Skip to main content

MLB Player Awards for the First Half of the Season

Picking the top players at each position in the AL and NL as well as which teams will make the MLB postseason as we approach the All-Star Game in Seattle.

The first half of the baseball season has flown by. Thanks to the pitch timer, which has cut 26 minutes of dead time from the average game, baseball has not been played this fast in 39 years. Packed inside the quicker pace are more hits, runs and stolen bases. And plenty of drama.

The biggest stories of the first half include Shohei Ohtani and Luis Arráez chasing history, the National League chasing the Braves ever since they started 14–4, the American League chasing the Rays ever since they started 13–0 and seven of the 11 lowest payroll teams holding at least a share of a playoff position (Orioles, Rays, Guardians, Reds, Marlins, D-Backs and Brewers), while half the playoff field from last season is on the wrong side of the cut line (Phillies, Mets, Cardinals, Padres, Blue Jays, Mariners). The game has flipped as the new rules reward younger, faster, more athletic teams.

Watch MLB with fuboTV. Start your free trial today.

Keep this in mind as you study the standings: of the 12 teams in playoff position last year on the Fourth of July, nine held their spots. The only changes: St. Louis made up three games on Milwaukee, Cleveland erased a 3 ½ game deficit to Minnesota and Seattle came back from seven behind Boston. All come-from-behind teams played at least .613 baseball after the holiday.

As the second half of the schedule begins this week, it’s time to pick my All-Star teams, the first half award winners and the most likely playoff teams: