Angels’ Shohei Ohtani, Phillies’ Bryce Harper among Players Choice Awards victors

Angels’ Shohei Ohtani, Phillies’ Bryce Harper among Players Choice Awards victors

Shohei Ohtani, Bryce Harper, Max Scherzer and Robbie Ray featured the list of the people who guaranteed Players Choice Awards for the 2021 season. The awards, reported Thursday on ESPN, are introduced by the Major League Baseball Players Association and are voted on by the actual players.

Ohtani and Ray were named Outstanding Player and Outstanding Pitcher, respectively, for the American League, while Harper and Scherzer guaranteed Outstanding Player and Outstanding Pitcher for the National League, honors like the MVP and Cy Young awards that are voted on by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.

Ohtani was likewise named Player of the Year, given to the player who “exhibits the best on-field performance” in either league, as per the MLBPA.

Ohtani – additionally gave the Commissioner’s Historic Achievement Award before the World Series – set up an unprecedented season as a two-way player for the Los Angeles Angels, bragging a .965 OPS with 46 home runs and 26 stolen bases as a hitter and a 3.18 ERA with 156 strikeouts in 130 1/3 innings as a pitcher.

Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Kansas City Royals catcher Salvador Perez completed second and third, respectively. Guerrero was likewise runner-up to Ohtani for the Player of the Year Award, with Harper completing third.

Harper, an MVP in 2015, drove the NL in OPS (1.044) and weighted runs made in addition to (170) while completing second in FanGraphs wins above substitution (6.6) and adding 35 home runs for the Philadelphia Phillies. Washington Nationals outfielder Juan Soto was the runner-up for the award, while San Diego Padres shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr. also, Atlanta Braves third baseman Austin Riley tied for third.

“Bryce’s 2021 season was one of the greatest in our franchise’s history,” Phillies owner John Middleton said in a statement. “… When we first signed Bryce, we knew we were getting one of the best in the game. We couldn’t be happier to have him in Phillies pinstripes as he continues to leave his indelible mark on this great sport.”

Scherzer, a three-time Cy Young Award winner who was traded from the Nationals to the Los Angeles Dodgers at middle of the season, went 15-4 with a 2.46 ERA and 236 strikeouts in 179 1/3 innings. The 37-year-old right-hander additionally donned the most reduced walk rate and hit rate in the NL and at last completed in front of Corbin Burnes and Zack Wheeler, respectively, in the voting.

Ray had a resurgent season for the Blue Jays, bringing down his ERA from 6.62 in 2020 to an AL-low 2.84 in 2021. Ray added 13 successes, a 1.05 WHIP and a major league-leading 248 strikeouts in 193 1/3 innings. Gerrit Cole of the New York Yankees and Lance Lynn of the Chicago White Sox completed second and third, respectively.

Baltimore Orioles first baseman Trey Mancini, who hit 21 home runs and played in 147 games a season in the wake of fighting Stage 3 colon cancer, and San Francisco Giants catcher Buster Posey, an All-Star subsequent to sitting out the 2020 season, captured Comeback Player of the Year awards in their respective leagues. Orioles left fielder Ryan Mountcastle, who hit 33 home runs, and Cincinnati Reds second baseman Jonathan India, who aggregated 3.9 FanGraphs wins above substitution, caught Outstanding Rookie awards.

The Marvin Miller Man of the Year Award, given to the player “whose leadership most inspires others to higher levels of achievement,” as per the MLBPA, went to Blue Jays second baseman Marcus Semien.

Mark Belanger, who went through 18 years in the significant leagues and afterward became the first former player to work for the MLBPA in 1983, won the Curt Flood Award, which, as indicated by the MLBPA, is given to a previous player “who in the image of Flood demonstrated a selfless, longtime devotion to the Players Association and advancement of players’ rights.”

Belanger spent 15 years working for the Union until his death at 54 years old in 1998, and before then he was a key confidante for Miller, the long-term executive who transformed the MLBPA into one of the strongest unions in the country.