Yordan Alvarez has put himself in the middle of the American League MVP conversation for two very different reasons: the Astros’ surge back into the race, and the possibility that he could chase down a Triple Crown.
Houston’s season has been a strange one. The Astros stumbled out of the gate and spent the early part of the year looking nothing like a contender. But with July underway, they’re suddenly back in the picture at 46-48, sitting just 1.5 games out of the AL Wild Card and 2.0 games behind in the AL West.
That turnaround has given Alvarez’s season a different kind of weight. ESPN’s Bradford Doolittle called him the Astros’ “First-half MVP,” and argued that his case for the league award is getting stronger by the day.
“With the Astros charging back into playoff contention and Alvarez a real candidate to win a Triple Crown, his path to AL MVP seems clear,” Doolittle writes.
The numbers back up the buzz. Through 92 games, Alvarez has piled up 3.9 bWAR, 105 hits, 62 runs scored, 16 doubles, 29 homers, 67 RBIs, a .313 batting average, and a 1.041 OPS.
The Triple Crown piece is what makes this especially interesting. To pull it off, Alvarez would need to finish first in the AL in batting average, home runs, and RBIs.
He’s already sitting on top of the home run leaderboard with 29, ahead of Ben Rice and Junior Caminero, who are tied at 26. He also leads the RBI race, though just barely, with 67 to Nick Kurtz’s 66.
The batting average race is the toughest hurdle. Alvarez’s .313 mark trails only Yandy Diaz, who is hitting .319. Ernie Clement is next at .298, so there’s some separation after Diaz, but Alvarez still has ground to make up if he wants the full Triple Crown package.
If he holds onto the home run and RBI leads and closes the gap in average - or if Diaz slips - the door opens for Alvarez to make history. And if that happens, the MVP case gets even louder. Miguel Cabrera won the AL MVP when he captured the Triple Crown in 2012, and that’s the kind of precedent that puts Alvarez in a powerful position.
There’s also the team angle. If Houston keeps climbing and lands a postseason spot, Alvarez’s MVP argument only gets stronger. The best hitter on a playoff team usually has a very clean path to the award, and Alvarez is making that case one big swing at a time.
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