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The NFL hands out its major awards; Odell Beckham top offensive rookie

PHOENIX – To the surprise of nobody, New York Giants receiver Odell Beckham Jr. was named NFL offensive rookie of the year.

The dynamic Giants receiver was given the award during the “NFL Honors” show, which the NFL puts on the night before the Super Bowl to honor its players and hand out its major awards. Beckham beat out a very good rookie class, especially at receiver.

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Beckham said "it means everything" to win the award, and talked about seeing his mom and dad in the crowd crying as he accepted it.

"To know that I made them proud is something that can't be taken away from me." Beckham said.

Beckham had a great year but really exploded into super-stardom with an incredible one-handed catch on “Sunday Night Football” in Week 12. Everyone was paying attention after that.

"When I first made the catch, I didn't realize what the magnitude of it was," Beckham said.

Beckham, who missed four games at the start of the season due to a hamstring injury (which he said never totally healed, as he had two tears in it) finished with 91 catches, 1,305 yards and 12 touchdowns, one of the greatest rookie years in NFL history.

We will update the NFL’s awards as they’re handed out during the night at the Phoenix Symphony Hall.

Offensive player of the year: Dallas Cowboys RB DeMarco Murray

There was a bit of an upset early in the night. Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers seemed to be a front-runner for the award but it went to Murray, the workhorse back for the Cowboys. Murray rushed for 1,845 yards during the regular season on 392 carries, and the Cowboys won the NFC East.

Murray is slated to become a free agent this offseason, and he'll be one of the more interesting free agents on the market. Teams will have to weigh Murray's brilliance, which was reflected in the offensive player of the year award, against the diminishing value of running backs to teams given their short careers. Murray reiterated he wants to stay with the Cowboys.

"I don't think it's any secret where I want to play next year," Murray said. "But I understand the business side of it. If I'm not there, I understand it."

Coach of the year: Arizona Cardinals' Bruce Arians

Arians navigated injuries to quarterbacks Carson Palmer and Drew Stanton to guide the Cardinals to the playoffs. The Cardinals went 11-5.

Arians has won the award twice in three seasons. In 2012 he won it for his work with the Indianapolis Colts when he was offensive coordinator but took over as interim head coach while Chuck Pagano battled leukemia. That led to his job with the Cardinals, who obviously made a great hire.

Defensive rookie of the year: St. Louis Rams DT Aaron Donald

Donald, the second of two Rams first-round picks, was a disruptive force in the middle of the St. Louis defense. He had nine sacks and 48 tackles for the Rams this season.

Defensive player of the year: Houston Texans DE J.J. Watt

For the first time in the history of this award, the vote was unanimous. It would have been a surprise if it wasn't unanimous.

Watt had one of the most dominant seasons of all time. He had 20.5 sacks and scored five touchdowns, two on defense and three on offense when the Texans would use him as a tight end near the goal line.

Watt has won the award twice in his four NFL seasons. He won the award in 2012 and the vote was nearly unanimous that season. He got 49 of 50 votes that year.

Comeback player of the year: New England Patriots TE Rob Gronkowski

Gronkowski suffered a torn ACL late in the 2013 season but came back strong. He had 1,124 yards an 12 touchdowns, and is a main reason the Patriots are in the Super Bowl.

NFL MVP: Green Bay Packers QB Aaron Rodgers

Read more about the MVP winner here.

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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!