Tag: Los Angeles Dodgers

Has Clayton Kershaw Suddenly Jumped into Top 2014 NL MVP Candidates?

Clayton Kershaw can do it all. Witness his most recent start on August 10 against the National League Central-leading Milwaukee Brewers.

Sure, Kershaw’s line was typically dominant: 8 IP, 6 H, 1 ER, 6 SO, 2 BB. But his contributions extended beyond the mound.

As he so often does, the lanky left-hander took the Los Angeles Dodgers on his back, driving in a run, scoring another, picking a runner off first and turning an acrobatic catch-and-throw double play.

In other words, doing it all.

“It’s fun to feel like a baseball player,” Kershaw told Dylan Hernandez of the Los Angeles Times after the 5-1 victory, which widened the Dodgers’ division lead over the rival San Francisco Giants. “We get labeled as pitchers, so every once in a while, you get some dirt on your jersey, it gets fun.”

It’s also gotten Kershaw into the midst of the National League MVP chase.

He’s only one name in a crowded field. But the opportunity is there for Kershaw—who already owns two Cy Young Awards—to bolster his trophy case.

Will he do it? Should he? Let’s break it down.

 

The Case For Kershaw

Kershaw has been so unhittable for the past couple of months, it’s easy to forget his season began on an inauspicious note. More specifically, the disabled list.

After recovering from a strained back muscle in early May and returning to action, Kershaw looked mostly like Kershaw. Then the calendar turned, and he looked like something else entirely. 

Entering play Tuesday, Kershaw boasts the best ERA (1.78) and WHIP (0.86) in all of baseball. He’s averaging nearly 11 strikeouts per nine innings. He’s tossed five complete games, a feat that 28 other teams have failed to accomplish, per the Los Angeles Times’ Bill Shaikin.

And his 5.9 WAR doesn’t just lead all NL pitchers, it leads all NL players. Period.

The Dodgers have always penciled in a “W” before Kershaw takes the hill. These days, they’re writing it in Sharpie.

As well they should: Los Angeles has won each of their ace’s last 13 starts, and he’s 11-0 in that stretch.

Valuable, no doubt. Extremely valuable. But most valuable?

 

The Case Against Kershaw

The argument against Kershaw is really more an argument against any pitcher winning MVP. 

Let’s let Albert Pujols, himself a three-time winner, make the case, per Hernandez:

You don’t see the players win the Cy Young. The Cy Young award is the MVP for the pitchers, and the MVP should be for the best player in the league…unless you don’t have any players in the league who have had a decent year.

Certainly there are players having more than decent years. The Colorado Rockies‘ Troy Tulowitzki (.340 batting average, 1.035 OPS), the Miami Marlins‘ Giancarlo Stanton (.292 batting average, 31 home runs, 82 RBI) and reigning NL MVP Andrew McCutchen of the Pittsburgh Pirates (.311 batting average, 17 HR, 17 SB) all belong squarely in the conversation.

There are knocks against each. McCutchen and Tulowitzki are both battling injuries. Tulo’s pedestrian road splits indicate a clear Coors Field bump. Stanton has racked up the strikeouts, whiffing 135 times in 514 plate appearances. And both Stanton and Tulowitzki play for clubs that almost certainly won’t make the postseason, something voters frequently factor in.

Any of those guys, though, would be a worthy winner. And unlike Kershaw, they’ve been a part of the bulk of their teams’ victories.

As good as Kershaw has been (and he’s been plenty good), he simply can’t contribute as consistently as his position-player peers while watching four out of every five games from the dugout.

 

The Verdict

Really, this comes down to a question of philosophy more than numbers: Should a pitcher ever win MVP?

If you say no—if you follow Pujols’ rather convincing logic—then clearly you give it to someone else (probably Stanton if McCutchen and Tulo don’t return to action soon). 

Voters, though, have said yes to pitchers before. Since the advent of the Cy Young in 1956, seven pitchers have won MVP. 

