Bobby Lemaire
Originally Posted on
05 March 2014.
On
February 12, longtime New York Yankee shortstop and Captain Derek Jeter
announced that 2014 would be his final season. This is not a surprise to many
fans and analysts, considering that Jeter is about to turn 40 and missed the
majority of the 2013 season due to ankle and calf injuries. In the 17 games
that he did participate in, Jeter batted a lowly .190 with one home run and
seven RBIs. While he did struggle last season, Jeter’s career will be mostly
remembered for clutch moments and World Series victories.
Jeter
was picked sixth overall by the Yankees in the 1995 MLB draft. One year later,
the 22-year-old won the Rookie of the Year award with a .314 batting average
with 10 homers and 78 RBI’s. Then in 1996, he led the Yankees to a World Series
title, the team’s first since 1978. Throughout his first 19 years in the big
leagues, Jeter and the Yankees won five World Series titles with an
unforgettable three-peat stretch from 1998-2000. His last championship came in
2009, in their first year at the new Yankee Stadium.
During
his career, Jeter has produced Hall of Fame numbers. Along with his Rookie of
the Year award, he has also won five Gold Gloves, four Silver Slugger
awards, has a career .312 batting averag and is a thirteen-time All-Star.
While these numbers are great, what really puts Jeter into the legendary category is his flair for the dramatics. Whenever there was a big moment for the Yankees, it is very likely that Jeter was a part of it. Whether it was Jeter’s home run in Game 1 of the ALCS against the Orioles (with a little help from 12-year-old fan Jeffrey Maier), his famous “flip play” against the Oakland Athletics in Game 3 of the 2001 ALDS or the catch he made on July 1, 2004 against the Red Sox, where he dove head first into the stands, Jeter just seemed to have that “clutch factor.”
While these numbers are great, what really puts Jeter into the legendary category is his flair for the dramatics. Whenever there was a big moment for the Yankees, it is very likely that Jeter was a part of it. Whether it was Jeter’s home run in Game 1 of the ALCS against the Orioles (with a little help from 12-year-old fan Jeffrey Maier), his famous “flip play” against the Oakland Athletics in Game 3 of the 2001 ALDS or the catch he made on July 1, 2004 against the Red Sox, where he dove head first into the stands, Jeter just seemed to have that “clutch factor.”
Then
on September 11, 2009, Jeter got his 2,722th hit, passing Lou Gehrig for first
all-time in career hits for the Yankees. Two years later on July 9, 2011, Jeter
hit a home run off Tampa Bay Rays’ ace David Price for his 3,000 hit. He ended
up going 5-5 that day because that is just his style.
There
is a contest going on Twitter in which someone tweets a player’s name with the
hashtag #FaceofMLB and the player gets a vote. The player with the most votes
at the end of the contest gets named “The Face of the MLB.” New York Mets third
baseman David Wright was declared the winner, defeating Oakland Athletics
infielder Eric Sogard in the finals. This vote doesn’t matter— Derek Jeter is
the face of baseball. He has been since the end of the 1990s and continued to
be one of the most respected players in the game during the 2000s, when
superstars like Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens were accused of performance
enhancing drugs. In one of the darkest eras of baseball, Jeter was one of the
stars shining brightest.
Jeter
was definitely one of the most noticeable people on the field, but he tried to
be invisible off of it. Even while dating Jessica Biel, Scarlett Johansson,
Minka Kelly or another movie star/model (seriously, Google Derek Jeter Dating
Diamond), you never heard him get into any sort of trouble. Being one of the
most popular men in one of the world’s biggest cities didn’t faze him. But if
you look at how he played the game, maybe he couldn’t be fazed.
This
will be Jeter’s swan song and every stadium he goes to for the last time will
give him a standing ovation. ESPN will constantly cover his road trips, giving
updates about what presents the opposing organization gave him. Some fans from
opposing teams will get sick of it quickly, but Derek Jeter has worked hard
enough for this goodbye.
Then
in five years, Jeter will be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame,
where his legacy will live on with likes of Ruth, Gehrig, Aaron and Robinson.
For the rest of time Yankees fans will remember his work.
No comments:
Post a Comment