For each section, if a player doesn’t qualify for batting stats (roughly 270 PA), their G and PA are listed. Bold indicates a leader at that position for the stat; top 3 listed for most stats.
If you compare this with the prior post discussing the AL, the gap in offensive talent and pitching depth becomes apparent.
#C
Name | OPS | Slash | Reg Stats | Other |
Josh Gibson (HOM) | 1.234 | 390/481/754 | 27 2B; 23 HR; 79 RBI; 5.3 WAR | 3.4 FRM |
Gary Carter (OTT) | 1.102 | 324/387/715 | 31 HR; 663 RBI; 3.9 WAR | 48% RTO |
Mike Piazza (BRK) | 1.027 | 311/348/679 | 31 HR; 70 RBI; 2.9 WAR | |
Jim Pagliaroni (BBB) | .898 | 248/355/543 | ||
Buster Posey (NYG) | .894 | 291/344/550 | ||
Ted Simmons (KCM) | .880 | 285/314/565 | 25 2B | 4.08 CERA |
The only question here is whether the NL dips below the big 3. 21 Year old Josh Gibson will start, of course, with Gary Carter and Mike Piazza in reserve.
#1B
Name | OPS | Slash | Reg Stats | Other |
Will Clark (NYG) | .989 | 302/381/608 | 56 RBI; 1.8 WAR | |
Mike Epstein (HOM) | .971 | 252/386/585 | 22 HR; 63 RBI; 1.7 WAR | .998 Fldg |
Anthony Rizzo (HOD) | .964 | 278/402/561 | ||
Joe Harris (HOD) | .956 | 295/410/546 | ||
Jeff Bagwell (HOU) | .938 | 279/376/562 | 71 RBI |
The NL has a totally different challenge to the AL: here, it is whether any of the natural 1B really deserve to make the team. Will Clark will start, with Mike Epstein on the bench. Joe Harris split his time between 1B and the OF, and may be selected in that role.
#2B
Name | OPS | Slash | Reg Stats | Other |
Joe Morgan (IND) | 1.101 | 324/425/676 | 50 RBI; 2.2 WAR | 52 G / 221 PA |
Roberto Alomar (OTT) | .972 | 312/391/581 | 22 2B; 18 HR; 65 RBI; 31 SB; 3.3 WAR | |
Ryne Sandberg (HOD) | .964 | 303/356/608 | 28 HR; 60 RBI; 2.7 WAR | .997 Fldg; 5.04 RF |
Jackie Robinson (BRK) | .897 | 270/357/540 | 17 HR | |
Craig Biggio (HOU) | .837 | 267/371/466 |
Roberto Alomar and Ryne Sandberg are locks, with Alomar getting the nod as the starter. Beyond them, it gets interesting: Joe Morgan has been phenomenal, but missed a significant chunk of time while Jackie Robinson may deserve a spot, but has split his time between 2B and 1B. While Robinson is invaluable to Brooklyn, his offensive production is excellent for a 2B, but only solid for a 1B.
#SS
Name | OPS | Slash | Reg Stats | Other |
Ernie Banks (HOD) | 1.006 | 287/316/690 | 34 HR; 78 RBI; 1.7 WAR | |
Carlos Correa (HOU) | .931 | 322/396/535 | 20 2B; 13 HR; 40 RBI; 3.1 WAR | .981 Fldg; 4.2 ZR |
Álex Rodríguez (OTT) | .899 | 260/322/577 | 25 HR; 45 RBI; 20 SB; 1.5 WAR | .974 Fldg |
While some may suggest that Kansas City’s Ozzie Smith deserves to be listed here due to his defensive prowess (he leads all SS in Fldg, RF, and ZR), it’s a bit too much to imagine a sub-.700 OPS warranting an all star spot. Ernie Banks and Carlos Correa are in, with Álex Rodríguez on the bubble for a while.
