The Willie Mays World Series Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award is given to the Major League Baseball (MLB) player deemed to have the most impact on his team's performance in the World Series, which is the final round of the MLB postseason. The award was first presented in 1955 as the SPORT Magazine Award, but is now decided during the final game of the Series by a committee of reporters and officials present at the game.
Johnny Podres was the inaugural winner in 1955 for the Brooklyn Dodgers | |
Sport | Baseball |
---|---|
League | Major League Baseball |
Awarded for | Annual most valuable player of the World Series |
Country | United States Canada |
Presented by | Major League Baseball |
History | |
First award | 1955 |
Most recent | Freddie Freeman (Los Angeles Dodgers) |
On September 29, 2017, it was renamed in honor of Willie Mays in remembrance of the 63rd anniversary of The Catch, which occurred the year before the award's debut; Mays never won the award himself.
Pitchers have been named Series MVP twenty-nine (29) times; four of them were relief pitchers. Twelve of the first fourteen World Series MVPs were won by pitchers; from 1969 until 1986, the proportion of pitcher MVPs declined—Rollie Fingers (1974) and Bret Saberhagen (1985) were the only two pitchers to win the award in this period. From 1987 until 1991, all of the World Series MVPs were pitchers, and, since 1995, pitchers have won the award nine times. The most recent pitcher to win the award is Stephen Strasburg, who won in 2019.
Trophy
Up until 2017, the World Series MVP trophy was similar to the Commissioner's Trophy, albeit scaled down and with a single large gold-plated flag. After being renamed to Willie Mays World Series MVP Award for the 2018 edition and onward, the trophy is a wooden pedestal topped by a bronze sculpture of Willie Mays making the iconic catch in the 1954 World Series.
General Motors has provided a vehicle to the World Series MVP winner for 14 straight seasons through 2018. Since 2019, Disney Parks, Products and Experiences has sponsored the award.
Winners
Year | Links to the article about that corresponding World Series |
---|---|
† | Member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum |
‡ | Active player |
# | Rookie |
* | Player also won the LCS MVP Award in the same postseason |
§ | Member of losing team in the World Series |
^ | Multiple award winners in the same World Series |
(#) | Number of times winning World Series MVP at that point (if more than one) |
Year | Player | Team | Position | Selected statistics | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1955 | Johnny Podres | Brooklyn Dodgers | Starting pitcher |
| |
1956 | Don Larsen | New York Yankees | Starting pitcher |
| |
1957 | Lew Burdette | Milwaukee Braves | Starting pitcher |
| |
1958 | Bob Turley | New York Yankees | Pitcher |
| |
1959 | Larry Sherry# | Los Angeles Dodgers | Relief pitcher |
| |
1960 | Bobby Richardson | New York Yankees§ | Second baseman |
| |
1961 | Whitey Ford† | New York Yankees | Starting pitcher |
| |
1962 | Ralph Terry | New York Yankees | Starting pitcher |
| |
1963 | Sandy Koufax† | Los Angeles Dodgers | Starting pitcher |
| |
1964 | Bob Gibson† | St. Louis Cardinals | Starting pitcher |
| |
1965 | Sandy Koufax† (2) | Los Angeles Dodgers | Starting pitcher |
| |
1966 | Frank Robinson† | Baltimore Orioles | Outfielder |
| |
1967 | Bob Gibson† (2) | St. Louis Cardinals | Starting pitcher |
| |
1968 | Mickey Lolich | Detroit Tigers | Starting pitcher |
| |
1969 | Donn Clendenon | New York Mets | First baseman |
| |
1970 | Brooks Robinson† | Baltimore Orioles | Third baseman |
| |
1971 | Roberto Clemente† | Pittsburgh Pirates | Outfielder |
| |
1972 | Gene Tenace | Oakland Athletics | Catcher |
| |
1973 | Reggie Jackson† | Oakland Athletics | Outfielder |
| |
1974 | Rollie Fingers† | Oakland Athletics | Relief pitcher |
