The only thing that could possibly upstage Gehrig’s disappointment is a Hall of Fame player who was robbed of the MVP twice by division rival Joe DiMaggio.
Remember when I explained that some seasons are immortalized in baseball lore, and that these efforts should sometimes overcome a solid season by a pennant winner?
Ted Williams was ignored for epic achievements in both 1941 and 1947.
In 1941, Williams generated one of the most magical numbers in major league history when he hit .406. Never duplicated and rarely even approached since 1941, Williams’ “.406” is still recognized as one of the few statistical anomalies that may never be broken.
Unfortunately for Williams, he was put up against an equally immortalized baseball feat by a man on a pennant-winning club—DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting streak.
Even if voters chose to deem the two epic accomplishments as “equal,” Williams led the league in walks, runs scored, home runs, slugging, on-base percentage (.553), and OPS.
Although a strong DiMaggio proponent, it is impossible for me to justify his MVP selection over a season like Williams’.
To further prolong the “head-scratching” phenomenon, Williams joined Gehrig in “Triple Crown but no MVP” purgatory in 1947.
Again losing the vote to “Joltin’ Joe,” Williams hit .343 with 32 HR and 114 RBI—also leading the league in runs, walks, OBP, OPS, slugging, and total bases.
DiMaggio received the award even though he did not lead the league in any offensive category. He also played in 15 fewer games than Williams, hitting just .315 with 20 HR, 97 RBI, and 97 runs.
It can be argued that 1947 represented the worst full season of DiMaggio’s career, and it is rather difficult to argue against that notion. To hand him the MVP award is rather laughable and is an indictment of the voting process in general.
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