



Baltimore, MD - MATT BIRK of the Baltimore Ravens was named the 2011 WALTER PAYTON NFL MAN OF THE YEAR, it was announced today. The award recognizes a player's off-the-field community service as well as his playing excellence.
The
announcement was made during NFL Honors, a two-hour primetime awards
special that will air nationally from 9:00-11:00 p.m. on NBC tonight.
NFL Commissioner ROGER GOODELL and JARRETT AND BRITTNEY PAYTON, the late Walter Payton's children, will honor Birk on-field tomorrow before kickoff of Super Bowl XLVI.
"I
am honored and truly humbled to be named the Walter Payton NFL Man of
the Year," said Birk. "This award is not about the recipient, but rather
a celebration of the decades-long tradition of NFL players using their
unique platform to touch lives and make a positive and lasting impact in
the communities in which they work and live. Walter Payton left a
legacy that went beyond the playing field. He continues to be an
inspiration and example of what a complete NFL player should aspire to
become. I am grateful to have played for two organizations, the
Minnesota Vikings and Baltimore Ravens, which encourage and support
their players' community efforts. I have always considered it a
privilege to play in the NFL and serve the communities that support our
game."
Birk, who just completed his in 14th NFL season, is the
anchor of the Ravens offensive line and an undisputed leader on and off
the field. The perennial Pro Bowl center has started 96 consecutive
games, the NFL's second-longest active streak among centers. In 2011,
Birk helped pave the way for Ravens running back Ray Rice to score a
franchise-record 15 total touchdowns and rush for a career-high 1,364
yards, also leading the league with 2,068 yards from scrimmage.
A
family man and father of six with a passion for emphasizing the
importance of education, Birk has focused a great deal of his energy on
promoting literacy among the youth around him. The Harvard graduate's
"Ready, Set, Read!" program, an initiative of his H.I.K.E. Foundation
(hope, inspiration, knowledge and education), reaches close to 100,000
children in the Baltimore area and motivates students to read at home
through an incentive-based system. Birk's work carries well past the
many initiatives and successes of his own foundation. He is committed to
bettering himself, his team, his community and the world. Birk has
agreed to donate his brain and spinal cord tissue to the Center for
Traumatic Encephalopathy at Boston University's School of Medicine to
help assist in researching the effects of repeated head traumas. Birk is
an eight-time Man of the Year (seven with the Vikings, one with the
Ravens), and was a finalist for the national award in 2008.
Birk
joins an esteemed list of winners of the annual award, including 17 Pro
Football Hall of Famers. Recent winners of the Walter Payton NFL Man
of the Year Award include MADIEU WILLIAMS, then of the Minnesota Vikings
(2010), BRIAN WATERS, then of the Kansas City Chiefs (2009), and former
Arizona Cardinals quarterback KURT WARNER (2008).
All 32 team
nominees for the award receive a $1,000 donation from NFL Charities to
the charity of their choice. The three Man of the Year finalists
received an additional $5,000 donation in their name. The selection
panel is comprised of NFL Commissioner ROGER GOODELL, former NFL
Commissioner PAUL TAGLIABUE, CONNIE PAYTON, Pro Football Hall of Fame
members FRANK GIFFORD and ANTHONY MUÑOZ, Giants great and Executive
Director of the NFL Alumni Association GEORGE MARTIN, 2010 winner MADIEU
WILLIAMS, and Sports Illustrated football writer PETER KING.
The
winner of the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award will receive the
Gladiator statue, an original art creation by the noted sculptor, DANIEL
SCHWARTZ. In addition, the player's favorite charity will receive a
$20,000 donation in his name.
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