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Lee wins AL Cy Young; Dice-K fourth

Posted by Nick Cafardo, Globe Staff November 13, 2008 02:04 PM


Here's a press release from the Cleveland Indians regarding Cy Young winner Cliff Lee:

Cliff Lee of the Cleveland Indians was elected the American League Cy Young Award winner in balloting by the BBWAA. It marked the second consecutive year and third time overall that a Cleveland pitcher was honored. CC Sabathia won last year. The other Indians winner was Gaylord Perry in 1972.

Lee was named first on 24 and second on the other four of the 28 ballots cast by two writers in each league city for a total of 132 points, based on the 5-3-1 tabulation system. The lefthander, 30, was 22-3 in leading the AL in victories, winning percentage (.880) and ERA (2.54) and adding career-high totals of innings (223 1/3) and strikeouts (170) with four complete games and two shutouts. Lee, the starting pitcher for the AL in the All-Star Game July 15 at Yankee Stadium, was the only pitcher named on all ballots.

The other four first-place votes went to Toronto Blue Jays righthander Roy Halladay, who was the runner-up with 71 points. Halladay, the 2003 winner, had a 20-11 record with a 2.78 ERA and led the major leagues in innings (246) and complete games (9). Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim reliever Francisco Rodriguez (2-3, 2.24 ERA), who set a major league record with 62 saves, finished third with 32 points. Four other pitchers received votes.

This was the fifth time two different pitchers from the same team won the AL Cy Young Award in successive years. The others were the New York Yankees’ Sparky Lyle (1977) and Ron Guidry (1978), the Baltimore Orioles’ Mike Flanagan (1979) and Steve Stone (1980), the Milwaukee Brewers’ Rollie Fingers (1981) and Pete Vuckovich (1982) and the Blue Jays’ Pat Hentgen (1996) and Roger Clemens (1997). Only Lyle and Guidry were both left-handed like Lee/Sabathia. It has happened three times in the National League.

The vote:
Pitcher, club 1st 2nd 3rd Points
Cliff Lee, Cleveland Indians 24 4 132
Roy Halladay, Toronto Blue Jays 4 15 6 71
Francisco Rodriguez, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 7 11 32
Daisuke Matsuzaka, Boston Red Sox 2 4 10
Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees 3 3
Mike Mussina, New York Yankees 2 2
Ervin Santana, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 2 2

1 comments so far...
  1. Hard to figure out who should have won. Lee and Halladay were both very worthy. Francisco Rodriguez is way overrated. Tons of opportunities + good (but not great) pitching from K-Rod = fairly meaningless record. I'd take Mariano, Papelbon, Lidge, Balfour, and others as my closer before Rodriguez. Good for Dice-K for finishing so high. I still can't figure out how he wriggled free from so many baserunners.

    Posted by SacBunt November 13, 08 11:50 PM
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