November 2008
The Cy Young Of The Central
On Tuesday, Tim Lincecum of the San Francisco Giants was named the National League Cy Young Award winner for 2008. Lincecum won by a comfortable margin over division foe Brandon Webb of the Diamondbacks. Third in the voting was Johan Santana of the Mets followed by Brad Lidge of the Phillies. Where are all the pitchers from the Central? Baseball’s largest division had to produce some decent enough pitchers to get some votes in the Cy Young race, right?
In all actuality, six pitchers ended up receiving at least some votes, with the Milwaukee Brewers CC Sabathia finishing 5th with nine points and Ryan Dempster of the Chicago Cubs finishing 6th with four points. Thanks to a graduated points scale (5-3-1) Dempster actually appeared on more ballots (4) than Sabathia (3), yet CC ended up with more total points as Dempster finished third on all four of his ballots, while Sabathia notched a first, second, and third place vote.
Sabathia also finished just a point shy of Brad Lidge for 4th (10-9). That looks even more impressive when it’s noted Lidge appeared on eight ballots to Sabathia’s three. No pitcher appeared on all 32 ballots, with Lincecum being the top one at 31. Webb was on 27, Santana 23, Lidge 8, Sabathia 3, and Dempster 4.
Some pundits said that Sabathia had no chance of actually winning the award because his amazing run for the Brewers occurred through only one half of the season. Some people thought however, that it shouldn’t matter, and that nobody could match what CC did for the Crew in the second half of the season. His amazing half-season did garner one first place vote for the Cy Young, showing that one voter didn’t care he only played half a season in Milwaukee.
Sabathia may very well end up somewhere else next season, and if he does, good for him. He will forever be loved in Milwaukee and if I had my way, even if he were to leave this off-season, I would seriously consider retiring his number years down the road. For a franchise that has been in existence since 1969 and has just three playoff appearances, what CC did to lead the Brewers to the postseason this year may very well be enough to get his number next to Robin Yount’s, Paul Molitor’s, Hank Aaron’s, Jackie Robinson’s, Rollie Fingers’ and Bob Uecker’s 50 years.
Recent Comments