If the season ended today, Kershaw would have a lower ERA and WHIP than six of them. Only Bob Gibson in 1968 (1.12 ERA, 0.85 WHIP) posted better numbers.

That ’68 season is widely regarded as “the year of the pitcher.” So it’s fitting that the game’s top arm claimed the top prize.

You could make the same argument in 2014. In the post-steroid era, the hurler again rules. And right now, no hurler is ruling like Clayton Kershaw.

Nothing is settled yet; there’s too much baseball left.

Right now, though, a pitcher looks like the clear and justified favorite for the NL MVP Award. Not just a pitcher—a player.

A player who can do it all.

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Josh Beckett Injury: Updates on Dodgers SP’s Hip and Recovery

It has been a special 2014 season for the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers, but they received some unfortunate news Friday regarding starting pitcher Josh Beckett. Ken Gurnick of MLB.com filled fans in on the latest:

Gurnick made note of another injury as well:

Dodgers manager Don Mattingly believes Beckett could pitch again this year.

It’s a possibility,” Mattingly said, per Doug Padilla of ESPNChicago.com. “At the point we’re talking about, 10 days or two weeks of rest and then starting the (recovery) progression. I anticipate that he will be able to pitch again this year.”

This is a difficult break for the team and Beckett as the Dodgers prepare for the stretch run in their National League West race with rival San Francisco. In 20 starts this year, Beckett sports a sparkling 2.88 ERA and 1.17 WHIP. He has quietly turned in a solid season while fellow pitcher Clayton Kershaw grabbed most of the headlines.

If Beckett is forced to retire, he will likely be remembered for his postseason prowess. He is 7-3 in his playoff career with a 3.07 ERA, but he was particularly impressive in 2003 (2.11 ERA with the Florida Marlins) and 2007 (1.20 ERA with the Boston Red Sox).

As for the Dodgers, they will have to make do with Kershaw and company as they look toward October. ESPNLosAngeles.com’s Mark Saxon provides details on the move the team made to bring in Roberto Hernandez from the Phillies on Thursday:

The Los Angeles Dodgers acquired veteran right-hander Roberto Hernandez from the Philadelphia Phillies for two players to be named later, the teams announced Thursday. The Phillies will receive two “lower-level minor leaguers,” a major league source familiar with the transaction told ESPN.com’s Jayson Stark.

Hernandez, who is starting Friday, will get a chance to fill the Beckett void as the Dodgers look to finish the season strong and maintain their position heading into October.

Check back for updates as they develop.

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Yasiel Puig Avoids Getting Tagged Out at Home, Scores Run vs. Cubs

Los Angeles Dodgers star Yasiel Puig is known for making some crazy highlight plays. And while this one didn’t make much of a difference in the final score, it was still pretty impressive.

In the bottom of the sixth inning of Friday night’s game against the Chicago Cubs, Hanley Ramirez hit a ground ball to third. On the resulting double-play attempt, Puig kept running past third base and charged toward home plate. After sliding past Welington Castillo, Puig faked him out to touch home and score a run.

Unfortunately for the Dodgers, the run only cut their deficit to six in an 8-2 loss.

[MLB.com, h/t Next Impulse Sports]

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Yasiel Puig Answers Doubters with Record-Setting 3-Triple Night

If Yasiel Puig is having a sophomore slump, it might be the best sophomore slump of all time.

There’s been a lot of handwringing lately about the Los Angeles Dodgers‘ second-year outfielder. He’s hit just one home run since June 1 and had a disastrous showing in the Home Run Derby and All-Star Game.

The swagger, suddenly, has turned to uncertainty.

So, naturally, the question on every Dodgers fan’s lips became, what’s wrong with Puig?

Not much, apparently.

Returning to the lineup Friday night after missing time with a hand injury, Puig went 4-for-5 with a record-setting three triples, leading the Dodgers to an 8-1 win over the division-leading San Francisco Giants.

With the victory, the Dodgers moved within 0.5 games of the Giants in the National League West. And with his performance at the plate, Puig went a long way toward silencing the doubters.

