Showing posts with label NL Stan Musial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NL Stan Musial. Show all posts

Thursday, October 28, 2010

BBA Announces Hamilton, Votto Win Stan Musial Award



HAMILTON, VOTTO TAKE HOME STAN MUSIAL AWARD


The Baseball Bloggers Alliance concluded their award season today by naming the best player in each league for 2010. When all the votes were tallied, two men were comfortably ahead.

Texas outfielder Josh Hamilton, who hit 32 home runs and fashioned an OPS of 1.044 while leading the Rangers into the playoffs, won the award in the American League. Hamilton received sixteen first place votes and 261 points overall, which put him ahead of his nearest competitor, Detroit first baseman Miguel Cabrera, by roughly 70 points.

In the National League, helping Cincinnati to an unexpected divisional title paid off for first baseman Joey Votto. After a season where he cracked 37 home runs and posted a 1.024 OPS, Votto also received sixteen first-place votes toward his total of 252 points. He also denied St. Louis first baseman Albert Pujols the chance to win back-to-back BBA awards. Pujols was selected as MVP by the BBA in 2009, but placed second with 197 points in this year’s voting.

Winners of other Alliance awards also received votes in the Musial balloting. In the American League, Walter Johnson winner Felix Hernandez received 21 points, while Goose Gossage selection Rafael Soriano had a single mention. On the senior circuit, Walter Johnson winner Roy Halladay placed fourth in the voting with 101 points.

The complete voting results are as follows (first place votes in parenthesis):

American League
Josh Hamilton, Texas (16) 261
Miguel Cabrera, Detroit (4) 188
Robinson Cano, New York 158
Jose Bautista, Toronto (1) 146
Adrian Beltre, Boston 107
Evan Longoria, Tampa Bay (1) 102
Paul Konerko, Chicago 65
Carl Crawford, Tampa Bay 56
Joe Mauer, Minnesota 50
Shin-Soo Choo, Cleveland 44
Felix Hernandez, Seattle 21
Vladimir Guerrero, Texas 13
Justin Morneau, Minnesota 12
Delmon Young, Minnesota 10
Cliff Lee, Seattle/Texas 8
CC Sabathia, New York 8
Alex Rodriguez, New York 7
Clay Buchholz, Boston 4
Mark Teixeria, New York 3
Jon Lester, Boston 2
Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle 2
Nick Swisher, New York 2
Jim Thome, Minnesota 2
Kevin Youkilis, Boston 2
Brett Gardner, New York 1
David Ortiz, Boston 1
Rafael Soriano, Tampa Bay 1

National League
Joey Votto, Cincinnati (16) 252
Albert Pujols, St. Louis (3) 197
Carlos Gonzalez, Colorado (1) 118
Roy Halladay, Philadelphia (1) 101
Adrian Gonzalez, San Diego 98
Troy Tulowitski, Colorado 98
Ryan Zimmerman, Washington 93
Matt Holliday, St. Louis 84
Aubrey Huff, San Francisco 32
Adam Wainwright, St. Louis 17
Ubaldo Jimenez, Colorado 16
Josh Johnson, Florida 16
Dan Uggla, Florida 16
Jayson Werth, Philadelphia 16
Ryan Braun, Milwaukee 13
Prince Fielder, Milwaukee 10
Ryan Howard, Philadelphia 9
Martin Prado, Atlanta 7
Jason Heyward, Atlanta 6
Rickie Weeks, Milwaukee 5
David Wright, New York 5
Adam Dunn, Washington 4
Kelly Johnson, Arizona 4
Andres Torres, San Francisco 1

The Baseball Bloggers Alliance was formed in the fall of 2009 to encourage cooperation and collaboration between baseball bloggers of all major league teams as well as those that follow baseball more generally. As of this writing, the organization consists of 233 blogs spanning all 30 major league squads as well as general baseball writing.

The BBA is organized under a similar structure as the Baseball Writers of America, where blogs that follow the same team are combined into “chapters” and only two votes from the chapter on an award are counted. The blog chapters that are focused on general baseball were allowed two votes as well, which they could use both on the same league or split between the two leagues.

Chapters generally followed one of two methods when casting their ballot. Either representatives of the chapter were given the ballots for voting or a “group ballot” was posted, accounting for both of their votes.

Ballots are posted on the respective blogs and for this award, were tabulated on a 13-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 point scale for first through tenth place. In the interest of transparency, links are given below for the ballots. Chapter affiliation is in parenthesis. Those chapters that decided on the group method are noted with an asterisk.

