Nov/17/08 07:08 PM Filed in:
Ryan Braun
Had Ryan Braun not had to
endure a ribcage injury during the final six weeks
of the 2008 season, there's no telling what his
final offensive numbers would have been.
As it was, the Milwaukee Brewers' leftfielder was
productive enough to win his first Silver Slugger
Award. Those awards, given annually to the top
offensive performers at each position in both leagues,
were announced Thursday.
Braun, who will be 25 on Monday, was named to the
National League outfield with St. Louis' Ryan Ludwick
and Colorado's Matt Holliday, who was traded to Oakland
earlier in the week.
"It's certainly an honor to be included with those two
guys because they had phenomenal years," said Braun,
reached in Puerto Rico while on a sponsor trip with
other major-leaguers.
"Whenever you get an award at the end of the year, it
means you were consistent during the season and helped
your team win. It means a lot to me."
The awards, sponsored by Louisville Slugger, were
determined by a vote of major-league coaches and
managers who selected players they thought were the
best offensive producers at each position. Selections
were based on a combination of statistics including
batting average, on-base percentage and slugging
percentage, as well as general impressions of a
player's overall offensive value.
In 151 games, Braun batted .285 with 37 home runs and
106 RBI, with 39 doubles, seven triples and a .553
slugging percentage. He ranked first in the NL with 83
extra-base hits, second with 338 total bases, tied for
fourth in homers, was fifth in slugging percentage and
tied for ninth in RBI.
Braun did all of that while playing since late August
with an intercostal strain near his ribcage, which
affected his swing and limited him to a .208 batting
average in September with only three homers and 11 RBI.
Still, it was Braun's two-run, eighth-inning homer on
the final day of the season that propelled the Brewers
to a 3-1 victory over Chicago and the NL wild-card
playoff berth.
"Injuries are a part of the game but it was definitely
frustrating," said Braun, only the third Brewer to win
a Silver Slugger Award since 1990. Outfielder Carlos
Lee won in 2005 and first baseman Prince Fielder won in
2007.
"If I was 100%, my numbers probably would have been a
little better. There's nothing I can do about that."
Braun said the intercostal strain has completely healed
but he has pushed back his off-season program a month
to early December to provide more rest and be stronger
entering spring training.
"I talked to some other players on this trip, like Ken
Griffey Jr., and they said they do their baseball stuff
a little later," Braun said. "They said it helps you
stay stronger through the end of (the next season)."
(jsonline.com)