Los Angeles Angels award winners and league leaders

Summary

This is a list of award winners and league leaders for the Los Angeles Angels professional baseball team.

Awards edit

Most Valuable Player edit

Cy Young edit

Rookie of the Year edit

Hank Aaron Award edit

Edgar Martínez Award edit

AL Manager of the Year edit

See footnote[1]

All-MLB Team edit

Gold Glove Award edit

Wilson Overall Defensive Player of the Year edit

See explanatory note at Atlanta Braves award winners and league leaders.

Wilson Defensive Player of the Year Award edit

Team (all positions)

Silver Slugger Award edit

MLB "This Year in Baseball Awards" edit

Note: These awards were renamed the "GIBBY Awards" in 2010 and then the "Esurance MLB Awards" in 2015.

"GIBBY Awards" Best Everyday Player edit

World Series MVP Award edit

ALCS MVP Award edit

See: League Championship Series Most Valuable Player Award

All-Star Game MVP Award edit

Note: This was re-named the Ted Williams Most Valuable Player Award in 2002.

All-Star Game—Home Run Derby champion edit

See: Home Run Derby

DHL Hometown Heroes (2006) edit

  • Rod Carew — voted by MLB fans as the most outstanding player in the history of the franchise, based on on-field performance, leadership quality and character value

Franchise Four (2015) [1]

  • Vladimir Guerrero
  • Nolan Ryan
  • Tim Salmon
  • Mike Trout

Baseball America Major League Player of the Year edit

Baseball America All-Rookie Team edit

See: Baseball America#Baseball America All-Rookie Team

Topps All-Star Rookie teams edit

Branch Rickey Award edit

The Sporting News Manager of the Year Award edit

See footnote[1]

Baseball America Manager of the Year edit

See: Baseball America#Major League Baseball awards
See footnote[1]
  • Mike Scioscia (2002, 2009)

Associated Press Manager of the Year edit

See: Associated Press#AP sports awards
See footnote[1]
  • Bill Rigney (1962) (in AL)

Team award edit

Team records (single-season and career) edit

Minor-league system edit

Baseball America Minor League Player of the Year Award edit

Minor League Baseball Yearly (MiLBY) Awards Hitter of the Year edit

Sporting News Minor League Organization of the Year edit

  • 2003 – Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim[7]

Minor League News Farm System of the Year edit

  • 2007 – Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim[7]

Other achievements edit

Hall of Famers edit

See: Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim#Baseball Hall of Famers

Angels Hall of Fame edit

See: Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim#Angels Hall of Fame

California Sports Hall of Fame edit

Los Angeles Angels in the California Sports Hall of Fame
No. Name Position(s) Seasons Notes
32 Dave Winfield RF 1990–1991 Elected mainly on his performance with San Diego Padres
36 Fernando Valenzuela P 1991 Elected mainly on his performance with Los Angeles Dodgers
44 Reggie Jackson RF 1982–1986 Elected mainly on his performance with Oakland Athletics and New York Yankees

Retired numbers edit

See: Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim#Retired numbers

Gene Autry Trophy edit

The Gene Autry Trophy, named for former Angels owner Gene Autry, is given to the team most valuable player. The award is voted on by the players.[8]

Year Winner
1990 Chuck Finley
1991 Jim Abbott & Bryan Harvey
1992 Luis Polonia
1993 Mark Langston & Tim Salmon (1)
1994 Chili Davis
1995 Tim Salmon (2)
1996 Troy Percival
1997 Tim Salmon (3)
1998 Gary DiSarcina
1999 Garret Anderson (1)
2000 Darin Erstad
2001 Garret Anderson (2)
2002 Garret Anderson (3)
2003 Garret Anderson (4)
2004 Vladimir Guerrero
2005 Chone Figgins & Bartolo Colón
2006 Vladimir Guerrero (2)[9]
2007 Vladimir Guerrero (3)
2008 Francisco Rodriguez[10]
2012 Mike Trout
2013 Mike Trout (2)[11]
2014 Mike Trout (3)
2015 Mike Trout (4)
2016 Mike Trout (5)
2017 Andrelton Simmons & Mike Trout (6)
2018 Mike Trout (7)
2019 Mike Trout (8)
2020 Mike Trout (9)
2021 Shohei Ohtani[12]
2022 Shohei Ohtani[13]

