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Marlins' Sandy Alcantara rides majors-best 228.2 innings pitched to NL Cy Young Award.​

It wasn't a question of whether Sandy Alcantara would win the Cy Young Award, just one of whether he would become the first unanimous winner in the National League since Clayton Kershaw in 2014.
Indeed, the Miami Marlins' 27-year-old right-hander swept all 30 first-place votes to beat out Braves lefty Max Fried and Dodgers southpaw Julio Urias to become the first Cy Young winner in Marlins history.
With Houston Astros ace Justin Verlander also winning the AL Cy Young by unanimous vote, this marks just the second time that both Cy Young winners were unanimous. Bob Gibson and Denny McLain also won unanimously in 1968, one year after the award started to be given out to both leagues.
In this age of five-inning starters, Alcantara stood out as a unicorn: He pitched 228⅔ innings, 23⅔ more than other pitcher in the majors, and the most innings since David Price threw 230 in 2016. He threw six complete games -- more than any other team. He pitched at least eight innings in 14 of his 32 starts, the most such games since 2014. His 8.0 WAR easily topped Aaron Nola's 6.0 as the best in the NL and ranked as the best in Marlins history, ahead of Kevin Brown's 7.9 in 1996.
"It makes me feel so special because I came here to the Marlins with my positive mentality -- just tried to win,'' Alcantara said after winning the award. "Tried to compete, tried to get better. This year I put everything in the same spot, working hard. I've had great success. And now to win the National League Cy Young, I feel so happy and blessed.''
He joins Pedro Martinez (1997) as the only player born in the Dominican Republic to win the NL award. Martinez also won twice in the AL (1999, 2000), and the other Dominican winner in the AL was Bartolo Colon in 2005.
"The hard work, the positivity, every day, fighting for my team, competing against any team. That makes it special,'' he said. "My mentality all the time is to be aggressive. Try to get better every day. And I'll keep doing the same. And let's see if I can win the Cy Young next year, too.''
Here's another way to view Alcantara's award: He had 16 starts of more than seven innings when you add in his two 7⅔-inning outings. Fried and Urias combined for just two outings of more than seven innings. It wasn't just his ability to pitch deep into games that made Alcantara the Cy Young winner, however. His 2.28 ERA ranked second in the NL behind Urias' 2.16, and he held batters to a .212 average with some of the most electric stuff in the majors.
"He's throwing 100-plus mph and he's got movement on that fastball," Cardinals first baseman Paul Goldschmidt said.
Indeed, Alcantara averaged just under 98 mph with his fastball (he throws both a four-seamer and sinker), but his game plan is a little different from a lot of modern pitchers. He induces a lot of soft contact rather than just racking up strikeouts -- and thus avoids the high pitch counts that result from a lot of deep counts. As a result, he led all starters in averaging just 14.2 pitches per inning, allowing him to go deep into games. He still managed 207 strikeouts, including a season-high 14 in an eight-inning win over the Braves on May 28. "Sometimes with Sandy it looks like pitch and catch," then-Marlins manager Don Mattingly said after that dominating victory.
Originally signed by the Cardinals out of the Dominican Republic, the Marlins acquired Alcantara after the 2017 season in a trade that sent Marcell Ozuna to St. Louis. Alcantara made the All-Star team in 2019, his first full season in the majors, when he finished with a 3.88 ERA, and then had a big breakout in 2021, when he went 9-15 with a 3.19 ERA in 205 innings.
An improved changeup took him to another level this season, as batters hit just .145 against it with no home runs in 248 at-bats. It's a power change that averaged 91.8 mph -- yes, a 92 mph changeup. According to Statcast metrics, his changeup saved 25 runs, the most valuable changeup in the game in 2022.
Maybe the highlight of Alcantara's season wasn't one of his seven scoreless outings, but a 4-3 victory over the Cardinals on June 29. Leading 4-3 with runners at first and second and one out in the ninth and Alcantara at 115 pitches, Mattingly came out to apparently remove him from the game. Alcantara talked himself into staying in and two pitches later induced to a double play to end it.
"When he came to me, I said, 'I got it. I got it.' I think he has too much confidence in me to finish the game," Alcantara said after that win. "I don't have to worry when I have men on base. I know I can throw a strike and get a double play."
"He said he had it, and he did," Mattingly said. "I wasn't going to promise him two hitters, but I gave him that one. He's pretty special."
Special enough that the extension the Marlins signed him to last November that runs through 2027 now looks like a bargain. With the Marlins now having a Cy Young winner, the only franchises without one are the Texas Rangers and Colorado Rockies.
 

