The 2012 season is over. Thank God. Now there's nothing standing in the way of offseason trades, signings and awards! Because Angels, Marlins, Dodgers, Phillies, Red Sox and Yankees fans know all too well that a World Series championship is actually determined not by the last two teams standing in the playoffs, but by who signs the most players to the biggest contracts before Spring Training. Anyway, in this edition of Postseason Predictions Extravaganza, we're going to take a crack at guessing who will win what awards before they are announced in the coming weeks, in the order they will be awarded.
AL Rookie of the Year: Mike Trout, CF, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
This might be the most uncontested RotY ever. Yu Darvish made a strong case to win with the Rangers in his first season on this side of the Pacific, garnering an All-Star appearance and starting the play-in Wild Card game for Texas (which, admittedly, he lost). Will Middlebrooks gave the Red Sox hope for their season early on before he went onto the DL and missed the rest of what could have been a solid rookie year. And Yoenis Cespedes was one of the top offensive and defensive performers on an A's team that surprised the baseball world (more on that later). But none of them did what Trout did this year. In fact, no rookie in history did what Trout did this year. He posted a 10.7 WAR, 2.5 higher than Robinson Cano of the Yankees and 3.5 higher than Buster Posey, who won that category in the National League. He became the first rookie in history to record a 30-30 season (30 home runs and 30 stolen bases). In fact, he led the AL and all of baseball with 49 stolen bases, meaning he almost became the third member of the 30-50 in history, and again, no rookie has ever come close. He batted in 83 runs, scored 129 on his own (best in the AL), had a .326 batting average (2nd behind Miguel Cabrera) and ranked in the top 3 in slugging and OPS, all this despite missing nearly the entire first month of the season (he played in 139 games). Whether he'll win the MVP award is not as certain (again, more on that in just a bit), but Trout will absolutely run away with the Rookie of the Year award, almost as fast as he runs from first to third. And that's pretty darn fast.

NL Rookie of the Year: Bryce Harper, CF, Washington Nationals.
Believe it or not, this one may not be as uncontested as Trout. There was Wade Miley of the Diamondbacks, Yasmani Grandal of the Padres and Andrelton Simmons of the Braves to consider. Miley anchored the D-backs rotation, leading the team in wins (16, tied with Yu Darvish in the AL for most wins by a rookie) and ERA (3.33). Grandal, along with first baseman Yonder Alonso, came over from the Reds in the Mat Latos trade, and both of them infused the Padres with a severely needed shot of youth and talent, giving San Diego fans hope for the future between the two of them and third baseman Chase Headley (side note: look for Headley to steal a few MVP votes this season). And Simmons projects to fill the starting shortstop role, something that's been a bit of a black hole since Yunel Escobar got traded to the Blue Jays a few seasons ago. But just as Trout had the best rookie season in the AL, so did Harper in the NL. Could it have been any other way? 22 home runs, 98 runs scored, 57 extra base hits, 254 total bases, and an .817 OPS. All of this before he turned 20 years old. And you guessed it: those are all either records for an NL rookie, or the best numbers a teenager has ever posted in Major League Baseball history. It's not every season that we see a rookie in both leagues post numbers that no kid ever has before, but this year was truly a special one in that regard. Not to mention that Harper helped bring postseason baseball back to Washington for the first time since the 1933 World Series. Yep, the kid is special, all right.

