You may not have heard of these awards, but trust me when I tell you they're the ones that really matter.

Yeah, everyone talks about MVP, Cy Young, Rookie of the Year and the like. I have my thoughts on those, too, if you care to know:

AL MVP: Aaron Judge, OF, NYY
NL MVP: Paul Goldschmidt, 1B, STL
AL CY: Justin Verlander, SP, HOU
NL CY: Sandy Alcantara, SP, MIA
AL ROY: Julio Rodriguez, OF, SEA
NL ROY: Michael Harris, OF, ATL

But if you ask me, they don't go far enough in highlighting all the players who made the Fantasy Baseball season what it was.

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Won't you join me in doing that now?

Most valuable hitter
Aaron Judge CF
NYY N.Y. Yankees • #99 • Age: 32

2022 Stats

AVG

0.310

HR

62

RBI

131

R

133

SB

18

OPS

1.111
By standard CBS scoring, no hitter was within even 100 points of Judge during his historic season. The gap between him and No. 2 (Jose Ramirez) was bigger than the gap between No. 2 and No. 23.
Most valuable pitcher
Justin Verlander SP
HOU Houston • #35 • Age: 41

2022 Stats

W-L

18-4

ERA

1.75

WHIP

0.83

INN

175

BB

29

K

185
A 39-year-old coming off Tommy John surgery, Verlander was 29th pitcher selected on average, according to FantasyPros. He finished No. 1 among pitchers in 5x5 scoring.
Most improved hitter
Nate Lowe 1B
TEX Texas • #30 • Age: 28

2022 Stats

AVG

.302

HR

27

RBI

76

R

74

OPS

.851

AB

593
A .264-hitting, 18-homer first baseman, as Lowe was in 2021, probably doesn't have a future as an everyday player, but what a difference a year makes. From June 1 on, he hit .317 with 24 homers and a .914 OPS.
Most improved pitcher
Kyle Wright SP
KC Kansas City • #30 • Age: 28

2022 Stats

W-L

21-5

ERA

3.19

WHIP

1.16

INN

180.1

BB

53

K

174
He was on nobody's draft board at the start of the year and ultimately became the majors' only 20-game winner, finally capitalizing on his latent prospect potential at age 26.
Most improved, midseason edition
Reid Detmers SP
LAA L.A. Angels • #48 • Age: 24

2022 Stats

W-L

7-6

ERA

3.77

WHIP

1.21

INN

129

BB

46

K

122
He was as squishy as they come when the Angels sent him down in late June, sporting a 4.66 ERA, 6.8 K/9 and a 9 percent swinging-strike rate. He returned a couple weeks later with a revamped slider and had a 3.04 ERA, 9.9 K/9 and 13 percent swinging-strike rate the rest of the way.
Biggest collapse
Pablo Lopez SP
MIN Minnesota • #49 • Age: 28

2022 Stats

W-L

10-10

ERA

3.75

WHIP

1.17

INN

180

BB

53

K

174
Lopez was single-handedly responsible for so many teams' reversal of fortune in the pitching categories. He had a 1.05 ERA through his first seven starts compared to a 4.60 ERA the rest of the way. A strong four-start stretch to end the season wasn't enough to redeem him.
Bobby Big Bat award
Christian Walker 1B
ARI Arizona • #53 • Age: 33

2022 Stats

AVG

0.242

HR

36

RBI

94

R

84

OPS

.804

AB

583
The rightful choice is probably Aaron Judge just by virtue of him hitting 16 more home runs than anybody else, but so as not to have a repeat winner, I'll give it to Walker, a 31-year-old afterthought who more than doubled his combined home run total from 2020 and 2021.
Freddie Fleet Foot award
Jon Berti 3B
NYY N.Y. Yankees • #19 • Age: 34

2022 Stats

AVG

0.240

HR

4

SB

41

OPS

.662

AB

358
Berti makes for an obvious choice as the unexpected stolen base leader -- and in roughly 50 fewer games than the next five on the list. No telling if he plays even that much next year, though, given how poorly he rates as a hitter.
Fakeout of the Year, pitcher edition
Eric Lauer SP
PIT Pittsburgh • #52 • Age: 28

