Luis Aparicio Award
The Luis Aparicio Award is given annually to a Venezuelan player in Major League Baseball who is judged to have recorded the best individual performance in that year. The winner of the award is determined by a vote conducted by Venezuelan sports journalists and Spanish-language media around the world. It is named after former MLB shortstop Luis Aparicio, who is the only player from Venezuela to be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame. The award was first presented in 2004, and was created in order to honour Aparicio's major league career and to commemorate his father, who died thirteen years before his son was elected into the Hall of Fame.
Johan Santana, José Altuve, and Miguel Cabrera are the only players to win the Luis Aparicio Award more than once, with Cabrera having won the award five times. Cabrera won the MLB Most Valuable Player Award and Hank Aaron Award alongside the Luis Aparicio Award in 2012 and 2013, becoming the first Venezuelan to win the MLB MVP Award. Santana, the 2004 and 2006 recipient, also won the Cy Young Award in those two years, winning by a unanimous vote on each occasion. Altuve, also a winner in 2014 and 2016, is the only player to win the Luis Aparicio Award, the MVP award, and become a World Series champion in the same season in 2017. He has also won a batting title in each of his three award seasons. Santana and Cabrera are the only award winners to also earn the pitching and batting Triple Crown respectively in the same season. In accomplishing the feat, Cabrera became the first player in 45 years to achieve a Triple Crown in batting since Carl Yastrzemski in 1967, while Santana became the first pitcher since Dwight Gooden in 1985 to secure a "Major League Triple Crown" by leading all of MLB in wins, earned run average and strikeouts. Francisco Rodríguez compiled a major league record of 62 saves in a single season in 2008 and went on to win the Rolaids Relief Man Award in the same year as the Luis Aparicio Award. Four winners—Cabrera, Altuve, Magglio Ordóñez, and Carlos González—were batting champions in their respective leagues in the same year they won the award.
The award is presented annually before a baseball game hosted by the local team, Águilas del Zulia, on November 18 in Aparicio's hometown of Maracaibo, Zulia. The date marks both the feast of the Virgin of Chiquinquirá – the patron saint of Zulia – and the anniversary of Aparicio's professional debut. , the most recent recipient of the award is Eugenio Suárez of the Cincinnati Reds.
Winners
Year | Links to the article about the corresponding baseball year |
Player | Denotes winning player and number of times they had won the award at that point |
Team | The player's team at the time he won the award |
Position | The player's position at the time he won the award |
^ | Indicates multiple award winners in the same year |
Player is active |
Year | Player | Position | Team | Ref |
Starting pitcher | Minnesota Twins | |||
Outfielder | Florida Marlins | |||
Starting pitcher | Minnesota Twins | |||
Outfielder | Detroit Tigers | |||
Relief pitcher | Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim | |||
Starting pitcher | Seattle Mariners | |||
Outfielder | Colorado Rockies | |||
First baseman | Detroit Tigers | |||
Third baseman | Detroit Tigers | |||
Third baseman | Detroit Tigers | |||
Second baseman | Houston Astros | |||
First baseman | Detroit Tigers | |||
Second baseman | Houston Astros | |||
Second baseman | Houston Astros | |||
^ | Outfielder | Atlanta Braves | ||
^ | First baseman | Milwaukee Brewers | ||
Third baseman | Cincinnati Reds |