former japanese professionals and the ROY award
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Posted on: February 3, 2008 10:30 pm
former japanese professionals and the ROY awardIf a guy spends 9 years in the minors, comes up and is great...you'll give him the award. So why not Japanese players. It's not like the minor leagues aren't proffesional baseball too. If it's your first year in the MLB, and you are the best one of the bunch...you deserve the ROY. |
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Posted on: February 3, 2008 11:52 pm
former japanese professionals and the ROY awardItll be interesting to see two Cubs compete for NL ROY, because if im not mistaken I believe Soto qualifies no? I can see how people feel that 20 something y/o guys may get shafted by a 30 something who comes in and wins the award, but they both have the same MMLB expirence so whats the problem? |
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Posted on: February 4, 2008 12:35 am
former japanese professionals and the ROY awardexcellent point don. that is the way i look at it as well. if the guy has been playing for year it doesnt matter as long as it wasnt years in the mlb. it is the mlb ROY not professional baseball's ROY. so i think we are looking at it the same way. others i am sure will disagree. |
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Posted on: February 7, 2008 4:20 pm
former japanese professionals and the ROY awardYea I mean it's the MLB rookie of the year award. A rookie is someone who is in their first year with the league. He has not been in the MLB therefore he is eligable for the award. |
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Posted on: February 7, 2008 9:12 pm
former japanese professionals and the ROY awardi agree completely. but it seems evertime a foreign player is up for a ROY award there is always a group who is oppossed to it. would they say the same about a 30 year old who comes up to the bigs after a career in the minor leagues and tears it up? i doubt they would but who wants to be fair right? |
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Posted on: February 24, 2008 12:08 am
former japanese professionals and the ROY awardI think you have to include the professionals that played in Japan in the conversation for rookie of the year. I mean, the award is named after Jackie Robinson, who played professionally in the Negro Leagues with the Kansas CIty Monarchs before joining the Dodgers, but still, never played in the Major Leagues, therefore keeping his eligibility for the award.. It's a MLB award, and therefore, if you haven't played in the majors, you should be eligible. Just my two cents.
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