2022 Stats

W-L

11-7

ERA

3.69

WHIP

1.22

INN

158.2

BB

59

K

157
Hard as it may be to remember, Lauer had two double digit-strikeout games in April and a 14 percent swinging-strike rate in his first six starts. He had zero and a 9 percent swinging-strike rate thereafter.
Fakeout of the Year, hitter edition
Ty France 1B
SEA Seattle • #23 • Age: 29

2022 Stats

AVG

0.276

HR

20

RBI

84

R

65

OPS

.777

AB

551
France seemed like a runaway for the batting title when he hit .347 over the first two months. Only problem is he hit .237 over the next four.
Fakest fakeout award
Taylor Ward LF
LAA L.A. Angels • #3 • Age: 30

2022 Stats

AVG

0.281

HR

23

RBI

65

R

73

OPS

.833

AB

495
Ward hit .370 with a 1.194 OPS in his first 30 games and .205 with a .601 OPS over his next 69. Should have known better, shouldn't we? Well, then he hit .353 with a .976 OPS over his final 36 games, so who's the smart guy now?
Perpetual fakeout award
Charlie Morton SP
ATL Atlanta • #50 • Age: 40

2022 Stats

W-L

9-6

ERA

4.34

WHIP

1.23

INN

172

BB

63

K

205
I don't know about you, but Charlie bit me. Over and over again, he bit me as I fixated on his whiff and spin rates, both of which remained stellar. Upon further inspection, it was the 28 homers, 10 more than his previous high, that did him in.
Best comeback, pitcher edition
Zac Gallen SP
ARI Arizona • #23 • Age: 28

2022 Stats

W-L

12-4

ERA

2.54

WHIP

0.91

INN

184

BB

47

K

192
Gallen battled elbow troubles in 2021 to the tune of a 4-10 record, 4.30 ERA and 1.29 WHIP. He seemed to me like someone destined for Tommy John surgery, but apparently not.
Best comeback, hitter edition
Eugenio Suarez 3B
ARI Arizona • #28 • Age: 32

2022 Stats

AVG

.236

HR

31

RBI

87

R

76

OPS

.791

AB

543
A move from Cincinnati to Seattle seemed like the last thing Suarez needed after htiting a combined .199 the previous two seasons. Not like he contended for a batting title or anything, but .236 is certainly enough to make his power worthwhile again, particularly at a position as thin as third base.
Best comeback, midseason edition
Marcus Semien 2B
TEX Texas • #2 • Age: 33

2022 Stats

AVG

0.248

HR

26

RBI

83

R

101

SB

25

OPS

.733
Tempting as it is to give the award to Blake Snell for a second straight year, it was Semien who most decisively turned things around, homering 25 times over the final four months after doing so just once in the first two. Cold weather may not suit him now than the humidor is in full use.
Sizzle reel award, pitcher edition
Spencer Strider SP
ATL Atlanta • #99 • Age: 25

2022 Stats

W-L

11-5

ERA

2.67

WHIP

0.99

INN

131.2

BB

45

K

202
The rookie became the league's must-see pitcher when he moved into the starting rotation during the summer, looking downright invincible when he was in command of the zone. He led the majors with 13.8 K/9, became the fastest ever to 200 strikeouts and set a franchise record with 16 strikeouts in a game.
Sizzle reel award, hitter edition
Oneil Cruz SS
PIT Pittsburgh • #15 • Age: 25

2022 Stats

AVG

0.233

HR

17

SB

10

OPS

.744

AB

331

K

126
The rookie struggled to keep the strikeouts under control but regularly tested the boundaries of what a hitter can do, including setting a record for hardest-hit ball at 122.4 mph. Between that and his 6-foot-7 frame, it's hard not to make Aaron Judge comparisons.
Biggest overachiever
Randy Arozarena LF
TB Tampa Bay • #56 • Age: 29

2022 Stats

AVG

0.263

HR

20

RBI

89

R

72

SB

32

OPS

.772
This year marked the second straight in which Arozarena outperformed his xBA by at least 30 points and his xSLG by at least 70, which probably means we can ignore them in his case.
Biggest Underachiever
Jose Abreu 1B
HOU Houston • #79 • Age: 37

