Marcus Stroman has his AL MVP pick: ‘Mythical god disguised as an MLB player’
The 2022 American League Most Valuable Player race is perhaps the best race in the history of Major League Baseball.
It’s Aaron Judge vs. Shohei Ohtani. There’s not even a close third.
But former All-Star Marcus Stroman doesn’t even think there is a debate — and he’s not rocking with the overwhelming favorite in Vegas.
“Judge is having one of the most historic seasons of all-time…but how do you not give the MVP to Ohtani?” Stroman tweeted on Tuesday. “What he’s doing has never been done before and may never happen again!”
Stroman added that both Judge and Ohtani are deserving of the award and that “There’s no wrong option.”
But when a fan asked him if Ohtani should “just get the MVP every year,” Stroman kept it straight up.
“If he continues to hit 30+ homeruns and strikeout 200+ hitters a year…then yes he should win the MVP each and every year!” he wrote, arguing that what Judge is doing has been done before — but not Ohtani.
AARON JUDGE DESERVES AL MVP OVER SHOHEI OHTANI, VLADIMIR GUERRERO JR. SAYS
Ohtani is the reigning MVP, winning it unanimously last season after he hit 46 homers — the third most in baseball — and drove in 100 runs with a .965 OPS. He also recorded a 3.18 ERA, which was the eighth-best mark in the AL among pitchers with at least 130 innings thrown.
His offensive numbers have taken a slight hit (34 homers, 95 RBI, .882 OPS), but his average is 18 points higher than last year’s .257. And on the mound, he has gotten much better. He leads the American League with an 11.9 K/9 (second-best in MLB), and his 2.35 ERA is the sixth lowest in baseball.
Those numbers earned him a $30 million deal for 2023, the largest ever for an arbitration-eligible player.
Judge’s Triple Crown run is likely at an end — he’s five points behind Luis Arraez (.315) for the AL lead entering Tuesday night.
But Judge still leads the majors with 61 home runs, which is tied for Roger Maris’ American League record that many consider the true all-time record due to Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa’s links to PEDs. He also leads MLB in on-base percentage, slugging percentage, total bases, OPS+ and runs scored while leading the AL in RBI and walks.
The MVP will be announced in November — the award will only take the regular season into account, which ends Wednesday.
It’s either one of the best offensive seasons we’ve ever seen or, while not the best at either, something we literally have never seen.
Read the full article Here