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FanHouse CyYoungAward

Latest CyYoungAward Stories

Call The Cy Young Races Off

You never know what's gonna happen when you're a pitcher. You could go on a two-month slump out of nowhere. Steve Blass disease could rear its ugly head. You could suddenly become close personal friends with Dr. James Andrews. There are no sure things, really, but if you're Cliff Lee or Brandon Webb, you can probably start making space on your shelf for a Cy Young Award.

Webb gave up one run on six hits against the Braves yesterday, boosting his record to 17-4 and lowering his ERA to 2.88. He's head and shoulders above everyone in the NL in wins and at the moment trails only Tim Lincecum, Jake Peavy, and Johan Santana in the ERA race. But not by much, and more important to the win-crazy BBWAA writers, none of those guys are going to match his win totals when it's all said and done. What's more, two of those three are certain to be watching the playoffs from home this October, and Santana's Mets stand a worse chance of playing in the postseason right now than Webb's Diamondbacks. Out of all of the challengers I think Linceucm poses the biggest threat in that two stellar months for him might have older voters reminiscing about Steve Carlton wining 27 games for a pathetic Phillies team in 1972, but this is really Webb's award to lose at this point.

Cliff Lee was even more impressive yesterday, shutting out the Blue Jays over eight innings. Lee is leading the AL in wins and ERA, and none of the three guys trailing him in the latter category -- Justin Duchscherer, Roy Halladay, or Felix Hernandez -- are playing for winning teams, ensuring that only Lee truly has a shot at both titles. Yet somehow Lee seems less of a lock for a Cy Young than Webb does, for the simple reason that Francisco Rodriguez is likely to break the saves record for the best team in baseball. AL voters haven't given a Cy Young to a closer since Dennis Eckersley got it in 1992 -- and the early season K-Rod buzz is certainly dying down -- but the save, she is a seductive stat, and to the extent Lee falters down the stretch, the writers have a fallback option in Rodriguez.

But it's not a smart option, because Lee, as Webb, have been dominant this year. And though it's only August 11th, we haven't had a a clearer choice for Cy Young this early in recent memory.

Sabathia Beats Out Beckett For Cy Young

Had the voting for the Cy Young Award been taken after the playoffs, I think it's safe to say that Josh Beckett would have been a runaway winner. Unfortunately for Josh, that's just not the way things work, though I'm sure the World Series ring is a fantastic consolation prize.

The voting is based on the regular season, and the votes say that Cleveland's C.C. Sabathia is the Cy Young Award winner in the American League.
In voting conducted by members of the Baseball Writers Association of America, Sabathia beat Boston's Josh Beckett for his first American League Cy Young Award. He is only the second pitcher in Indians history to win the award -- the first being Gaylord Perry, who won it in 1972.
Sabathia went 19-7 for the Indians this season as he was the ace of a starting staff that led the Indians to an AL Central title, and a trip to the ALCS. Sabathia set all sorts of career highs this season, in wins, ERA (3.21), innings pitched (241, led the Majors), strikouts (209), and perhaps most importantly, games started (34).

Sabathia has always been a dominant pitcher, but he had always had trouble staying healthy. I don't think it's a coincidence that the first year he stayed healthy for a whole season he ends up winning the Cy Young Award.

All of which is probably going to lead to quite a hefty contract extension from the Indians before too long.

MLB Cy Young Watch: C.C. Sabathia is Large, and Barely in Charge

We here at the MLB FanHouse will be musing twice a month until the end of the season on who we think leads the AL and NL Cy Young award races.

American League: C.C. Sabathia, Cleveland Indians

Last time if you remember, the A.L. Cy race was too close to call. This time ... well, it still is. But I can't cop out twice in a row. Since our last Cy snapshot, C.C. Sabathia (17-7, has thrown 17 innings in two starts and has only given up one run, helping the Tribe to a healthy lead in the A.L. Central. Josh Beckett is right there too, having won his last two starts as well. But after Sabathia has passed Beckett in ERA, a category he had been lagging behind by a big margin all season, I have to give the edge to Sabathia this week. With John Lackey, Kelvim Escobar, and Fausto Carmona also lurking, it's going to be a very tight race down the stretch.

Also in the mix:
Josh Beckett (18-6, 3.27 ERA)
John Lackey (16-8, 3.18 ERA)
Kelvim Escobar (16-7, 3.04 ERA)
Fausto Carmona (16-8, 3.20 ERA)
J.J. Putz (1.43 ERA, 37 saves)
Chien-Ming Wang (18-6, 3.69 ERA)

MLB Cy Young Watch: Brad Penny and Dan Haren Prove the More Things Change ...

We here at the MLB FanHouse will be musing twice a month until the end of the season on who we think leads the AL and NL Cy Young award races.

National League: Brad Penny, Los Angeles Dodgers

Even with his recent abdominal strain, Brad Penny has lengthened his lead on the Cy Young chase. Even after Tuesday's loss to the Giants, Penny still outdistances the field 13-2 with a 2.60 ERA, including the guy who was once much closer in the race, Jake Peavy. Peavy hasn't been bad but he's been quite ordinary in losing four of his last five decisions, putting him in the everyone else discussion as in: There's Brad Penny, and then there's everyone else.

Also in the mix:
Jake Peavy: 10-5, 2.41 ERA, 144 K's
John Maine: 12-5, 2.92 ERA
Cole Hamels: 12-5, 143 K's
Carlos Zambrano: 14-7, 128 K's
Chris Young: 9-3, 1.82 ERA

American League after the jump ...

MLB Cy Young Watch: Brad Penny Stares Down Jake Peavy

We here at the MLB FanHouse will be musing twice a month until the end of the season on who we think leads the AL and NL Cy Young award races. This is the sixth installment.

National League: Brad Penny, Los Angeles Dodgers

Brad Penny proved he belongs at the top of the list after staring down Jake Peavy in a Cy Young worthy battle. This race is razor thin. Penny is at 10-1 with a 2.00 ERA, while Peavy is at 9-2 and 2.09. What keeps this race so close is Peavy's huge strikeout advantage (119 to 77), but chances are this race will go back and forth the rest of the season, with the team that wins the division also winning the Cy Young Award for their pitcher.

Also in the mix:
Jake Peavy: 9-2, 2.09 ERA, 119 K's
Chris Young: 8-3, 2.14 ERA
Ben Sheets: 10-3, 3.19 ERA
John Maine: 9-4, 2.74 ERA
Takashi Saito: 23 saves, 1.30 ERA

American League after the jump ...

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