- Posts: 174
- Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2012 11:21 pm
As a lifelong Yankees fan, I don't believe that he was the greatest Yankee ever, not by a long shot. But he was very very good for a long time, won 5 rings, and played SS for the most storied franchise in MLB history in the pressure cooker that is New York, I agree the hype has been over the top this year and sometimes it was downright creepy what with the number "2" on the cap, on the bases, etc etc. I think Olbermann is making the argument that there are some fans, particularly those under 40, who really don't have an appreciation for the history of the game and blindly deify Jeter. He does have a point but let's not mistake the marketing hype machine that is baseball and Jeter played in this era of non-stop ESPN & internet coverage. Having said that, the man has had several Roy Hobbs moments in his career: the flip vs OAk in the 2000 playoffs, the HR for the 3000th hit, the walk off HR vs Arizona in the 2001 WS, the diving catch vs. Boston that rearranged his face, the leadoff HR vs the Mets in the 2000 WS Subway Series, SS on a team that won 125 games (Regular Season & Playoffs) and swept the WS vs San Diego in 1998, the walk off hit in his last regular season game at Yankee Stadium the other night....the man has had a legendary career - there is more to baseball than numbers
Jayson Stark's blog puts a nice cap on his career and when you consider he did this as a shortstop it is even more impressive
http://espn.go.com/blog/jayson-stark/po ... er-numbers
Yankee fans will forever be grateful for him, Rivera, Pettite, Posada & Bernie Williams among others, homegrown Yankees who helped lead the Yankees out of the disaster of the early 90's (Stump Merrill anyone? Alvaro Espinosa, Mel Hall?? ) and helped fuel the last dynasty in MLB in the late 90's, early 2000's.
I can understand why people are tired, but let's keep it in perspective - amid all the marketing and hoopla, he did have a Hall of Fame, 1st ballot career.
Jayson Stark's blog puts a nice cap on his career and when you consider he did this as a shortstop it is even more impressive
http://espn.go.com/blog/jayson-stark/po ... er-numbers
Yankee fans will forever be grateful for him, Rivera, Pettite, Posada & Bernie Williams among others, homegrown Yankees who helped lead the Yankees out of the disaster of the early 90's (Stump Merrill anyone? Alvaro Espinosa, Mel Hall?? ) and helped fuel the last dynasty in MLB in the late 90's, early 2000's.
I can understand why people are tired, but let's keep it in perspective - amid all the marketing and hoopla, he did have a Hall of Fame, 1st ballot career.