Milwaukee's Ryan Braun wins NL MVP
NEW YORK — Ryan Braun sat alone on a balcony in his Malibu home that overlooks the Pacific Ocean, uneasy about his chances of winning the NL Most Valuable Player award.
With the season Los Angeles' Matt Kemp had, he wasn't sure the call would come at all.
The phone rang all right, and Braun has been smiling ever since.
Braun was voted the NL MVP after helping the Milwaukee Brewers win their first division title in nearly 30 years.
"I'm not going to pretend like I wasn't anxious or nervous because I was," Braun said. "It's honestly difficult to put into words how much this means to me."
The left fielder received 20 of 32 first-place votes and 388 points in voting announced Tuesday by the Baseball Writers' Association of America.
A nerve-racking morning that began with a solitary drive turned to elation in the California sun.
The 28-year-old Braun shared the news with his brother and girlfriend, who were at the house. He called his parents, then rang good friend Aaron Rodgers, the Green Bay Packers quarterback, and exchanged text messages with Kemp, the runner-up.
"This really is a dream," Braun said. "This is beyond my wildest dreams to be in this position at this point in my career."
Kemp earned 10 first-place votes and 332 points after coming close to winning the first Triple Crown since Carl Yastrzemski in 1967. Braun's teammate Prince Fielder finished third with 229 points, and Arizona's Justin Upton finished fourth with 214 points. Fielder and Upton each received one first-place vote.
St. Louis' Albert Pujols finished fifth. It was the 11th straight year the three-time MVP was in the top 10 in balloting.
NL Cy Young Award winner Los Angeles' Clayton Kershaw was 12th in the voting a day after Detroit's Justin Verlander added the AL MVP to his Cy Young.
"I think he was the single most dominant player in baseball this year," Braun said of Verlander. "As a position player I'm biased to the fact that I think position players should be at the forefront of the award, but if you honestly look at what he accomplished, how much he meant to that team and how dominant he truly was you cannot make any argument against him winning that award."
In his fifth year in the big leagues, Braun led the NL with a .597 slugging percentage and had a chance to overtake Jose Reyes for the batting title on the last day of the season but finished second with a .332 average. The four-time All-Star had 33 homers, 111 RBIs, 109 runs scored and stole 33 bases as Milwaukee won a franchise-best 96 games. His 77 extra-base hits was tops in the league.
Kemp led the NL with 39 homers, 126 RBIs and was third in average (.324), but played for the NL West's third-place Dodgers. He also won a Gold Glove.
"Matt's one of the best players in the game. No question about it. The season he had will go down as one of the greatest in Dodgers history," said Braun, who grew up in California rooting for the Dodgers. "If he had won the MVP I certainly couldn't have argued with him winning. He had a phenomenal year."
Although Braun and Kemp had similar statistics, Kemp was hindered by the Dodgers' 82-79 third-place finish in the NL West. The Brewers won the NL Central title, their first division crown since winning the AL East in 1982.
"Without a doubt I think it's a drastically different experience playing meaningful games down the stretch," said Braun, the 2007 NL Rookie of the Year.
Braun, in fact, was convinced the Brewers' first-place finish is what put him over the top with voters.
"If you honestly assess both of our seasons individually I think his numbers are probably better than mine, and I just feel fortunate to have been on the better team," Braun said. "It's an individual award, but it's a result of being part of a special team, a special organization."
Braun is the first Brewers player to win the MVP award in the National League and first since Robin Yount won in 1989, when Milwaukee was in the AL East. Rollie Fingers (1981) and Yount in 1982 are the other Brewers to take home MVP honors.
"Robin's the greatest player in Milwaukee Brewers history, so anytime you're mentioned alongside him it's a tremendous achievement," Braun said.
Braun signed a $105 million, five-year contract extension in April, linking him to the Brewers through 2020. He received a $100,000 bonus for winning the MVP.