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Justin Verlander wins third AL Cy Young by unanimous vote.​


Houston Astros pitcher Justin Verlander won his third American League Cy Young Award on Thursday, joining a distinguished club with fewer than a dozen members throughout baseball history. He did so unanimously. And he did so under unprecedented circumstances -- as a 39-year-old coming off Tommy John surgery, which kept him off a major league mound for most of the past two years.
It was all rooted in positive thinking.
When Verlander decided to surgically repair a torn ulnar collateral ligament in September 2020, he thought not about his age but about a percentage: 89%. That, he told MLB Network before being announced as the winner, was the rate at which pitchers eventually return to their prior selves after navigating the 12- to 18-month rehab from Tommy John surgery. He thought about how well his body responded to the core surgery he underwent in 2014, tricking himself into believing it bought him an extra handful of percentage points. And he thought about how he was the best pitcher in the AL as recently as 2019.
"I will always kind of remember this Cy Young as looking back at the growth of me as a father and as a person and just also the rehab and all the hard work that went into the rehab, and just how much I was committed to, 'It was going to go well, and I was going to come back and be me,'" Verlander said on a conference call after claiming the award. "Positive affirmations only take people so far, obviously, so to actually have it happen I think will just be something that I'll always remember."
Verlander, who recently helped the Astros capture their second World Series championship in five years, received all 30 first-place votes for the AL Cy Young Award by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. The 30 second-place votes were split between Dylan Cease of the Chicago White Sox (14), Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Angels (nine) and Alek Manoah of the Toronto Blue Jays (seven). Sandy Alcantara of the Miami Marlins took all of the first-place votes for the National League version, making this the second time that both Cy Young winners were unanimous (Bob Gibson and Denny McLain also did it in 1968).
Verlander, who also won in 2011 and 2019, joins a list of 10 others who have captured at least three Cy Youngs. Seven of them (Randy Johnson, Steve Carlton, Greg Maddux, Sandy Koufax, Pedro Martinez, Jim Palmer and Tom Seaver) are in the Hall of Fame. Two others (Clayton Kershaw and Max Scherzer) will be eventually. And the other (Roger Clemens) hasn't been inducted because of his ties to performance-enhancing drugs.
Verlander will someday be enshrined in Cooperstown -- but first he needs to decide which team he'll finish his career with. Verlander opted out of the $25 million salary he would have earned in 2023 and is perceived to be seeking a deal similar to the three-year, $130 million contract Scherzer signed with the New York Mets last offseason. Verlander said Astros owner Jim Crane, who recently parted ways with James Click as his general manager and has been more hands-on with baseball-operations decisions, was in touch via text message recently and communicated his interest in retaining Verlander.
"I'm not a negative person, so I don't want to sit here and say maybe I won't be back because it's been a wonderful ride and I don't know what's going to happen, so I'm not gonna sit here and pretend to know," Verlander said. "I'm just going to be in a situation where the market will dictate itself. We'll see what happens. Obviously there's a lot of people that are interested. Jim understands that. Based on our conversation, he completely understands that there's a lot of people that are potentially interested in my services, including the Astros, and we'll see what happens."
Verlander led the AL in wins (18) and led the majors in both ERA (1.75) and WHIP (0.83) in 2022, fronting a deep Astros pitching staff that helped secure a championship.
Verlander -- 39 years and 227 days old on the last day of the regular season -- is the fourth-oldest Cy Young winner and the second-oldest pitcher to lead the majors in ERA, topped only by a 43-year-old Clemens in 2005. Verlander's ERA was the best by a pitcher who made a minimum of 25 starts in his age-39-or-older season since earned runs became official in 1913, and it was the lowest by an AL pitcher in a full season -- at any age -- since Pedro Martinez had a 1.74 ERA in 2000.
Verlander completed at least six innings in 22 of his 28 starts and accumulated 175 innings during the regular season, striking out 185 batters and walking only 29. He followed with an up-and-down performance in the ensuing postseason but overcame shaky command to contribute five innings of one-run ball against the Philadelphia Phillies in Game 5 of the World Series, a major step in ultimately attaining his second title.
Verlander's third Cy Young came in the most unlikely of ways -- near the end of his career, on the heels of major elbow surgery. He became the second non-rookie ever to make a minimum of 15 starts and post a sub-2.00 ERA despite not pitching in the majors the previous season, according to ESPN Stats & Information research. The other was Fred Toney, who had a 1.58 ERA for the 1915 Cincinnati Reds after pitching in the minor leagues the previous year.
Verlander felt elbow soreness throughout the rehab process and into the regular season. He wondered if it would linger throughout the summer. And then suddenly, going into his fifth start in the first week of May, it stopped. His elbow had adapted to the stress of pitching in a major league game again.
"I just felt like myself," Verlander said. "And the moment that I felt normal and like myself, pain free, able to recover like I always have, I think my mindset just completely shifted to, 'OK, I am the pitcher I've always been.' That level of pitching, when I'm healthy, has always been quite high. I didn't anticipate it ending in the Cy Young. I don't try to put those expectations on myself. But I knew that I had the opportunity to go out and have a wonderful season."

PLAYER, TEAM1ST2ND3RD4TH5THTOTAL
Justin Verlander, Astros30--------210
Dylan Cease, White Sox--14105197
Alex Manoah, Blue Jays--71310--87
Shohei Ohtani, Angels--9712182
Framber Valdez, Astros------11214
Shane McClanahan, Rays------1810
Shane Bieber, Guardians------135
Nestor Cortes, Yankees--------33
Gerrit Cole, Yankees--------11
Kevin Gausman, Blue Jays--------11
 

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Who's Aaron Judge for 500 :lmao:
 

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See ya next season.
Congrats
 

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