Derek Jeter. Number 2.
For nearly half of my adult life, he has played
shortstop for the New York Yankees, a team that I have grown to loathe over
that time period. In fact, it is safe to say that there exists nowhere a sports
franchise that I detest more than the New York Yankees. As a Red Sox fan, I
suppose this is natural. Over the years I have developed an intense dislike for
players in pinstripes. Alex Rodriguez, Robinson Cano, Andy Pettitte, Jaba Chamberlain,
just the sight of them would raise my blood pressure. But with Jeter it was
different.
Don’t get me wrong, I never cheered for him. There
was no player in the game who I less wanted to see in the batter’s box with the
game on the line. It didn’t matter if he was in the midst of a 0 for 30 slump,
when the lights were the brightest, and the pressure at its highest peak, Jeter
always seemed to come through.
Derek Jeter will play his last game this week, and
that fact has caused me no small amount of sadness. The truth is, Derek Jeter
represents everything that I love about the game of baseball. He is a throwback
to an earlier era in the game. He’s the kind of player who never ran his mouth, never made news off
the field. I never heard him say a negative thing about a teammate, never saw
him try to show up an opponent. All the guy has ever done is play baseball at
the highest level, while managing to save his best moments for the biggest
stages when the pressure was the most intense.
He’s not even in the discussion of greatest player
ever. There are many others with better power, more speed, a better arm, and better
range. But there isn’t anyone to ever play the game with better instincts, no
one who was more clutch.
A game as old as baseball experiences peaks and
valleys and right now baseball is in a very deep valley. The game has gotten
slow, its popularity is flagging with every demographic except mine…mid-fifties
white guy. Losing Derek Jeter could not possibly have come at a worse time for
the game that I love. But, father time waits for no man. So, number 2 will hang
up the cleats for good after a game against the Red Sox on September 28, 2014.
He will probably hit an opposite field double with
the bases loaded, top of the ninth to drive in the winning runs. Damn that guy!
Thanks Derek. Thank you for playing the game the
right way, for never embarrassing it or yourself by beating up a woman or acting
like a fool in public. Thank you for providing an example for young players to
follow, an example of class, dignity and grace under pressure.
Derek Jeter. Number
2.
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