#3B
Name | OPS | Slash | Reg Stats | Other |
Albert Pujols (KCM) | 1.003 | 314/381/622 | 32 2B; 60 RBI; 2.5 WAR | |
Ron Cey (BRK) | .978 | 278/375/602 | 22 HR; 2.6 WAR | .978 Fldg; 2.46 RF; 3.5 ZR |
Eddie Mathews (BBB) | .917 | 222/345/572 | 27 HR; 56 RBI | 2.76 RF |
Scott Rolen (PHI) | .911 | 275/349/562 | 55 RBI; 2.1 WAR | .976 Fldg; 2.6 ZR |
Albert Pujols is named the starter here (although he may end up shifting over to 1B in the game itself), with Ron Cey behind him. Eddie Mathews‘ best hope of making the cut is if he ends up being the leading candidate for Birmingham, but my guess is they find representation on the pitching staff first.
#LF/RF
As with the AL, we’ll treat the corner OF’s together.
Name | OPS | Slash | Reg Stats | Other |
Larry Walker (OTT) | 1.080 | 292/364/715 | 37 HR; 877 RBI; 2.5 WAR | 3.97 RF |
Rick Reichardt (HOM) | 1.044 | 314/387/657 | ||
Tony Gwynn (HOU) | 1.030 | 390/429/601 | 27 2B; 6 3B; 3.1 WAR | 5 Kills |
Aaron Judge (PHI) | .972 | 272/368/604 | .993 Fldg | |
Stan Musial (KCM) | .964 | 329/392/573 | 37 2B; 2.2 WAR | 5.7 ZR |
Joe Rogan (PHI) | .958 | 296/341/617 | ||
Johnny Callison (NYG) | .913 | 272/333/580 | .993 Fldg |
Certainly Larry Walker, Rick Reichardt, and Tony Gwynn make it, with Gwynn and Walker earning the starting nods. It seems like Aaron Judge and Stan Musial should make the cut as well, and Rogan gets a roster spot for his combined effort on the mound and at the plate.
#CF
Name | OPS | Slash | Reg Stats | Other |
Rick Monday (OTT) | 1.207 | 305/397/809 | 46 G / 151 PA | |
Oscar Charleston (IND) | 1.006 | 335/384/622 | 19 2B; 9 3B; 63 RBI; 25 SB; 2.7 WAR | |
Willie Mays (NYG) | .974 | 277/347/627 | 31 HR; 62 RBI; 3.1 WAR | 8.5 ZR |
Carlos Beltrán (OTT) | .860 | 253/326/534 | 63 RBI |
Rick Monday can’t be a serious candidate, given his playing time, but wow are those numbers eye-popping.
Oscar Charleston gets the start at age 20, with Willie Mays also being named to the team. Carlos Beltrán is listed partially to show the gap between Mays and the next group of CFers. Rogan could also have been listed here.
#DH
Name | OPS | Slash | Reg Stats |
Willie Stargell (HOM) | .954 | 270/348/606 | 14 2B; 27 HR; 60 RBI; 1.2 WAR |
Albert Belle (BBB) | .884 | 256/313/571 | 15 2B; 26 HR; 59 RBI |
Benny Kauff (NYG) | .869 | 261/315/553 | 19 2B |
Duke Snider (BRK) | .771 | 226/262/509 | 25 HR; 54 RBI |
Willie Stargell will start, but it’s not clear any of the rest of these make it: Mathews is a better selection for Birmingham if one is needed, and Benny Kauff and Duke Snider–while doing well–just aren’t quite all star material this year.
#SP
Now things get a lot tighter in the NL. Here is everyone with a sub 4.00 ERA and/or 10 or more wins, plus a few others.
