NL's Bay, AL's Crosby win Rookie of Year honors

Published: Tuesday, Nov. 9 2004 12:00 a.m. MST

NEW YORK — Jason Bay succeeded where Roberto Clemente, Willie Stargell and Barry Bonds failed: He became the first Pittsburgh Pirates player to win the NL Rookie of the Year award.

Bay, also the first Canadian to win the rookie award, got 25 of 32 first-place votes and 146 points Monday from the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Oakland shortstop Bobby Crosby was just a vote shy of being a unanimous pick for AL honor.

Clemente wasn't listed on a single ballot in 1955, when each voter selected just one name and Bill Virdon won. Stargell didn't get any votes when Pete Rose won in 1963, and Bonds was sixth with four points in 1986, finishing behind Todd Worrell, Robby Thompson, Kevin Mitchell, Charlie Kerfeld and Will Clark.

Ralph Kiner's big rookie season for the Pirates came in 1946, one year before the rookie award began.

"It means the world to me," Bay said. "You walk into the locker room and you see all those jerseys hanging up, it's kind of amazing it never happened."

Pittsburgh had been the only pre-expansion team without a rookie of the year, with four players finishing second: first baseman Donn Clendenon (1962), second baseman Johnny Ray (1982), pitcher Mike Dunne (1987) and outfielder-first baseman Orlando Merced (1991).

San Diego shortstop Khalil Greene was far back in second with seven first-place votes, 24 seconds and one third for 108 points, and Padres reliever Akinori Otsuka was next with 23 points.

Bay, traded by Montreal in 2001, the New York Mets in 2002 and San Diego in 2003, became friends with Greene in the Padres' organization. Greene, who broke his right index finger Sept. 13 and missed the rest of the season, hit .273 with 15 homers and 65 RBIs.

"I was figuring he was going to win," Greene said. "Statistically, which is what it's based on more than anything, he had a better year than I did."

Crosby received 27 of 28 first-place votes for 138 points. Chicago White Sox closer Shingo Takatsu received the other first-place vote, from Newsday's Jim Baumbach, and finished second with 44 points, followed by Baltimore pitcher Daniel Cabrera with 29 points.

Crosby, the son of former major league infielder Ed Crosby, said it was nerve-racking waiting for the announcement and that being a unanimous pick "would have been nice."

"I think it's sweet either way," he said.

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