The Lud: First an All-Star, now … MVP?
TOWER GROVE — Several innings before Ryan Ludwick launched his fourth home run in three games and even before he extended his hitting streak to seven games, the resemblance between him and the early-season favorite for MVP leapt off the page.
Before each game, the Cardinals’ media relations staff puts out the two teams’ starting lineups on one sheet of paper. By each position player’s name is his triple-crown stats. On Sunday night, these two sets of three numbers were strikingly similar:
.293, 27, 76
.303, 26, 77
The first set belonged to Philadelphia second baseman Chase Utley, whose dash to the league lead in homers and substantial RBI total (76) have the pundits pegging him as the third different Phillie to win the MVP in three seasons. The second belongs to All-Star Ludwick, who … well hasn’t found those three little initials attached to his name all that often — except when talking about this team’s MVP.
Ludwick was an All-Star before he was an everyday player. Now that he’s an everyday player — and thriving in the cleanup spot — is he an MVP?
The Cardinals’ breakout outfielder hit four homers in the three-game series against Philadelphia, going 7-for-11 with a 1.818 slugging percentage. He won the NL Player of the Week award Monday. Since the All-Star break, he’s hit .387 with six home runs, a .694 slugging percentage and 13 RBIs. The surge has erased the taste from a .228 average in June, and it has put him squarely among the league leaders in categories used to define Most Valuable Player.
“I had a rough June,” Ludwick said. “I felt like I made some adjustments. It’s going to be a constant grind. They’ve got guys out there scouting you day in and day out, trying to find ways to get you out. They might find a hole. You have to find a way to cover it up. It’s part of the game.”
Ludwick leads the National League in slugging entering play today (.614) and is top 10 in batting average (.306), on-base-plus-slugging (.998, OPS), home runs (27) and RBIs (78). Pull out the “Advanced Placement” stats and Ludwick is top 20 in Win Shares (15) and top 15 in Runs Created (81.5). By now, you probably know where I’m going with this.
The last several years, this blog has fiddled around various ways to define the V in MVP. One of the exercises that I think works well to focus the MVP discussion is an MVP Aggregate approach (MVPag), or The Musial Theorem, as we called it. The process is simple: Settle on the statistics that best define an MVP, mostly offensively, and then add individual player’s rank within those stats. The lower the score the better.
It reveals who has excelled in many areas — from slugging to scoring — and reveals the most well-lopsided hitter in the league.
Previous examples are available here:
Always trying to refine and improve on the framework of the MVPag, but it’s useful in this discussion, too. Does Ludwick belong in the MVP conversation?
For the sake of simplicity, I selected seven statistics: batting average (BA), slugging percentage (SLG), on-base percentage plus slugging (OPS), runs created (RC), home runs (HR), RBIs (RBI) and Win Shares (WS). Rifling through those numbers, the same 15 names started coming up consistently, with a couple others — Atlanta’s Brian McCann and Philadelphia’s Pat Burrell — mixed in. I mapped where they ranked and added up their MVPag.
A few examples (rank):
PLAYER: BA … SLG … OPS … RC … HR … RBI … WS
Ludwick: .306 (10)/.614 (1)/.998 (5)/81.5 (12)/27 (5t)/78 (6t)/15 (19t)
Utley: .292 (23)/.575 (8)/.947 (8)/91.0 (4)/28 (4)/77 (8)/18 (7)
Albert Pujols: .344 (3)/.597 (3)/1.051 (2)/93.7 (2)/21 (19t)/67 (19t)/19 (4t)
Ryan Howard: .242 (76)/.502 (22)/.832 (30)/69.9 (28)/31 (2)/96 (1)/12 (50t)
Lance Berkman: .337 (4)/.609 (2)/1.047 (3)/99.4 (1)/22 (14t)/76 (9)/24 (1)
It’s a rough, incomplete look, to be sure. But it offers a snapshot of the MVP discussion. The aggregate rank — the sum of the hitter’s rankings — separates the hitters who excel in one category (say, home runs) while rewarding the hitter that has the Musial Effect — quality performance in a variety of categories. (Note: If a hitter ranked 50 or higher in any one category, the rank was considered 50.)
And, when tallied, these numbers make a few things clear: The usual suspect is near the top of the MVPag — and should his team remain in contention probably the MVP sweepstakes, too — and Ludwick belongs. At least to the same extent that Utley does.
