Cape Breton Post

A pitcher for NL MVP?

The numbers make compelling cases for deGrom, Scherzer and Nola

- BY JAKE SEINER

Jacob deGrom, Max Scherzer and Aaron Nola are going pitch for pitch in the NL Cy Young Award race.

Problem is, that prize might not do the trio justice. Not according to baseball’s advanced analytics.

With 2 1/2 weeks left in the season, it’s time to ask: Should one of those three could be MVP?

“It’s the best player in the league,” deGrom said. “If that happens to be a pitcher and they can win it, then it’s well deserved.”

There’s no debating deGrom’s dominance, even if it’s not translatin­g into wins for the struggling New York Mets. Scherzer’s awards-season resumé is more traditiona­l, bolstered by league-leading totals in victories and strikeouts.

And Nola is right there, too, in a breakout season with the Philadelph­ia Phillies.

But an MVP? For three pitchers who are going to miss the post-season? Some don’t think pitchers should even be considered for the award, though they’ve won 25 times before.

The stats devised by sabermetri­cians suggest it would be a swing and a miss not to consider a pitcher – certainly not in a year when the crop of NL hitters just doesn’t add up.

The NL has produced at least one hitter worth six wins above replacemen­t (WAR) each season since the Chicago Cubs’ Hack Wilson topped 1926 at 5.7, according Fangraphs.

This year’s group is equally underwhelm­ing, strictly by the numbers. Milwaukee teammates Lorenzo Cain (5.4) and Christian Yelich (5.3) top the

circuit, followed by Arizona’s Paul Goldschmid­t (5.2), St. Louis’ Matt Carpenter (5.2), Chicago’s Javier Baez (4.9) and Colorado’s Nolan Arenado (4.8).

For a catch-all stat like WAR – which measures contributi­ons on offence, defence, baserunnin­g

and pitching – that 0.6 gap from Arenado on up is nearly negligible. Can’t go wrong choosing between them.

But that group is far behind the league’s top pitchers by the same measure. DeGrom leads the NL with 8.1 WAR, and Scherzer, Nola and Diamondbac­ks ace Patrick Corbin are also ahead of the hitters. Over at Baseball-Reference, which has its own WAR formula, Scherzer (9.7) holds the top spot way ahead of Cain (6.3), with Nola, deGrom and Rockies left-hander Kyle Freeland all beating the batters.

It’s unusual, but not unheard of, for a pitcher to lead a league in WAR. By Baseball-Reference’s math, Clayton Kershaw did it when he won NL MVP in 2014, as did Justin Verlander for his AL MVP in 2011. Corey Kluber, Cliff Lee, Roy Halladay and Zack Greinke have each done it once over the past decade, too. But in the age of ever-tighter pitch counts and innings limits, it’s not as common as it once was and figures to keep getting tougher.

Of the 25 pitcher MVPs, 14 were awarded before the Cy Young Award was introduced in 1956.

Prior to Kershaw and Verlander, the previous pitcher winner was reliever Dennis Eckersley in 1992, and the prior starter to take MVP was Roger Clemens in 1986.

Marlins manager and 1985 AL MVP Don Mattingly was the runner-up to Clemens that year – and wasn’t thrilled about it.

“Hard for me as a player, to kind of know I play 160 games or whatever it is and then somebody has 30, 35 starts,” Mattingly said.

He’s changed his mind since becoming a manager. Doesn’t hurt he was leading the Dodgers when Kershaw won MVP.

“If you’re talking about them as Cy Young and MVPs, they’re guys that are basically taking care of your bullpen that day, stopping any kind of streaks, adding to streaks - a guy you know you can count on,” Mattingly said.

Unless a hitter separates from the pack over the final couple weeks, one of those three just might be an MVP.

“It’s been done before,” Mets manager Mickey Callaway said. “They should be considered.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? New York Mets starter Jacob deGrom delivers a pitch.
AP PHOTO New York Mets starter Jacob deGrom delivers a pitch.

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