Attention Baseball Fans:
We have a serious problem. It seems that the best baseball player this season is not going to garner enough votes to be a first-team All-Star. Let me repeat. The best player in baseball won't be an All-Star starter.
Albert Pujols of the St. Louis Cardinals is leading the Major League in Batting Average (.384) and Slugging Percentage (.720). He's also tied for the Major League Lead with 27 Doubles and 67 Runs Scored.
Not enough for you? The kid is best in the National League in Hits (103), second in the NL in Runs Batted In, and third in NL Home Runs (21).
In OPS, considered the most accurate statistic of offensive production, he's also first in the league.
Currently, Barry Bonds, Sammy Sosa and Gary Sheffield lead Albert Pujols in the voting. Yet none of them have numbers even close to his.
So, if there's any justice in this world, you'll go to MLB.com and Vote for Albert Pujols as a National League All-Star Outfielder.
Stumble It!
We have a serious problem. It seems that the best baseball player this season is not going to garner enough votes to be a first-team All-Star. Let me repeat. The best player in baseball won't be an All-Star starter.
Albert Pujols of the St. Louis Cardinals is leading the Major League in Batting Average (.384) and Slugging Percentage (.720). He's also tied for the Major League Lead with 27 Doubles and 67 Runs Scored.
Not enough for you? The kid is best in the National League in Hits (103), second in the NL in Runs Batted In, and third in NL Home Runs (21).
In OPS, considered the most accurate statistic of offensive production, he's also first in the league.
Currently, Barry Bonds, Sammy Sosa and Gary Sheffield lead Albert Pujols in the voting. Yet none of them have numbers even close to his.
So, if there's any justice in this world, you'll go to MLB.com and Vote for Albert Pujols as a National League All-Star Outfielder.
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