2022 Stats

AVG

.304

HR

15

RBI

75

R

85

OPS

.824

AB

601
Abreu hit half as many home runs as in 2021 -- a career-low 15, in fact -- even though his Statcast page was still lit up in red. Seeing as he's still 93rd percentile for average exit velocity and 92nd percentie for xSLG, I'd say that reports of his demise have been greatly exaggerated.
Stealthiest underachiever
Michael Massey 2B
KC Kansas City • Age: 26

2022 Stats

AVG

0.243

HR

4

SB

3

OPS

.683

AB

173
It may be that Kauffman Stadium was just a miserable place to hit in 2022. Massey mustered only four home runs in his 52 games as a rookie, but Statcast suggests that if he had played somewhere like Great American Ball Park instead, he would have hit 14.
Biggest weirdo
Cal Quantrill SP
COL Colorado • #47 • Age: 29

2022 Stats

W-L

15-5

ERA

3.38

WHIP

1.21

INN

186.1

BB

47

K

128
Try as I might, I'll never understand Quantrill, who once again excelled with a 3.38 ERA despite a 4.37 xERA, a 4.12 FIP and a 4.38 xFIP. He doesn't miss bats, he doesn't get ground balls, he doesn't yield weak contact. He is the weirdest of the weird.
Biggest victim of the shift
Corey Seager SS
TEX Texas • #5 • Age: 30

2022 Stats

AVG

0.244

HR

33

RBI

83

R

91

OPS

.772

AB

593
Seager's .242 batting average against the shift was the fifth-lowest among the 45 hitters with at least 300 at-bats in that scenario. It might explain why his overall batting average (.245) lagged so much behind his xBA (.283). Perhaps you've heard that the shifts will be limited next year.
The guy Fantasy Footballers won't see coming
Jake McCarthy RF
ARI Arizona • #31 • Age: 26

2022 Stats

AVG

0.283

HR

8

SB

23

OPS

.769

AB

321
Though he got some looks early on, it wasn't until McCarthy returned to the majors in July that he established himself as a fixture in the Diamondbacks lineup, hitting .302 the rest of the way. His 19 steals in the final two months would have ranked 25th for the entire season.
The one I wouldn't shut up about
Vinnie Pasquantino 1B
KC Kansas City • #9 • Age: 26

2022 Stats

AVG

0.295

HR

10

OPS

.832

AB

258

BB

35

K

34
Yeah, sorry about that, though I still say a guy with an average exit velocity (91.1 mph) akin to Freddie Freeman and a strikeout rate (11.6 percent) akin to Alex Bregman is destined for big things. You'll see.
Mr. Durability
Sandy Alcantara SP
MIA Miami • #22 • Age: 28

2022 Stats

W-L

14-9

ERA

2.28

WHIP

0.98

INN

228.2

BB

50

K

207
Honorable mention for Framber Valdez's streak of 25 straight quality starts, but when it comes to workload, Alcantara is in a class of his own. His six complete games were three more than any other pitcher, and he went *more than* seven innings in 16 of his 32 starts.
Mr. Wait ... Who?
Joey Meneses 1B
WAS Washington • #45 • Age: 32

2022 Stats

AVG

0.324

HR

13

OPS

.930

AB

222

BB

15

K

52
The well-traveled 30-year-old might still not have reached the majors if not for the Juan Soto trade. He's made himself an indispensible part of a rebuilding lineup.
Mr. Look Who Finally Decided to Show Up
Max Muncy 3B
LAD L.A. Dodgers • #13 • Age: 33

2022 Stats

AVG

.196

HR

21

OPS

.713

AB

464

BB

90

K

141
With apologies to Bo Bichette, who salvaged a disappointing season by hitting .406 with seven homers and four steals from Sept. 1 on, this award goes to Muncy, who once and for all proved the health of his elbow by hitting .247 with 12 homers and an .858 OPS over the final two months.
Mr. Thanks for the Memories
Nelson Cruz DH
SD San Diego • #32 • Age: 43

2022 Stats

AVG

.234

HR

10

OPS

.650

AB

448

BB

49

K

119
Year after year, for probably half a decade, we've all wondered if this would be the year Cruz's production falls off, making him a perennial bargain in drafts. Well, that year finally came, at age 42.