“When he’s waiting on the ball and shooting the ball to right-center, he’s at his best,” said Dodgers skipper Don Mattingly, per the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin‘s JP Hoornstra (via the Los Angeles Daily News). “Obviously, he stung the ball really well tonight. Looked patient at the plate, looked calm, looked quiet.”

It’s a funny thing. For all the focus heaped on Puig’s power outage, his numbers have always looked solid. Even before Friday night’s explosion, the 23-year-old Cuban owned a more-than-respectable .308/.398/.519 slash line.

As his countryman, Yoenis Cespedes of the Oakland A’s, noted last year, power isn’t central to Puig’s game, per the Los Angeles Times‘ Bill Shaikin. “Not to be disrespectful to him at all, but I know him from Cuba,” Cespedes told Shaikin. “He’s not really a home run hitter.”

Still, all the skills—the defense-testing speed, the superlative arm—that make Puig one of the most exciting five-tool players in the game have remained on display.

More than anything, Puig is a victim of his own success. With his bat-flipping antics and raw, unbridled potential, he’s attracted as much attention (both positive and negative) as any young player in recent memory.

The expectations are sky-high—which means it takes a moon shot to clear them.

Puig didn’t hit any moon shots Friday night at AT&T Park, but he did smack a trio of three-baggers. That’s the most triples in a single game in Los Angeles Dodgers history and equals the franchise record set by Jimmy Sheckard in 1901, per CBSSports.com’s Mike Axisa.

So, yeah. Pretty historic.

Also, pretty cathartic. Puig exerted his dominance, sure, but more importantly so did Los Angeles. Facing their hated rivals—the team that stands between them and a second straight division title—the Dodgers went nuts, banging out 15 hits.

They knocked around Tim Lincecum, on a career-reviving roll following his June 26 no-hitter against the San Diego Padres.

And they got a stellar start from Zack Greinke, who tossed seven shutout frames with 10 strikeouts (including a rare four-strikeout inning, just the fifth in Los Angeles Dodgers history, per MLB.com’s Ken Gurnick).

Maybe best of all, they wrote another chapter in the storied history of the Dodgers-Giants rivalry, which looks like it’ll be in full force this summer. That, as MLB.com’s Richard Justice points out, is a good thing for all of us:

Baseball is better when the Dodgers and Giants are both good. They’ve been going at one another for around 120 years, and the games today have as much emotion and intensity as they did back in the days of Jackie Robinson and Willie Mays. They remain two of the sport’s cornerstone franchises, both playing to packed houses, both occupying large places in the hearts and minds of their local citizens.

The undisputed star of the night, though, was Puig, who re-established himself as a game-changing offensive force and the unquestioned anchor of L.A.’s offense.

If this is what a sophomore slump looks like, the Dodgers better hope for more slumping.

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Bored Yasiel Puig and Hanley Ramirez Videobomb Sideline Reporter

Yasiel Puig and Hanley Ramirez were bored Monday night.

After a weekend of painful plunks to their respective left hands, the two Los Angeles Dodgers found themselves confined to the dugout for their away opener against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Like kids stuck inside on a rainy day, they fussed about restlessly before deciding to invent their own entertainment: annoying SportsNet LA reporter Alanna Rizzo.

The two men stuck their hands up and made faces during Rizzo’s live-air segment at the top of the sixth. Puig made a finger mustache, and Ramirez mouthed the lyrics to “Soul Man.”

A professional to the end, Rizzo played along with the distraction.

Yasiel Puig and Hanley Ramirez continue to not leave me alone,” Rizzo said.

Some people found Puig and Ramirez’s gimmick entertaining.

Puig and Hanley are going to do the things Puig and Hanley do, but there comes a time when they need to let the other pros do their jobs.

The good news is that the kids might not be be cooped up for long. J.P. Hoornstra of InsideSoCal.com reports that Puig and Ramirez didn‘t suffer any broken bones after each was hit by a pitch over the weekend.

On Monday, Dodgers manager Don Mattingly told Hoornstra and fellow reporters that Puig and Ramirez are sore and their timetable for return remains fluid.