| |
1975 | Pete Rose | Cincinnati Reds | Third baseman |
| |
1976 | Johnny Bench† | Cincinnati Reds | Catcher |
| |
1977 | Reggie Jackson† (2) | New York Yankees | Outfielder |
| |
1978 | Bucky Dent | New York Yankees | Shortstop |
| |
1979* | Willie Stargell† | Pittsburgh Pirates | First baseman |
| |
1980 | Mike Schmidt† | Philadelphia Phillies | Third baseman |
| |
1981^ | Ron Cey | Los Angeles Dodgers | Third baseman |
| |
Pedro Guerrero | Outfielder |
| |||
Steve Yeager | Catcher |
| |||
1982* | Darrell Porter | St. Louis Cardinals | Catcher |
| |
1983 | Rick Dempsey | Baltimore Orioles | Catcher |
| |
1984 | Alan Trammell† | Detroit Tigers | Shortstop |
| |
1985 | Bret Saberhagen | Kansas City Royals | Starting pitcher |
| |
1986 | Ray Knight | New York Mets | Third baseman |
| |
1987 | Frank Viola | Minnesota Twins | Starting pitcher |
| |
1988* | Orel Hershiser | Los Angeles Dodgers | Starting pitcher |
| |
1989 | Dave Stewart | Oakland Athletics | Starting pitcher |
| |
1990 | José Rijo | Cincinnati Reds | Starting pitcher |
| |
1991 | Jack Morris† | Minnesota Twins | Starting pitcher |
| |
1992 | Pat Borders | Toronto Blue Jays | Catcher |
| |
1993 | Paul Molitor† | Toronto Blue Jays | Designated hitter, first baseman, third baseman |
| |
1994 | Series canceled due to player's strike | ||||
1995 | Tom Glavine† | Atlanta Braves | Starting pitcher |
| |
1996 | John Wetteland | New York Yankees | Relief pitcher |
| |
1997* | Liván Hernández# | Florida Marlins | Starting pitcher |
| |
1998 | Scott Brosius | New York Yankees | Third baseman |
| |
1999 | Mariano Rivera† | New York Yankees | Relief pitcher |
| |
2000 | Derek Jeter† | New York Yankees | Shortstop |
| |
2001^ | Randy Johnson† | Arizona Diamondbacks | Pitcher |
| |
Curt Schilling | Starting pitcher |
| |||
2002 | Troy Glaus | Anaheim Angels | Third baseman |
| |
2003 | Josh Beckett | Florida Marlins | Starting pitcher |
| |
2004 | Manny Ramirez | Boston Red Sox | Outfielder |
| |
2005 | Jermaine Dye | Chicago White Sox | Outfielder |
| |
2006 | David Eckstein | St. Louis Cardinals | Shortstop |
| |
2007 | Mike Lowell | Boston Red Sox | Third baseman |
| |
2008* | Cole Hamels | Philadelphia Phillies | Starting pitcher |
| |
2009 | Hideki Matsui | New York Yankees | Designated hitter |
| |
2010 | Edgar Rentería | San Francisco Giants | Shortstop |
| |
2011* | David Freese | St. Louis Cardinals | Third baseman |
| |
2012 | Pablo Sandoval | San Francisco Giants | Third baseman |
| |
2013 | David Ortiz† | Boston Red Sox | Designated hitter |
| |
2014* | Madison Bumgarner‡ | San Francisco Giants | Starting pitcher |
| |
2015 | Salvador Pérez‡ | Kansas City Royals | Catcher |
| |
2016 | Ben Zobrist | Chicago Cubs | Outfielder |
| |
2017 | George Springer‡ | Houston Astros | Outfielder |
| |
2018 | Steve Pearce | Boston Red Sox | First baseman |
| |
2019 | Stephen Strasburg | Washington Nationals | Starting pitcher |
| |
2020* | Corey Seager‡ | Los Angeles Dodgers | Shortstop |
| |
2021 | Jorge Soler‡ | Atlanta Braves | Outfielder, designated hitter |
| |
2022* | Jeremy Peña#‡ | Houston Astros | Shortstop |
| |
2023 | Corey Seager‡ (2) | Texas Rangers | Shortstop |
| |
2024 | Freddie Freeman‡ | Los Angeles Dodgers | First baseman |
|
From 1955 through 2024, a total of 70 seasons, there have been 69 editions of the World Series played (as there was no World Series in 1994). In 67 editions a single MVP was named; in one edition (1981) three MVPs were named; and in one edition (2001) two MVPs were named. Thus, there have been a total of 72 MVPs—the below tables sums them by team and by position. All pitchers (starters or relievers) are grouped in the "pitcher" count, and all outfielders (left, center, right) are grouped in the "outfielder" count. When a player is listed at multiple positions, the first position listed is deemed to be his primary position, and he has been counted as such.