Name | W-L; ERA | Reg Stats | Other |
A. Rube Foster (KCM) | 5-1, 2.20 | .202 BABIP, 0.96 WHIP, 3.67 FIP | 88% QS, 2 SHO |
Toad Ramsey (HOU) | 12-4, 2.60 | 163 K, 0.90 WHIP, 2.68 FIP, 5.8 WAR | 72% QS, 2 SHO, 2.29 SIERA, 2.0 WPA |
Fernando Valenzuela (BRK) | 6-1, 2.66 | 0.87 WHIP; .176 BABIP | 3 GS / 74 IP |
Hardie Henderson (PHI) | 10-6, 3.05 | .214 BABIP | 1.5 WPA |
Jim Whitney | 5-2, 3.11 | 1 Sv; 2 H, 1.02 WHIP | 75% QS, 2.0 WPA |
Roger Clemens (HOU) | 10-4, 3.64 | .210 BABIP | |
Smokey Joe Williams (BRK) | 7-8, 3.64 | 3.4 WAR | |
Orel Hershiser (BRK) | 11-4, 3.70 | ||
Luis Padrón (IND) | 12-2, 3.87 | 3.44 FIP, 3.8 WAR | 2 SHO |
Smokey Joe Wood (KCM) | 9-6, 3.95 | ||
J.M. Ward (PHI) | 4-4, 3.99 | ||
Frank Castillo (KCM) | 10-1, 4.43 | 2 SHO | |
Bullet Joe Rogan (PHI) | 5-8, 4.46 | 2 SHO |
Toad Ramsey is the starter, with Luis Padrón and A. Rube Foster close behind. Hardie Henderson seems to be another required choice, with his ERA barely eclipsing 3.00.
After that choices, have to be made: Jim Whitney has been brilliant, but just barely qualifies for the ERA title. Fernando Valenzuela has been even better, but was used out of the bullpen for most of the season. And how do you ignore a starting pitcher with a 10-1 record? I don’t think you can, so we’ll add Valenzuela and Castillo, snubbing Brooklyn’s very strong duo of Orel Hershiser and Smokey Joe Williams.
#RP
Name | W-L; ERA | Reg Stats | Other |
Harley Young (BBB) | 0-1, 1.12 | 3 Sv; 6 H | 1.87 FIP |
Craig Kimbrel (KCM) | 2-3, 1.85 | 2 Sv; 11 H | 2.38 FIP; 15 SD; 2.88 SIERA |
Robb Nen (NYG) | 3-2, 1.89 | 9 Sv; 6 H | |
Tug McGraw (HOU) | 3-3, 2.05 | 9 Sv | .90 Sv% |
Eddie Guardado (KCM) | 2-1, 2.05 | 1 Sv; 5 H | 2.58 FIP |
Lee Smith (HOD) | 4-1, 2.65 | 6 Sv; 6 H | .198 BABIP; 0.771 WHIP; .86 Sv%; 2.89 SIERA |
Eric Gagne (BRK) | 2-1, 2.81 | 19 Sv | 18 SD |
Josh Lindblom (HOM) | 4-2, 3.19 | 23 Sv | .96 Sv%; 18 SD |
Ted Kennedy (PHI) | 2-2, 3.47 | 4 Sv; 9 H | |
Rob Murphy (IND) | 1-3, 3.55 | 1 Sv; 11 H | |
Michael Jackson (HOM) | 1-4, 3.73 | 1 Sv; 12 H | |
Bob Howry (PHI) | 3-1, 4.09 | 12 Sv | .172 BABIP; 0.82 WHIP |
More hard choices. Harley Young and Craig Kimbrel have been essentially unhittable and Eric Gagne and Josh Lindblom have been the most effective closers. So those 4 for sure. Robb Nen has done everything the Gothams have asked, covering as closer while Brian Wilson was injured, and continuing to dominate after Wilson’s return (Wilson only misses the team through a lack of IP after his injury).
The real omission here seems to be Lee Smith, who has stepped into the closers role for the House of David with aplomb, reflected in his overall statistical performance.
#NL All Stars
It came down to Scott Rolen, Buster Posey, Smokey Joe Williams, and Jim Whitney for the NL’s final spot. We decided to honor their dominant pitching as a league, removing Rolen and Posey from consideration.
Williams has only pitched roughly a dozen innings more than Whitney, who has better numbers across the board. That leaves Smokey Joe on the outside looking in this year.
As with the AL, here are the highest ranked performers in various categories who missed the cut.
