The trade deadline may have shaken up the majors, but in the AL, the three major awards races have seen no such movement. Instead, you have two established stars running away with the MVP and Cy Young races, though there have been some big jumps amid the young names down the ballot. With two months left in the season, do any of them have what it takes to make a run at a trophy? Here’s how all the top contenders shake out after a busy July (and here’s last month’s check-in on the chase).

This piece will pick 10 MVP contenders, five Cy Young choices, and three Rookie of the Year options, just like the actual BBWAA ballots. The rookie cut-off is 130 at-bats or 50 innings from the season(s) prior. Stats in bold indicate American League leader; stats in bold and italics indicate MLB leader. All stats are current as of the morning of Mon., Aug. 5.

MVP

1. Mike Trout, CF, Angels (Last Month: 1)

.296/.437/.659 (474 PA), 36 HR, 87 RBI, 8 SB (2 CS), 85 BB, 186 OPS+, 7.1 bWAR

One way not to lose the MVP award for the millionth time: lead your league in every conceivable category. That’s what Trout is doing, as all the bold ink up there shows. Not only that, but he’s also coming off a ludicrous month of July in which he hit .286/.392/.821 (yes, you read that last one right) with 13 homers in 22 games. He’s on pace to obliterate his career high in home runs (41, set in 2015) and, at 7.1 WAR through 106 games, is on his way to the fourth 10-plus WAR season of his career and third in his last four years. You simply can’t do any better than this.

18 of @MikeTrout’s 21 hits this month have gone for extra bases. 💪 pic.twitter.com/TBz4rGsMZS — MLB Stats (@MLBStats) July 28, 2019

2. Alex Bregman, 3B, Astros (Last Month: 4)

.267/.397/.531 (486 PA), 27 HR, 67 RBI, 4 SB (1 CS), 84 BB, 145 OPS+, 4.9 bWAR

The gap between Trout and second place might as well be the Grand Canyon, but I’m obliged to pick his runner-up anyway. For this month’s installment, it’s Bregman, who edges out fellow AL West third base counterpart Matt Chapman thanks to better plate patience (his 17.4% walk rate is second only to Trout in the majors) and a little more power.

3. Matt Chapman, 3B, Athletics (Last Month: 5)

.257/.343/.515 (466 PA), 24 HR, 64 RBI, 0 SB (1 CS), 51 BB, 128 OPS+, 4.8 bWAR

Not that Chapman is terribly far behind Bregman, though. Neither of these two is putting pressure on Trout, but the battle for No. 2 is still plenty intriguing.

4. DJ LeMahieu, 1B/2B/3B, Yankees (Last Month: 2)

.335/.382/.530 (443 PA), 17 HR, 75 RBI, 4 SB (2 CS), 31 BB, 141 OPS+, 4.5 bWAR

LeMahieu couldn’t follow up his scorching June with a similar July, slashing a respectable yet unexceptional .282/.341/.449 on the month. He’s been hot again in August, though, with six hits in 14 at-bats, and is in a tight battle with the Mets’ Jeff McNeil for the MLB batting title.

5. Rafael Devers, 3B, Red Sox (Last Month: 6)

.320/.369/.562 (489 PA), 22 HR, 86 RBI, 8 SB (6 CS), 34 BB, 136 OPS+, 4.0 bWAR

Like a Statcast version of Midas, every ball Devers puts wood on is blistered: He’s tops in the majors in balls hit 95 mph-plus (181) and ranks 10th in average exit velocity (92.6 mph). He’s also tied for the AL lead in doubles with 37 and is first in the majors in hits with 144 amid a true breakout season.

Rafael Devers recorded his 13th three-hit game of the season. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/Q5LkJRgYhX — Red Sox (@RedSox) July 28, 2019

6. Xander Bogaerts, SS, Red Sox (Last Month: 8)

.306/.386/.565 (497 PA), 25 HR, 84 RBI, 3 SB (1 CS), 58 BB, 142 OPS+, 3.8 bWAR

Alongside Devers in the left side of Boston’s infield, Bogaerts has busted out with the season everyone expected of him, setting a new career high in homers. He’s also ripping balls with aplomb: He’s tied with Devers for the AL lead in doubles (37) and with Trout for the AL lead in extra-base hits (61).

7. Jorge Polanco, SS, Twins (Last Month: 3)

.299/.359/.506 (491 PA), 17 HR, 55 RBI, 4 SB (3 CS), 41 BB, 126 OPS+, 4.6 bWAR

Polanco continues to slide down the MVP rankings after a July in which he hit a meager .230/.291/.440 (albeit with five homers in 23 games). His hot start is a fast-fading memory.

Story continues