TRIPLE DOUBLE
Cabrera clear pick for AL MVP if he wins Triple Crown. But what if he doesn’t?
Let’s answer the big question right away: If Miguel Cabrera wins the Triple Crown, he should be the American League’s MVP. To lead the league in batting average, homers and runs batted in and not be named MVP simply does not feel right.
Cabrera, the Detroit Tigers third baseman, has a chance at the first Triple Crown since Carl Yastrzemski in 1967. If he does it, history will remember Cabrera as the standout player of 2012. We know he does not run or field as well as others. But to give the MVP to another player seems to be overthinking the issue.
The Los Angeles Angels’ Mike Trout is a breathtaking talent, capable of amazing feats wherever he is on the field. We do not need statistics to appreciate Trout’s many skills. Watch him for a few games, and it is obvious Trout holds a wide lead in Wins Above Replacement, the numerical measure of a player’s all-around contribution to his team. Trout does it all.
Cabrera does not do it all, and nobody is claiming that the Triple Crown categories perfectly define greatness. But if he does lead in all three, this is what it would mean: Cabrera hit the most balls over the fence, brought the most runs in to score and had the highest percentage of hits to at-bats — while becoming the first player in 45 years to lead in all three. That has to count for something.
History is one of baseball’s charms and, for a lot of fans, a reason to care so much about the game. Giving Cabrera the MVP seems to be the appropriate way to honour that achievement — if, indeed, he does it.
If Cabrera wins only two of the categories, he joins a much less select group. Since Yastrzemski’s feat, there have been 47 instances of a player leading his league in two of the Triple Crown statistics. In the absence of a truly historic season, the award should go to Trout, who is so close to Cabrera in OPS (combined on-base and slugging percentage) that his edge on the bases and defence puts him over the top.
Even if he misses the Triple Crown, Cabrera will be considered, and last week in Detroit, his teammates stumped for his candidacy. Justin Verlander, who won the award last year, wore a T-shirt Monday endorsing Cabrera for MVP.
“It just means you’re the best play- er in your league that year, and he’s been one of the best players — and consistently, the best player in baseball — for the last seven or eight years,” Verlander said. “I know it goes year by year, but I think he deserves credit for that.”
Don Kelly, a Tigers utility man, said Cabrera deserved recognition for shifting positions to accommodate Prince Fielder. Established stars do not always switch willingly.
“To move from first base to third base, I think, has been lost in the whole thing,” Kelly said. “That’s not an easy transition in itself, and then to put up even better numbers playing a different position this year? You’re talking about most valuable player — and to do that for a team, that’s valuable in itself.”
Cabrera is nowhere near as skilled defensively as Trout or Adrian
“He’s been one of the best players for the last seven or eight years.” JUSTIN VERLANDER TIGERS PITCHER, ON TEAMMATE MIGUEL CABRERA
Beltre, the Texas Rangers’ extraordinary third baseman, who should finish among the top five for the MVP. But Cabrera has played the way the Tigers hoped. “I did not expect him to be Brooks Robinson,” manager Jim Leyland said. “But what I expected, I got.” What we talked about was outstanding hands and a very good arm. We didn’t talk about super range or anything. We didn’t paint some rosy picture that he’ll be fantastic. We told it like it was, and that’s how it’s worked out.” In most cases, like the Trout-Cabrera comparison, the performance of a player’s team should be largely irrelevant. Voters tend to see it differently, placing greater emphasis on candidates who lead their teams to the playoffs. But value is value, whether it helps a team win 95 games or 75, and the MVP goes to an individual, not a team. Sometimes, though, team performance is hard to ignore, and Pittsburgh’s Andrew McCutchen suffers greatly because of it. McCutchen had a breakout season, and in July was the favourite to be National League MVP. But McCutchen has been ordinary over the last two months as his team has wheezed to the finish, continuing a streak of losing seasons that started in 1993. Two catchers — San Francisco’s Buster Posey and St. Louis’ Yadier Molina — deserve strong consideration. Excelling at the plate while playing such a demanding position is harder than any non-catcher realizes, and both have been dominant forces in lineups that withstood major losses this season.
Posey’s offensive numbers are better than Molina’s, and Posey plays his home games in a pitcher’s park. But Molina is a superior defender who throws out almost half of all potential base stealers. (Posey throws out fewer than 30 per cent.)
Fortunately, voters do not have to distinguish between Posey and Molina, at least at the top of the ballot. That spot belongs to Ryan Braun, the Milwaukee Brewers left fielder who won the award last season. Braun has played even better this year, and while the Brewers are unlikely to make the playoffs, that is mainly the fault of their late-inning relief, not Braun.
Braun faced a 50-game suspension at the start of the season because of a failed drug test last October. He fought the punishment and won, to Major League Baseball’s chagrin, and some voters could choose to take a stand against him.
But to do so would be to violate the spirit of the award. The MVP can be interpreted various ways — statistics, contributions to a winning team, historical significance — but, irrefutably, the award signifies one season, and one season only. Braun has been active all season, without any positive drug tests.
He is essentially a neutral defensive player, but an exceptional baserunner (30 steals in 37 attempts through Monday) who entered the weekend as the NL leader in home runs, RBIs, total bases and OPS.
Some people might always view Braun with suspicion because he has never fully explained what caused the positive test. He chose instead to let his play speak for him, and it has revealed him, once again, as the dominant force in the NL.