Cubs News: Cody Bellinger wins 2023 National League Comeback Player of the Year Award |
Right-handed pitcher Liam Hendriks and outfielder/first baseman Cody Bellinger have been named the recipients of the 2023 American League and National League Comeback Player of the Year Awards, respectively, Major League Baseball announced today. The Comeback Player of the Year Awards are officially sanctioned by Major League Baseball and have been presented annually since 2005 to one player in each League who has re-emerged on the field during the season. The winners were determined following a vote by the 30 Club beat reporters from MLB.com, the official website of Major League Baseball.
Hendriks, who announced in January that he had been diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, returned to the field for his third season with the Chicago White Sox on May 29th after receiving treatment. Prior to his return, the three-time All-Star announced in late April that he was cancer-free. The Perth, Australia native, who launched a campaign inviting fans to purchase specially designed “Close Out Cancer” t-shirts with proceeds benefitting the Lymphoma Research Foundation (LRF), was the recipient of the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance at ESPN’s annual ESPY Awards in July. The 34-year-old appeared in five contests for the White Sox and earned two victories with one save before returning to the Injured List with elbow inflammation in mid-June. The two-time Mariano Rivera AL Reliever of the Year Award winner missed the remainder of the season after eventually undergoing Tommy John surgery. Hendriks entered 2023 coming off back-to-back All-Star campaigns in which he collected 38 saves in 2021 and 37 saves in 2022. His 16.14 strikeout-to-walk ratio in 2021 ranks as the highest in Major League history for a single season with at least 100 strikeouts. In his first season with the Chicago Cubs, Bellinger hit .307 with 26 homers, 97 RBI, 29 doubles, 153 hits, 95 runs scored and an .881 OPS, reaching the totals in each category for the first time since his 2019 NL MVP Award-winning season with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Across 130 games played, the 2017 Jackie Robinson NL Rookie of the Year Award winner also swiped a career-best 20 stolen bases and reached the 20-homer, 20-stolen base plateau for the first time in his career, becoming the seventh Cubs player to do so. The Arizona native was one of three players across all of Baseball to hit at least .305 with 25 homers and 20 stolen bases, joining NL MVP Award winner Ronald Acuña Jr. of the Atlanta Braves and Freddie Freeman of the Los Angeles Dodgers. The 2013 fourth round draft selection led all Major Leaguers with 75 RBI from July 1st through the end of the season, including a 53-game stretch with 55 RBI from July 1st-August 30th. Bellinger spent his first six Major League seasons with the Dodgers and reached 100 career homers in just 401 games, marking the third-fastest in Major League history to reach the milestone. Other players who received votes for AL Comeback Player of the Year included pitcher Tyler Glasnow of the Tampa Bay Rays (10-7, 3.53 ERA, 21 GS, 120.0 IP, 37 BB, 162 SO), who was limited to just two starts in 2022 while working his way back from Tommy John surgery; first baseman/outfielder Ryan O’Hearn of the Baltimore Orioles (.289, 14 HR, 60 RBI, 22 2B, 48 R, .801 OPS), who set career-bests in games, runs, hits, doubles and RBI in his first year with the O’s after appearing in just 67 games with Kansas City in 2022; and pitcher Chris Sale of the Boston Red Sox (6-5, 4.30 ERA, 20 GS, 102.2 IP, 29 BB, 125 SO), who had been limited by injuries to just 11 starts total over the previous three seasons. Other players who received votes for NL Comeback Player of the Year included first baseman Bryce Harper of the Philadelphia Phillies (.293, 21 HR, 72 RBI, 29 2B, 84 R, 11 SB, .900 OPS), who underwent Tommy John surgery in the off-season and returned to the field just 160 days after the procedure, marking the fastest such return on record; second baseman Ozzie Albies of the Braves (.280, 33 HR, 109 RBI, 30 2B, 5 3B, 96 R, 13 SB, .849 OPS, All-Star selection), who was limited by injuries to just 64 games in 2022; outfielder Jason Heyward of the Dodgers (.269, 15 HR, 40 RBI, 23 2B, 56 R, .813 OPS), who was limited to just 48 games in 2022 and reached totals in a number of offensive categories not seen since his 2019 season; outfielder Michael Conforto of the San Francisco Giants (.239, 15 HR, 58 RBI, 14 2B, 58 R, .718 OPS), who played in 125 games during his first season with the Giants after missing the entire 2022 season while recovering from shoulder surgery; and designated hitter/outfielder Jorge Soler of the Miami Marlins (.250, 36 HR, 75 RBI, 24 2B, 77 R, .853 OPS, All-Star selection), who was limited to 72 games in 2022 after missing the final 67 games of the season with a back injury. Previous winners of the Comeback Player of the Year Awards include: Year American League National League 2005 Jason Giambi, NYY Ken Griffey Jr., CIN 2006 Jim Thome, CWS Nomar Garciaparra, LAD 2007 Carlos Peña, TB Dmitri Young, WSH 2008 Cliff Lee, CLE Brad Lidge, PHI 2009 Aaron Hill, TOR Chris Carpenter, STL 2010 Francisco Liriano, MIN Tim Hudson, ATL 2011 Jacoby Ellsbury, BOS Lance Berkman, STL 2012 Fernando Rodney, TB Buster Posey, SF 2013 Mariano Rivera, NYY Francisco Liriano, PIT 2014 Chris Young, SEA Casey McGehee, MIA 2015 Prince Fielder, TEX Matt Harvey, NYM 2016 Rick Porcello, BOS Anthony Rendon, WSH 2017 Mike Moustakas, KC Greg Holland, COL 2018 David Price, BOS Jonny Venters, ATL 2019 Carlos Carrasco, CLE Josh Donaldson, ATL 2020 Salvador Perez, KC Daniel Bard, COL 2021 Trey Mancini, BAL Buster Posey, SF 2022 Justin Verlander, HOU Albert Pujols, STL