AL Manager of the Year: Bob Melvin, Oakland Athletics.
If you picked the Athletics to win the AL West this year, raise your hand. All right, now all of those who raised their hand, get out of here and stop lying. Nobody on earth would ever have guessed that a team whose most prolific free agent signing was a 26 year old Cuban defector who had never played a day of professional ball in his life (Cespedes), or that an outfield comprised mainly of Red Sox castoffs (Coco Crisp and Josh Reddick, along with ex-Rockie Seth Smith) would have put up offensive numbers better than their current counterparts in Boston. No one, not even those who live in Oakland, could have expected a rotation headed by 39 year old Bartolo Colon (who was suspended near the end of the season for a failed drug test) would end up ranking in the top 10 of all defensive stats, reaching as high as 5th in opponents' batting average. There isn't a person alive that would believe that a 34 year old Australian relief pitcher in Grant Balfour would become such a dominant closer. But for all of these facts and stats, most of which are hard to believe when considering the team they relate to, the A's didn't care. They were known as the team that didn't know they weren't supposed to be winning, but that's a copout. They sure knew it when Bob Geren was managing the team. For some reason, this team couldn't tap into its' immense potential until Melvin took the helm, and from the day he was hired, the A's surged to their first division crown since 2006. That's not coincidence. Melvin deserves credit for breathing new life into an Athletics team that looked dead.

NL Manager of the Year: Davey Johnson, Washington Nationals.
The Nationals lost 100 games in 2008 and 2009. Hard to believe now, right? After a year in which they had the best record in baseball and won their very first NL East crown, the Nats of the last 7 years since they moved from Montreal and ceased to be the Expos seem like a distant, happily-forgotten memory. And Johnson is directly responsible for turning this team of inexperienced rookies, listless veterans and offseason acquisitions into a dangerous contender, likely for years to come. He, along with GM Mike Rizzo, presided over the most controversial pitching decision in a long time when they announced before the season that Stephen Strasburg would be shut down in September and wouldn't pitch in the playoffs, considering that they didn't think they'd be competing this year. When it became clear that they would, Johnson stuck to his guns and didn't allow Strasburg to pitch, in the interest of nurturing his skills for the long-term instead of short-term playoff performances. He advocated bringing up Harper as the everyday center fielder when some felt Harper wasn't ready. Johnson has past experience with this, though: he saw Dwight Gooden as a valuable asset for the Mets in the 1980s when he called him up to the big leagues, and he promptly won Rookie of the Year in 1984 and a World Series in 1986, which Johnson led the Amazin's to. His vivacious spirit and vigor are still with him even at 69, and Johnson has brought this Nationals team to baseball's Promised Land. It's even likely that, whether he wins this year or not, 2012 won't be the last year he's in the running.

AL Cy Young: Justin Verlander, SP, Detroit Tigers.
I'm sorry, David Price. And I'm sorry, Jered Weaver. But it's Justin Verlander...again. Price led the league in wins (20) and ERA (2.56). Weaver threw a no-hitter and also won 20. But the league leader in WAR, strikeouts, innings pitched and WHIP? Take a wild guess. A 7.5 WAR, 239 strikeouts, 238.1 innings (the second season in a row in which he average roughly a strikeout an inning, no small feat considering how much he throws and how often) and a 1.06 WHIP would be great for any pitcher, and would almost certainly gain them a Cy Young. But for Verlander, these stats are actually down from his award-winning campaign in 2011. He came up short in the All-Star Game, and struggled mightily in his lone World Series start this year, but make no mistake: Justin Verlander is still the best pitcher in baseball right now. His stats are impressive, the sabermetrics support him, but what makes Verlander the scariest hurler to take the mound is that, unlike most pitchers and against all logical conclusions, he gets better the longer he pitches in a game. Most pitchers throw much faster in the earlier innings than they do in the later innings, due simply to fatigue and working so hard. Verlander throws 91 in the 1st inning, 95 in the 6th inning, and 100 in the 9th inning (not coincidentally, he led baseball in complete games this season with 6, no small feat). For someone who understands the art of pitching better than anyone else today, it's surprising that he's only won the Cy Young once. But don't be surprised if you see him win his second this year, and many more soon to come.

