JoltinJoe wrote:Gil Dobie wrote:
Not only does his average .260 range hurt but his strikeouts also hurt, 168 this year. Otherwise he would be a shoe-in. Cabrera has 47 doubles and 30 HR's while Granderson has 24 doubles and 41 Homers with 10 3-baggers.
Let's look at total run production (this game is about scoring runs, right?), which results from adding runs scored and RBI, and then deducting HRs to account for instances when a player scores on a run he also drove in.
Granderson: 136 runs + 119 RBI - 41 HRs = 214 total run production
Cabrera: 111 runs + 105 RBI - 30 HR = 186 total run production.
Incidentally, the Yankees scored 867 runs; the Tigers scored 855 runs. It is fair to say that Granderson was, by far, the most productive offensive player in the majors this year. And he plays great defense too.
It's about value to your team, Cabrera didn't have the greatest hitters around him, he made Vitor Martinez and Demon Young better as pitchers had to pitch to them. Cabrera didn't have the great hitter in front of him to drive in the runs, nor the future hall of famers behind him to drive him in, Granderson with the already great Yankees hitters Jeter ahead, Tex, Cano and sometimes A-Rod to drive him in. Just think of all the runs Granderson cost the Yankees by striking out 168 times. That's 79 more times than Cabrera in 4 more plate appearances. Granderson had better stats in runs and rbi which depend on other players to drive you in or get on base.
Total Bases - Cabrera 332, Granderson 321
Average - Cabrera .344, Granderson .263
On Base Percentage - Cabrera .447, Granderson .364
Slugging - Cabrera .585, Granderson .553
OPS - Cabrera 1.032, Granderson .917
If the award is for the best player on a losing team, then Bautista.