“Hanley’s sore. Yasiel is still a bit sore,” Mattingly said. “Hanley, we’re not going to try to do anything with. Yasiel, as the day goes on, we’ll see if he can do anything.”

Please, Don. If they can play, get them back on the field. Do it for Alanna. When they’re hurt, she hurts.

 

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Yasiel Puig Strikes Out at 2014 Home Run Derby, Fails to Go Yard Once

Yasiel Puig entered the 2014 Home Run Derby with some implicit expectations on his shoulders.

Being 23 years old and built like a brick outhouse, Puig came into the ball-spanking competition with the general assumption that he would wow the crowd, if not win the competition.

So it came as a none-too-tiny surprise when Puig, a decent power hitter by any measure, failed to hit a single home run in the Derby on Monday night.

According to Mike Oz of Big League Stew, the young Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder arrived at the event without a designated pitcher and opted to have Robinson Cano’s father, Jose Cano, step in to throw. Puig managed to grab hold of a few pitches but pulled them hard into foul territory.

Oz points out that players who hit Jose Cano’s pitches haven’t had success in the Derby.

“The last Home Run Derby competitor to get shut out was Robinson Cano in 2012,” Oz writes. “As coincidence would have it, Cano’s dad, former big-league pitcher Jose Cano, was the one pitching to Puig on Monday, just like he did Robinson in 2012.”

Was it the Jose Cano curse that ruined Puig’s night? Or just shoddy concentration and nerves bearing down on a young player at his first Derby?

We’ll never know, but the Dodgers maintain that Puig is saving his runs for Tuesday’s All-Star game.

Puig didn’t seem too distressed by his goose egg. He posed with Miami Marlins outfielder Giancarlo Stanton, who walloped the bomb of the night in the first round.

At the risk of sounding like a Puig apologist, I’ll take this time to remind you that the Home Run Derby means nothing. It’s a lawless night where baseball fans cast aside their rigid principles and allow players to gawk at the sexiest, big-ticket moment the sport has to offer.

Still, Puig and his bear arms could’ve given the people a little more cowbell. The Roman masses in the stands at Target Field came to see giant men put baseballs out of their misery—and a Puig clean sheet was the last thing they wanted.

 

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Yasiel Puig Could Steal the Show in 1st MLB Home Run Derby

Los Angeles Dodgers phenom Yasiel Puig was among the more notable absences from MLB All-Star weekend last year, as he was just 38 games into his big league career.

This year, his talents will be on full display at Target Field in Minnesota, and he has a chance to steal the show.

Not only was he voted to start in the NL outfield, joining Andrew McCutchen and Carlos Gomez, but it was also announced on Tuesday that he will participate in the Home Run Derby.

Dodgers MLB.com beat writer Ken Gurnick confirmed the news:

Colorado Rockies shortstop Troy Tulowitzki (18 HR) was named the captain of the National League side, so it was him who selected Puig to participate.

He has tremendous power, watching him from afar,” Tulowitzki told Thomas Harding of MLB.com last week when mentioning Puig as a potential candidate.

Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Jose Bautista (17 HR) will captain the American League squad, and he’ll be joined by reigning champion Yoenis Cespedes (14 HR), Baltimore Orioles center fielder Adam Jones (16 HR) and second baseman Brian Dozier (16 HR) of the host Minnesota Twins.

Miami Marlins slugger Giancarlo Stanton (21 HR) and Cincinnati Reds third baseman Todd Frazier (17 HR) will join Puig and Tulowitzki on the NL side. One more participant from each league has yet to be announced, per an MLB press release.

Nelson Cruz, Miguel Cabrera and Mike Trout all declined invitations from Bautista to swing it for the AL side, according to Mike Axisa of CBS Sports.

Trout noted that he’d rather take the event in as a spectator, while Cabrera didn’t want to mess with his swing.

Puig made it clear he was not worried about his numbers suffering as a result of his inclusion in the Derby, joking that he has already been struggling of late:

Puig was hitting .344/.436/.615 with 11 home runs at the end of May, ranking as one of the most productive hitters in baseball.

However, he’s hit just .252/.324/.362 since the start of June.

Recent struggles aside, Puig was made for this kind of event.

He has tremendous raw power and has always played with a flair that borders on cocky. Now he’ll legitimately be the center of attention and have a chance to put on a show on the national stage.

Puig will be looking to follow in the footsteps of fellow Cuban defector Cespedes, who put on a show in last year’s Derby with 17 home runs in the first round and 32 overall on his way to claiming the trophy.

Moonshot home runs are what the Home Run Derby is all about, and while Puig ranks just 27th in the NL in long balls, his average distance of 417.3 feet is good for third in all of baseball.

We could dive into all sorts of advanced statistics for Puig and his power numbers through his first year-and-a-half in the league, but instead let’s just watch some video of his more notable bombs.

A 453-foot bomb off Jacob Turner of the Miami Marlins on May 3 of this year, the longest of his career:

A 451-footer off Adam Ottavino back on July 2 of last year in the launching pad that is Coors Field:

A 444-footer off Chase Anderson of the Arizona Diamondbacks on May 17 of this year:

A 442-footer off Brandon McCarthy that is the definition of a moonshot:

The one disappointing part of Puig in the Derby? No bat flips.

Luckily, the Los Angeles Dodgers Twitter feed has you covered there:

Who knows, maybe it will come down to a slug-off to end it, and Puig can still work a bat flip in with a walk-off winner. Regardless, Puig in the Derby should make for good television.

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Sal "The Barber" Maglie Finished Just a Little off the Top in 1956

Ninth in an 11-part series examining the vagaries of awards voting.

Sal Maglie’s 1956 season combines the “Elston Howard factor” of collecting more MVP votes than worthier candidates largely because his team inched out theirs at the finish line with the “‘Indian Bob’ Johnson factor” of a hot stretch drive that stayed fresh in the memory of writers come ballot time.

Maglie enjoyed the double-whammy of earning lots of votes this way in two award races: the National League MVP and the very first Cy Young honor.

Not to paint a picture that Maglie reaped undue reward for a marginal season. On the contrary, he was a key starter who contributed mightily to a pennant winner—but in my opinion, his runner-up finishes for the MVP and Cy Young Award came at the expense of more-deserving candidates.

Sal Maglie’s story is well known: Struggling for several pre-war years in the mid-minors, he went home to work in a defense plant as America mobilized, until finally making his debut with the New York Giants just as the war drew to an end. Three of his five wins came by shutout, including one against the World Series–bound Chicago Cubs.

But nearing his 29th birthday as Opening Day of 1946 approached, Maglie, along with Max Lanier, Mickey Owen, Giants teammate Danny Gardella and more than a dozen other major leaguers, jumped to the Pasquale Brothers’ outlaw Mexican League, nearly aborting his career before it started.

Maglie pitched in Mexico for two seasons under the tutelage of hotheaded Cuban fireballer Dolf Luque, who had enjoyed a successful 20-year NL career, including a 27-win season in 1923.

Luque taught Maglie to be a more aggressive pitcher, soon transforming Maglie into one of the most feared moundsmen in the National League for his eagerness to throw high and inside, resulting in his sobriquet, “The Barber.” (Despite his nasty reputation, however, Maglie hit only 44 batters in his 10-year major league career.)

Temporarily banned from the majors for his outlaw days, Maglie pitched in Canada before returning to the Giants in 1950. Now a well-traveled 33-year-old, he unleashed his talent and temper on National League batters to the tune of an 18-4 record, pacing the NL in ERA, shutouts and winning percentage.

In the Giants’ legendary 1951 campaign, Maglie reached his apex, tying with teammate Larry Jansen for the major league lead in victories, with 23.

His 2.93 ERA claimed second best, and he finished third in strikeouts. In the Shot Heard ‘Round the World game, Maglie surrendered four runs in eight innings but took a no-decision when Ralph Branca spared him the goat’s horns.

