TORONTO -- Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Matt Kemp, who finished runner-up to Ryan Braun in voting for the 2011 National League Most Valuable Player award, thinks the suspended Milwaukee Brewers slugger should be stripped of the honour. Braun finished with 388 points and 20 first-place votes, to 332 and 10 for Kemp. Major League Baseball attempted to suspend Braun following a positive test that October for elevated testosterone, but the penalty was overturned by an arbitrator who ruled Brauns urine sample was handled improperly. Braun agreed Monday to a 65-game suspension for unspecified violations of baseballs drug rules and labour contract. Asked Tuesday whether the award should be taken away from Braun, Kemp responded: "I mean, yeah, I do," pausing and adding, "I feel like it should be, but thats not for me to decide, you know?" Kemp said people feel "betrayed" by Braun. "Im disappointed," Kemp said. "I talked to Braun before any of this happened, we had conversations and I considered him a friend. I dont think anybody likes to be lied to and I feel like a lot of people have felt betrayed. Thats not just me, thats the whole Brewers organization, a lot of his teammates. I think a lot of people feel that way." Jack OConnell, secretary-treasurer of the Baseball Writers Association of America, said the award vote was final. "The decision was already made. He won it," OConnell said in an email Monday. Kemp said he wasnt as comfortable as teammate Skip Schumaker in being openly critical. Schumaker said Monday that Braun should receive a lifetime ban, adding that he planned to take down an autographed Braun jersey hanging in his house. "Talking about things like this is very, very touchy, Kemp said. "Its weird. Me, I dont like to talk about this stuff but I feel like I have to a little bit. "Skip did come out and say some things and he said how he felt," Kemp added. "A lot of players dont do that but you respect guys who come out and say what they feel because thats what you respect, the truth." Kemp was out of the lineup for the second straight game Tuesday because of a sore left ankle. He returned from the disabled list Sunday after an 11-game absence caused by a sore left shoulder. Cheap Yeezy 700 Teal Blue . After Mondays hard-fought loss, the wait seemed longer than usual. Getting set to go their separate ways for a short Christmas break, the Raptors coach credited his team for their effort on a seemingly impossible three-game road trip, urging them to build on that success when they get back to work at the end of the week. Fake Yeezy 700 Teal Blue . 8 Kansas to a 64-63 win over Texas Tech on Tuesday night. The freshman from Vaughan, Ont. http://www.yeezy700outlet.com/discount-yeezy-700-hospital-blue-online.html .5 seconds to play in the game, Kevin Love never stopped believing that they would come out of there with a win. 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The U.K. anti-doping agency has sent investigators to Kenya to look into allegations that four British athletes used the banned blood-booster EPO in a well-known high-altitude training region, claims that could increase the scope of the problem in the East African nation and show foreign runners are also doping there.The allegations, made using secretly filmed video footage in a joint sting operation by German broadcaster ARD and British newspaper The Sunday Times and published late Saturday and early Sunday, were of grave concern and of significant interest, UKAD CEO Nicole Sapstead said.We have opened an investigation and are taking the necessary steps to corroborate the evidence and investigate it further, Sapstead said in a statement. I can confirm that this evidence is being treated with the utmost importance and urgency, and two members of UKAD staff are currently in Kenya pursuing a number of lines of enquiry.The four British athletes accused of doping with EPO in and around the British teams high-altitude training camp in Iten in western Kenya were not named, although The Sunday Times said it knew the identity of at least one of them and that the athlete was already under suspicion for doping.The two media outlets said three Kenyan men -- two of them doctors at a hospital in Eldoret, another high-altitude running town near Iten -- told them that they had either provided or administered EPO to four British athletes. Two of the Kenyan men implicated by the reports were arrested last week by Kenyan anti-narcotics officers and appeared in court on doping-related charges.Kenya has been under severe scrutiny over the past four years because of a surge in doping cases involving its runners. Kenyas high-altitude training camps are popullar with top distance runners from across the world, raising concerns that foreign athletes could also take advantage of the areas poor doping controls.ddddddddddddARD and The Sunday Times reported they quickly found an EPO supplier in Iten. Using a hidden video camera, ARD and The Sunday Times secretly recorded the supplier saying he could easily provide EPO for around 60 Euros ($66) a dose.The media outlets reported they found empty EPO packaging matching those the supplier offered them, along with used syringes, in a garbage can at Itens nearby High-Altitude Training Center. At the time, a number of European athletes -- British and Turkish -- were in attendance.We strongly suspect doping in this Olympic year, the ARD reporter said.EPO is a hormone that boosts the number of oxygen-carrying red blood cells and can therefore increase an athletes endurance. It was the banned substance at the center of the Lance Armstrong doping scandal in cycling.One of the Kenyan men who allegedly provided the EPO to British athletes, identified as Joseph Mwangi, said in the sting that he had supplied the substance to around 50 athletes in all, some of them Kenyan and some foreigners training in Kenya.The allegations appear to reflect the overriding problem in Kenya, where men claiming to be doctors or pharmacists have for years been supplying banned substances for cash. World 1,500-meter champion Asbel Kiprop of Kenya, who has not been implicated in any doping, said last week that in one case Kenyan authorities had taken no action after a marathon runner banned for doping identified the doctor who supplied him with steroids. ' ' '