It is that time of the baseball season when the most important questions are answered. Not who will win their divisions, but personal accolades. You have to remember, baseball is a game of stats, and no matter how much of a team player a person is, they will always keep track of strikeouts they have in a season or the number of homeruns they have hit.
This year is especially exciting because of the plethora of talent that has emerged in baseball. My favorite race is the Rookie of the Year race. My interest in this was restored last night after seeing Yankees rookie Ivan Nova throw 7.1 innings of 5 hit, 1 run ball. Nova has been lights out all year. He has posted a 15-4 record with the third most innings pitched in baseball among rookies and 3.81 ERA. Those are pretty impressive stats for any pitcher, regardless a rookie. I normally would not consider a pitcher for an MVP award because they throw every five days if they are a starter, or an inning or so every few games. However, the Rookie of the Year award is different because it really depends on the talent pool of the rookies.
I found the most recent rookie stats from mlb.com. I realized Ivan Nova has impressive stats, but there are rookies in the AL that have stats that are even more impressive. I decided to only include those players that have at least 350 at bats or 100 innings pitched. The rationality for this is that it is a better indicator of a player’s real talent. The more innings pitched or the larger number of at bats, you can get a better sense of the players performance because of the larger sample size.
I decided on two candidates for the AL Rookie of the Year, and Nova was not in consideration. The first is the Angel’s Trumbo who has 27 homeruns with 82 RBI’s and .256 batting average. He also leads AL rookies with 500 at bats. He is also second in the AL with 128 hits (Homser from KC is first with 134). His batting average is a little low, but among AL rookies, he is ranked third. He has also played in the most games (139) than all AL rookies. His downside is he has a .295 on base percentage (which is awful) and 108 strikeouts. He does not get on base a lot, and strikes out a good amount, which is a big problem.
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| Trumbo hitting his 15th homerun of the year |
The other possibility is Tampa’s Hellickson. Hellickson is having an unreal season. He has a 2.96 ERA with 170.3 innings pitched and 109 strikeouts. He also leads all rookies with 2 complete games and is the only rookie to throw a complete game shutout. However, he has a 12-10 record, which is his only real downside. If we use statistics derived from sabermetrics (that was compounded by ESPN, definitely not by me), he has 6 tough loses and no cheap wins. This shows that sixty percent of his losses came in games where he threw at least six innings while giving up less than three runs. He also has a very respectable WHIP of 1.14.
In my opinion, the AL Rookie of the Year has to be Jeremy Hellickson. There are rookies that have impressive stats, but are weak in important areas. Hellickson has strong stats from a team that lost its bullpen and best players in the off-season. Hellickson also pitches in the very competitive American League East where he has to go against the best hitters in all of baseball.


