Opening Day already feels like a distant memory as MLB rolls out its March and April award winners. The numbers are wild: Yordan Alvarez bounced back after a rough, injury-filled 2025 with a scorching start, and Geraldo Vargas shocked everyone as NL Player of the Month.
On the mound, Tyler Soriano and Shohei Ohtani both kicked off their years with historic performances. Youngsters and relievers wasted no time making their presence felt in both leagues. Let’s break down every winner and pick out a few early trends.
AL Highlights
The American League’s storylines revolve around a slugger who’s finally healthy again, plus a handful of pitchers and rookies making noise right away. The AL handed out four big honors, really showing off the league’s depth and resilience.
AL Player of the Month: Yordan Alvarez
Alvarez’s numbers barely seem real. He hit .356/.462/.737 with a league-best 1.199 OPS.
He mashed 12 home runs and somehow walked more (21) than he struck out (14). Alvarez looks like Houston’s anchor in the lineup again, bringing power, patience, and a knack for driving in runs. It’s got Astros fans dreaming big.
- Batting average: .356
- On-base + slugging (OPS): 1.199
- Home runs: 12
- Walks vs. strikeouts: 21 vs. 14
AL Pitcher of the Month: Tyler Soriano
Soriano took the ball for seven starts and just mowed hitters down. He put up a 0.84 ERA and became the first since at least 1900 to allow one run or fewer in his first six starts (excluding openers).
His command and efficiency gave his rotation a rock-solid foundation right out of the gate.
- ERA: 0.84
- Starts: 7
- Runs allowed in first six starts: ≤1 in each
AL Rookie of the Month: Caden McGonigle
Detroit’s rookie wasted no time, opening his career with a four-hit game. He finished April with a .935 OPS, giving Tigers fans a real reason to watch the kids this year.
- Opening-game performance: four hits
- April OPS: .935
AL Reliever of the Month: Adam Varland
Varland came out firing in high-leverage spots, punching out 26 in just 15 innings. He posted a 0.56 ERA and struck out a wild 43.3% of batters faced.
That’s the kind of late-inning stuff every bullpen dreams about.
- Innings: 15
- ERA: 0.56
- Strikeout rate: 43.3%
NL Highlights
The National League handed out its own awards to a mix of old faces and fresh talent. Geraldo Vargas led the way, while Shohei Ohtani put up another jaw-dropping month as a two-way star.
The NL’s rookie class looked loaded, and the bullpen arms made their presence known early.
NL Player of the Month: Geraldo Vargas
Vargas turned in a .378 average and kept a hitting streak alive to open the season. At 34, he’s rewriting the script for journeymen everywhere, showing he can still rake and spark a team’s offense.
- Average: .378
- Hitting streak: Extended into season start
- Age/profile: 34-year-old career journeyman
NL Pitcher of the Month: Shohei Ohtani
Ohtani returned to full-time pitching and was nearly untouchable. He posted a 0.60 ERA over five starts, lowest among anyone with at least 30 innings.
It’s hard to overstate how much his two-way game changes the landscape for fans and opponents.
- ERA: 0.60
- Innings: 30+
- Starts: 5
NL Rookie of the Month: Nick Stewart
Stewart led all qualified NL rookies with a .570 slugging percentage and nine home runs. Cincinnati found a real bat here, and it’s a reminder the league’s young talent pipeline is alive and well.
- Slugging: .570
- Home runs: 9
NL Reliever of the Month: Mason Miller
Mason Miller’s swing-and-miss rates? Just wild. He looked untouchable during his scoreless-inning streak.
That streak reached 34 2/3 innings before it finally snapped. It really shows why he’s one of the most dangerous late-inning arms in the NL.
- Scoreless innings streak: 34 2/3
- Strikeout efficiency: high swing-and-miss
Here is the source article for this story: Top hitters, pitchers, rookies & relievers from season’s 1st month
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