Halfway through the season, the American League has turned into a muddled mess, and that includes the MVP race. There’s no Aaron Judge.
There’s no Shohei Ohtani. Instead, the league’s top individual award is being sorted through a field full of candidates with obvious flaws, most of them tied to teams that haven’t been very good.
That’s the backdrop in a league where the Yankees own a run differential of +120, while only three other AL clubs are in the black at all, none better than the Rays at +20. The Red Sox are five games out of a playoff spot.
The Rangers are a losing team and still sitting in a wild-card position. No AL team has ever made the playoffs in a 162-game season with fewer wins than the 84 by the 1984 Royals, and this group could have two teams finish beneath that mark.
The MVP picture has the same unfinished, unsatisfying feel. For the first full season since 2019, the AL winner won’t be Judge or Ohtani. It has been a long time since the top 10 behind the winner included names like DJ LeMahieu and Nelson Cruz, all the way back when Mike Trout took the award.
What makes this race so strange is how many of the leading candidates are carrying baggage. Of the top 12 AL players by WAR, 10 are on losing teams.
Cody Bellinger and Miguel Vargas are the only exceptions. That matters because only 10 MVPs have ever come from losing teams, and the AL’s last four such winners all came from the Angels, with Ohtani doing it twice and Trout doing it twice.
Only three players have ever won the award while on a team that lost 90 or more games: Trout in 2019, Alex Rodriguez in 2003 and Cal Ripken in 1991.
Still, the contenders are the contenders, flaws and all.
Yordan Alvarez sits at the front of the pack because he has been the league’s best hitter. A DH from a losing team has never won MVP, and Ohtani’s winning seasons in 2021 and 2023 came with the added value of 23 pitching starts in each year.
Alvarez has spent only 18 games in the outfield. But his bat is carrying the case: he leads the AL in homers, on-base percentage, slugging and total bases.
Nick Kurtz is right behind him. He leads the league in runs, walks and RBIs, but the home-road split is glaring. His OPS falls 293 points away from the West Sacramento launching pad.
Bobby Witt Jr. owns the AL lead in WAR, which always gives him a real argument with voters. The problem is the rest of the profile.
His power is down, the Royals have been stuck since their 7-16 start, and he has only 10 homers. No player has won MVP for a losing team without hitting at least 29 home runs, which Trout did in 2016.
All 10 MVPs from losing teams were sluggers, averaging 44.5 homers.
Byron Buxton has the kind of power that can get attention, but his numbers have started to slide. He is tied for 29th in the league in WAR and posted a .211 June. He is also carrying a .186 average with runners in scoring position, while driving himself in 25 times compared with 18 RBIs from a teammate.
Junior Caminero is another name with plenty of upside. He could end up as a 40-homer third baseman for a winning team, which is the kind of profile that jumps off the page. But the splits are loud: a 1.071 OPS at home and .748 on the road, plus a .208 mark with runners in scoring position.
Then there’s Bellinger, who has the highest WAR among players on winning teams. His home-road split is extreme even by today’s standards, with a 1.128 OPS at Yankee Stadium and .576 away from it.
His at-bat against Red Sox reliever Aroldis Chapman on Saturday showed exactly how much his game has changed. After falling behind 0-and-2, Bellinger saw nine more pitches, fouled off five, and kept spoiling 99.9 mph heat with a short, controlled swing before taking ball four.
He became the first hitter this season to foul off four pitches from Chapman at 99.9 mph and faster.
That kind of plate discipline would have been hard to imagine four years ago, when Bellinger struck out 150 times and walked only 38. This season, only Bellinger, Kevin McGonigle of the Tigers and Steven Kwan of the Guardians have more walks than strikeouts in the AL.
Yankees manager Aaron Boone sees the transformation as the product of both athleticism and reinvention. “First of all, he’s a great athlete, so he’s evolved really well,” Boone says.
“Early on in his career when he won the MVP, he was just such a great athlete, an explosive player. Then he had the shoulder injury, which really messed him up.
It affected his swing and obviously affected his performance. But I think he re-invented himself once he got through that.
He evolved into a different kind of player, even last year.
“I think his greatest tool is his athleticism, but also with that is the bat-to-ball. He’s got different swings, he can touch everything.
This year, he still has the Belli thing in him, that’s special, but he’s walking. That’s been huge.”
Boone doesn’t sound bothered by the ugly split either. “One of the things that attracted us to him a couple of years ago and this offseason was we thought his swing was made for Yankee Stadium,” Boone says.
“So, I do think there’s a component where he’s built for Yankee Stadium. So, I’m not surprised he’s better at home.
But I think it’s an anomaly that it’s as big as it is.”
In Other News...
Royals Just Became The Butt Of Another Brutal National Joke
The Royals have spent much of the season trying to climb out of a rough spot while still holding postseason hopes, but their latest wave of attention came from an especially unflattering place. A satirical Babylon Bee piece took aim at Kansas City with a joke built around the idea that the club managed to lose on a day it did not even play, a punchline aimed at a team already carrying the worst record in the American League.
The sting of it is made sharper by what happened last week, when Kansas City was outscored 35-3 over a two-game stretch, the kind of skid that invites ridicule from outside observers and weary reactions from fans. Royals supporters did exactly that on social media, weighing in on the joke in real time as the club once again found itself as the punchline in a national conversation it would rather avoid. [Read more 🡒]
Royals Make A Tense Coaching Decision As Season Keeps Sliding
With the Royals continuing to slog through a season that has tested just about every part of the roster, the attention has started to drift toward the coaching staff and whether change might be coming. General manager J.J. Picollo said the organization is not looking to make a sweeping move in-season, even as the club works its way through a 35-50 record and a steady stream of injuries that have made the year harder to evaluate in real time.
Matt Quatraros three-year extension signed in the offseason gives the Royals some continuity at the top, and the staff around him has already been reshaped with new voices in the hitting and pitching rooms. For now, Kansas City is keeping that structure intact while trying to steady things on the field, with any broader review pushed to the end of the year rather than the heat of the summer. [Read more 🡒]
Royals Downtown Stadium Push Just Took A Major Step Forward
A downtown ballpark move for the Royals is no longer just talk, as the club has filed a permit for the project and taken another tangible step toward reshaping where the franchise plays its home games. The plan calls for a major district built around the stadium site, with Populous lined up as the design lead and architect, giving the effort a more concrete structure as it moves from vision to paperwork.
The scope is sprawling, covering roughly 91 acres and split into 10 planned areas, with the timeline stretched well beyond the first shovels in the ground. Construction could begin this year and run through 2031, while the broader district is expected to keep unfolding all the way to 2040, depending on market demand and how quickly each phase can advance. [Read more 🡒]
