...yup, and generally speaking most catchers don't lead the league in many offensive categories...in fact Yogi won the MVP 3 times and never lead the league in anything.
...looking at the big picture and taking into account his consistency, his offense, defense, and leadership...Munson was one of the greats.
		
		
	 
  Again, I'm not taking anything away from Munson. His leadership alone was second to none. As far as Yogi, Munson really only had 10 full seasons so compared to Yogi's 1st 10 seasons the numbers are........
  Munson = 1,397 games, 5,258 ABs, 1,536 hits, 112 HRs, 692 RBI, 293 BA, .346 OBP, .410 SLG%, .756 OPS
  Yogi......= 1,333 games, 5,004 ABs, 1,469 hits, 236 HRs, 999 RBI, 292 BA, .352 OBP, .495 SLG%, .847 OPS
  And even with Yogi, he was lucky that at the time he played the MVP was generally given to someone who played in the world series that year. Otherwise in 1951 it really should have gone to Ted Williams. 1954 he earned. But in 1955 IMO 3 players were more deserving of the award then Yogi including his own team mate Mickey Mantle. Also Ted Williams & especially Al Kaline. 
  Bottom line is I wouldn't say Munson was great but he was very good in area's that don't show up in the box score & if you fielded 8 Thurmon Munsons you couldn't go wrong.