Aaron Judge’s MVP case: A transcendent performance to save Yankees’ season

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Ben Verlander welcomes Deesha Thosar to talk about Aaron Judges’ pursuit of the New York Yankees’ single season home run record and the overall vibe in the Bronx

OPS+ does a great job of comparing players across generations, as it’s relative to league standards and conditions. Since Ruth, only nine players have posted an OPS+ above 200 in a full season. Ted Williams and Barry Bonds both did it six times, Mickey Mantle did it thrice and George Brett, Mark McGwire, Norm Cash, Sammy Sosa, Stan Musial and Willie McCovey once. And now Aaron Judge. Having an OPS+ above 200 means you were TWICE as good, by OPS, as the average hitter in baseball. Judge’s 208 OPS+ is exactly double Gleyber Torres‘ 104 OPS+. 

And if Aaron Judge had walloped 60-whatever homers for the 2015 Brewers or some other irrelevant team, it would still be a fabulous accomplishment. But that he posted the single most dominant home-run season since Ruth while carrying a flimsy and feeble Yankees offense through all the pressure that comes from playing in the Bronx, with all the free agency hooplah hanging over his head, is downright remarkable. 

The MVP ballot clearly states “The MVP need not come from a division winner or other playoff qualifier.” Ohtani should not be punished for the sins of his owner and substandard teammates. It’s not his fault he’s never played in a single meaningful baseball game on American soil. But when things are this close, circumstances matter. 

From August 2nd to September 3rd, the Yankees went 9-20, scoring an average of 3.29 runs per game. Over that span, Yankees not named Aaron Judge posted a .204 average, a .266 on-base percentage and a .304 slugging percentage, good for a microscopic .570 team OPS. During that same run of games, Judge tossed out a .282/.454/.608 line with an 1.063 OPS, contributing, per weighted runs created, to about a third of his team’s runs. If that wasn’t enough, he also started in center field for 11 of those games.

In the same situation, with that same level of immense pressure, Shohei might have been just as good. But that’s a guessing game. The fact of the matter is that Judge was that good, he did those things, we saw them. For a month, he kept the world’s most famous baseball team afloat, steering them clear of what would have been the single worst regular season collapse in baseball history.

The ballot given to BBWAA members who vote for MVP is hilariously vague about criteria. “There is no clear-cut definition of what Most Valuable means,” it proclaims, “It is up to the individual voter to decide who was the Most Valuable Player in each league to his team.” Some weird eye-of-the-beholder, live-your-truth stuff right there, but sure, I’ll play along.

Determining value is a tricky process. You can’t just rank everyone’s WAR and vote for the top dog (though if you did, Judge would be the guy). Unpacking the definition of the word “valuable” is an equally reductive and frustrating process. For me — and remember, it’s about me, the ballot just said so — the MVP should go to the player whose individual performance deserves to be celebrated and remembered, above all others, for generations to come. 

From his dramatic decision on Opening Day to decline the Yankees’ extension offer to his ever-growing mountain of taters, Judge and his accomplishments have defined this baseball calendar, whether or not he passes Roger Maris’ American League record of 61 homers. He is the story, the center of attention and the MVP. 

By no fault of Shohei Ohtani’s, 2022 has been the season of Aaron Judge.

Related: Ready for the counterpoint? Pedro Moura tells you why Shohei Ohtani’s unprecedented season makes him deserving of the award.

Jake Mintz, the louder half of @CespedesBBQ, is a baseball writer for FOX Sports. He’s an Orioles fan living in New York City, and thus, he leads a lonely existence most Octobers. If he’s not watching baseball, he’s almost certainly riding his bike. Follow him on Twitter @Jake_Mintz.


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