If the Marlins had finished with a better record than the Phills, Ramirez would have had just as good a shot, if not a better one, at the MVP award because frankly his numbers at the plate were superior to Rollins', albeit not by much.
Honestly I haven't watched Ramirez enough to know if his defense is as bad as its toted as being. Not saying I don't believe info from others, just saying I don't know because I haven't watched enough. But let's be serious, since when has defense been a serious factor in MVP voting? Ryan Howard.. is he a hoover? 2004 Bariod Bonds on his creaky knees.. was he a defensive gem?
I'm not trying to downplay the importance of defense in any way, but I just think that MVP voters don't really take that into account. Its all about what you do at the plate and how successful your team is. Just a simple switcharoo, putting Ramirez on the Phills and Rollins on the Marlins.. does anyone subjectively think that would have drastically altered either team's final record? Maybe by a few games here or there, but not to a large degree IMO. Of course we'll never know, all speculation.
But to me, Rollins' team won more often, so he's an MVP candidate, and Ramirez's team is in the dumps rebuilding, or whatever it is they are calling it, and he's just a really good SS on a crappy team.