Votto is third among qualifiers in batting average (.304) and hits (84), trailing leader Ryan Zimmerman of the Nationals and Paul Goldschmidt of the Diamondbacks in both categories. His 55 runs and .414 OBP are second only to Goldschmidt (68, .443).
Here's the latest update on All-Star voting. pic.twitter.com/q3lS1lH1tG
— Joel Goldberg (@goldbergkc) June 26, 2017
With a collective 3.2 WAR, Votto is behind Goldschmidt by a full win but sits comfortably ahead of the Braves’ Freddie Freeman (2.6) and Zimmerman (2.5).
As ESPN’s Buster Olney pointed out, Votto has an exceptional combination of high slugging, low strikeout tendencies.
Joey Votto begins Saturday’s game ranked 7th in MLB in lowest K percentage (11.0%) and 7th in MLB in slugging pct (.595). Think about that.
— Buster Olney (@Buster_ESPN) June 24, 2017
Yet Votto is a distant fifth in voting, even trailing Freeman, who hasn’t played in six weeks, by roughly 60,000 votes. Chicago’s Anthony Rizzo, who’s received the second most votes, ranks fifth in the NL in first baseman WAR.
👀 👀 pic.twitter.com/UIs1kYJIc2— MLB (@MLB) June 28, 2017Joey Votto’s eyes when he has a 2-0 count be like …
Statistics support Votto as the second most productive first baseman in the NL this season. But the reality of All-Star voting is that it’s a popularity contest. With only three days left to vote, Votto’s fate likely falls in the hands of coaches.
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