Word: mvp
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Gary Sheffield, who would garner MVP buzz in any other year, has said that Pujols would get his vote for MVP. Sheffield, one of Bonds’ few close friends, cited the huge RBI advantage that Pujols holds over Bonds, who has just 88. Pujols is hitting .388 with runners on; Bonds is hitting...
Since 1995, when the wild card was instituted, Colorado’s Larry Walker is the only MVP winner who didn’t see postseason play (in 1997). He hit .366 with 49 home runs, 130 RBI and 208 hits. Pujols is right there, without playing 81 games in the hitter-friendly confines of Coors field...
Brenda Lee, you simple simpleton. Albert Pujols, MVP? Over Barry Bonds? Pujols may be 16 years younger and the chic pick, but the award is given to the most valuable player. No one is more valuable than Bonds, to any team—possibly in the history of Major League Baseball...
...statistics. Pujols has a .363 batting average. He has 43 home runs and 124 RBIs. He has 207 hits and 49 doubles. He’s is the top three in the National League in hits, runs, RBIs, home runs, doubles, slugging percentage, on base percentage and batting average. MVP numbers? No question—in most years...
Bonds is hitting .340, with 44 home runs and 88 RBIs. 88 RBIs? How could he win MVP, Brenda Lee asks. He’s only got 127 hits! He has 21 doubles! Well, Brenda Lee, read Moneyball. Billy Beane will tell you. Normal baseball statistics don’t always tell you the entire story. To see Barry’s true worth, you’ve got to look at walks...