American League
Camden Crazies (Baltimore)*
The Bottom Line (Boston)*
The Tribe Daily (Cleveland)*
Motor City Bengals (Detroit)
Switch Hitting Pitchers (Detroit)
One Royal Way (Kansas City)*
Twinkie Talk (Minnesota)
Seth Speaks (Minnesota)
Bronx Baseball Daily (New York)*
Contract Year (Oakland)
Rise of the Rays (Tampa Bay)
Infield Fly (Toronto)
The Blue Jay Hunter (Toronto)
Advanced Fantasy Baseball (Fantasy)*
Victoria Seals Baseball Blog (Other)*
Misc. Baseball (History)*
Blogging From The Bleachers (General)*

National League
Blog Red Machine (Cincinnati)
Marlin Maniac (Florida)
Marlins Diehards (Florida)
Feeling Dodger Blue (Los Angeles)
The Eddie Kranepool Society (New York)*
Dugger’s Corner (Philadelphia)
Where Have You Gone, Andy Van Slyke? (Pittsburgh)*
The Outfield Ivy (St. Louis)
Pitchers Hit Eighth (St. Louis)
Friar Forecast (San Diego)*
22gigantes (San Francisco)*
Advanced Fantasy Baseball (Fantasy)*
Victoria Seals Baseball Blog (Other)*
Misc. Baseball (History)*
Ron Kaplan’s Baseball Bookshelf (Miscellaneous)*
Blogging From The Bleachers (General)*


Prior Winners: 2009: Joe Mauer, Minnesota; Albert Pujols, St. Louis

The official website of the BBA is located at www.baseballbloggersalliance.com. The BBA can be found on Twitter by the handle @baseballblogs and by the hashmark #bbba. Members of the BBA may be heard at Blog Talk Radio every Tuesday night with their call-in show, BBA Baseball Talk, which may also be downloaded as a podcast from iTunes. For more information, contact Daniel Shoptaw at founder@baseballbloggersalliance.com.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

BBA NL Stan Musial Award Ballot

Baseball's award season is upon us and we finally have a vote that counts for something this year. We're proud members of the Baseball Blogger Alliance and they've been kind enough to give us ballots. The only thing the BBWAA ever gave us was Jimmy Rollins as the 2007 NL MVP. It's not like Albert Pujols was worth 2 more wins and had a .429 OBP or anything. Today we'll be unveiling our NL Stan Musial ballot for player of the year. Note: I completely ignored RBI.

1. Joey Votto
Votto and Albert Pujols put up almost identical stats. Votto had the slightest of edges in WAR (wins above replacement) with a 7.4 to Pujols' 7.3, on base percentage with .424 to .414, slugging percentage with .600 to .596 and even UZR (ultimate zone rating) with 1.6 to 1.5. Pujols ended the season with five more home runs, 42 to 37. The two were almost interchangeable first basemen in the National League. Votto had 19 more points of wOBA (weighted on base average) than Pujols which cancels out my other tie-breaker. The other tie-breaker, you ask? Votto is only worth 8 Scrablle points compared to the 14 for Pujols. I'm a scientist.

2. Albert Pujols
↑ ↑ ↑

3. Ryan Zimmerman
Zimmerman continues to fly under the radar in Washington because of hot prospects like Sthephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper but he's been the face of the franchise for years. He hit 25 home runs and .307/.388/.510 as the best defensive third baseman in baseball (13.9 UZR) and is still just 26-years-old. His 7.2 WAR was just a shade behind that of Votto and Pujols but, unfortunately, he's destined to finish in MVP voting like Teddy Roosevelt does in the Presidents race. Okay, better than Teddy but still...

4. Roy Halladay
My NL pitcher of the year. And to be honest, I'm not entirely sure he isn't the NL MVP.

5. Troy Tulowitzki
Tulo was a beast down the stretch hitting 15 homers and .303/.366/.754 in September. He finished the regular season with a .315/.381/.568 line and a 6.4 WAR. The Rox let me down in the playoff race but I can't hate on Buster Posey. Also cool about the Colorado Rockies, they serve Denver omelets throughout the stadium at kiosks.[citation needed]

6. Matt Holliday
Holliday was a great Robin to Pujols' Batman for the Cardinals hitting .312/.390/.532 for a 6.9 WAR.

7. Adam Wainwright
My second best NL pitcher of the year.

8. Carlos Gonzalez
Cargo had a little variation in his home stats (.380/.425/.737) compared to his line away from Coors Field (.289/.322/.453). Woof. Sure the splits are ugly but he still finished with 34 home runs and a .336/.376/.598 line. That's roughly what I put up last week in my backyard Wiffle Ball league.

9. Ubaldo Jimenez
My third place NL pitcher of the year.

10. Brian McCann
There are plenty of good candidates for the final place on this ballot. While McCann's 5.3 WAR and .269/.375/.453 line weren't tops in the league, he plays a premium position and was the offensive force on his team aside from 20-year-old rookie Jason Heyward. Who says I never give Atlanta any love? Put your hands down, all of my Atlanta based friends.