Winners by teams
| Winners by position
|
Notes
- Johnny Podres won the inaugural award in 1955 with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Podres, with nine wins and ten losses during the regular season, beat the Yankees twice in the series; both victories were complete games.
- Don Larsen won the 1956 World Series MVP after pitching the only no-hitter in World Series history, in the fifth game of the series; the no-hitter was also a perfect game.
- Bobby Richardson won the 1960 World Series MVP while playing for the losing team in the series, the New York Yankees, and had 12 runs batted in, a World Series record; he is also the only second baseman to win the World Series MVP.
- The first non-American to win the award was Pedro Guerrero in 1981.
- In 1977, Reggie Jackson hit three home runs in the deciding game, taking the nickname "Mr. October", in which October is the month of the MLB postseason; Jackson had a total of five home runs in the series, a World Series record.
- Willie Stargell won the 1979 World Series MVP at the age of 39, and is the oldest World Series MVP.
- In 1989, Dave Stewart became the first pitcher to win two games each in an LCS and a World Series in the same postseason, winning him the World Series MVP.
- In 1996, John Wetteland won the World Series MVP, setting a World Series record with four saves.
- In 2000, Derek Jeter won the World Series MVP and the All-Star Game MVP in the same season, the only player to do so.
- Stephen Strasburg (2019) is the only first overall draft pick to win the award.
- 22 World Series MVPs have been inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame:Alan Trammell (1984), Jack Morris (1991), Paul Molitor (1993), Tom Glavine (1995), Mariano Rivera (1999), Derek Jeter (2000), Randy Johnson (2001), and David Ortiz (2013) are the only Hall of Famers to have won the World Series MVP since 1981. Molitor was also the first designated hitter to win the World Series MVP.
- Hideki Matsui, the 2009 winner, batted in six runs in the sixth game of the 2009 World Series, tying Richardson's record for most runs batted in for a single World Series game. Matsui became the first Japanese-born player to win the award, as well as the first player to win it as a full-time designated hitter. He is also the only player named both a World Series and a Japan Series MVP.
- Four players have won the award twice: Sandy Koufax (1963, 1965), Bob Gibson (1964, 1967), Jackson (1973, 1977), and Corey Seager (2020, 2023). Jackson and Seager are the only players to have won the award with two different teams, while Seager is the first player to win the award in both leagues.
- There have been two occasions on which multiple winners were awarded in the same World Series: Ron Cey, Pedro Guerrero, and Steve Yeager in 1981, and Johnson and Schilling in 2001. The duo of Johnson and Schilling combined for all four of Arizona's wins in the 2001 World Series; Johnson had three of them.
- Twelve of the fifty-eight World Series MVPs have also won the MLB MVP, the Cy Young Award, or the LCS MVP in the same season. Koufax (1963), Frank Robinson (1966), Jackson (1973), Stargell, and Mike Schmidt (1980) are the only players to have won the MLB MVP and the World Series MVP. A total of six players won the Cy Young Award and the World Series MVP in the same season: Bob Turley (1958), Whitey Ford (1961), Koufax (1963, 1965), Bret Saberhagen (1985), Orel Hershiser (1988), and Johnson (2001).
- Nine players have won the World Series MVP in the same season in which they won the LCS MVP: Stargell (1979), Darrell Porter (1982), Hershiser (1988), Liván Hernández (1997), Cole Hamels (2008), David Freese (2011), Madison Bumgarner (2014), Corey Seager (2020), and Jeremy Peña (2022) — all of them except Peña, an American League player, were the NLCS MVPs.
- Koufax (1963) is the only person to have won the Cy Young Award, the MLB MVP, and the World Series MVP in the same season, while Stargell (1979) is the only person to have won the MLB MVP, the LCS MVP, and the World Series MVP in the same season. Hershiser (1988) won the Cy Young Award, the LCS MVP, and the World Series MVP in the same season.
See also
- Babe Ruth Award
- List of Major League Baseball awards
- (Baseball awards in the United States)
References
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The SPORT Magazine Award, an annual award presented since 1955, originally by SPORT magazine in cooperation with the Chevrolet Motor Co. (the magazine ceased publication in 2000 and is no longer involved with the award).
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External links
- World Series History: Most Valuable Players
- World Series Most Valuable Player Award at Baseball Almanac
- MLB Postseason: Willie Mays World Series MVP Award Winners at Baseball-Reference
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