Halladay had a better year than Lee by every measure except ERA and wins, and they were exceptionally close in those two categories. Halladay pitched more innings, had more Ks, and posted a lower WHIP. "Indictment of the voters" is probably a little strong here, however. I do get caught up in my own rhetoric at times.
The main problem with the AL Cy Young voting was the horrible inconsistency of it all. Some people are still clearly voting for the pitcher with the most wins, period. The voting also lacked internal consistency. Halladay should have finished a very close second, but it wasn't even in the same galaxy. You had voters giving K-Rod AL MVP votes, but no AL Cy Young votes. (Huh?)
Linceum certainly wasn't the clear-cut winner, either. You could make decent arguments for Santana (even with missing time), Webb, Haren, Hamels, Billingsley, and even Dempster. Again, it's not the outcome I mind so much as the process. Linceum ran away with it, while Brad Lidge received more votes than Dempster, Hamels, Haren, and Billingsley combined. Again, no real internal logic there.
Maddon certainly deserved AL MOY, and that was an oversight on my part. (I just forgot about the award entirely.) Piniella doesn't deserve as much credit for the Cubs' success, in my honest opinion. This has nothing to do with the postseason, but how he managed certain resources during the regular season. His handling of the bullpen and the Fukudome situation were very poor. Piniella is a good, possibly even a great manager, but he deserved the award last year, not this one. His real achievements of turning the team around and changing the ins utional culture all happened last year. This year, he had the best horses, period. I would have given Manuel the NL MOY award, even before the postseason began.
The Gold Gloves, as always, were total crap.