Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers is the overwhelming favorite in the MVP mock voting.
MLB.com released the results of its MVP mock voting on Monday (Nov. 19). Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees topped the American League and Ohtani of the Dodgers topped the National League.
Ohtani received first-place votes from 35 of the 41 voting experts. Second-place Bryce Harper received five votes. Jersey received 38 votes, while Baltimore's Gunner Henderson received three.
Ohtani left the Los Angeles Angels after last season and signed a massive 10-year, $700 million (97.11 billion won at today's exchange rate) contract. It is the highest in professional sports history.
He won't be on the mound this year due to elbow surgery last year. But he's been doing his job at the plate. What's more, he's leading the offense as the No. 1 hitter with fellow MVP Mookie Betts out with an injury.
Through the first half of the year, 토토사이트 Ohtani has hit .400 with a .635 on-base percentage, .635 slugging percentage, and 1.035 OPS in 94 games with 29 home runs, 69 RBIs, and 23 doubles.
He ranks second in the National League in batting average, first in home runs, third in RBI, tied for third in stolen bases, fourth in slugging percentage, first in on-base percentage, and first in OPS. He ranks at the top of several offensive metrics.
“Like Aaron Judge in the American League, Ohtani is the next big thing,” MLB.com wrote, noting that he ‘hasn't pitched once this year, but his dominance as the Dodgers’ designated hitter has been MVP-worthy.”
Until last year, Ohtani had become one of the biggest stars in the majors as a “two-hitter,” winning unanimous American League MVP honors in 2021 and 2023. This year, he's focused solely on hitting, but he leads the Dodgers' offense in hits and runs batted in.
Ohtani was followed in the National League voting by Philadelphia's Bryce Harper, Cincinnati's Eli De La Cruz, Atlanta's Marcell Ozuna, and Milwaukee's Christian Yelich.
Rounding out the American League balloting behind the No. 1 jersey were Baltimore's Gunner Henderson, Jeter's Yankees teammate Juan Soto, Kansas City's Bobby Witt, Jr.
MLB.com released the results of its MVP mock voting on Monday (Nov. 19). Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees topped the American League and Ohtani of the Dodgers topped the National League.
Ohtani received first-place votes from 35 of the 41 voting experts. Second-place Bryce Harper received five votes. Jersey received 38 votes, while Baltimore's Gunner Henderson received three.
Ohtani left the Los Angeles Angels after last season and signed a massive 10-year, $700 million (97.11 billion won at today's exchange rate) contract. It is the highest in professional sports history.
He won't be on the mound this year due to elbow surgery last year. But he's been doing his job at the plate. What's more, he's leading the offense as the No. 1 hitter with fellow MVP Mookie Betts out with an injury.
Through the first half of the year, 토토사이트 Ohtani has hit .400 with a .635 on-base percentage, .635 slugging percentage, and 1.035 OPS in 94 games with 29 home runs, 69 RBIs, and 23 doubles.
He ranks second in the National League in batting average, first in home runs, third in RBI, tied for third in stolen bases, fourth in slugging percentage, first in on-base percentage, and first in OPS. He ranks at the top of several offensive metrics.
“Like Aaron Judge in the American League, Ohtani is the next big thing,” MLB.com wrote, noting that he ‘hasn't pitched once this year, but his dominance as the Dodgers’ designated hitter has been MVP-worthy.”
Until last year, Ohtani had become one of the biggest stars in the majors as a “two-hitter,” winning unanimous American League MVP honors in 2021 and 2023. This year, he's focused solely on hitting, but he leads the Dodgers' offense in hits and runs batted in.
Ohtani was followed in the National League voting by Philadelphia's Bryce Harper, Cincinnati's Eli De La Cruz, Atlanta's Marcell Ozuna, and Milwaukee's Christian Yelich.
Rounding out the American League balloting behind the No. 1 jersey were Baltimore's Gunner Henderson, Jeter's Yankees teammate Juan Soto, Kansas City's Bobby Witt, Jr.
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