Oh look, the guy who didnβt pick Aaron Judge or Shohei Ohtani to win MVP honors in 2025 is back with more awards predictions. This ought to go well.
Hey, I could have used this space one year ago to predict repeats in those races, as well as the AL Cy Young with Tarik Skubal and both Manager of the Year slots with Pat Murphy and Stephen Vogt. I could have also gone with preseason favorite Paul Skenes for the NL Cy Young.
But that would have been one boring baseball column.
Nope, at the risk of being rendered dumb again — especially in an MVP realm currently dominated by all-time talents — Iβm sticking with my usual formula of using this space to come up with plausible award winners for next season while veering away from repeats and otherwise obvious favorites. Itβs a task made even more difficult by all the moving parts of the offseason and not knowing what developments await us in Spring Training.
These are risks I embrace for you, dear reader, at the start of a new calendar year. Because if Iβm going to be wrong, well, at least Iβll be wrong even earlier than everyone else.
So here we go with my picks for the Baseball Writersβ Association of America honors in 2026.
AMERICAN LEAGUE MVP: Julio RodrΓguez, Mariners
It bothers me that I didnβt pick Cal Raleigh here last year, even though he didnβt win. (I still think he should have won.) Raleigh had been top 10 in FanGraphs WAR in 2024, so it was plausible. But catcher MVPs are rare. And after the wear and tear of his epic offensive year and deep postseason run, Iβm loath to pick Raleigh now. His 2025 just feels unrepeatable (though Iβd love to be proven wrong).
Instead, Iβm going with Raleighβs teammate.
Julio, Julio, wherefore art thou, Julio? Are you ready for your close-up? Are you willing to meet the moment in your age-25 season and cement the Mβs as the AL Westβs team to beat? Are you able to avoid the sluggish starts of seasons past and be something other than merely a second-half sensation?
I think you are, Julio. You reduced your strikeout percentage last season, your bat speed is off the charts, your defense and speed are appreciated assets, and the passion and the pain of your first extended October run have, Iβm sure, instilled a hunger to get back and to do more. You have all the tools to be an MVP.
Or at least, to finish second to Judge.
NATIONAL LEAGUE MVP: Juan Soto, Mets
Iβm following my own (admittedly unnecessary) rule in not picking Ohtani here, but Iβm also in dire need of a W. So Iβll go with probably the next-most obvious pick in Soto.
It feels like this is the 10th time Iβve picked Soto to win an MVP, which is wild, given that heβs only played eight seasons. Itβs bound to happen eventually, right?
Were the Mets a mess last season? Yes. Was it Sotoβs fault? Well, he could have hustled to first a few more times, but the answer is no. The man was the third player ever and the first this century with a 40-homer, 100-RBI, 100-walk, 100-run, 30-steal season. His defense will continue to hinder his case, but thereβs no reason to think this 27-year-old at the peak of his patience/power prowess canβt win the MVP.
AMERICAN LEAGUE CY YOUNG: Garrett Crochet, Red Sox
Picking Skubal to win here again might actually be the bold play, considering Hall of Famers Randy Johnson and Greg Maddux are the only pitchers to win three straight Cy Youngs. But that would go against my policy, and, anyway, we canβt even be totally certain Skubal is in the AL in 2026.
So again, give me a 2025 finalist who seems destined to win one of these. Thatβs Crochet, who was the runner-up to Skubal in a race that honestly could have been a lot closer. Crochet threw 10 more innings than Skubal, and Baseball Prospectusβ WAR model, which considers opponent quality, actually had Crochet at 7.0 vs. Skubalβs 5.9 mark.
While this isnβt an inventive pick, itβs a sensible one now that Crochet is fully stretched out to a true aceβs workload and in full command of his wipeout stuff. When you strike out roughly one-third of opposing batters as a matter of routine, youβre going to find yourself in the Cy Young conversation.
I whiff a lot on these picks, so it stands to reason that I should go with the guy who is the best at whiffing people to help my chances.
NATIONAL LEAGUE CY YOUNG: Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Dodgers
Thereβs probably no stopping Skenes, whose 1.96 ERA from 2024-25 was the best in MLB β¦ by 34 points!
But fake rules are fake rules. So letβs go with the reigning World Series MVP, who might be a risky pick after logging 17 2/3 inning in the span of a week in that Series. The Dodgers are also deep enough in the rotation (if healthy) to play the load management game, and that might leave Yamamoto short on Cy Young-caliber innings.
