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10.22.2008 10:13 am

Albert Pujols wins Sporting News Award (update)

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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TOWER GROVE — Gathering award-season momentum, Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols was elected as Sporting News’ 2008 Player of the Year in a vote of 314 fellow players, the magazine announced Wednesday morning. To capture why Pujols was selected over other major leaguers, like Ryan Howard or Josh Hamilton, the magazine turned to the baseball person who knows him best.

His biggest fan. His boss.

Cardinals manager Tony La Russa.

“He is the classic complete player,” La Russa writes for Sporting News, in an edition that will reach bookstores and newsstands tomorrow. “I’ve never had a player who has a better attitude and understanding about why you’re in uniform. It’s a competition. Albert comes to the ballpark and he gets ready for the competition and to contribute in a complete way.”

Albert Pujols wins second postseason award in as many days.

Albert Pujols wins second postseason award in as many days.

Earlier this week, Pujols received the Players Choice Award as the NL Outstanding Player, and he is a finalist for two more Players Choice awards that will be announced this week. One of those is the Player of the Year award. The other finalists for that award are Manny Ramirez and Cliff Lee. While there was growing discussion about Ramirez’s candidacy for the NL MVP — especially aftering supercharging the LA Dodgers to a division title after his arrival — there was considerable sentiment that Ramirez, like Milwaukee ace CC Sabathia, would lack support because they didn’t spend the entire season in the National League.

Pujols chief competition for the award seems to be St. Louis native Ryan Howard, who led the majors in home runs and RBIs while also powering the Phillies to the NL East title.

Pujols numbers are known by heart now. He finished second in the league in batting. He hit 37 home runs and drove in 116 RBIs. He had 114 at-bats with runners in scoring position. He topped the majors in slugging percentage. Yadda. Yadda. Yowza. He is also a favorite to win his second Gold Glove at first base.

In a release from Sporting News editor Jeff D’Alessio, Sporting News states that Pujols “is on a trajectory to finish his career among the best to play the game.”

It continues:

At age 28, he has more homers (319) than Hank Aaron did at that age (298), a higher career batting average (.334) than Mickey Mantle (.307), more RBIs (977) than Frank Robinson (896) and more hits (1,531) than Lou Gehrig (1,350).

“You don’t want to disrespect other people, so to me, if you say Albert will be in the conversation of the greatest players to ever play the game, that’s enough,” La Russa writes for the magazine. “He doesn’t have to be the best, or two or three. All you need to know is, when you have that conversation of the greatest players of all time, Albert Pujols will be one of the guys you talk about.”

Pujols wins the Sporting News award for the second time in his career, and it is the eighth time a Cardinal has won the award since 1944. As far as Cardinals, only Stan Musial and Pujols have won the award more than once. The previous Cardinals to win it:

1944 … Marty Marion

1946 … Stan Musial

1951 … Stan Musial

1964 … Ken Boyer

1971 … Joe Torre

1974 … Lou Brock

2003 … Albert Pujols

-30-

99 comments

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Pujols is deff one of the best players in the league but here is a list of players who are just as good if not better

Manny, Ortiz, Bay, ARod, Sorino, H Rameriz, Reyes, D Lee, Crawford, Hamilton, Howard, Wright, Pedroia, Youk, Tex, Vlad

— Wade
3:36 pm October 22nd, 2008

Just curious Wade, but do you also think that A-Rod is overrated?

Why or why not?

— Craig
3:37 pm October 22nd, 2008

I’m really thinking of trading in my Honda for a Yugo….

— bullera
3:39 pm October 22nd, 2008

Is that Mira Sorino? Absolutely hotter than Albert!

— bullera
3:40 pm October 22nd, 2008

Mantle was a career .298 hitter.

— Gman
3:43 pm October 22nd, 2008

I am guessing that if you follow Wade’s logic that A-Rod is over rated too.

— Tekstorm
3:44 pm October 22nd, 2008

Congratulations, Wade. You admitted that you didn’t bother reading the hard statistical evidence that refuted your thesis that Albert Pujols has not had a career equal to that of the amazing Jason Bay. You are, by your own admission, willfully ignorant.

KMac, you’re right that this is a distraction, but why shame on us? Who gives a crap if people want to banter with random ignoramuses?

Also, when you say “certain aspects,” I’d say that’s a pretty small subset: pitching, game-calling (catching), maybe middle infielding.

What else is there? At the plate, it’s Pujols, A-Rod, a chasm, then everybody else. Howard hits more HRs, but that’s primarily because he gets more pitches to hit, which in turn is because pitchers know he’ll pretty much swing at anything. It’s a cost/benefit thing: If a pitcher knows he’s significantly more likely to strike out than hit safely (and four times more likely to K than homer), they’re apt to take their chances and go for the whiff, as opposed to a guy who has three times more hits than strikeouts (that would be our Albert).

Howard’s strengths as a hitter are remarkable, but his numbers are inflated, somewhat perversely, thanks to his liabilities. To bring this full circle: Ryan Howard, in fact, is essentially Jason Bay with an extra scoop of power. (Bay strikes out a lot, too.)

— Bill
3:51 pm October 22nd, 2008

Interesting that Wade chooses to mention Alfonso Soriano again as a player who is “just as good if not better” than Albert Pujols

first fact to note Soriano(1/7/76) is FOUR years older than Pujols (1/16/80)

Soriano(10 seasons) .282/.329/.518/.847 (116 OPS+)
797 runs - 270 HR - 705 RBI

Pujols(8 seasons) .334/.425/.624/1.049 (170 OPS+)
947 runs - 319 HR - 977 RBI

Soriano is as good or better? HOW?

— Craig
3:53 pm October 22nd, 2008

baseball-reference.com

Check it out, Wade. All the information you need about every player, well, ever.

Knowledge is not something to avoid.

— Bill
3:57 pm October 22nd, 2008

I’m a huge Pujols fan, so obviously my opinion is biased and I realize but when I read Wade’s comments, but when I read

“[“but if I have to pick a guy to put at the plate in the bottom of the 9th in game seven of the World Series”] Sorry Brian but I have to go with Big Papi or Alfonso Soriono on that one.”

that really made me chuckle… Soriano struck out swinging on 3 pitches to record the final out in the Dodger’s sweep of the Cubs in this year’s NLDS.

http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/gameday/index.jsp?gid=2008_10_04_chnmlb_lanmlb_1&mode=gameday

Nice choice, Wade.

And as for Papi? Game seven vs Rays, 0-3 with 2 SO and 4 LOB.

— Wade_is_a_Moron
4:00 pm October 22nd, 2008

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