2024 World Series MVP Odds: Shohei Ohtani Heavy Favorite, Aaron Judge, Juan Soto Trail

2024 World Series MVP Odds: Shohei Ohtani Heavy Favorite, Aaron Judge, Juan Soto Trail article feature image
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(Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) Pictured: Shohei Ohtani

2024 World Series MVP Odds

PlayersOdds
Shohei Ohtani+230
Aaron Judge+500
Juan Soto+550
Mookie Betts+750
Giancarlo Stanton+950
Max Muncy+1600
Teoscar Hernandez+2700
Freddie Freeman+3000
Kike Hernandez+3000
Tommy Edman+3300
Gerrit Cole+3300
Gleyber Torres+4000
Jazz Chisholm Jr.+5000
Yoshinobu Yamamoto+6000
Jack Flaherty+6000
Anthony Volpe+10000
Will Smith+11000
Carlos Rodon+11000
Austin Wells+11000
Anthony Rizzo+12000
Luke Weaver+22000
Alex Verdugo+22000
Michael Kopech+36000
Gavin Lux+36000
Walker Beuhler+36000
Chris Taylor+36000
Clarke Schmidt+40000
Luis Gil+40000

Odds are according to FanDuel as of Tuesday afternoon. This market is not available in New York and a few other states due to regulatory constraints.

Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani is the far and away favorite to win the 2024 World Series MVP and is priced over fellow stars Aaron Judge and Juan Soto.

Ohtani had also been the favorite to win the 2024 NLCS MVP before losing that award to teammate Tommy Edman, who hit .407 with a homer, 11 RBI and five runs during that victory over the Mets.

Edman had been as long as +12000 to win the award. The World Series MVP is an award meant for long shots, so don't silo yourself together on Ohtani, Judge or Soto, even at relatively long odds.

On the note, Edman, the shifty utility player, has vaulted up the odds board to +3300 on account of his NLCS performance.

ALCS MVP Giancarlo Stanton has the fifth-best odds at +950 after a dynamite round in which he jacked a home run in four of the five games.

Of course, previous results don't predict future outcomes — especially in such a small sample size. Recency bias reigns true here, so Edman and Stanton may not be the best picks.

About the Author
Avery Yang is an editor at the Action Network who focuses on breaking news across the sports world and betting algorithms that try to predict eventual outcomes. Avery is a graduate from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. He has written for the Washington Post, the Associated Press, Sports Illustrated, (the old) Deadspin, MLB.com and others.

Follow Avery Yang @avery_yang on Twitter/X.

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