Maglie followed 1951 with several more strong seasons, helping New York to a World Series championship in 1954 and remaining one of the hated nemeses of the Brooklyn Dodgers—and their fans—during his tenure in the Polo Grounds. While donning a Giants jersey, Maglie tortured the powerful Bums by taking 23 of 34 decisions.

In 1955, despite ringing up nine victories through July, the defending champs put Maglie on waivers. Quickly claimed by the Cleveland Indians, he hurled a mere 25.2 innings the rest of the season and looked to be near the end of the line.

Five innings into the 1956 campaign, the borough of Brooklyn did a collective double take as their defending champions, slow out of the gate, purchased the reviled Maglie from the Tribe.

During his first two months in Dodger blue, Maglie, used as both a spot starter and a reliever, did little to help Brooklyn’s fortunes, going 2-3 and carrying an ERA above 4.00.

Then, on July 28, The Barber found his groove. (He won his start previous to July 28 but did not pitch well and claimed victory thanks to Brooklyn’s 10-run assault.) Through the end of August, Maglie won four of five decisions, pitched three no-decisions in which he surrendered a total of two earned runs and dropped his ERA from 4.20 to 3.34

As Brooklyn slowly cut into the Milwaukee Braves’ summer-long lead—simultaneously rumbling with the revived Cincinnati Redlegs—Maglie maintained his magic.

On September 11, he went the distance to beat Milwaukee, 4-2, bringing Brooklyn into a tie for first. And in his next start, Maglie gutted out a narrow victory at Crosley Field to raise the Dodgers into the lead for the first time since April.

As Brooklyn, Milwaukee and Cincinnati played tug-of-war for the pennant, Maglie no-hit the Philadelphia Phillies on September 25. Although Milwaukee’s easy victory in Cincinnati that day kept Brooklyn from gaining ground, Maglie’s headline-making feat so close to the end of the season surely carried a lot of weight come awards time.

Four days later, his complete-game victory in the opener of a double-header against the Pittsburgh Pirates put Brooklyn one game in the lead for good. (After winning the back end of the double-header, Brooklyn clinched the pennant with a series sweep of Pittsburgh the next afternoon, despite Milwaukee also winning its final game.)

At season’s end, Maglie stood at 13-5, with a 2.87 ERA for Brooklyn—a fantastic ERA while hurling two-thirds of his innings in a home park among the toughest in which to pitch.

There is no doubt that Brooklyn—which edged Milwaukee by a single game and Cincinnati by two—won the pennant largely on the arm of Sal Maglie. From late July onward, Maglie was money—especially during the three-team race of September, when he went 6-1, with a 1.77 ERA.

For his heroics, Maglie finished second to teammate Don Newcombe in both the MVP race and the brand-new Cy Young Award, as Newcombe authored one of the monster seasons of the post-war era: 27-7, 3.06 ERA and a 0.989 WHIP—by far, baseball’s best.

Not to minimize in any way Maglie’s huge contribution to a pennant winner, but of the 11 NL pitchers who received MVP votes, only reliever Clem Labine collected fewer wins. Maglie also pitched the fewest innings of any vote-getting starter.

Especially considering that Don Newcombe and his 27 victories were the true anchor of Brooklyn’s staff—and rightfully rewarded as such—a Dodger who played every day deserved more recognition than Maglie for keeping the Bums churning through a daily dogfight.

How Duke Snider finished a distant tenth in the MVP is a real head-scratcher. Garnering a single first-place vote, the Duke’s vote share lagged well behind not only Maglie, but teammates Jim Gilliam and Pee Wee Reese—a part-time keystone combo having an excellent fielding season, with Gilliam cracking an even .300 and drawing 95 walks.

But Duke carried the biggest stick on an aging team suddenly replaced by Cincinnati as the most potent offense in the league.

Snider paced the Senior Circuit in home runs, walks and OPS, tying with Junior Gilliam for the lead in on-base percentage, all while chasing down fly balls to center field at his usual reliable rate. He also crossed the plate 112 times, second most in the league.

