Babe Ruth Award
The Babe Ruth Award is given annually to the Major League Baseball (MLB) player with the best performance in the postseason. The award, created in honor of Babe Ruth, was first awarded in 1949 to New York Yankee pitcher, Joe Page, the MVP of the World Series, one year after Ruth's death. The award was created by the New York City chapter of the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA). It continued to be awarded exclusively for performances in the World Series until 2007, when the New York chapter of the BBWAA changed the award to cover the entire postseason.[1][2] Though it is older than the World Series Most Valuable Player Award, which was not created until 1955 (as the "SPORT Magazine Award"), the Babe Ruth Award is considered less prestigious, because it is not sanctioned by MLB and is awarded several weeks after the World Series.[3][4]
Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
League | Major League Baseball |
Awarded for | Annual most valuable player of the MLB postseason |
Presented by | New York City chapter of the Baseball Writers' Association of America |
History | |
First award | 1949 |
Most recent | Jeremy Peña, (Houston Astros) |
MLB expanded its postseason to include the League Championship Series (LCS) in 1969, the League Division Series (LDS) in 1995, and the Wild Card round in 2012. The Wild Card round is a one-game playoff, the LDS follows a best-of-five playoff format, and the LCS and World Series follow a best-of-seven playoff format.[4][5] In 2020, the Los Angeles Dodgers, won the 2020 World Series, but Randy Arozarena of the Tampa Bay Rays was named winner of the Babe Ruth Award.[6]
Ruth was a noted slugger who batted .326 with 15 home runs and three wins in three games started as a pitcher during World Series play.[7] However, the Babe Ruth Award does not only go to sluggers or pitchers. Dick Green won the award for the 1974 World Series, in which he batted 0-for-13, but helped the Oakland Athletics win the series with his defense.[8][9]
Joe Page of the New York Yankees was the first winner of the Babe Ruth Award, and Jonathan Papelbon of the Boston Red Sox was the first winner since the award criteria changed to cover the entire postseason. In all, members of the Yankees have won the award sixteen times. Luis Tiant and Randy Arozarena are the only winners of the Babe Ruth Award to play for the World Series–losing team. Two players, Sandy Koufax and Jack Morris, have won the award twice.[10]
Winners
Key to table
Year | Links to the article about that corresponding World Series |
---|---|
Player (X) | Denotes winning player and number of times they had won the award at that point (if more than one) |
^ | Indicates multiple award winners in the same year |
* | Indicates year when player did not win the World Series Most Valuable Player Award (1955–present)[11] |
† | Member of the Baseball Hall of Fame |
‡ | Denotes player who is still active |
§ | Indicates losing team in the series |
Table of winners
Image gallery
- Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax, a two-time winner
- Reggie Jackson won the award in 1977.
- Orel Hershiser won the award in 1988.
- Derek Jeter (left) won the award in 2000, while Dave Winfield (right) won the award in 1992.
- Paul Molitor won the award in 1993.
- Tom Glavine won the award in 1995
- Cole Hamels won the award in 2008.
- Alex Rodriguez won the award in 2009.
- David Ortiz won the award in 2013.
- David Price won the award in 2018.
See also
- "This Year in Baseball Awards" Best Major Leaguer, Postseason
- List of Major League Baseball awards
- Baseball awards
- Conn Smythe Trophy, the National Hockey League's award for its postseason MVP
Notes
- For 1949–2006, statistics are for the World Series only. As the award was changed in 2007 to encompass the entire postseason, statistics from 2007 through the present represent the entire postseason.
References
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