Cincinnati
Reds Pitcher Johnny Cueto will lead the pitching charge into the NLDS
along
with Bronson Arroyo and Mat Latos.
Miguel Cabrera won baseball's
Triple Crown in 2012 with the Detroit Tigers. He was the first one in 45 years
to win it.
Major League Baseball... Detroit's Miguel Cabrera wins
Triple Crown
detriottigers.com
KANSAS CITY -- In the ultimate sign
of respect for a visiting player, Tigers third baseman Miguel Cabrera received
a standing ovation from the crowd at Kauffman Stadium as he stepped into the
batter's box Wednesday night. Then, he stepped into history.
With a .330 average, 44 home runs
and 139 RBIs, Cabrera became the first player in 45 years to achieve the Triple
Crown, leading the American League in all three categories. Save for a
two-homer game from ex-teammate Curtis Granderson to climb within one home run,
it was essentially a victory lap.
For the crowd in Kansas City, the
players on the field and fans watching everywhere else, it was an appreciation.
For Cabrera, it seemed to be a realization.
Unbelievable," Cabrera said.
"I don't believe this happened right now. I didn't believe three weeks ago
it was going to happen. I didn't believe this was possible. But you always
dream. Thank God I got an opportunity for this dream to come true."
Cabrera repeated his batting title,
becoming the first Tigers player with consecutive batting crowns since Ty Cobb
won three from 1917-19.
But it's the Triple Crown that
earned the accolades. Major League Baseball's 12th such feat since the RBI
became an official stat was the first by a Latin-born player. No one had done
it since Boston's Carl Yastrzemski in 1967.
"It is an honor to
congratulate Miguel Cabrera on earning the Triple Crown, a remarkable
achievement that places him amongst an elite few in all of baseball
history," Commissioner Bud Selig said in a statement. "Miguel has
long been one of the most accomplished hitters in the game, and this
recognition is one that he will be able to cherish for the rest of his career
in baseball and beyond. As the Tigers prepare for the postseason, we have a
global stage to witness Miguel's talent, which will go down as one of the
hallmarks of Major League Baseball's extraordinary 2012 regular season."
Like Yastrzemski, Cabrera pulled
away from his closest competitors with a playoff race pushing him. Unlike Yaz,
who said he wasn't aware he had done it until the very end, Cabrera was
enveloped by the attention in the final days.
Unlike Cabrera, Yastrzemski didn't
have two generations of history since the last one. He didn't have any gap at
all; Frank Robinson had accomplished it one year before.
"I would like to extend my
sincere congratulations to Miguel Cabrera on winning the Triple Crown,"
Yastrzemski said in a statement. "I am glad that he accomplished this
while leading his team to the American League Central title. I was fortunate
enough to win this award in 1967 as part of the Red Sox Impossible Dream
Team."
Said Robinson: "Miguel has
been outstanding all year long by coming to play every day, showing his
discipline at the plate and making the most of his great talent. For me,
earning the batting title over Tony Oliva, who we played against in the last
series of the year, was the hardest part, and for Miguel, I am sure it was even
more challenging, given all the specialized relievers in the game today."
Never had baseball gone this long without
a Triple Crown, but Yastrzemski's standard held up far beyond the year of the
pitcher in 1968. It somehow made it through the '90s, past the millennium and
into a new golden age of pitching.
Once Cabrera took the skills that
had already allowed him to win the batting crown, home run and RBI titles and
applied them with consistency, history was no match.
It was a feat five years in the
making for Cabrera. He was a month into his Tigers career, having just hit one
of his trademark opposite-field home runs the night before, when Jim Leyland
laid down a challenge for him.
"I want to see him bear down
every at-bat for one week, show me what he can do," Leyland said on a
Friday afternoon in a smelly hallway of the Metrodome in 2008.
Leyland had seen Barry Bonds raise
and lower his concentration level according to the situation when he was
managing in Pittsburgh. But for him, the focus he saw out of Albert Pujols was
the best he had ever seen.
That's what he wanted to see out of
Cabrera, then a National League transplant who had just turned 25.
"I think when the situation
becomes big, he zeros in. He locks in," Leyland said that day, "but I
want to see what he can do if he locks in every at-bat. There's no telling what
he could do. This guy's a special talent."
It's no longer potential. It's
etched in history.
"I don't think he gets what
just happened," Prince Fielder said. "He's the best of all
time."
Fittingly, Cabrera took a moment to
thank his manager, remembering that early challenge.
"He's one of the guys who
pushed me every day to play hard," Cabrera said after Wednesday's game.
"He pushed me to go out there and play hard every day, don't throw away
any at-bats. I said thank you for pushing me that way to go out there and do
better."
