Athletics 1B Nick Kurtz wins AL
Rookie of the Year award, Braves C Drake Baldwin wins NL honor
[November 11, 2025]
By JAY COHEN
Athletics slugger Nick Kurtz was accompanied by a good friend as he
joined one exclusive club on Monday night.
Kurtz was a unanimous choice for American League Rookie of the Year,
and Atlanta Braves catcher Drake Baldwin won the National League
award.
“It’s a great honor that I’m going to be put up with some of
baseball’s greats who won the award,” Kurtz said. "It puts some
finishing touches on the year, look back on it and enjoy what I’ve
done a little bit.”
The 22-year-old Kurtz is the 14th unanimous selection for the AL
honor and the second from the A’s franchise, joining Mark McGwire in
1987. Finishing right behind Kurtz was A’s teammate Jacob Wilson,
and Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony was third.
It was the fifth time in the AL and ninth time overall that
teammates finished in the top two spots in Rookie of the Year
balloting. The last time it happened in the AL was the Mariners’
Alvin Davis and Mark Langston in 1984.

“It’s awesome. He was actually in the same room with me 30 minutes
ago or so," Kurtz said of Wilson.
"That’s something that we really wanted to do together. It shows the
kind of teammates we are and how we strive to make each other
better.”
The 22-year-old Kurtz batted .290 with 36 homers, 86 RBIs and a
1.002 OPS in 117 games this year. The first baseman became the
eighth rookie since 1901 to finish with an OPS over 1.000 while
making at least 400 plate appearances.
For winning Kurtz will be credited with a full year of major league
service instead of 159 days, under the collective bargaining
agreement. If he isn’t sent back to the minor leagues and there
isn't a work stoppage that costs him service days, he would become
eligible for free agency after the 2030 season.
Baldwin, 24, stepped up for Atlanta after No. 1 catcher Sean Murphy
was sidelined by a cracked rib in spring training. While Murphy was
limited by injuries for much of the year, Baldwin hit .274 with 19
homers, 80 RBIs and an .810 OPS in 124 games.
Baldwin’s win secured an extra selection for Atlanta after the first
round in next year’s amateur draft under the collective bargaining
agreement’s prospect promotion incentive.
“I was just going into it with an open mind, kind of realizing how
cool it is to even be a finalist for it,” Baldwin said. “But I
didn’t know how it was going to turn out. I know it’s tough to rank
or try to judge who had a better year between a pitcher and a hitter
or a catcher.”
Baldwin received 21 of 30 first-place votes. Cubs right-hander Cade
Horton got the other nine first-place votes and finished second,
followed by Brewers third baseman Caleb Durbin. The balloting was
conducted before the postseason.
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Baldwin said Horton had a fantastic year.
“Either way, even if he would’ve won, I would have had all the
respect in the world for him and I’d have understood why,” he said.
Baldwin and Kurtz each get $750,000 from a pre-arbitration bonus
pool, and runners-up Horton and Wilson each receive $500,000.
The Manager of the Year for each league will be announced on
Tuesday, followed by the Cy Young Award winners on Wednesday.
Kurtz, 22, starred at Wake Forest University before he was selected
by the A’s with the No. 4 pick in the 2024 amateur draft. The
6-foot-5 slugger began this season in the minors, but he hit an RBI
single in his first big league at-bat on April 23 against Texas.
It was a sign of things to come.
He hit a solo drive off Dodgers reliever J.P. Feyereisen for his
first big league homer on May 13. He belted four more homers in a
span of four days that same month, including his first career
multihomer game on May 21 against the Angels.
He had his signature performance on July 25 at Houston, becoming the
youngest player in major league history and the first rookie to hit
four home runs in one game. He went 6 for 6 with eight RBIs while
matching an MLB record with 19 total bases.
Kurtz is the ninth winner for the A's overall, second in the AL
behind the Yankees' 10.
Baldwin was a third-round pick in the 2022 draft out of Missouri
State University. He started on opening day for Atlanta and got his
first major league hit on March 29 at San Diego.
Baldwin had one of his biggest days of the season on July 21,
driving in six runs in a 9-5 victory over San Francisco. He went
deep twice and finished with five RBIs in his first career
multihomer game on Aug. 7, an 8-6 win over Miami.
Baldwin is the seventh catcher to win the NL honor and the second
from the Braves, joining Earl Williams in 1971. He is the 10th
winner from the Braves franchise overall, second in the NL behind
the Dodgers with a record 18.

Baldwin's new manager, Walt Weiss, was the 1988 AL Rookie of the
Year with the A's. Weiss had been the Braves’ bench coach since
2018.
“The last game of the year he told me good luck," Baldwin said.
"Even being on the same list as him is pretty cool. Everyone
respects him. He’s a great guy.”
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