pwootten wrote:All of this debate raises the question of how valuable is a great player to a losing team? Andre Dawson in 1987 is the best example. The Cubs finished last in the NL East with a 76-85 record, 18.5 games out. We can be fairly sure they would have lost considerably more games without him, but last is last.
This is a good case for the discussion, Pwooten, as it really well showed the two competing--and relatively legitimate--views on the matter. For me, Dawson's production was so awesome on a team without much production from anyone else, it really could be legitimately argued that time that the Cubs would have lost significant more games without him. And, while last
is last, he kept it from being an ungodly last.
That being said, that is a rare occasion, and in most cases there will be a viable excellent player on a winning team whose production significantly contributed to his team's winning season, and thus provided more significant value to it, and would beat out a player's year similar to Dawson's.
Ozzie Smith finished second in the '87 MVP race. He had a .392 OBP for a Cardinal team that won the East by just three games. Would the Cardinals have won without the Wizard? That's where the subjective part of picking an MVP comes in. If I had a vote in 1987, Ozzie would have been my guy. I feel he was more valuable to the Cards than Dawson was to the Cubs.
As to Ozzie and subjectivity, I agree with you here as well. Firstly, there is subjectivity involved in
all of the value judgments in MVP voting, and the subjective/objective value judgments of offense vs. defense and production for a winning team vs. production for a losing team came into play. So, in essence there were two legitimate positions:
1. Dawson's tremendous offensive production, and solid defense, outweighed Ozzie's sublime defense and solid offense that helped a winning team win.
2. Smith's sublime defense and decent offense helping a winning team win outweighed Dawson's tremendous offense and solid defense for a team that hardly won at all.
To me, both are legitimate positions that can be supported by logic, statistical evidence, and the voting rules. It just shows the great spectrum of legitimate subjective insights involved in MVP voting that isn't as present in the voting for the other awards.