And as Newcombe struggled to clinch the pennant on the schedule’s final day—surrendering six earned runs on 11 Pirates’ hits—it was the Duke who saved Brooklyn’s season, slamming a pair of home runs and driving in four RBI.

Sandy Amoros also clubbed two homers, but Duke’s three-run blast in the bottom of the first set the tone and put Pittsburgh in a hole from which it could not fully emerge before Don Bessent relieved the fatigued Newcome and sealed the pennant.

Of course, no one knew from WAR at the time, but the Duke tied Willie Mays for the NL lead at 7.6. Having topped 130 RBI in the previous two seasons yet driving home “only” 101 in 1956, perhaps voters turned their pens elsewhere based on Duke’s “drop-off” in that coveted stat.

Already a potent lineup, the long-lost Redlegs—who hadn’t seen .500 since 1944—slugged their way from 75 to 91 wins largely on the addition of Frank Robinson.

Enjoying one of the greatest freshman campaigns ever—and copping a unanimous Rookie of the Year honor for it—the gritty Robinson smashed 38 home runs, a record that would stand for 31 seasons.

In doing so, Robinson also helped Cincinnati clout a record-tying 221 home runs. Exhibiting impressive bat discipline for a 20-year-old slugger, Robinson drew 64 walks to go with his solid .290 batting average, which, combined with a league-high 20 hit-by-pitches for the rookie who defiantly dug in against veteran hurlers, led to an NL-best 122 runs scored.

Robinson also tied teammate Ed Bailey for second in OPS, with .936. Considering Cincinnati’s dearth of starting pitching—only Brooks Lawrence chalked up more than 13 victories, and only Joe Nuxhall logged an ERA better than league average—Robinson, in my opinion, had more to do with Cincinnati’s sudden resurgence than any other Redleg.

One can argue that a seventh-place finish on the MVP ballot was amply complemented by the Rookie of the Year honor, but Robinson, a natural-born leader and the highest-scoring player on the highest-scoring team, should have finished higher in the vote.

Interestingly, both Snider and Robinson batted their best against each other as Brooklyn and Cincinnati jockeyed all summer for the inside track. Duke lit up Redlegs hurlers for an even .400 and slugged a monstrous .787, while driving in 18 runs and scoring 23 times in 22 contests.

Nearly matching Duke’s mastery of Cincinnati pitching, the rookie Robinson still bruised Brooklyn for nine homers and .716 slugging, resulting in 13 RBI and 20 runs scored in the same 22 games.

Neither fared well against Milwaukee’s deep and stingy rotation.

Warren Spahn also probably should have ranked higher than Maglie. Arguably the best pitcher on what was, far and away, the best pitching staff in the NL (team ERA of 3.11nearly half a run better than runner-up Brooklyn), Spahn enjoyed a typical Warren Spahn season: 20-11, 2.78 ERA. He led the league in nothing but hurled 90 more innings than Maglie.

Over the course of an entire season, during which Spahn’s Braves spent 83 percent of its schedule within two games, either way, of first place, 90 high-quality innings is a huge difference to overlook.

Milwaukee’s strength on the mound may have actually worked against Spahn at voting time. Lew Burdette spun a season very similar to Spahn statistically (19-10, 2.70 ERA, in 256.1 innings), yet although voters barely took notice of Burdette or 18-game winner Bob Buhl at awards time, Spahn’s 20 wins might have lost some impact among his big-winning teammates.

Of course, had Milwaukee finished a game ahead of Brooklyn, Spahn likely would have received many of the votes that instead went to Maglie.

Unfortunately for Spahn, who went 7-1 and saved one game in September (including a 12-inning complete-game victory on September 13), he took a truly hard-luck loss in Milwaukee’s penultimate game of the season, which dropped the Braves a game behind Brooklyn and allowed the Dodgers to claim the pennant the following afternoon despite Burdette’s 4-2 win in St. Louis.

