- Posts: 78
- Joined: Mon Aug 27, 2012 11:49 am
I think Miguel Cabrera is the best hitter in the game, hands down (Sorry Pujols lovers). I saw him play early in his career in Florida, and being around baseball my whole life (including playing all 4 years in college) I have never seen someone consistently hit the ball as hard as Cabrera. He's really quite spectacular to watch in person.
That being said, I wholeheartedly agree with the Keith Law article and would definitely pick Trout as the MVP. I believe baseball is an individual sport, not a team sport, save a few situations (relays, pickoffs, etc.). At the plate, on the mound, in the field, it's just you and the ball. No one else can help. You don't need someone to pass you the ball, you don't need a lead blocker. It's the collective individual efforts that inevitably resemble a team sport.
You can't say that Cabrera was the reason his team made the playoffs and that since Trout's team didn't make the playoffs, his contributions aren't meaningful. It's not that simple. Cabrera could go 1-4 with a single to drive in the winning run in a 1-0 Verlander shutout, while Trout could go 4-4 with 3 runs scored and 2 RBIs and rob a homerun, but Ervin Santana got lit up or the bullpen blew the lead, and the Angels lose 7-5. That's just a hypothetical, but clearly Trout did a lot more to give his team a chance at winning that game than Cabrera did in his game. That's the bottom line. Trout gave his team a better chance of winning through his total offensive and defensive production than Cabrera or anyone else in the league.
Mike Trout - MVP
P.S. If you look solely at WAR, Robinson Cano is 2nd in the AL and Cabrera is 3rd.
That being said, I wholeheartedly agree with the Keith Law article and would definitely pick Trout as the MVP. I believe baseball is an individual sport, not a team sport, save a few situations (relays, pickoffs, etc.). At the plate, on the mound, in the field, it's just you and the ball. No one else can help. You don't need someone to pass you the ball, you don't need a lead blocker. It's the collective individual efforts that inevitably resemble a team sport.
You can't say that Cabrera was the reason his team made the playoffs and that since Trout's team didn't make the playoffs, his contributions aren't meaningful. It's not that simple. Cabrera could go 1-4 with a single to drive in the winning run in a 1-0 Verlander shutout, while Trout could go 4-4 with 3 runs scored and 2 RBIs and rob a homerun, but Ervin Santana got lit up or the bullpen blew the lead, and the Angels lose 7-5. That's just a hypothetical, but clearly Trout did a lot more to give his team a chance at winning that game than Cabrera did in his game. That's the bottom line. Trout gave his team a better chance of winning through his total offensive and defensive production than Cabrera or anyone else in the league.
Mike Trout - MVP
P.S. If you look solely at WAR, Robinson Cano is 2nd in the AL and Cabrera is 3rd.