Kris Bryant

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Kris Bryant
Kris Bryant on April 27, 2015.jpg
Bryant with the Chicago Cubs
Chicago Cubs – No. 17
Third baseman
Born: (1992-01-04) January 4, 1992 (age 32)
Las Vegas, Nevada
Bats: Right Throws: Right
MLB debut
April 17, 2015, for the Chicago Cubs
MLB statistics
(through May 25, 2016)
Batting average .276
Home runs 36
Runs batted in 134
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Kristopher Lee Bryant (born January 4, 1992) is an American professional baseball third baseman for the Chicago Cubs of Major League Baseball (MLB). He attended the University of San Diego, where he played college baseball for the San Diego Toreros baseball team.

Bryant won the Dick Howser Trophy and Golden Spikes Award as the best amateur baseball player in 2013. The Cubs selected him with the second pick in the 2013 Major League Baseball Draft. Prior to the 2015 season, he was ranked as the number one prospect in baseball by Baseball America.

Amateur career

High school

Bryant attended Bonanza High School in Las Vegas, Nevada. Playing for the school's varsity baseball team all four years, he recorded a .418 batting average, a .958 slugging percentage (SLG), 103 hits and 47 career home runs.[1] He was named to the USA Today All-USA baseball first-team.[2] The Toronto Blue Jays selected Bryant in the 18th round of the 2010 Major League Baseball Draft. He did not sign, and enrolled at the University of San Diego, to play college baseball for the San Diego Toreros baseball team.[3]

College

As a freshman at the University of San Diego in 2011, Bryant had a .365 batting average, a .482 on-base percentage (OBP), and a .599 SLG, with nine home runs. He was named a freshman All-American[4] and the West Coast Conference Co-Freshman of the Year and Co-Player of the Year, sharing both honors with Marco Gonzales.[2][5]

As a sophomore in 2012, he was named a first-team All-American by Baseball America.[6] That summer, Bryant was selected by USA Baseball to play for the United States collegiate national team.[7]

In the 2013 season as a junior, Bryant hit 31 home runs to lead the nation. It is the most home runs hit by a college player since the NCAA switched to a BBCOR composite bat in 2011. It broke the previous record of 30 set by Victor Roache in 2011[8][9] and amounted to more home runs than 223 of 296 Division I teams hit that season.[10] Bryant won the Golden Spikes Award[11] and the Dick Howser Trophy, which are both awarded to the top collegiate player in the nation.[12][13] He was also named a Louisville Slugger First Team All-American and the College Baseball News National Player of the Year.[14]

Professional career

Draft and minor leagues

Bryant with the Daytona Cubs in September 2013

Bryant was considered to be one of the best available players in the 2013 Major League Baseball Draft,[2][15][16] and was scouted by the Houston Astros, who had the first overall pick.[17]

After the Astros selected Mark Appel with the first overall selection, the Chicago Cubs chose Bryant with the second overall selection.[18] Many baseball executives and scouts agree that Bryant was the safest pick in the draft. He was also rated as the best hitter in the draft because of his easy power from foul pole to foul pole and ability to make contact on inside fastballs as well as down-and-away curveballs.[19] Bryant agreed to a $6.7 million signing bonus with the Cubs two days prior to the signing deadline.[20]

Bryant began his professional career with the Boise Hawks of the Class A-Short Season Northwest League batting .354 with 4 home runs. He was promoted to the Daytona Cubs of the Class A-Advanced Florida State League on August 12.[21] He hit .333 with five home runs for Daytona, and helped them win the Class A-Advanced championship. After the season he played in Arizona Fall League (AFL). He was named co-player of the week, along with Mitch Haniger, in the first week of the fall league season.[22] He was named the MVP of the AFL after hitting .364/.457/.727 with six home runs in 20 games.[23]

Bryant started 2014 with the Double-A Tennessee Smokies. In June he won the 2013 Southern League Home Run Derby and participated in the All-Star game.[24] On June 18, 2014, Bryant was promoted to the Triple-A Iowa Cubs after batting .355 with 22 home runs and 58 RBI in 68 games with Tennessee.[25] In Keith Law's midseason top prospect update in July 2014, Bryant was ranked as the best prospect in baseball.[26] At the end of the regular season, Bryant was named the USA Today Minor League Player of the Year and Baseball America Minor League Player of the Year and also won the Joe Bauman Home Run Award[27][28] Baseball America named him the # 1 prospect in 2015.[29]

