The Yankees' Gerrit Cole received one first-place vote for the AL Cy Young Award last season, with the Blue Jays' Robbie Ray being the popular selection. Someone believed the Cardinals' Mike Shildt was a better pick for NL Manager of the Year over eventual winner Gabe Kapler of the Giants. In the past, there once was a guy who didn't think pitchers deserved MVP votes.
Regardless of how you feel about the voting decisions of members of the Baseball Writers' Association of America, the supermajority of them — us, because I am one — care deeply about the ramifications of their selections, enough to approach the balloting process with integrity. And we have tried to protect that process when it was threatened.
There's been a development in the past week that could challenge BBWAA members' ability to fill out a ballot with a clear conscience. Especially in this market.
But first, a history lesson.
In 2007, pitcher Curt Schilling revealed that his contract included a clause that would pay him $1 million if he received a single Cy Young Award vote, even joking that he would split the bonus with the writer who voted for him. That didn't sit well with the BBWAA, which voted 41-21 at the winter meetings in Nashville to ban players with such clauses from being eligible for postseason awards. The BBWAA simply didn't want it to appear that it is helping players afford vacations in Turks and Caicos.
Well, that lasted all of two days. There was pushback from agents, along with subtle promises to not make their players available for interviews ever again. Two days later, the vote was tabled. We learned then not to get in the way of players earning more money.
Now our judgment will be put to a greater test.
The Twins have reached an agreement to sign Byron Buxton to a seven-year, $100 million contract that allows the pride of Baxley, Ga., to patrol center field at Target Field for seasons to come. They stepped up with a better offer than the seven-year, $80 million insult they trotted out in July. Buxton will earn $9 million in 2022, then $15 million each year of the contract after that.