The finalists for the Hank Aaron Award -- the first since the legend's death -- include Shohei Ohtani, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Bryce Harper, Juan Soto and Fernando Tatis Jr.
The winners of the award, which was established in 1999 by Major League Baseball to honor the best offensive player in each league, will be announced in November.
Ohtani, the favorite for American League MVP, is the first player who also pitches ever nominated. In addition to Ohtani and Guerrero, New York's Aaron Judge, Baltimore's Cedric Mullins, Oakland's Matt Olson, Kansas City's Salvador Perez and Cleveland's Jose Ramirez are the American League nominees.
Joining Harper, Soto and Tatis in the National League are Cincinnati's Nick Castellanos, San Francisco's Brandon Crawford, Atlanta's Freddie Freeman and St. Louis' Paul Goldschmidt.
In a phone interview, Billye Aaron, who was married to Hank Aaron for 48 years, said her husband "was always very excited about the award itself and, of course, very excited about the World Series because, during that time, before every fourth game, he had the pleasure of meeting and getting to know and shake hands with the winners."
The voting panel includes eight Hall of Fame players -- including new voters Chipper Jones, Pedro Martinez and John Smoltz -- as well as a fan vote.
Aaron, MLB's longtime home run king and one of the most beloved and respected players in the game's history, died in his sleep in January.
"I'm still in a state of grief beyond measure," Billye Aaron said. "I'm doing OK. I have some difficulty many days. But like everybody else, when you come to this stage in your life, you have to learn to cope with it. You can't change it. You can't do anything about God's will. So you learn to accept it and learn to go on.
"I miss him so very, very much. I loved him so very, very much."
Aaron, she said, would have been particularly excited for the NL Division Series that starts Friday between the two MLB teams for whom he played: the Braves and Milwaukee Brewers. Aaron played his first 12 years for the Milwaukee Braves before they moved to Atlanta, where he spent nine seasons. A two-year stint with the Brewers wrapped up his career.
"He loved Milwaukee. He loved the Milwaukee Braves. He loved the Milwaukee Brewers," Billye Aaron said. "And he loved, of course, the Atlanta Braves. He probably would've had some difficulty not rooting for both teams. The team that is your bread and butter -- you probably would fall into that category. And being on the staff as well. So he probably would have to pull for Atlanta. But I know he had a strong fondness for the Milwaukee team."
MLB intended to honor Aaron in Atlanta at July's All-Star Game. Blowback from Georgia's new voting-rights laws, however, prompted MLB to shift the game to Denver's Coors Field, where Freeman and Judge escorted Billye Aaron onto the field for the ceremony that celebrated her husband.
While MLB weathered criticism for the choice, Billye Aaron said "it was the right thing for Major League Baseball to do."
"In light of the political situation going on then and continuing to go on now," she said, "the decision to move the All-Star Game out of the city of Atlanta, in spite of the impact that it would have on Atlanta and on the businesses that were preparing for the great game -- I still think Major League Baseball did exactly what it needed to do in recognizing that racism can overrule some things."