Yu Darvish
16-9, 3.90 ERA, 221 K, 89 BB, 191.1 IP
Darvish lived up to the hype of coming over from Japan, and then some. We even forget that it was a question of whether he would start the season in Triple-A or with the Rangers. He busted out the wins right out of the gate, going 4-0 with a 2.18 ERA in April. He then helped the Rangers hold on to their playoff spot by posting a 4-0 record with a 1.85 ERA down the stretch. Most years, he would be the front-runner by a long shot, much like CC Sabathia in 2001, but unfortunately the possible MVP happened to be a rookie.
Yoenis Cespedes
.292, 23 HR, 82 RBI, 16 SB, 25 2B
Another import who played right up to his potential, Yoenis started mashing right away. With three homeruns, 7 RBIs, and a ridiculous 1.477 OPS through the first four games, he looked like a steal at $9 million a year. Though he quickly settled down, he was one of the many consistant cogs in the Athletics' machine that drove them to the division title. Much like Darvish, in another year he has a fighting chance, just not this year.
Mike Trout
.326, 30 HR, 83 RBI, 49 SB, 129 R, 8 3B
I want you to just sit and have a nice chuckle with me for a second. He had been out-hyped by Darvish and Cespedes coming over, didn't play for the first month, and still put up one of the greatest all-around seasons by ANYONE, let alone a rookie. He came up one stolen base shy of only the third 30-50 season of all time. He took back four balls that had already crossed the fence and turned them into outs. He turned a team that was floundering at 7-14, to a team that won 89 games and fell victim to the newly-tough AL West. While the MVP may be out of reach, you can put this one in the books.
Mike Trout for Presiden... I mean AL Rookie of the Year
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