Nick Adenhart Award edit

The Nick Adenhart Pitcher of the Year Award, named for former Angels player Nick Adenhart, is given to an Angels pitcher for outstanding performance throughout the regular season. The award is voted on by the players.[14]

Year Winner
2015 Huston Street
2017 Yusmeiro Petit
2018 Andrew Heaney
2019 Andrew Heaney (2)
2020 Dylan Bundy
2021 Shohei Ohtani[15]
2022 Shohei Ohtani[16]

American League statistical leaders (batting) edit

Batting Average edit

Slugging Percentage edit

On Base Percentage edit

  • Mike Trout .441 (2016)
  • Mike Trout .442 (2017)
  • Mike Trout .460 (2018)
  • Mike Trout .438 (2019)

OPS+ edit

  • Bobby Grich 165 (1981)
  • Mike Trout 168 (2012)
  • Mike Trout 176 (2015)
  • Mike Trout 173 (2016)
  • Mike Trout 186 (2017)
  • Mike Trout 198 (2018)
  • Mike Trout 182 (2019)

Games edit

At Bats edit

Runs edit

Hits edit

Total Bases edit

Doubles edit

Triples edit

Home Runs edit

RBI edit

Walks edit

Strikeouts edit

Stolen Bases edit

Caught Stealing edit

Singles edit

Hit By Pitch edit

Sacrifice Hits edit

Sacrifice Flies edit

Intentional Walks edit

Grounded into Double Plays edit

At Bats per Strikeout edit

At Bats per Home Run edit

Outs edit

Runs Created edit

Adj. On-Base Plus Slugging edit

Adj. Batting Runs edit

Adj. Batting Wins edit

Power-Speed Number edit

Offensive Win Perc. edit

Win Probability Added edit

Wins Above Replacement (Baseball Reference) edit

Wins Above Replacement for Position Players (Baseball-Reference) edit

Offensive Wins Above Replacement (Baseball Reference) edit

American League statistical leaders (pitching) edit

ERA edit

Wins edit

WHIP edit

Hits Allowed/9IP edit

  • Andy Messersmith 6.08 (1969)
  • Andy Messersmith 6.66 (1970)
  • Nolan Ryan 5.26 (1972)
  • Nolan Ryan 5.98 (1974)
  • Nolan Ryan 6.11 (1976)
  • Nolan Ryan 5.96 (1977)
  • Nolan Ryan 6.83 (1979)
  • Jered Weaver 7.01 (2012)

Strikeouts/9IP edit

  • Nolan Ryan 10.43 (1972)
  • Nolan Ryan 10.57 (1973)
  • Nolan Ryan 9.93 (1974)
  • Frank Tanana 9.41 (1975)
  • Nolan Ryan 10.35 (1976)
  • Nolan Ryan 10.26 (1977)
  • Nolan Ryan 9.97 (1978)
  • Nolan Ryan 9.01 (1979)
  • Shohei Ohtani 11.9 (2021)

Saves edit

Innings edit

Strikeouts edit

  • Nolan Ryan 329 (1972)
  • Nolan Ryan 383 (1973)MLB RECORD
  • Nolan Ryan 367 (1974)
  • Frank Tanana 269 (1975)
  • Nolan Ryan 327 (1976)
  • Nolan Ryan 341 (1977)
  • Nolan Ryan 260 (1978)
  • Nolan Ryan 223 (1979)
  • Jered Weaver 233 (2010)

