Bonds wins record seventh MVP Award

maddogchen

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2004
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NEW YORK (AP) -- Barry Bonds won his record seventh NL MVP award in a walk.

Capping a season of suspicion and success, the San Francisco Giants left fielder became the oldest player to win the award. The 40-year-old received 24 first-place votes and 407 points Monday in balloting by the Baseball Writers' Association of America to earn the award for the fourth straight season.

Los Angeles third baseman Adrian Beltre was second, getting six first-place votes and 311 points, and St. Louis first baseman Albert Pujols was third with one first and 247 points. St. Louis third baseman Scott Rolen got the other first-place vote and finished fourth, followed by teammate Jim Edmonds.

Bonds is the only player with more than three MVP awards and the only one to win more than two in a row. Willie Stargell was previously the oldest to win it, sharing the 1979 NL award with Keith Hernandez at 39 1/2 .

Among the four major North American professional sports, he trails only the NHL's Wayne Gretzky, who won nine MVPs. In the NBA, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar leads with six.

Bonds became only the third player to hit 700 career homers, and with 703 trails only Hank Aaron (755) and Babe Ruth (714). But following his grand jury testimony in a federal investigation, he repeatedly was questioned whether he used steroids.

His personal trainer has been indicted for illegal distribution of steroids, but Bonds has denied using illegal steroids.

Bonds' season was unparalleled statistically. He hit .362 to win his second NL batting title in three seasons and shattered the major league record with a .609 on-base percentage, topping the previous mark of .582 he set two years ago.

He walked 232 times, 34 more than the previous record he set in 2002 and more than 100 better than anyone else in baseball this season, and his 120 intentional walks obliterated the old mark of 68, also set by Bonds in 2002.

Bonds' .812 slugging percentage led the major leagues for the fourth straight season but fell short of the record he set at .863 in 2001. He hit 45 homers and matched Aaron's NL record of eight 40-homer seasons, trailing only Ruth's major league mark of 11. He also became the first player in major league history with 13 consecutive 30-homer seasons.

Bonds earned a $500,000 bonus for winning the award, and Beltre, Edmonds, Pujols and Rolen earned bonuses of $50,000 each.
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Not a surprise...just thought I let you all know.
Now to sit back, break out a cold one, and see all the Bonds haters bring up the steroids issue :)
 

marcello

Golden Member
Aug 30, 2004
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The fact that he didn't win unanimously is a shame. It just shows that these idiot writers do not vote without bias. Pathetic.
 

oogabooga

Diamond Member
Jan 14, 2003
7,806
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Macello : According to the writers it's not like statistics matter, it's how he played the game *rolls eyes*
but seriously : the vast majority of them voted for him, and he was a sound choice, and at least the right decision was made (no back to the NL cy young....)
 

maddogchen

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2004
8,903
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I also like to say that its too bad the SF Giants don't back this 7 time MVP with quality players so that they could actually win a world series, instead of surrounding him with fairly cheap castoffs
 

chuckywang

Lifer
Jan 12, 2004
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Well, can't say I'm surprised with this selection. He was definitely the one who deserved it the most.