Tied with Brooklyn with two games to play, Spahn spun a masterful 11 innings, yielding only three hits and one earned run. But Cardinal Herm Wehmeier, an oft-wild thrower with a career mark of 80-100 going into the game, matched Spahn inning for inning.

With the score tied 1-1 in the bottom of the 12th, Spahn yielded a double to Stan Musial. Intentionally walking Ken Boyer to get to Rip Repulski, Repulski ripped a double to left, scoring Musial and giving Brooklyn—busy winning the second game of a double-header against Pittsburgh after Maglie won the opener—a one-game edge going into the season’s final day.

As for the Cy Young Award—which, in 1956, was issued to a single pitcher selected from both leagues—Maglie again placed second to Newcombe. The same argument for Spahn (and Burdette) in the MVP race becomes stronger for this vote. With Newcombe deservedly running away with the inaugural award, Maglie earned four of the remaining six votes, outpacing both Spahn and Whitey Ford.

The ace of the eventual world-champion New York Yankees, Ford went 19-6, with a Major League–topping 2.47 ERA. But the Bronx Bombers peeled away from the rest of the AL in July and coasted to the pennant, so Ford enjoyed none of the hero-making drama of a close race, as did Maglie.

Yet a pitcher superior that season both to Spahn and Ford, let alone Maglie, was completely ignored. Herb Score, coming off a Rookie of the Year effort in 1955, took another step toward the superstardom he’d sadly never reach (see his entry, No. 2, in my series for a fuller explanation).

Flame throwing his way to a 20-9 season, garnished with an AL-high five shutouts and 263 strikeouts—best in the Majors and 71 more than anyone else—Score unfairly went missing at ballot time thanks to an 88-win Cleveland Indians squad made irrelevant by the machine-like Yankees.

As good as was Maglie down Brooklyn’s stretch drive, Score, with his adjusted ERA of 166, pitched at the highest caliber virtually all season.

Pitching in his third—and final—World Series, in 1956, Maglie went the distance in the opener, whiffing 10 Yankees in a 6-3 victory at Ebbets Field. In Game 5, he had the misfortune of pitching against history, as his gutsy eight innings were no match for Don Larsen’s perfection. (Along with the Shot Heard ‘Round the World game, this made Maglie a starting pitcher in perhaps the two most famous contests in baseball annals.)

New York, of course, went on to reclaim the crown Brooklyn had usurped the previous year.

Maglie pitched one more season in Brooklyn, but now 40 years old, the Barber’s days were numbered. He bounced to the Yankees—becoming one of only 14 players who made the stop at all three New York boroughs—before concluding his short but eventful career with the St. Louis Cardinals, in 1958.

Etching a most impressive 119-62 record, with a career ERA 27 percent better than league average, Sal Maglie enjoyed one helluva ride for a guy who didn’t stick in the Majors until age 33.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Biggest Strengths and Weaknesses of Dodgers’ Top 10 Prospects

The Los Angeles Dodgers added several players to their farm system over the past few days through the MLB draft.

Most of those selected are still years away from becoming impact prospects, and only the team’s first-round selection cracked last week’s Top-10 list.

The following slides will further examine the Dodgers’ young talent on the farm, specifically focusing on each player’s strengths and weaknesses.

Notes: All statistics courtesy of Baseball Reference unless otherwise noted. All statistics updated through June 9 unless otherwise noted. Tom Windle replaces Scott Schebler as No. 9 prospect.

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The Best and Worst of Yasiel Puig’s Polarizing First Calendar Year in MLB

Today officially marks the one-year anniversary of Los Angeles Dodgers polarizing superstar Yasiel Puig making his major league debut.

The Dodgers were 23-32 and 8.5 games back in the NL West at the time of his promotion, and they proceeded to go 69-38 the rest of the way, roaring back to take the division title by 11 games over the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Puig was a big reason why they were able to get their season on track, but his first calendar year in the big leagues has been a roller-coaster ride to say the least.

Here is a look at the best and worst of Yasiel Puig one year after he burst onto the scene with a memorable performance against the San Diego Padres.

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