Who was the Atlanta Braves team MVP in 2013? You can make difference cases for Craig Kimbrel, Jason Heyward, Justin Upton or Mike Minor. You could also make very strong cases for Andrelton Simmons and Chris Johnson. But the way I see it is that the Braves 2013 team MVP was Freddie Freeman.
On a Braves team that was hit hard by injuries and inconsistency among many of it's key players including terrible offensive seasons from B.J. Upton and Dan Uggla, it was Freddie Freeman that the Braves turned to when the offense needed big hit after big hit to rack up an amazing 96 wins and win their first NL East title since 2005.
Freeman hit from day one of the season through the last day of the season when the Braves were eliminated by the Dodgers in the Divisional Series.
Freeman carried an impressive triple slash line of .319/.396/.501 with an OPS (on-base plus slugging) of .897. Freeman finished in the top ten in the NL in many offensive stats:
average - .319 (3rd)
on-base percentage - .396 (6th)
slugging percentage - .501 (8th)
on-base plus slugging - .897 (7th)
hits - 176 (7th)
runs - 89 (T-10th)
runs batted in - 109 (T-2nd)
runners in scoring position average - .443 (2nd)
Freeman also continues to show increased improvement in his walk and strikeout percentages. From his rookie year of 2011 through 2013 his strikeout percentage has declined from 22.4% to 20.8% to 19.2% while his walk percentage has increased from 8.3% to 10.3% to 10.5%. Freeman's linedrive percentage has also increased every year from 18.8% to 26.0% to 26.7%.
These trends tell us that Freddie Freeman at the ripe age of just 24 (September 12) that he is a force to be reckoned with for the foreseeable future which is why it would be smart on the Braves part to lock him to a long-term deal sooner rather than later.
Freeman is entering his first year of arbitration and following the 2016 season will be eligible for free agency. Signing him to a team friendly deal now would give the Braves stability at the first base position of which they haven't seen in many years.
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