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Howard Or Pujols? For MVP, It's Clear

Two years ago Ryan Howard — prime slugger on a non-playoff team — defeated Albert Pujols — prime slugger on a World Series champion — for National League Most Valuable Player.

Well, what do you know.

Two years later, and the roles are reversed. In fact, the 2008 Cardinals finished 86-76, just one game better than those 2006 Phils, at 85-77. Weird, eh? But what matters is Howard and Pujols are battling for NL MVP yet again. This time they have interesting competition — Manny Ramirez, who made a bandit’s run with the Dodgers; David Wright, who had another sparkling season; CC Sabathia, who pitched the Brewers into the postseason; Lance Berkman, the prodigious slugger who never gets enough due; Chipper Jones, who hit the heck out of the ball for a few months; and Hanley Ramirez, the all-world shortstop coming into his own. But I don’t think the competition will win — seriously, this one is purely Pujols.

We can hope for a Howard win, but the numbers tell you everything. Pujols hit .357 and drove in 116 runs, collecting a .462 on-base percentage. Yes, he almost reached base half the time. Like Howard, he did have teammates who drove in some runs, but when you factor in Pujols’ two injuries — a calf that sidelined him two weeks, and an elbow that should’ve sidelined him all season — and look at his still outstanding numbers, you can’t deny the man.

But if you need figures, here’s some statistical analysis. I have two formulas that determine a player’s value. One is SSR (subjective statistical record), which looks at numbers that most average fans consider relevant; the other is OSR (objective statistical record), which looks at numbers that stat-friendly fans consider relevant. Here are those numbers:

Howard SSR : .251 AVG / 48 HR / 1 SB / 105 R / 146 RBI / 92 WINS = 4.08086 SSR
Pujols SSR : .357 AVG / 37 HR / 7 SB / 100 R / 116 RBI / 86 WINS = 4.08765 SSR

SSR looks at your garden-variety numbers and team wins. I developed the formula to think as a sportswriter voting for MVP would think — offense is important, hard numbers are major, team performance must be factored. Each stat is multiplied by a variable to create a total, which is then divided by 162, the overall constant. An SSR of over 4.00 is elite. Pujols won by a hair — just to add, David Wright had about a 4.06, Manny Ramirez finished just over 4.00.

Howard OSR : 413 TB+ / 105 R / 146 RBI / 475 OUTS = 2.15 OSR
Pujols OSR : 453 TB+ / 100 R / 116 RBI / 364 OUTS = 2.283 OSR

OSR looks at numbers according to plate appearances. Here, I take total bases and add walks and stolen bases, and also use runs, runs batted in and outs, to show how much a hitter accomplishes in his at bats. An OSR of over 2.00 is elite. Pujols wins again. And to add, Ramirez actually finished ahead of Howard with a 2.21 OSR, while Wright had a 2.086 OSR.

So to both your average sportswriter and your statistically-minded fan, Pujols had the superior year. Playoff team or not, the guy clearly deserves the award.

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Tim Malcolm

Tim first found the Phillies as a little infant at Veteran’s Stadium, cheering on a Juan Samuel game-winning home run in his very first game. With the pinstripes in his blood, he witnessed Terry Mulholland’s 1990 no-hitter, “Steve Carlton Night” at the Vet, game three of the 1993 World Series, countless games during the charmed 2008 championship season and various road excursions. Since November 2007 Tim’s been writing about them daily at Phillies Nation, becoming one of the world’s most popular Phillies scribes. You can catch him on Twitter and Facebook, as well. When he’s not talking about the Phils he’s relaxing with a St. Bernardus ABT 12 or one of his many favored brews.

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