The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

THE COMEBACK KID

AFTER BATTLING COVID-19, FREEMAN WINS NL MVP AWARD

- By Gabriel Burns gabriel.burns@ajc.com

Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman often was considered baseball’s most underrated and underappre­ciated player. His long-due day of recognitio­n came Thursday.

Freeman was named National League MVP, receiving 28 of 30 first-place votes from the Baseball Writers Associatio­n of America. Dodgers outfielder Mookie Betts finished second with two first-place votes. Padres third baseman Manny Machado finished third. Braves slugger Marcell Ozuna, whom Freeman credited for helping his offensive production, finished sixth. The award appropriat­ely capped off the best season of Freeman’s career: He hit .341/.462/.640 with 13 homers, an Mlb-leading 23 doubles, 53 RBIS and 51 runs scored while playing in all 60 games. The Braves, with Freeman hitting second or third daily, produced arguably the best offense in franchise history. The 31-yearold also added his usual stellar defense. Freeman was the best player on a team that went 35-25 and won its third consecutiv­e division title.

Beloved former Brave Dale

Murphy, the only individual in franchise history to win multiple MVPS, announced the results during a special on MLB Network. Freeman, Betts and Machado each fielded questions for roughly 20 minutes before the announceme­nt. Upon hearing he won, Freeman, who was surrounded by family at his home in Orange County, California, put his hands over his face and behind his head before celebratin­g with family members.

Freeman is the Braves’ sixth MVP. He’s the fourth to win the honor since the franchise relocated to Atlanta before the 1966 season. He joins Bob Elliott (1947), Hank Aaron (1957), Murphy (1982, 1983), Terry Pendleton (1991) and Chipper Jones (1999) in Braves immortalit­y. Freeman, a fourtime All-star, previously finished in the top eight of MVP voting four times.

“Sixty-three years ago, I was voted the league’s most valuable player, and today, Freddie Freeman, I have the honor of congratula­ting you for being the most valuable player,” Aaron said in a video posted by the Braves. “I want to congratula­te you on not only being the most valuable player of the Atlanta Braves, but just being the most valuable player in the clubhouse, being the most valuable player that all of us can be very proud of. Freddie, this is quite an honor and I just want to congratula­te you again.”

Jones, a friend and former teammate of Freeman’s, said in the same video: “Freddie, I don’t know what to say, buddy. It’s been a pleasure to watch you play and grow into a tremendous ballplayer. We joked, I held this over your head for a long time and you said one day you would get one. And now that day has come. I can’t tell you how proud I am of you. I want to welcome you to the club, because once you get your name right there, that’s instant credibilit­y amongst your peers. You certainly earned it.”

The MVP award looks even more meaningful in context. When MLB returned from its coronaviru­s-induced hiatus in early July, most were skeptical even a shortened season could end as planned. The Braves were especially concerned when Freeman, the face of the organizati­on, tested positive for COVID19 on July 3 as players reported to camp.

That night, Freeman couldn’t sleep. He was battling body aches and a fever that peaked at 104.5.

“I said a little prayer that night,” Freeman recalled. “I’ve never been that hot before. My body was really, really hot. So I said, ‘Please don’t take me.’ I wasn’t ready. It got a little worrisome that night.”

The next morning, Braves manager Brian Snitker informed reporters that Freeman had tested positive and would be out indefinite­ly. Freeman, meanwhile, was past the worst of his fever.

While he wasn’t exhibiting symptoms, Freeman couldn’t register the back-to-back negative tests needed to rejoin his team. Snitker said the Braves would “need to make a decision soon” about Freeman on July 16, eight days before opening day.

The next morning, Braves trainer George Poulis told Freeman he’d recorded consecutiv­e negatives — “You’ve hit a home run,” he said. Freeman had several tests done at Emory and was cleared at 1 p.m. He was at Truist Park an hour later, working out during the team’s scheduled off-day.

Freeman hit in every inning during the exhibition games in preparatio­n for July 24. It worked: Freeman was in the opening-day lineup. After it seemed he would miss the start of the season, he wound up playing every game.

It wasn’t totally smoothwhen Freeman returned. He struggled out of the gate, hitting .190 (8-for42) across his first 13 games. He looked rusty, andwhileth­atwas understand­able, he wouldn’t use it as an excuse – just as he wouldn’t use the bone spurs in his elbow as an excuse the previous postseason. Freeman lost 8 pounds during his battle with COVID-19 and felt more fatigued early in the season.

When he caught fire, however, he never cooled off. And when the MVP race came down to the final month, he was at his best. Freeman hit .375/.496/.750 with eight homers and 32 RBIS – with more walks (20) than strikeouts

Hall of Famer Hank Aaron

‘Sixty-three years ago, I was voted the league’s Most Valuable Player, and today, Freddie Freeman, I have the honor of congratula­ting you for being the Most Valuable Player.’

(14) – in September, winning NL Player of the Month. He topped his month off by entering the secondto-last game in the ninth inning and hitting a walk-off homer in extras to defeat the Red Sox and clinch the No. 2 seed for his team.

Ultimately, Freeman led the NL in runs (51), doubles (23), extrabase hits (37) and FWAR (3.3). He was second in average, on-base percentage (.462), slugging (.640), OPS (1.102), RBIS (53) and total bases (137). He was third in hits (73) and walks (45). Freeman became only the second player since 1920 to finish in the top four of the majors in runs, hits, doubles, Rbisand walks, joining the Yankees’ Lou Gehrig, who did it in 1927.

Freeman’s strong finish seemed to secure his MVP award. He was considered the favorite as the regular season concluded. His Braves fell short of their ultimate goal — they lost the NL Championsh­ip Series in seven games to the World Series champion Dodgers — but it was still the franchise’s best postseason run in nearly two decades and Freeman provided two memorable moments.

White Sox first baseman Jose Abreu won the American League MVP. It is the first time both league MVPS are first basemen. Freeman and Abreu also snapped a 10-year drought for first basemen and the MVP award. Before Thursday, Cincinnati’s Joey Votto was the last first baseman to win an MVP (2010). Freeman, 31, is also the oldest NL MVP since Barry Bonds (40) in 2004, yet he’s two years younger than Abreu.

The award was a longtime coming for Freeman, who’s quietly been among baseball’s most consistent superstars. Freeman’s game and personalit­y aren’t flashy, however, and at times he’s even overshadow­ed on his own team, which is loaded with talented and exciting players.

But his production, consistenc­y and intangible­s couldn’t be overlooked in 2020. As a result, Freeman has further cemented himself as a franchise icon. Consider him underappre­ciated by the national audience no more.

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 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/AJC 2020 ?? Freddie Freeman led MLB in doubles with 23 and was NL Player of the Month for September. He played in all 60 games after missing the summer camp with a severe case of COVID-19, hitting .341/.462/.640 with 13 HRS, 53 RBIS and 51 runs scored.
CURTIS COMPTON/AJC 2020 Freddie Freeman led MLB in doubles with 23 and was NL Player of the Month for September. He played in all 60 games after missing the summer camp with a severe case of COVID-19, hitting .341/.462/.640 with 13 HRS, 53 RBIS and 51 runs scored.
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