So, we’re at that time when summer slowly turns to fall, when the breeze would be a little bit chillier if I didn’t live in southern California, and when the sportswriters of America “choose” a “most” “valuable” “player”. Some would say that a non-unanimous victory for Albert Pujols would be something less than a brutal crime against humanity. I disagree. Here’s why Pujols doesn’t just win the race, he destroys it:
1) He dominates the NL in nearly every relevant offensive category. He is second to Chipper in OBP at .453, leads the league with a pornographic .631 slugging percentage, and has a lot of batting average and RBIs, if you care about stupid stats. If you like decent stats, he leads the NL by 13 Runs Created and leads the league in batting wins and offensive winning percentage. Basically, he’s a monster at the plate.
2) He is the best defensive first baseman in the game, and among the top defenders in baseball. Pujols has committed only five errors (another stupid stat), which is tied for best among NL 1B qualifiers. He leads the league in revised zone rating and is tied for third in out of zone plays (both of the people who have more OOZ plays than Albert have significantly worse numbers in their zone, indicating erratic defense). Pujols has saved heaven knows how many errors at first base. It’s not often that the best bat in the league is also the best glove in the league.
3) If you believe in stupid stuff like “intangibles” (which are always then made tangible through nonsensical analysis), Pujols finishes first there too. On a team that was supposed to win 70 games, Pujols performed well enough to keep the team in contention through mid September. Pujols is widely acclaimed as one of the hardest workers in baseball and is an amazing influence in the community. He’s one of the best baserunners in the game. Despite hitting for outstanding power, he’s one of the toughest strikeouts in the league. Basically, if you like to define value properly, Pujols wins in a walk. If you like stupid stuff, Pujols wins that too. So why is it that at least half of these morons who call themselves “writers” will vote for someone else? We’ve got a few other candidates in the mix: Ryan Howard, Lance Berkman, Chase Utley, C.C. Sabathia, and Manny Ramirez. Let’s take those in turn.
RYAN HOWARD
OK, so he’s got a nice smile and craps inner city ballparks. The only argument for Howard over Pujols is his power: nobody hits for more power than Ryan Howard (or so the legend goes). But has anybody checked the numbers? He does have twelve more dingers and thirty more RBI. However, a much better measure of power is isolated power, which is calculated by subtracting batting average from slugging percentage. This shows you how hard the batter hits the ball when he hits it, eliminating all those nasty times when he doesn’t. Here’s a shocker: Howard’s IsoP is .284, Albert’s .283. They’ve got exactly the same power. The difference is Pujols provides that power a whole lot more often, crapping doubles while Howard’s crapping cheeseburgers. And how would you compare the non-power elements of Howard’s game to those same element’s of Albert’s? Show yourself out.
Q: How do you turn Ryan Howard into Albert Pujols?
A: Add twenty walks, seventeen doubles, and thirty one hits. Turn lousy defense into the best defense in the league. Turn a useless baserunner into one of the best. Subtract eighty plate appearances and seventy pounds.
LANCE BERKMAN
This is a thinking man’s argument. Lance Berkman is one hell of a player, and Ryan Howard is not fit to carry his jock (at least in 2008). Berkman finishes a bit behind Pujols in all of the defensive metrics. The problem is that Berkman is still giving up thirty points of OBP and seventy points of SLG. He’s a good player, a great player even, but a touch behind Albert in every way, and he plays the same position. Lance has a great case as the second best player in the league. He is not the best.
CHASE UTLEY
Utley’s offense lags well behind Albert: he’s giving up seventy points of OBP and a hundred points of SLG despite a much better home ballpark. The only real argument for Utley is that he has more positional value, which is indisputable. He might well be the best defensive second baseman in the NL, which is an outstanding point in his favor. However, it isn’t enough to make up a whopping advantage in Albert’s offensive numbers. Think of it this way: the offensive difference between Albert Pujols and Chase Utley is pretty much the same as the difference between Chase Utley and Kelly Johnson. Playing second base doesn’t make that go away.
C.C. SABATHIA
Good night, this is a stupid argument. But I’ll crush it anyway. Albert Pujols is sixty eight runs better than the league average hitter. Over his time in the National League, Sabathia has been about thirty four runs better than the NL average pitcher. Over the whole season, Sabathia has been about fifty runs better than the average pitcher. Albert wins easily…..oh crap. I forgot to mention that Albert is also the best defensive player at his position. And the baserunning. And everything else.
MANNY RAMIREZ
OK, so he’s been great for the Dodgers. Over the whole season, he’s been fourteen runs worse than Albert compared to the league average. Game over. And you want to compare their defensive value? Maybe you think Manny stabilizes a clubhouse while Albert destroys one? Well, I guess that’s an empirical question…..I don’t even know how you’d evaluate that…..