''This team has been so loyal to me. They believed in me. They drafted me. They helped to develop me, and there would be nothing more meaningful to me than to eventually win a world championship in Milwaukee," he said. "It would mean a lot more to me than if I went to a large-market team, big-market-team and won two or three championships."
National League Most Valuable Players
2011 — Ryan Braun, Milwaukee
2010 — Joey Votto, Cincinnati
2009 — x-Albert Pujols, St. Louis
2008 — Albert Pujols, St. Louis
2007 — Jimmy Rollins, Philadelphia
2006 — Ryan Howard, Philadelphia
2005 — Albert Pujols, St. Louis
2004 — Barry Bonds, San Francisco
2003 — Barry Bonds, San Francisco
2002 — x-Barry Bonds, San Francisco
2001 — Barry Bonds, San Francisco
2000 — Jeff Kent, San Francisco
1999 — Chipper Jones, Atlanta
1998 — Sammy Sosa, Chicago
1997 — Larry Walker, Colorado
1996 — x-Ken Caminiti, San Diego
1995 — Barry Larkin, Cincinnati
1994 — x-Jeff Bagwell, Houston
1993 — Barry Bonds, San Francisco
1992 — Barry Bonds, Pittsburgh
1991 — Terry Pendleton, Atlanta
1990 — Barry Bonds, Pittsburgh
1989 — Kevin Mitchell, San Francisco
1988 — Kirk Gibson, Los Angeles
1987 — Andre Dawson, Chicago
1986 — Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia
1985 — Willie McGee, St. Louis
1984 — Ryne Sandberg, Chicago
1983 — Dale Murphy, Atlanta
1982 — Dale Murphy, Atlanta
1981 — Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia
1980 — x-Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia
1979 — Willie Stargell, Pittsburgh, and Keith Hernandez, St. Louis
1978 — Dave Parker, Pittsburgh
1977 — George Foster, Cincinnati
1976 — Joe Morgan, Cincinnati
1975 — Joe Morgan, Cincinnati
1974 — Steve Garvey, Los Angeles
1973 — Pete Rose, Cincinnati
1972 — Johnny Bench, Cincinnati
1971 — Joe Torre, St. Louis
1970 — Johnny Bench, Cincinnati
1969 — Willie McCovey, San Francisco
1968 — Bob Gibson, St. Louis
1967 — x-Orlando Cepeda, St. Louis
1966 — Roberto Clemente, Pittsburgh
1965 — Willie Mays, San Francisco
1964 — Ken Boyer, St. Louis
1963 — Sandy Koufax, Los Angeles
1962 — Maury Wills, Los Angeles
1961 — Frank Robinson, Cincinnati
1960 — Dick Groat, Pittsburgh
1959 — Ernie Banks, Chicago
1958 — Ernie Banks, Chicago
1957 — Hank Aaron, Milwaukee
1956 — Don Newcombe, Brooklyn
1955 — Roy Campanella, Brooklyn
1954 — Willie Mays, New York
1953 — Roy Campanella, Brooklyn
1952 — Hank Sauer, Chicago
1951 — Roy Campanella, Brooklyn
1950 — Jim Konstanty, Philadelphia
1949 — Jackie Robinson, Brooklyn
1948 — Stan Musial, St. Louis
1947 — Bob Elliott, Boston
1946 — Stan Musial, St. Louis
1945 — Phil Cavarretta, Chicago
1944 — Marty Marion, St. Louis
1943 — Stan Musial, St. Louis
1942 — Mort Cooper, St. Louis
1941 — Dolph Camilli, Brooklyn
1940 — Frank McCormick, Cincinnati
1939 — Bucky Walters, Cincinnati
1938 — Ernie Lombardi, Cincinnati
1937 — Joe Medwick, St. Louis
1936 — Carl Hubbell, New York
1935 — Gabby Hartnett, Chicago
1934 — Dizzy Dean, St. Louis
1933 — Carl Hubbell, New York
1932 — Chuck Klein, Philadelphia
1931 — Frank Frisch, St. Louis
x-unanimous selection.