Posted on 11/18/2003 11:17:20 AM PST by Sabertooth
11/18/2003 1:07 PM ETBonds wins sixth NL MVP AwardSlugger receives 28 of 32 first-place votes
By Chris Shuttlesworth / MLB.com
SAN FRANCISCO -- Barry Bonds captured his record sixth National League MVP Award and unprecedented third in a row Tuesday, beating out St. Louis' Albert Pujols by a 426-303 point margin. Bonds received 28 of 32 first-place votes, while Pujols received three.
Barry Bonds hit .341 with 45 home runs for the Giants in 2003. (Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP)
The six MVP honors put Bonds far and away in his own class among baseball players, as no other player has won more than three. Bonds is now one of just four athletes in the four major U.S. sports to win an MVP Award six times. The NBA's Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and the NHL's Gordie Howe each won six, while hockey legend Wayne Gretzky captured nine MVP Awards in his sport.
NL MOST VALUABLE PLAYERPlayer 1st Total Bonds 28 426 Pujols 3 303 Sheffield 1 247 Thome - 203 Lopez - 159 Gagne - 143 Helton - 75
Besides Bonds, no other player has won more than three MVP Awards. The three-time winners:
AL Player Years Jimmie Foxx 1932, 33, 38 Joe DiMaggio 1939, 41, 47 Yogi Berra 1951, 54, 55 Mickey Mantle 1956, 57, 62 NL Player YearsStan Musial 1943, 46, 48 Roy Campanella 1951, 53, 55 Mike Schmidt 1980, 81, 86
AL MOST VALUABLE PLAYERPlayer 1st Total Rodriguez 6 242 Delgado 5 213 Posada 5 194 Stewart 3 140 Ortiz 4 130 Ramirez 1 100 Garciaparra 1 99
MORE AL COVERAGE
Rodriguez wins first MVP Award
Delgado second in MVP voting
Posada third in AL race
Stewart places fourth in MVP race
Ortiz, Manny, Nomar are top seven
Since the BBWAA began handing out MVP Awards in 1931, the award has gone to players from a team without a winning record only seven times:
Year Player Team Record
1952 Hank Sauer CHC 77-77 1958 Ernie Banks CHC 72-82 1959 Ernie Banks CHC 74-80 1987 Andre Dawson CHC 76-85 1989 Robin Yount MIL 81-81 1991 Cal Ripken BAL 67-95 2003 Alex Rodriguez TEX 71-91
Bonds' title gives the Giants the league's top individual honor in each of the last four years -- Jeff Kent edged Bonds in 2000 -- a feat never before accomplished in the National League. Mickey Cochrane, Lefty Grove and Jimmie Foxx (twice) of the Philadelphia A's won the award four times in a row from 1928-33 (no award was given out in 1929 or 1930), while the Yankees saw Yogi Berra and Mickey Mantle combine for four in a row from 1954-57 and Roger Maris (twice), Mantle and Elston Howard do the same from 1960-63.
While Bonds' 45 homers were far below the 73 he hit in winning the MVP Award in 2001 and his .341 average -- third best in the league -- fell short of the .370 mark he posted in winning a batting title and another MVP Award in 2002, his performance in 2003 was perhaps more remarkable.
It came as Bonds watched his father, former Giants All-Star Bobby Bonds, succumb to cancer, with the superstar son leaving the team several times to be with his ailing father and then to mourn with his family after Bobby's death.
Bonds returned from that final bereavement leave after missing five games, hit a home run in the second at-bat of his first game back and then was hospitalized overnight for an irregular heartbeat brought on by stress and sleeplessness.
Just before his father's death and immediately after his first bereavement leave to be with the ailing Bobby, Bonds ended two games against the Braves with a walk-off homer in the 10th inning. In the other contest of the three-game sweep of Atlanta, Bonds received an intentional walk to load the bases in the ninth and Edgardo Alfonzo followed with a game-winning single.
Bonds tallied another walk-off homer, the ninth of his career, on his 39th birthday July 24, just after he threw out a potential go-ahead run at the plate. That homer also made him the all-time San Francisco Giants home run leader, passing Willie McCovey.