This is the potential so many saw
in Cabrera, from Leyland to Carlos Guillen, from Verlander to former teammate
and mentor Magglio Ordonez. This is the talent, the quick bat and
opposite-field power, Tigers assistant general manager Al Avila saw when he was
the Marlins scouting director signing Cabrera more than a decade ago, and when
he talked over hypothetical trades with the Marlins to get him to Detroit at
the 2007 Winter Meetings.
This is the potential. And yet the
results are beyond what so many imagined.
The results are enough to make
Leyland -- who absolutely hates comparing players -- think of Bonds, and think
of Cabrera, and pause.
"I've managed a lot of
players, and some great ones, but I've never seen anything like this,"
Leyland said.
Bonds owns home run records and
batting titles. He never did this. Amazingly, he never won a home run title and
a batting crown in the same season.
Pujols came close in 2009, taking
his bid into the final days before falling short in batting average and RBIs.
The potential was there for
Cabrera. It just took a little time to come together.
Cabrera was a 24-year-old
wunderkind when the Tigers traded for him, signed him to one of baseball's
richest contracts, and placed on his shoulders the aspirations of a World
Series. With that came the championship dreams of an aggressive-spending owner
and the hopes of a city that needed some hope in the midst of economic
calamity. And Cabrera probably wasn't ready for all of that. Not many kids that
age are.
He has grown into the role of
superstar, personally and professionally, learned how to deal with the
attention and the pressure.
When the Tigers lost the AL Central
tiebreaker game to the Twins in 2009, again at the Metrodome, Cabrera sat at
his locker inconsolable. He was a giant of a man, hunched over, sobbing,
feeling like he had let the team down. He hit .280 with 21 RBIs in 33 games
after Sept. 1, a good stretch for a lot of players, but statistically his worst
month of the season. A domestic incident in the season's final weekend had
become national news, and put his personal life in the papers.
When the Tigers celebrated their
first division title in 24 years last September on a Friday night in a cramped
clubhouse in Oakland, Cabrera sat by himself with a bottled water and a cigar
and watched everybody else party. The look on his face showed he was clearly
content, and maybe a little bit relieved that his team had done what he was
brought here to do.
He didn't just produce last
September, he thrived.
"That's just the sign of a
great player," Justin Verlander said. "If there's pressure, they do
better. He realized in the last month that he had the chance to win a batting
title and what did he do, hit .450 or whatever."
He was exaggerating, but not by
much. Cabrera hit .429 in the final month to win his first batting title,
adding it to his home run title from 2008 and his RBI crown from '10.
He already had won all three Triple
Crown categories, just in different seasons. The list of other active players
to do that starts with Pujols and ends with Alex Rodriguez.
This is the year Cabrera put it all
together, literally and figuratively, personally and professionally. For him,
the end might have been the sweetest of all.
While the Tigers celebrated another
division title Monday night, champagne flowing in the visiting clubhouse at
Kauffman, Cabrera was off to the side, but he wasn't hiding. He was in
Leyland's office, his young daughter in his arms, while owner Mike Ilitch and
team president/general manager Dave Dombrowski sat with Leyland and the coaches
and enjoyed the moment.
He took the field early that day,
before the Tigers took batting practice, and said hello to just about every
Royals player and coach near the batting cage. He talked hitting with Johnny
Giavotella, and he hugged Royals coach Rusty Kuntz, a former coach with the
Marlins. Then he went 4-for-5.
Then he came out the next day, the
letdown game for most teams that clinch a playoff spot, and went 2-for-3 to
pretty much clinch the batting title.
"I always like to play,"
Cabrera said. "I cannot sit down and see what's going to happen because
it's boring. You're going to see me there, having fun and playing hard to win
games."
To watch Cabrera's demeanor on the
field the past two weeks, it was impossible to tell he was in a playoff race,
let alone a chase with hitting history. In the midst of a Twins scoring
opportunity during Sunday's pitching duel, with speedy Ben Revere on third,
Cabrera caught a popup behind third base, turned his head, snuck a suspicious
look at Revere and smiled. Revere laughed out loud.
Nobody on the Tigers, and maybe
nobody in the game today, has a reputation for working harder and setting high
standards than Verlander. He wouldn't have gotten to this point in his career
otherwise. What Cabrera has done leaves him in awe.
"It's surreal, unbelievable
what he's done this year," Verlander said. "It's amazing to me how he
continues to get better. You look at his numbers in the past, and he's like the
best player in the game, and yet he turned it up to another level this year
somehow."
For someone with so much weight of
his team's fortunes on his shoulders, he has gotten precious little individual
credit for it. It isn't just about MVP voting; Cabrera has never even been
voted to start an All-Star Game. He started last year only because Justin
Morneau was hurt.
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