NEW YORK — Ryan Braun
climbed up the steps of the National League
dugout, walked onto the grass, stopped, and looked
around at one of the most beautiful sights he has
witnessed.
So, this was Yankee Stadium, the historic ballpark
Braun has always known, but until Monday had never
seen.
"This is unbelievable," says Braun, the Milwaukee
Brewers outfielder and National League All-Star
starter. "This is so cool. There's just a vibe about
this place. There's so much energy.
"There's very few places that have this type of
atmosphere."
Braun, 24, who learned this spring the All-Star Game
would be played in the final season at Yankee Stadium,
soon made it his mission to be an All-Star. He did his
part, hitting .290 with a team-leading 23 homers and 66
RBI. He then let his family and fans do the rest,
voting him to the game.
"I can't tell you how many thousands of times I voted,"
says his mother, Diane Braun, "but I never stopped.
When I wasn't working, I was voting."
Diane, who actually works as a brewer at Anheuser-Busch
in the Los Angeles area, made sure everyone joined in
the effort. There was company-wide e-mail encouraging
everyone to vote for her son. Relatives voted across
the country.
"I had everyone but my poor dead mom voting," says
Diane, who personally built a batting cage for her son
in high school. "It paid off."
When Braun heard the news he made the All-Star team, he
sent a simple three-word text message to Diane
informing her of the news:
"We did it."
The effort paved Braun's road to the Bronx and this
week's proceedings, three days he won't soon forget.
Long delay
Braun and fellow All-Stars Ben Sheets
and Corey Hart sat on the runway for about three hours
Sunday in Milwaukee waiting for clearance to leave.
Their private plane finally took off, but once it
reached the Philadelphia area, they were caught in a
holding pattern before finally landing after about a
six-hour journey.
They reached their Manhattan hotel at about 11:30 p.m.
ET. Diane, part of the 15-member family contingent in
town to watch Braun, kissed her son hello when he
walked into the door. Braun handed her his All-Star
tickets, and said she was in charge.
"Mom, this might be the last time I even get to see
you," says Braun, who plans to stay in New York an
extra day just to relax. "It's going to be so hectic."
Braun dropped his bags off. He then took his
girlfriend, Andreena Clark, and brother, Steve, 23, to
Tao restaurant. They got back to the hotel about 3 a.m.
and slept. Braun didn't wake up until seven hours
later; room service began his day.
Braun went downstairs to the hotel lobby at noon for
the home-run derby press conference. He laughed at
questions asking if he really wanted to participate.
You kidding? This is what he dreamed of since high
school.
"I remember Ryan was watching the Home Run Derby one
summer," Diane Braun says, "and said, 'I want to be in
there. One day, I'm going to be in that Home Run Derby.
You'll see, Mom.' "
That's Braun. Always confident. He not only believed he
would be in the big leagues one day, but become a star.
"I've always been extremely confident in my abilities,"
says Braun, who was in the minor leagues just 14 months
ago, "and always believed I would get to this level.
And now that I'm here, nothing could be better.
"There's no bigger accomplishment for a baseball player
than to be an All-Star in the Major Leagues."
Embraces faith
Braun turned out to be quite popular at
the National League press conference session,
particularly after Jewish All-Stars Kevin Youkilis and
Ian Kinsler said they wanted to meet Braun. Braun,
however, said he actually is half-Jewish. His father
was born in Tel Aviv, but his mother is Catholic.
"I didn't grow up celebrating the holidays or
anything," Braun says, "but it's something I certainly
embrace."
Braun, who had his agent, Nez Balelo, pitch to him
during the Home Run Derby, knows that tonight will be
the most magical night of his baseball career. He hopes
to pick the brain of NL teammates Albert Pujols and
Chipper Jones in the clubhouse. He wants to talk to as
many Hall of Famers as possible. And he is not about to
leave town until he visits Monument Park at Yankee
Stadium.
"I want to do it all," says Braun, who plans to stay in
New York an extra day for sightseeing. "And at the same
time, I don't want it to ever end.
"Believe me, this is something I'll remember forever."
(usatoday.com)