Bonds won his first MVP Award in 1990 with Pittsburgh before narrowly losing the 1991 race to Terry Pendleton. He then won back-to-back awards in 1992 and 1993, the latter his first season with San Francisco. In 2001, after setting the single-season record with 73 homers, he won his unprecedented fourth MVP Award with 30 of 32 first-place votes and then last year captured his first unanimous honor, easily topping Pujols.
The slugger helped the Giants capture the NL West title in 2003 as the club remained in first place every day of the season before falling to the eventual world champion Marlins in the Division Series. He easily led the Majors with a .749 slugging percentage, a .529 on-base percentage and 148 walks, 61 of those intentional, though far more were unofficially intentional.
Barry Bonds / LF
By comparison, Boston's Manny Ramirez finished second with 29 intentional free passes. Only two other entire teams had more intentional walks than Bonds -- the Cardinals with 68 and the Diamondbacks with 63.
Despite the kid-gloves treatment, Bonds still powered 45 home runs, two behind league leader Jim Thome, who finished fourth in voting behind Atlanta's Gary Sheffield. Bonds also drove in 90 runs and scored 111 times despite playing in only 130 games and recording 390 at-bats -- 201 fewer ABs than Pujols, who hit 43 homers and walked 79 times (12 intentional). He tied the NL mark jointly held by himself and Duke Snider by reaching base safely in 58 consecutive games.
Bonds ended the season just two homers shy of tying godfather Willie Mays' 660 for third on the all-time list. By hitting at least 30 homers for the 12th straight season, Bonds extended his own NL record and tied Foxx's Major League mark established from 1929-40. With three multihomer games in 2003, he moved past Mays into third on the all-time list with 64 such games, three shy of Mark McGwire and eight behind Babe Ruth.
He became the charter member of the 500-500 club when he stole his 500th career base in the 11th inning June 23, subsequently scoring the game-winning run. He also passed Ruth for second on the all-time walks list with 2,070 and is 120 free passes shy of Rickey Henderson's Major League record.
Chris Shuttlesworth is an editorial producer for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
In 2001, Bonds hit 37 home runs at home, 36 on the road.
A .646 winning percentage over the course of a 161-game season translates to 104 wins. Which means that in additiona to the home runs, RBIs, on-base percentage, etc., you should also add a statistic called "Games Lost By Team Due to Player's Inability to Compete" -- by my reckoning, Bonds cost his team four games this year simply by not being in the lineup.
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If a player's value to his team is dictated by how poorly they play without him, then by using that logic I could probably find a couple of cases in recent sports history where a player who was on the disabled list for the entire season should have been selected as his league's Most Valuable Player.
I bet that it's out of control in any big money sport where the difference between making the cut and making a boatload of money is very thin.
I've known a couple of guys that went to NFL training camp, none of them made it, but all of them had admitted to doing at one course of steriods which means that they probably did at least two (if not more).
And this was the 80's. I can't imagine what it must be like these days.
Pujols would impress me more if hadn't wasted so many at bats (at least relative to Bonds). Bonds reached base 291 times last year, Pujols 301. But Pujols made 132 more outs than Barry as he got there (398 to 266).
If a player's value to his team is dictated by how poorly they play without him, then by using that logic I could probably find a couple of cases in recent sports history where a player who was on the disabled list for the entire season should have been selected as his league's Most Valuable Player.
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No, that was 2003. I see now I should have said "last SEASON" to avoid such confusion.
Go ahead and make up some worthless stat based on extrapolating how Barry would've hit 237 triples if he'd played all the games.
I didn't make up any "worthless stat" that I'm aware of. Nor did I extrapolate anything. Those numbers I posted are cold, hard facts.
It's probably over simplified thinking but there it is, not just in baseball either, any MVP in any sport that goes to a player that wasn't in the playoffs is silly IMHO.
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This is where I disagree completely, because the "presence vs. absence" comparison is as much a function of the quality of a player's replacement as it is of the player's skill and statistics.
If you use this comparison as the basis of your assessment, then a player who is backed up by a career .180 hitter with no speed and no power will always come out ahead of a comparable player who is backed up by a decent player who could start for any other team in the league.
Also, if you use this comparison as the basis of your assessment you are introducing a statistical measure that can't be applied to a guy who shows up to play in 162 games.
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