Former Fresno State Star Aaron Judge Wins AL MVP Award

Former Fresno State Star Aaron Judge Wins MLB’s MVP Award Judge caps a big year with hardware Contact/Follow @MWCwire Well deserved win Aaron Judge, the former Fresno State Bulldog was just named MVP, completing a season so spectacular that the word …

“Certainly, Judge is betting on himself.” USA TODAY noted. The bet by Judge wasn’t without risk, but it paid off. He put his fate in his own hands, then, with expert precision torched the entire league. 

Judge’s merits ensured the gambit would have been successful even without an award, but after one of the best offensive seasons of all time, and an MVP trophy to show for it, Judge seems to be holding all the cards. 

Part of what makes his MVP season so impressive is the competition. The runner-up, Shohei Ohtani, the recipient of the only two first-place MVP votes that Judge failed to secure, is unlike any baseball player the world has ever seen. Defeating Ohtani, who is one of the most prolific batters and simultaneously one of the dominant pitchers in the league, might end up being one of the more impressive feats of Judge’s career. 

As a two-way player, Ohtani also had a sizable advantage for his MVP campaign, adding value to his team on both sides of the ball in a way that any outfielder simply cannot. Not only is Ohtani a two-way player, he is a fully-loaded two-way player who would be perfectly competitive playing only half his game either as just a pitcher or position player. Ohtani is so absurdly good that he is un-ironically compared to Babe Ruth on a routine basis. 

Yet, Judge was still named MVP. How could Judge be considered more valuable than a once-in-a-generation two-way player? With a once-in-a-generation literal record-breaking performance at the plate. Anything less than the supernatural display of human athletic excellence that Judge performed simply wouldn’t have been enough to surpass Ohtani. 

Judge had a batting average of .311, 62 home runs, 131 RBIs, 177 hits, 16 stolen bases, and 133 runs. He also had an OPS of .425, a SLG of .686, an OPS of 1.11, and a WAR of 10.6.

By smashing 62 home runs, Judge also smashed the all-time single-season American League home run record previously held by Roger Maris with 61 home runs in 1961. Judge also came up just short of the rare Triple Crown and led the league in nearly every offensive metric. 

Had the fifth-highest batting average, led the league in home runs, tied with Pete Alonso for the most RBIs, and had the eight most hits. Judge also led the entire MLB in OPS, SLG, OPS, and WAR.  

Judge’s performance measured against the rest of the AL shows why it’s his name on this year’s trophy.

His .311 batting average, well above the Mendoza line, was the only thing preventing him from winning the Triple Crown as Luis Arraez was the only American League player to top it with an average of .316.

His 62 home runs led the AL by a massive margin. The runner-up, Mike Trout, had only 40. 

Without tying with Alonso from the National League, Judge stood alone atop the RBI leaderboard, with 131, followed by Jose Ramirez with 126. After Ramirez, Kyle Tucker, with just 107, makes up the top three. 

Judge’s .425 OBP and .686 SLG were both followed by was followed by Yordan Alvarez with .406 and .613 respectively. Judge was one of only two players in the entire league with an OPS over 1.0, coming in at 1.111 followed, again, by Alvarez, with an OPS of 1.019. With a WAR of 10.6, Judge separated himself from the field and was followed by Andres Gimenez at only 7.2. 

Current Mountain West teams have produced MLB legends such as Cecil Fielder, Mark Grace, and Tony Gwynn. Like them, Judge hopes to earn a place in baseball history. His career is young, but so far, he seems to be on pace to do just that. Adding an MVP award to his resume certainly elevates his chances of joining the likes of Fielder, Grace, and Gwynn.


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