Hank Aaron (BBB). #4 in H (96); #6 in HR (29); #16 in SLG (.588).
Joe Harris (HOD). #13 in BA (.295); #3 in OBP (.410); #18 in OPS (.956).
Jeff Bagwell (HOU). #4 in RBI (71).
Buster Posey (NYG). #13 in WAR (2.2).
Nap Lajoie (HOM). #3 in 2B (28).
Pete Hill (HOU). #1 in 3B (10).
Tim Raines (OTT). #1 in SB (59).
Orel Hershiser (BRK). #3 in W (11).
Christy Mathewson (NYG). #2 in IP (128); #2 in K (124).
Smokey Joe Williams (BRK). #3 in WAR (3.4); #4 in FIP (3.73).
Roger Clemens (HOU). #5 in ERA (3.64).
J.M. Ward (PHI). #4 in WHIP (1.02).
Rob Dibble (IND) and Jeff Pfeffer (KCM) are tied for #3 in Saves with 16, but neither have an ERA under 5.00.
The offensive players look fine. Mathewson and especially Smokey Joe have a right to feel aggrieved about this one.
Starters in bold.
C: Gary Carter (OTT), Josh Gibson (HOM); Mike Piazza (BRK).
1B: Will Clark (NYG), Mike Epstein (HOM).
2B: Roberto Alomar (OTT), Ryne Sandberg (HOD).
SS: Ernie Banks (HOD), Carlos Correa (HOU).
3B: Ron Cey (BRK), Albert Pujols (KCM).
LF: Tony Gwynn (HOU); Rick Reichardt (HOM).
CF: Oscar Charleston (IND), Joe Rogan (PHI), Willie Mays (NYG).
RF: Aaron Judge (PHI), Stan Musial (KCM), Larry Walker (OTT).
DH: Willie Stargell (HOM).
SP: Frank Castillo (KCM), A. Rube Foster (KCM), Hardie Henderson (PHI), Luis Padrón (IND), Toad Ramsey (HOU), Fernando Valenzuela (BRK), Jim Whitney (BBB).
RP: Eric Gagne (BRK), Craig Kimbrel (KCM), Josh Lindblom (HOM), Robb Nen (NYG), Harley Young (BBB).
Selections are more consistently spread across the NL, with Homestead and Kansas City leading the way with 5 players each. All teams saw at least 2 players selected for the midsummer classic.
Brooklyn, with the best record in the league, may feel a bit hard done by, as both Smokey Joe Williams and Jackie Robinson are left off the squad. Indianapolis has a similar argument, with only 2 representatives despite being only a game out of 1st with a record over .500, but the omission of Joe Morgan due to playing time is more understandable.
Here they are by team
Homestead Grays (.535). Mike Epstein (1B), Josh Gibson (C), Josh Lindblom (P), Rick Reichardt (OF), Willie Stargell (DH).
Kansas City Monarchs (.534). Frank Castillo (P), A. Rube Foster (P), Craig Kimbrel (P), Stan Musial (OF), Albert Pujols (3B).
Brooklyn Royal Giants (.575). Ron Cey (3B), Eric Gagne (P), Mike Piazza (C), Fernando Valenzuela (P).
New York Gothams (.494). Will Clark (1B), Willie Mays (OF), Robb Nen (P).
Houston Colt 45’s (.494). Carlos Correa (SS), Tony Gwynn (OF), Toad Ramsey (P).
Philadelphia Stars (.483). Hardie Henderson (P), Aaron Judge (OF), Joe Rogan (U/P).
Ottawa Mounties (.460). Roberto Alomar (2B), Álex Rodríguez (SS), Larry Walker (OF).
Indianapolis ABC’s (.523). Oscar Charleston (OF), Luis Padrón (P).
Wandering House of David (.471). Ernie Banks (SS), Lee Smith (P).
Birmingham Black Barons (.432). Harley Young (P), Jim Whitney (P).
The NL sees only 4 repeat all-stars: Mike Epstein, Josh Gibson, Willie Mays, and Stan Musial