Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Astros’ Verlander, Mets’ deGrom win second Cy Youngs

CY YOUNG VOTING

- By Jake Seiner

NEW YORK >> Justin Verlander has a second AL Cy Young Award — and a clear path paved toward Cooperstow­n. Verlander beat out teammate Gerrit Cole in balloting by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America revealed Wednesday night. Verlander got 17 first-place votes to 13 for Cole, who became a free agent after the season.

Mets ace Jacob deGrom won the NL prize for the second straight year. He received 29 of 30 firstplace votes, becoming the 11th pitcher to win Cy Youngs in consecutiv­e years. He and Verlander are the 20th and 21st players to win the award multiple times.

Verlander, 36, won his first Cy Young in 2011 with Detroit, when he was also named MVP. Since then, he’d been a runner-up three times.

“The adversity I went through puts a new perspectiv­e on everything,” he said. “I mean, still would’ve liked to have won a couple of them.”

The case between Verlander and Cole was tight. Cole had more strikeouts (326) and a lower ERA (2.50), but Verlander threw 10 2/3 more innings and won more games. They are the first set of teammates to finish 1-2 in AL voting — it’s happened five times in the NL.

Verlander and Cole pitched Houston to the World Series, where Cole continued to dominate while Verlander faltered. The right-hander lost twice to the champion Washington Nationals — a letdown not factored in voting that concluded before the postseason began.

He’s hoping to take another run at a title — with Cole — next season.

“I know that Gerrit had a great time playing here and I know he would like to return, if possible,” Verlander said. “But that is now on Gerrit and his family and people above me.”

DeGrom is in special company as a repeat NL winner, joining Sandy Koufax, Greg Maddux, Randy Johnson, Tim Lincecum, Clayton Kershaw and Max Scherzer.

“It was a dream to play this game and a dream to win one Cy Young,” deGrom said. “To win back to back was a goal. It’s hard to explain. You set these goals, but it almost doesn’t feel real yet.”

The 31-year-old led the NL with

255 strikeouts and posted a 2.43 ERA. His resume was bolstered by his durability — deGrom totaled

204 innings, compared to 182 2/3 for runner-up Hyun-Jin Ryu and

172 1/3 for Scherzer, the Nationals ace who finished third.

A year after taking the award despite just 10 victories — fewest ever by a starting pitcher — deGrom earned 11 wins with a Mets team that’s struggled to support him.

After signing a $137.5 million, fiveyear deal to remain with New York shortly before opening day, deGrom wasn’t so dominant early in the season. He got hit around in April and May, even allowing seven runs in an outing against the last-place Marlins.

The embarrassm­ent in Miami was a wake-up call for the gritty deGrom. Following that loss, he went 8-3 with a 1.89 ERA over his final 23 starts.

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