Gordon is Once Again Golden

It was announced on Tuesday night that KC Royals left fielder Alex Gordon was named the Gold Glove Award winner in the American League.

For the second consecutive season, Gordon was honored with the hardware for his excellent play in left field. It’s a nice reward for a guy playing on a consistently bad team.

Gordon finished the season with 17 outfield assists over 160 games.

Jeff Francoeur was beat out in right field by Oakland’s Josh Reddick. Third baseman Mike Moustakas was beat out by Texas’ Adrian Beltre. Eric Hosmer was beat out by fellow first baseman Mark Teixeira of the NY Yankees.

*The Gold Glove Awards are voted on by managers and coaches.

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Will a Royal Win a Gold Glove?

Last season, left fielder Alex Gordon had a breakout season for the KC Royals, both offensively and defensively. He won the Gold Glove for left field in the American League, as he had 20 outfield assists.

In 2012, he turned his offensive season around after hitting less than .200 over the first month of the season. He once again was great on defense (17 assists to just two errors) and is one of three finalists for the Gold Glove Award in the AL for left field.

Gordon‘s competition is Tampa Bay’s Desmond Jennings (who did not commit an error but had just four assists in only 129 games) and Texas’ David Murphy (who played in 133 games and made one error with four assists). Gordon played in 160 games for the Royals and was second in baseball in outfield assists to teammate Jeff Francoeur.

Francoeur is one of three finalists for the Gold Glove in right field in the AL. He played in 147 games for the Royals and committed four errors. He tallied 19 assists. His competition for the award: Cleveland’s Shin-Soo Choo (who had just seven assists in 154 games with two errors) and Oakland’s Josh Reddick (who was third in the AL in assists with 15 in 144 games but he committed six errors).

Despite his awful offensive season, first baseman Eric Hosmer is one of three finalists for the Gold Glove Award in the AL. He committed nine errors in 1295 total chances. He also turned 132 double plays, which was second in baseball to his competition, Adrian Gonzalez.

Not sure how Gonzalez is in the running considering he was traded to the National League during the summer and his stats are combined between the two leagues (he committed three errors in 1404 total chances while turning 134 double plays). Hosmer‘s other competition is NY Yankees first baseman Mark Teixeira. He has the top fielding percentage in all of baseball (just one error), but he only turned 91 double plays and only had 1055 total chances. His range factor (8.86) is better than Hosmer‘s (8.69).

» Continue reading “Will a Royal Win a Gold Glove?”

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