The MVPag for the 15 players selected:
- Lance Berkman, HOU … 36.0
- Albert Pujols, STL … 54.5
- Ryan Ludwick, STL … 62.0
- Chase Utley, PHI … 62.0
- Ryan Braun, MIL … 64.0
- Matt Holliday, COL … 69.5
- Carlos Lee, HOU … 80.0
- Chipper Jones, ATL … 95.0
- Adam Dunn, CIN … 111.0
- David Wright, NYM … 114.5
- Hanley Ramirez, FLA … 118.0
- Dan Uggla, FLA … 129.5
- Nate McLouth, PIT … 130.0
- Ryan Howard, PHI … 209.0
Offer your take, your criticism, your suggestions below in the comment sections.
***
For the Farmniks out there, P-D contributor Nate Latsch has this update on Jacob Turner, a local prep pitcher who is climbing into the national draft picture in the same way Holt’s Tim Melville and Highland’s Jake Odorizzi last year. Turner, about to be a senior at Westminster, went 5-2 with a 1.45 ERA last spring.
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Derrick Goold said he was going to Mizzou for capital-J journalism, but after growing up in the Time Zone Baseball Forgot he was really drawn to MU sitting between two major-league cities. Goold joined the Post-Dispatch in 2001 after working for The Times-Picayune and Rocky Mountain News, covering sports from LSU to NHL and every level of baseball in between.
Luddy might have decent stats without AP in the lineup, but there is no way he is getting pitches like he has in this series. His homerun last night came on a pitch that AP would never get, a FB right down the middle.
I agree that Utley’s production is way more valuable, because of his position. This guy might go down as one of the greateast power hitting second baseman of all time. He is so strong, and his swing is so compact. Utley is fun to watch.
I know that Luddy, Ank, and Glaus are all producing, but if the Cardinals are ever going to maximize AP’s full potential then they need a bat that can change a whole lineup. I realize that there are few of these guys around, but there are a few guys that have to be pitched similar to the way teams pitch to Albert. Maybe the answer is within the system? Could Joey Bombs become that guy or Raz could certainly fit the role. But if the Cardinals are going to maximize Albert’s potential then they need a guy that can change a whole lineup. Also, Albert is back to pulling everything!!! Everything is down and away, just take it the other way AP.
Another problem, of course, is that Pujols and Ludwick may split some votes, which would allow someone like Utley to win on a plurality. Kind of like 1979, when Bruce Sutter won the Cy Young Award because J.R. Richard and Joe Niekro split the starting pitcher votes, both having won 20 games (or thereabouts; I’m too lazy to look it up right now) for Houston that year.
couldnt agree more his story is truly amazing and I find myself rooting for him every day Go Luddy!
Didn’t Ludwick only hit like .190 when Pujols went on the DL for about 12-13 games? That really should just about kill his chances of winning the MVP.
Why would you essentially double-weight slugging (by including OPS) but not on-base percentage? Is that intentional?
Still waiting for his “regression to the mean” ala Jayson Stark
Yeah, MVP is a farce. Best example, in 2006 Pujols had 9 fewer homers and 12 fewer RBI’s than Ryan Howard, but had 130 LESS strikeouts AND won the gold glove. Are you telling me that 12 more RBI’s is more important than fielding and striking out 130 fewer times? Absolute joke.
not-arguing philly guy,
yep. it was intentional. ditto with double-counting RBIs. thought it was the way to go. getting on base is swell, but driving in runs and creating runs is the name of the game, right?
dg
I love the double standard in the MVP. When McGwire destroyed the home run record with 70, Sammy Sosa won the MVP because the Cubs made the playoffs and the Cardinals didn’t. In 2006, when St. Louis won the division (admittedly backing in) and the Phillies didn’t make the playoffs, Ryan Howard still won the MVP because he had a few more home runs, as already noted above, and despite Pujols’ huge edge as a defender, baserunner and contact hitter.
This season, if the playoff issue eliminates Berkman, it should again be Albert, hands down. Of course, he won’t win.
Unless a player from a midwest team really stands head over heals over the large market teams on the east and west coast,
or the north side of Chicago. Anyone remember Andre Dawson? Or how Sosa slaughtered Big Mac in the ‘98 voting?