The Answer:
No player in Major
League Baseball history has won the Most Valuable Player
Award during a season in which their primary position was
designated hitter.
The designated hitter is a player used in the batting lineup in
place of the pitcher. The designated hitter rule has never been
adopted by the National League.
Since 1973, which was the first year DHs were used by the
American League, three players have won the MVP award in years they
played a significant amount of games as a designated hitter.
The first was Boston's Jim Rice who in 1978 played 49 of his 163
games (remember the one-game playoff against New York) as a DH. The
next season California Angels league MVP Don Baylor played 65 of 162
games at DH, and finally in 1996 Texas' Juan Gonzalez played 32 of 134
games at DH.
For more information about the designated hitter rule in
baseball read our Infoplease Feature: Rules That Needed to be
Broken.
—The Editors
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