his way to completely eradicating any memory of his 2008 start. Another eleven Ks against just two walks also makes sure no memory of that start remains.
With a quarter of the season gone, Chicago Cubs' rookie catcher has left no doubt that his 2007 breakthrough seasonw as not a fluke. He his his 7th HR of the season and drove in RBIs # 27, 28 and 29. The only question is how close to Victor Martinez he comes in next season's catcher rankings.
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NL Cy Young, MVP, and ROY leaders
Baseball Happenings dynamic feature that draws on the collective knowledge of the blogging community to provide intelligence on which players are currently considered the leading contenders for the big three baseball awards - MVP, Cy Young and ROY - for the American and National leagues enters its 4th week. The NL voting will be available here .
Here is the way I voted. My biases for voting in the Cy Young and MVP awards lean towards those hitters and pitchers playing on contending teams. ROY determination is not tied are strongly to his team's record, but good rookies on expected play-off contenders will get additional consideration.
NL Cy Young:
1. Brandon Webb, Arizona Diamondbacks
2. Edinson Volquez, Cincinnati Reds
3. Carlos Zambrano, Chicago Cubs
8-0 on a 1st place team is a lock. Coming in second is the ERA and Strikeout leader, Edinson Volquez, and closing fast is Chicago Cubs' ace Carlos Zambrano. I'd expect Zambrano to surpass Volquez shortly, but, until then, I'll just marvel at what Volquez has accomplished.
NL MVP:
1. Lance Berkman, Houston Astros
2. Chase Utley, Philadelphia Phillies
3. Hanley Ramirez, Florida Marlins
Lance Berkman leads the NL with a 1.235 OPS. Add sixe stolen bases and you get the best hitter in the NL. Chase Utley offers a 1.089 OPS and an NL-leading 13 HRs. He just noses out Florida Marlins SS Hanley Ramirez as a result of those HRs. Albert Pujols just missed with his .500 OBP, bhut I can't get too excited because of the mere 7 HRs.
NL ROY:
1. Geovanny Soto, Chicago Cubs
2. Kosuke Fukudome, Chicago Cubs
3. Joey Votto, Cincinnati Reds
Chicago Cubs' catcher Geovanny Soto takes over the top spot with a 1.003 OPS. Teammate Kosuke Fukudome falls to second because Soto's postion and SLG outpace Kosuke's excellent .481 OBP. Reds' 1B joey Votto noses out Braves' SP Jair Jurrjens thanks to history-making 3HR/1Sb day. He is also drawing some walks which should serve to keep his OBP respectable. In a weaker field, Dodgers' 3B Blake DeWitt would get more props with a slash stat line of 323/398/479 - after doing worse between Hi A & AA last season!
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