Guardians' Vogt named AL Manager of the Year

Cleveland's Stephen Vogt was named American League Manager of the Year on Tuesday after winning the AL Central in his first season on the job.

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The Cleveland Guardians ' Stephen Vogt was named American League Manager of the Year on Tuesday after winning the AL Central in his first season on the job, while Pat Murphy became the first Milwaukee Brewers skipper to win the NL honor. The 40-year-old Vogt, who had never managed before this year, steered Cleveland to a 92-69 record. The Guardians made it to the AL Championship Series before losing to the New York Yankees .

He is the third AL manager to win the award, given out since 1983, in his rookie season managing. AL Manager Of The Year Voting Voting for American League manager of the year, as selected by the Baseball Writers' Association of America (tabulated on a 5-3-1 basis): Despite injuries to starters Shane Bieber and Triston McKenzie that left the Guardians short-handed for most of the season, Vogt managed Cleveland's bullpen brilliantly, with its 2.57 ERA more than half a run better than the next-best team.



The Guardians improved by 16 games over the previous season and won Vogt's first playoff series against Detroit until the Yankees dismissed them in five games. Over his 10-year playing career, Vogt played for six teams and was twice an All-Star. He took over in Cleveland for the retiring Terry Francona -- himself a three-time Manager of the Year -- after spending a season as the Seattle Mariners ' bullpen coach.

Vogt received 27 of 30 first-place votes and finished ahead of two other AL Central managers, Kansas City 's Matt Quatraro (two first-place votes) and Detroit's A.J. Hinch (one).

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