NL Cy Young: R.A. Dickey, SP, New York Mets.
In the original draft of this post, I had Giants starter Matt Cain for this award. I mean, a perfect game? Starting the All-Star Game? Taking his team to another championship title? How could you not pick him? How could you not pick Nationals hurler Gio Gonzalez, who led the NL in wins with 21 in his first season in the Senior Circuit? What about Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw, the reigning Cy Young recipient who had the lowest ERA (2.53) in the league? Heck, even Braves reliever Craig Kimbrel will get serious consideration after one of the greatest single-season relief performances in history. But it has to be Dickey, the least likely candidate just a year ago. The 37 year old knuckleballer wowed the baseball world this year, winning 20 games, leading the league in innings pitched (233), strikeouts (230) and was 3rd in the league behind Kershaw and Cain in WHIP with 1.05. He climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro this past offseason, and wrote a book talking about his struggles as a child after being molested by a babysitter. He has switched teams frequently in the past decade, and was never known for his knee-buckling knuckler until this season, when he absolutely dominanted baseball, including back-to-back 1-hit shutouts in June, both of which saw Dickey throw 10 or more strikeouts, the first time a single pitcher threw two such games in the same season, let alone in consecutive starts. And we found out, when the season ended, that he had torn a muscle in his stomach in Spring Training. He did all this with a painful injury? Give this man the Cy as quickly as possible.

AL MVP: Mike Trout, CF, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Now, any semi-loyal reader to this blog (and I know there are at least 3 of you somewhere out there) will remember the two Cage Match posts I wrote before the playoffs making a case for both Trout and Miguel Cabrera of the Tigers to win this award. In the first post, I said I believed Trout would win, but just barely. In the second, I admitted that I had no idea which one deserved it more, and that either one would be a good winner. But, as we inch closer to the actual announcement award, my gut is telling me it's Trout. Sure, Cabrera took his team to the World Series, but these awards are voted on before the postseason. Yes, Cabrera won the Triple Crown, but so did Carl Yastzremski in 1967 (the last one to do it before this year) and he didn't win MVP that year despite taking his Red Sox to the Fall Classic as well. Of course, Trout's a rookie and there is a specific award for that, but there are no rules in place that say a rookie can only win Rookie of the Year and not MVP (just ask Fred Lynn in 1975 or Ichiro in 2001). And when we took a look at it, I mean REALLY delve into the sabermetrics that are becoming so popular with today's fans, it becomes painfully clear that Trout excels in a way that even a powerhouse like Cabrera couldn't do in his best season...which just happened to be this one. As I've said before, this award is far too close to call, and could go either way. But don't be surprised if this Trout ends up hooking onto the MVP line while Cabrera flounders in 2nd place again.

NL MVP: Ryan Braun, LF, Milwaukee Brewers.
Before you jump down my throat for not picking Giants catcher Buster Posey, just listen: Braun ranked in the top 3 in batting average (3rd), RBI (2nd) and home runs (1st) in the National League. He was first in runs scored, slugging and OPS. He even stole 30 bases to go with his 40 home runs, notching yet another 30-30 season, his 2nd in a row. He notched a 6.8 WAR, good for 3rd in the NL. And he just happened to fail a drug test this time last year. Nobody is denying that he did fail the test, regardless of his successful appeal of his 50-game suspension. It was reported that the level of testosterone in his urine sample, most likely synthetic, was around 4 times higher than any other sample taken in the last decade and a half. Whatever it may have been, it was there. Don't you think that he, of all MLB players, would be tested regularly and monitored more closely than anyone else in 2012? If that was the case, and it undoubtedly was, how is it that he actually put up better numbers this season than he did last year when he won? Because he has talent, and he has power, and he plays the game the right way, despite what his detractors say. His numbers this year and last, while spectacular, really don't deviate much from his career averages: a .313 batting average (.319 this year), 37 homers (41), 118 RBI (112) and a .943 OPS (.987). Whatever caused his test results, they certainly didn't boost his already-impressive offensive output. He'll likely lose votes for that test, and Posey is just as deserving of the award, but for our part, we're going with a repeat win for the Hebrew Hammer.
These awards will all be announced in the second week of November, at which point we'll bring you updated analysis and see if we were right about any of the winners (we probably won't be).