But this guyβs preparation is second to none, and the more comfortable heβs gotten in MLB, the better the results have been. His 2.74 expected ERA last season trailed only that of Skenes (2.63) and Skubal (2.71), so he was definitely in Cy company.
AMERICAN LEAGUE RELIEF PITCHER OF THE YEAR: Cade Smith, Guardians
The questions on everybodyβs lips as we embark upon 2026: Who will be the winners of the first-ever BBWAA Relief Pitcher of the Year Awards? Will they be the same as the winners of the already existent Mariano Rivera and Trevor Hoffman Reliever of the Year Awards? And if not, will the wrong guys accidentally show up to the BBWAA dinner out of confusion?
Only time will tell. For now, with Cleveland going back to Smith in the ninth after he took over the closing role from Emmanuel Clase in 2025, heβs my pick. After all, Smith has spent his first two Major League seasons holding opponents to a .558 OPS β eighth-best among MLB relievers with at least 100 innings in that span. Heβs a big guy (6-foot-5, 230 pounds) with big stuff and big extension, and so far heβs been unflappable.
NATIONAL LEAGUE RELIEF PITCHER OF THE YEAR: Mason Miller, Padres
That OPS stat I cited for Smith? Mason is first in that span, at .494. The Padres sure gave up a lot to get him last summer, and either a lot will be asked of him on what will be a revamped San Diego pitching staff or a lot will be received for him in a trade (if the latter, hopefully itβs to an NL team so as not to screw up this prediction).
In any event, because he has yet to win MLBβs version of the Reliever of the Year honor, Iβm allowed to take the relatively safe route in selecting Miller here.
AMERICAN LEAGUE ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Kevin McGonigle, Tigers
Trey Yesavage will of course be a popular pick after what he and his savage splitter did in the postseason. So heβs off the table for me, unfortunately.
Instead, Iβll go with the guy who has maybe the best hit tools in the Minors right now. McGonigleβs approach and bat speed are impressive, and he slashed .305/.408/.583 with 46 strikeouts against 59 walks in 88 games across three levels in 2025. He might not crack the Tigersβ Opening Day squad at shortstop like some fans will hope, but I think there will be ample opportunity for him in 2026.
NATIONAL LEAGUE ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: JJ Wetherholt, Cardinals
Nolan McLean was an insta-ace for the Mets down the stretch last season and, therefore, the likely favorite in the NL.
As much as Iβd love to go with that, letβs pivot to a Cardinals kid with clear opportunity to meaningfully impact what is bound to be a new-look roster. Brendan Donovan is still with the Cards as I type this, but I would expect that to change and Wetherholtβs above-average offensive game to earn him ample playing time in the infield.
AMERICAN LEAGUE MANAGER OF THE YEAR: Craig Albernaz, Orioles
Though 2025 gave us rare repeats for this prize, no way it happens again, right?!
Nah, weβll go back to the tradition of giving it to a skipper who leads a squad from the abyss to October. Thatβll be Albernaz, a gifted dugout mind who was instrumental in helping the Guardiansβ Stephen Vogt win this award in consecutive seasons. It only stands to reason that Vogt will now hand it off to his friend and former comrade, who is taking over a Baltimore squad that had too much talent to be as big a dud as it was in 2025, even before the Pete Alonso deal. The Oβs seem somewhat allergic to acquiring pitching, but I suspect theyβll remedy that. They wonβt be AL East favorites, but theyβll have a reasonable shot at reaching the postseason, so theyβre right in the sweet spot for this award.
NATIONAL LEAGUE MANAGER OF THE YEAR: Don Kelly, Pirates
Letβs finish this off with a wild one. Go-big-or-go-home kinda stuff.
The Pirates have a good pitching staff fronted by Skenes, who is probably destined for a second Cy now that I picked someone else. So thatβs a good start. What they couldnβt do in 2025 (and plenty of other years) is hit. Theyβve been looking to change that this winter, and Kelly is a native Pittsburghian who will emerge as one of the great stories of the 2026 season in guiding the Buccos back to October (via a Wild Card spot, letβs not get too crazy) for the first time in more than a decade.
Donβt you just love a happy ending? Me too. Even if itβs incorrect!