Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Hill I'm Willing To Die On: Baseball Edition

For much of baseball history, there was the National League and the American League. They were completely separate entities with the winners of each league facing each other in the World Series. Otherwise, teams from each league would never meet during the regular season. There were separate league presidents, and umpires were employed by either the AL or NL. Limited interleague games started in the mid-90s with each team playing teams from the other league for a handful of games, but the percentage of interleague games during the season was still fairly small. Now, although there are still separate leagues, there are no league presidents, umpires are employed by Major League Baseball, and every team plays against each other each season. For the 2024 season, each team played 46 interleague games. That's a substantial number. So why are there still separate awards (MVP, CY Young, etc.) for each league?  The hill I'm willing to die on today is that there should be one baseball award winner. Period. 


Instead of Shohei Ohtani being the National League MVP and Aaron Judge being the American League MVP, there should only be one like in every other American sport. (The MVP debate this season would be unreal!) Look at the NBA for the 2023-2024 season. Nikola Jokic won MVP while Shai Gilgeous-Alexander finished second and Luka Doncic finished third in the voting. All three play in the Western conference. If this was baseball, Giannis Antetokounmpo would have been the Eastern Conference MVP which seems a little ridiculous. 

In football, Lamar Jackson easily won the NFL MVP last season. Would Dallas Cowboys fans really celebrate Dak Prescott being the NFC MVP? The answer is probably not. Let’s stop this two MVP and two Rookie of the Year award nonsense in baseball and just have one award winner for the entire sport.

Please click here to see more of my extremely sporadic Hills I'm Willing To Die On series.

No comments: