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Robin Yount named AL Most Valuable Player
By the fall of 1982, the baseball world had made a widely undisputed choice for the American League MVP. Talked about at length in newspapers, there was one power-hitting shortstop who stood tall among the rest. And everyone who witnessed his style of play had only rave reviews.
After future Hall of Famer Robin Yount hit two home runs in the final game of the regular season to help his Milwaukee Brewers clinch the American League pennant, manager Harvey Kuenn declared that “without reservation, he’s the best all-around shortstop I’ve ever seen. He’s the same guy who came up to the majors when he was 18. He just wants to be the best in his own way: Do it nice and quiet and give everyone else credit for it.”
Peter Gammons, of the Boston Globe, couldn’t agree more with Kuenn.
“It is virtually etched in stone that Robin Yount is going to win it in a runaway,” he wrote in a piece detailing his predictions for award-winners throughout the league.
On Nov. 9, 1982, the prediction became a reality.
After a postseason performance in which Yount batted .414 and set a World Series record by getting four hits in a game two times, Brewers pitcher Don Sutton remarked to the Associated Press that “Yount is the best athlete I’ve ever played with. He’s not only the MVP and an All-Star. I think he’s All-World. I’ve admired him from a distance, and close up I’m in awe at the things this man can do.”
It seemed as if everyone had come to a consensus that Yount would win the AL MVP award, except for Yount himself. Putting emphasis on the team dynamic, he chose to shrug off all of the compliments coming his way.
“If it were up to me,” he told the Associated Press when asked about his chances of winning the AL MVP. “I probably wouldn’t have an award. No one person can carry a team through a 162-game schedule. I think the only awards should be team awards.”
Regardless, Yount’s 1982 season was one of the best ever by a shortstop. He topped the leaderboards that year, as he led the major leagues in slugging (.578), total bases (367) and hits (210) and tied for first in doubles (46). He also ranked second in the American League in batting average (.331), runs scored (129) and third in triples (12).
That’s why, when the Baseball Writers’ Association of America sat down to take a vote, the choice was almost unanimous. The 27 year-old received 27 out of a possible 28 votes, and 385 points out of a possible 392. He would also win the Gold Glove Award that year, and pick up another MVP Award in 1989.
Yount was the first shortstop in either league to be named MVP since 1965.
But maybe the key to his success was that he didn’t get caught up in his own achievements.
“It’s quite an honor but as I’ve said many times, I couldn’t have won it without everyone else on the team,” Yount said to the New York Times. “When you’re involved in a team spot, it’s difficult to single out an individual person.”
As if the title of AL MVP wasn’t enough to convince Yount that he had singled himself out, the BBWAA would come knocking again in 1999 – this time with election to the Hall of Fame to forever cement his legacy in baseball history.
Alex Coffey was the communications specialist at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
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