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Ehwmatt wrote:It's a tough justify in my book when he only plays in 1/5th of the games. So in a sense, you're right with your little statistic.
But I think the individual wins/margin of winning the division statistic is a bad benchmark. Success in pro sports, especially one with as long a season as MLB, often turns on confidence and swagger (assuming they are at least relatively talented compared to other teams in the league).
Verlander's lights-out pitching this year set the tone for that team. It let everyone else, not the least of which his other starting pitchers, loosen up and play good ball. So I think he contributed far more than 24 wins.
xflajrnylvr wrote:I think its not deserved he choked in the playoffs and like mentioned only played in handful of seasons games
S2M wrote:Rockindeano wrote:Who cares? A Red Sox didn't win. Good.
I'm more concerned with the inconsistency of the criteria, than whether a Red Sock won it or not.....
Rockindeano wrote:S2M wrote:Rockindeano wrote:Who cares? A Red Sox didn't win. Good.
I'm more concerned with the inconsistency of the criteria, than whether a Red Sock won it or not.....
Button the Fuck up, Daisy.
Ok seriously? Ellsbury had nice numbers, but they weren't Jose Bautista numbers to be sure; I knew you would come in here whining that Ellsbury LOST the MVP. Verlander was exceptional. He won it because a position player certainly didn't put up huge numbers to take it away from Justin.
And to the poster who said he "choked" in the playoffs, save it. The award is voted on before the playoffs even start.
S2M wrote:Rockindeano wrote:S2M wrote:Rockindeano wrote:Who cares? A Red Sox didn't win. Good.
I'm more concerned with the inconsistency of the criteria, than whether a Red Sock won it or not.....
Button the Fuck up, Daisy.
Ok seriously? Ellsbury had nice numbers, but they weren't Jose Bautista numbers to be sure; I knew you would come in here whining that Ellsbury LOST the MVP. Verlander was exceptional. He won it because a position player certainly didn't put up huge numbers to take it away from Justin.
And to the poster who said he "choked" in the playoffs, save it. The award is voted on before the playoffs even start.
AGAIN....I do not care that Ellsbury didn't win it. I just want to know exactly WHY verlander won it. What criteria are the voters using?
Enigma869 wrote:I don't have a problem with Verlander winning the MVP, because he was that dominant. That said, Pedro not winning the MVP (especially now that Verlander won it) in 99 was ABSURD!
Verlander - 24-5
Pedro - 23-5
Verlander - 2.40 ERA
Pedro - 2.07 ERA (Which might be the lowest ERA in the past 40 years)
Verlander - 0.92 WHIP
Pedro - 0.92 WHIP
Verlander - 250 Strikeouts
Pedro - An astonishing 313 Strikeouts!
Martinez had the most dominant year that I've ever seen a pitcher have and didn't win the MVP, so apparently some baseball writers have changed their stance on whether or not a pitcher is worthy of MVP consideration.
conversationpc wrote:Enigma869 wrote:I don't have a problem with Verlander winning the MVP, because he was that dominant. That said, Pedro not winning the MVP (especially now that Verlander won it) in 99 was ABSURD!
Verlander - 24-5
Pedro - 23-5
Verlander - 2.40 ERA
Pedro - 2.07 ERA (Which might be the lowest ERA in the past 40 years)
Verlander - 0.92 WHIP
Pedro - 0.92 WHIP
Verlander - 250 Strikeouts
Pedro - An astonishing 313 Strikeouts!
Martinez had the most dominant year that I've ever seen a pitcher have and didn't win the MVP, so apparently some baseball writers have changed their stance on whether or not a pitcher is worthy of MVP consideration.
As good as he was that year, he may have been even better the following year. He had his best ERA+ number that year. As a matter of fact, in all of baseball history, Pedro's adjusted ERA is #1 all time. Amazing.
Enigma869 wrote:
Martinez had the most dominant year that I've ever seen a pitcher have and didn't win the MVP, so apparently some baseball writers have changed their stance on whether or not a pitcher is worthy of MVP consideration.
S2M wrote:
Not to mention those numbers were amassed in the midst of the steroid era.....which makes them all the more incredible.
Rockindeano wrote:Secondly, writers need to ALL settle on a criteria...I say ALL writers, because some writers believe a pitcher should be able to win the MVP while others do NOT think a pitcher is worthy of the award.
jestor92 wrote:If the Tigers didn't have Verlander or if Verlander would've pitched like #3 or 4 starting pitcher the Tigers don't make the playoffs. Verlander was the team's MVP and IMO he was the AL MVP. I think Pedro should've been the MVP when he had that monster year. All those players who didn't win the MVP award like Ellsbury, Bautista, etc., hey that's nice but your teams would've been sitting home if you performed like that or not. You're going to get your Silver Slugger Award (which is the award for the best hitter at each respective position), but the MVP is the player who is most valuable to his team. Verlander was the Tiger's and the AL's MVP this year.
S2M wrote:jestor92 wrote:If the Tigers didn't have Verlander or if Verlander would've pitched like #3 or 4 starting pitcher the Tigers don't make the playoffs. Verlander was the team's MVP and IMO he was the AL MVP. I think Pedro should've been the MVP when he had that monster year. All those players who didn't win the MVP award like Ellsbury, Bautista, etc., hey that's nice but your teams would've been sitting home if you performed like that or not. You're going to get your Silver Slugger Award (which is the award for the best hitter at each respective position), but the MVP is the player who is most valuable to his team. Verlander was the Tiger's and the AL's MVP this year.
Sorry, not buying it....Sox ended up ONE game out. So are you telling me that if the Sox win that 91st game - you would have accepted Ells as the MVP winner? 91 wins = MVP.....90 wins = no MVP? Bogus....
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