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Jeter
even made a Mets fan happy.....
Photo
by Nick Laham
- Getty |
........and the guy who caught the ball, Christian
Lopez, made it even more special
Photo-Nick Laham - Getty
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A Mets fan has it rough these days,
all of which seem to be
Yankee days. First, there was the 3000th
hit by the most famous Yankee of them all, oh what is his name? Then tonight I got to watch as Robinson Cano
won the Home Run Derby in Arizona with some really prodigious shots.
Oh well,
at least I
did get to see Jose Reyes interviewing Carlos Beltran before the
festivities
began on the MLB Network, one of the funniest things I’ve seen in a
while.
But, truth to tell, I was really happy
for Jeter on
Saturday. If he had just dribbled a
seeing-eye grounder for that long-awaited milestone, it wouldn’t have
meant
anything. But Jeter always had a flair
for the dramatic and Saturday was certainly no exception.
It kills me to say so but the whole
day validated all the
ballyhoo and the high esteem he’s held in by every fan of Major League
Baseball. I mean, really!
He needed
two hits
and he started his day off by getting the first one he needed right off
the
bat, so to speak. Then, with the whole
world watching, and a great pitcher, David Price, on the mound, he had
one of
the best at-bats I’ve ever seen, fouling off pitch after pitch, taking
the
close balls, and then just driving that ball, no doubt about it, into
the
left-center field seats.
It was one of those moments you
remember. I was in my garage workin’ out,
one eye on
the screen and the other on the mat. But
I was watching every pitch. If he had
struck out, it would have been a great at-bat. I
jumped in the air as I heard the crack of the bat
and watched that
drive and heard that call.
It was a moment made for Jeter and by
Jeter. Of course, there have been other
Jeter
moments, but everybody remembers two especially, his flip to the plate
to nail
the incredibly stupid Jeremy Giambi at the plate in a playoff game
against
Oakland and that flying leap into the seats in short left-center field
to
complete a catch that couldn’t have been made any other way.
But those other moments had been
surprises, moments made by
Jeter but not especially for him, as was his quest for that elusive 3000th
hit. There had been the injury, then the
rainout and the interminable questions about his feelings about the
whole
thing. When he stepped into that batter’s
box for that second at-bat, he had to know the whole baseball world was
watching.
And that’s why Jeter is a great player. When the pressure is on, he turns up his
game. He feels he can make the play, no,
not just can but will make the play. Other
players don’t make that flying leap, other
players don’t have the
presence of mind to stay with that play in Oakland, one he admits to
this day had
only been made because the runner didn’t slide, and, even then, it had
been a
close thing.
I love watching Jose Reyes play but he
wouldn’t have made
either of those Jeter plays. He doesn’t
have that presence of mind and he doesn’t have the kind of drive that
would
mean possibly sacrificing his body. Now
don’t get me wrong. Jose will make a lot
of plays that Jeter couldn’t ever make but Jeter will make every play
he can possibly
make. Jeter is in the game.
There’s a little hot dog in all the
greats and Jeter is no
exception to that either. But, to me,
only hot dogs make those impossible plays.
Not that that 3000th hit
was an impossible
play. If anything, it was inevitable. But hitting the homer was something else
again, and it was a moment that really cried out for something special. Jeter
heard the call and made the most of it. He
knew he could hit one in that spot so he did.
With every player on both sides
hanging over the dugout,
with many thousands watching live and millions taking it in on
television,
Jeter made the moment one worth everybody’s time. He
knocked one over the wall. It was great,
even the probably scripted
Posada dash to the front of the congratulatory line and Mariano there
too at
the forefront, three old soldiers of baseball just really happy in the
moment. The captain had done it again.
And, of course, he didn’t stop there. Jeter was on fire. He
was 3 for 3 and 4 for 4 and 5 for 5 and
the game-winner. What else?
It was a glorious Jeter day, a great day to
be a Yankee fan.
A total of 27 other players have
reached 3000 hits, most of
them notable names too, and all but two made it to the Hall of Fame. And one of those two, Pete Rose, should be in
there too. The other is Rafael Palmeiro, not a Hall of Fame player to me,
even discounting the juice.
The 3000 hit plateau is one that
speaks of greatness and
longevity. You have to be a pretty
damned good player to be in the game that long, but other marks of
longevity
such as most consecutive games played
If Jeter hadn’t been assured of always
having a place in New
York’s hearts before Saturday, he has it now, no matter what follows,
much as
was and is the case for Eli Manning and Broadway Joe and Walt Frazier.
He may not finish his career as the
leadoff man for the
Yankees but will hardly matter now. Those
other icons won titles but Jeter already had
more titles than any
of them. What he may not have had before
Saturday was that one big day.
Well, he sure had one Saturday. Five for five, the 3000th hit a
homer, and the game-winning hit to top it all off.
The 3000th
after all had to come on a winning day.
(Christian Lopez made the
day even more special by returning the ball he caught, passing up many
thousands of dollars in the bargain).