Eric Canha-USA TODAY Sports

In somewhat surprising fashion, Red Sox reliever Chris Martin finished 12th in 2023 American League Cy Young Award voting. The results were revealed by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America on MLB Network earlier Wednesday evening.

Martin received one fifth-place vote from Paul Sullivan of the Chicago Tribune for a total of one point. The veteran right-hander placed last in a field of 12, finishing behind the likes of Yankees ace Gerrit Cole, who won the award unanimously, runner-up Sonny Gray of the Twins, and Kevin Gausman of the Blue Jays.

It goes without saying that Martin enjoyed a dominant first season in Boston after signing a two-year, $17.5 million deal with the club he began his professional career with last December. The 37-year-old hurler initially got off to a so-so start and even missed some time in April due to right shoulder inflammation, but he did not miss a beat upon returning to action in early May.

In 55 total relief appearances, which ranked second on the Red Sox behind Josh Winckowski’s 59, Martin posted a miniscule 1.05 ERA and 2.44 FIP with 46 strikeouts to just eight walks over 51 1/3 innings of work in which he held opposing hitters to a .237 batting average against.

With closer Kenley Jansen locked in for the ninth most nights, Martin emerged as one of manager Alex Cora’s most-trusted setup men. All 55 of his outings came in the seventh inning or later as he recorded three saves in four opportunities while leading the club in holds with 23.

Before being shut down with a viral infection in late September, Martin had gone 20 straight appearances (19 innings) without allowing an earned run dating back to July 30. Altogether, the native Texan put up zeroes in all but five of his outings for the Red Sox this year.

Among the 66 relievers in the American League who reached the 50-inning threshold this season, Martin ranked second in walks per nine innings (1.40), second in walk rate (4.0 percent), eighth in WHIP (1.03), first in left on base percentage (93.6 percent), second in barrel rate (2.1 percent), first in ERA, third in FIP, and fifth in xFIP (2.90), per FanGraphs.

Martin — who is up for All-MLB consideration — was the only Red Sox pitcher to receive a Cy Young vote on Wednesday, becoming the first to accomplish that feat since Nathan Eovaldi finished fourth in the race two years ago. He also joins Craig Kimbrel (2017) and Koji Uehara (2013) as notable Boston relievers to net votes for the award within the last decade.

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