Games Started edit

Complete Games edit

Shutouts edit

Win/Loss Percentage edit

Home Runs Allowed edit

Walks Allowed edit

  • Bo Belinsky 122 (1962)
  • Dean Chance 114 (1966)
  • Nolan Ryan 157 (1972)
  • Nolan Ryan 162 (1973)
  • Nolan Ryan 202 (1974)
  • Nolan Ryan 183 (1976)
  • Nolan Ryan 204 (1977)
  • Nolan Ryan 148 (1978)

Hits Allowed edit

Strikeout to Walk edit

Losses edit

Earned Runs Allowed edit

Wild Pitches edit

Hit Batsmen edit

Batters Faced edit

Games Finished edit

Oldest Player edit

Youngest Player edit

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d In 1936, The Sporting News began The Sporting News Manager of the Year Award. (In 1986, TSN expanded the award to one for each league.) In 1959, the Associated Press began its AP Manager of the Year Award, which was discontinued in 2001. (From 1984 to 2000, the award was given to one manager in all of MLB.) In 1983, MLB began its own Manager of the Year Award (in each league). In 1998, Baseball Prospectus added a Manager of the Year award to its "Internet Baseball Awards" (one per league). In or about 2000, the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum began its Charles Isham "C. I." Taylor Legacy Award for "Managers of the Year". In 2003, MLB added a Manager of the Year award (for all of MLB) to its This Year in Baseball Awards. In 2007, the Rotary Club of Pittsburgh began its Chuck Tanner Major League Baseball Manager of the Year Award (for all of MLB). (In 2010, it began a separate Chuck Tanner Collegiate Baseball Manager of the Year Award.) Baseball America also has a Manager of the Year award (for all of MLB). USA Today has a Manager of the Year award (one per league).
  2. ^ Eddy, Matt (October 25, 2013). "2013 Major League Player of The Year: Mike Trout". Baseball America. Retrieved March 10, 2014.
  3. ^ Eddy, Matt (October 21, 2011). "Infield, Pitching Staff Highlight 2011 Rookie Team". Baseball America. Retrieved 2011-11-08.
  4. ^ The World Series Trophy was first awarded in 1967. In 1985, it was re-named the Commissioner's Trophy. From 1970 to 1984, the "Commissioner's Trophy" was the name of the award given to the All-Star Game MVP.
  5. ^ Baxter, Kevin (7 September 2011). "Angels FYI: Mike Trout is minor league player of the year". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 7, 2011.
  6. ^ Cooper, J.J. (September 7, 2011). "2011 Minor League Player Of The Year Mike Trout". Baseball America Inc. Retrieved 2011-11-08.
  7. ^ a b "PRESS RELEASE: Angels' GM Tony Reagins given contract extension". Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim official website. MLB Advanced Media, L.P. November 6, 2009. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved 2011-11-02.
  8. ^ "Gene Autry Trophy". 24 September 2005.
  9. ^ "Rodriguez gets club-record 47th save as Angels trip A's". ESPN. 1 October 2006. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  10. ^ "Seven-run second inning sends Rangers to rout of Angels". ESPN. 27 September 2008. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  11. ^ "Angels' Jason Vargas blanks A's as Oakland holds in best-record race". ESPN. 23 September 2013. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  12. ^ "Ohtani named team MVP and Pitcher of Year". NHK. 25 September 2021. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  13. ^ Bollinger, Rhett (October 1, 2022). "Ohtani inks $30M deal for '23, gets 2 awards, extends career-best hit streak". MLB.com. Retrieved October 7, 2022.
  14. ^ "LA Angels Announce Nick Adenhart Award Winner for 2017". 30 September 2017.
  15. ^ "Ohtani named team MVP and Pitcher of Year". NHK. 25 September 2021. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  16. ^ Bollinger, Rhett (October 1, 2022). "Ohtani inks $30M deal for '23, gets 2 awards, extends career-best hit streak". MLB.com. Retrieved October 7, 2022.