Bryant playing for the Iowa Cubs in July 2014

Bryant was invited to spring training by the Cubs in 2015. In 40 at-bats he hit 9 home runs, which led all players. He also had a .425 with a .477 on-base percentage and a 1.175 slugging percentage.[30] Despite his performance, the Cubs elected to send Bryant back down to their Triple-A affiliate, the Iowa Cubs. Media members assumed that service time rules in baseball played a major influence on the team's decision; if Bryant played 12 days in the minors before being promoted to the majors the Cubs would receive another year of club control. The MLBPA issued a statement saying, "Today is a bad day for baseball".[31] In seven games with the Iowa Cubs, Bryant hit three home runs and batted .321.[30]

Major league

On April 17, 2015, Bryant was called up to the majors by the Cubs.[32][33] He made his debut that day, going 0–4 with three strikeouts and grounded into a fielder's choice, but showed good defense in the 5–4 loss against the San Diego Padres. Manager Joe Maddon joked of this after the game, remarking, "We did bring him up for his glove." [34] The following day at Wrigley, Kris recorded his first hit, an RBI blooper into center field off of San Diego's pitcher Tyson Ross. His patience showed in this game as he recorded three walks with no strikeouts, and he additionally tallied his first error and stolen base. His hustle played a key role in the team's victory in the 11th inning, as he ran out an infield single to set up the eventual walk off hit from teammate Starlin Castro.[35] Despite zero home runs in the month of April, Bryant batted for a .318 average, a .455 on-base percentage, and earned 10 walks and RBIs.[36]

Beginning the month of May with a 20-game home run drought, Bryant hit his first major league home run on May 9, 2015, a three run shot, off of Milwaukee Brewers's Kyle Lohse. His second home run came at Wrigley Field; the first ball hit into the newly opened left field bleachers.[37] Bryant finished the month of May with a .265 batting average, 7 home runs, 22 RBI's, and 16 walks, which led to him being awarded the NL Rookie of the Month for May.[38]

Bryant's first grand slam came on June 17 in the ninth inning of a 17–0 win against the Cleveland Indians. [39] In a July 4 game against the Miami Marlins, Bryant hit both a two-run homer and his second grand slam of the season off Jarred Cosart. This made him the second Cubs rookie to hit two grand slams since Billy Williams in 1961.[40] Bryant was selected as an injury replacement selection for Giancarlo Stanton on the National League roster for the All-Star game in Cincinnati, Ohio and also participated in the 2015 Homerun Derby.[41] On July 25, Bryant was the last out of Cole Hamels no-hitter. On July 27, Bryant hit his first career walk-off home run, a two-run homer in a 9–8 win over the Colorado Rockies.[citation needed]

On September 6, Bryant hit a 495-foot (151 m) home run, the longest of the 2015 MLB season. With the homer, Bryant tied Williams (1961) and Geovany Soto (2008), for the Cubs' franchise single-season RBI record for rookies with 86. On September 11, he established the record by driving in a run with a double.[42] On September 22, Bryant passed Williams for the most home runs by a Cubs rookie, with 26.[43] In 151 games of his first season in the Majors, Bryant batted .275 with 26 home runs, 31 doubles, and 99 RBI. The 99 RBI's were the most for a rookie since Albert Pujols's 130 in 2001. Bryant struck out 199 times which led the National League and set a new rookie record. According to sales on Major League Baseball's official website, Bryant had the best-selling jersey in all of baseball during the regular season.[44]

With the Cubs finishing the season 97-65, the team clinched a Wild Card spot and it was their first berth in 7 years. Despite a hitless game in the 2015 MLB Wild Card Game, the Cubs shut out the Pittsburgh Pirates 4–0 advancing the Cubs to the National League Division Series, where in game three Bryant hit a two-run home run against the rival St. Louis Cardinals to help the Cubs to an 8–6 win.[45] The Cubs won the series in 4 games, but lost to the Mets in the 2015 NLCS. Bryant was named the Baseball America Rookie of the Year for the 2015 season making him the first in history to win the Baseball America college, minor league, and rookie of the year awards in consecutive seasons.[46] Bryant was awarded the Sporting News Rookie of the Year Award for the National League, becoming the first Cub to earn it since Soto in 2008.[47]

On December 7, 2015, it was reported that Bryant had filed a grievance against the Cubs for delaying his call-up to the majors for the purpose of delaying his free agency.[48]

Personal

Bryant was named his high school's salutatorian, but allowed a classmate to take the role instead when he found out how badly she wanted it.[14] In college, he majored in biology before switching to finance.[2]

His father, Mike, played in minor league baseball for the Boston Red Sox organization.[2][49] Mike owned a patio furniture store, but sold it in order to get a job that permitted him to coach his son.[50]

He and fellow baseball player Bryce Harper grew up as acquaintances in the Las Vegas area, and began playing baseball with one another when they were nine. Their friendly competition was displayed in the May 2015 series against the Washington Nationals at Wrigley Field, when they greeted each other for the first time in the Major Leagues.[51]

References

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External links

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