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The True Victim of the Steroid Era: Albert Pujols


As a diehard Cubs fan, I know firsthand how good Albert Pujols is.

Every summer, King Albert punishes the Cubs and every other NL Central team. He is arguably the most consistent player in baseball today. He has been an All-Star in all but one of his years in the majors. He has finished top five in MVP voting in all but one of his years as a pro, winning it three times.

The damage caused by the steroid era is unfixable. Records and numbers were inflated drastically as players began cheating left and right. Everyone was a victim, from old-timers, to clean players, and last but not least, the fans.

The biggest victim of all is the King himself, Albert Pujols.    

It all started his rookie year. In 2001, Albert won the Rookie of the Year honors while batting .329, hitting 37 home runs, and driving in 130 runs all as a 20 year old. He finished fourth in the MVP ballot. The winner that year was Barry Bonds, who, as it’s widely assumed, took steroids.

The second man on the MVP ballot was Slammin Sammy, who has been linked to performance enhancing drugs.

The third man was Luis Gonzalez. Gonzalez had an interesting year, hitting 57 home runs and driving in 142 runs. With the exception of that season, Gonzalez had one season in his whole career where he hit more than 30 home runs, and he hit 31 that year. To me, that’s very suspicious.

In 2002 and 2003, King Albert finished second in the MVP voting, both years to Barry Bonds. In 2004 Albert finished third in the MVP voting, the winner being Barry Bonds.

Adrian Beltre was second in the voting, but he had a very suspicious season, comparable to Luis Gonzalez’s 2001 year.

In 2004, Beltre hit 48 home runs and had a batting average of .334. Not including 2004, Beltre has only gone above 25 home runs once, in 2007, when he hit 26. Also, not including 2004, Beltre has only one season where he has batted above .280, and that was in 2000(he is batting .333 so far this year). To me, that raises lots of question marks.

Finally, in 2005, justice was served, and King Albert won his first MVP. In 2006 Albert was second in the MVP voting to Ryan Howard. Howard has been consistent with his numbers and has not been linked to performance enhancing drugs, so he won fair and square.   In 2007, Albert had an off year and finished ninth in the voting. In 2008 and 2009, Albert won back to back MVP awards, and in 2010, he is working toward a three-peat.

In my opinion Albert Pujols should have seven, yes seven, MVP awards, which would make him the all-time leader in MVPs (Barry Bonds has seven). However, to assume Barry Bonds, Sammy Sosa, Luis Gonzalez, and Adrian Beltre all used performance enhancing drugs might be unfair. Just because Luis Gonzalez and Adrian Beltre had one great year and were never able to duplicate it doesn’t mean they used performance enhancing drugs.

In addition, you can’t go back and take away MVP awards, but, hypothetically speaking, let’s say we can. I’ll let you be the judge. How many MVPs should Albert Pujols have?

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

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