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Sorry Victor, but a RP/CL from a big market ballclub who didn't play in as many games or innings as you had last season, is certainly far more deserving of the AL award.
Besides, it was Mo's last go-round in MLB before retiring, so as a longtime career-encompassing member of the most important and globally recognizable MLB franchise, being none other than the vaunted Yankees, he must be given as much recognition as is humanly possible, along with some sweet parting gifts, for the likely near-future first-ballot HOFer & unlike Todd Helton, who rather very quietly hung up his spikes this season, or Chipper Jones who retired last year.
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20131104&content_id=63680098&vkey=pr_mlb&c_id=mlb
Forgot that this was Liriano's second comeback player of the year award. He also won it in the AL with the twinks in '10. I wonder how many other players in MLB history have won it twice, much less in both the AL and NL?
Besides, it was Mo's last go-round in MLB before retiring, so as a longtime career-encompassing member of the most important and globally recognizable MLB franchise, being none other than the vaunted Yankees, he must be given as much recognition as is humanly possible, along with some sweet parting gifts, for the likely near-future first-ballot HOFer & unlike Todd Helton, who rather very quietly hung up his spikes this season, or Chipper Jones who retired last year.
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20131104&content_id=63680098&vkey=pr_mlb&c_id=mlb
Forgot that this was Liriano's second comeback player of the year award. He also won it in the AL with the twinks in '10. I wonder how many other players in MLB history have won it twice, much less in both the AL and NL?
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