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Freddie Freeman. Frederick Charles Freeman (born September 12, 1989) is a Canadian and American professional baseball first baseman for the Los Angeles Dodgers of Major League Baseball (MLB). Freeman made his MLB debut with the Atlanta Braves in 2010 and played with them for 12 seasons.
Earned NL Player of the Week honors twice: 4/16-22 (.478, 11-for-23, 3 HR, MLB-best 14 RBI) and 4/30-5/6 (.367, 11-for-30, 3 HR, 10 RBI). With RISP and two outs, batted .289 (22-for-76) with three home runs and 34 RBI. His 22 hits tied for sixth-most in the NL.
Bats: Left • Throws: Right. 6-5, 220lb (196cm, 99kg) Team: Los Angeles Dodgers (majors) in Villa Park, Draft: Drafted by the Atlanta Braves in the 2nd round of the 2007 MLB June Amateur Draft from El Modena HS (Orange, CA). High School: Debut: September 1, 2010 (Age 20-354d, 19,823rd in major league history)
Freeman is the fourth first baseman to win World Series MVP and the first since Boston’s Steve Pearce in 2018. He’s also the ninth Dodgers player (10th occurrence) to win the honor, captured most recently by Corey Seager in 2020. “This is everything,” Freeman said when presented with the award. “This is it right here.”.
Complete career MLB stats for the Los Angeles Dodgers First Baseman Freddie Freeman on ESPN. Includes games played, hits and home runs per MLB season.
Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman became the first player in MLB history to hit a home run in six straight World Series games when he cranked one out of Yankee Stadium in Game 4 on ...
View the profile of Los Angeles Dodgers First Baseman Freddie Freeman on ESPN. Get the latest news, live stats and game highlights.
When a man hits a walk-off home run in extra innings — in the World Freaking Series — he can’t imagine in that moment that the baseball is never going to come down. But he could ask the guys ...
Freddie Freeman set the course in the Dodgers' run to the championship with a historic grand slam -- and kept right on swatting his way to World Series MVP.
Freddie, playing on a severely sprained ankle, did not appear in two of the final three games in the National League Championship. Yankees manager Aaron Boone, though, made the obvious decision....