
Let's look at both of the front runner's numbers (As of 8/31):

Adrian Gonzalez: .342 average, and 184 hits both lead the AL. He is 13th in homers, but is second in RBI with 103. But, he trails Granderson in stolen bases by 23, runs scored by 33, and triples by seven. He's also fifth in the league in OPS at .957.
With those stats in mind, baseball experts believe Gonzalez is right there in the AL MVP race, and some believe he should still win it. But not so fast, if you go inside those numbers you can clearly tell Granderson is by far the better candidate to win the award.

- Above .500 opponents: 63 games, .276 average, 22 homers, 54 RBI, 13 steals, 60 runs, .381 OBP, .627 slugging %, 1.009 OPS
- Below .500 opponents: 68 games, .273 average, 16 homers, 53 RBI, 11 steals, 63 runs, .371 OBP, .553 slugging %, .924 OPS

- Above .500 opponents: 66 games .261 average 68 hits, 13 homers, 48 RBI, .339 OBP, .487 slugging %, .826 OPS.
- Below .500 opponents: 66 games .419 average, 116 hits, 10 homers, 55 RBI, .464 OBP, .617 slugging %, 1.081 OPS.
Sure it's nice Adrian Gonzalez can feed off against the bottom feeders of the league. That's fine and dandy, but anyone can do that. But it's a red flag when his signature batting average and total hits take a huge drop off when he plays better teams. In my eye, to be the most valuable player you have to continue to produce against all kinds of competition, and Granderson is either the same in some categories, or he's better. For Gonzalez, he's the same in some categories, but he drops off significantly against the better teams. I really hope I've caught the voter's eye on this, it really shows that Gonzalez really shouldn't be a front runner for the American League MVP, and that Granderson should be ahead of the pack.
--Jesse Schindler, BYB Staff Writer
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