MARIANO RIVERA: ALMOST PERFECT!
"Without question we're talking about
the best reliever in the history of baseball. This guy has become branded with
the Yankee logo. People are going to remember this man for so long for what
he's done." Brian Cashman
Mariano Rivera quite deservedly is the first to become
a unanimous choice slotted to be inducted into the Cooperstown Baseball Hall of
Fame.
Talk about
coming out of nowhere, out of humble beginnings.
Out of Panama City, Panama, Mariano Rivera was a skinny kid
who used a milk carton for a glove, tree limbs and broom sticks for bats,
fishing nets that were balled up and wrapped in electrical tape for balls.
Never in his wildest imagination did he dream he would play
19 years for the New York Yankees and become the greatest relief pitcher, the
all-time gold standard for relief pitchers.
He spoke no English. He was a teenage
shortstop who was a converted pitcher who couldn’t hit much. He didn’t even
begin pitching until he was 19. Taking a flyer, the Yankees signed him for
$3,000.
Talk about
coincidence. Rivera’s first pitching coach with the Gulf Coast League Yankees,
was Hoyt Wilhelm, the first relief pitcher ever elected to the Hall of Fame and
first official all-time saves leader.
At Single-A ball in Greensboro, North Carolina, Rivera
pitched and no one thought he was going anywhere. He was not even protected by
the Yanks in the '92 expansion draft. Rivera, however, knew what it was like to
grind, to endure.
After
five plus seasons in the minors, on May 23, 1995, the slim and serious
25-year-old made his Yankee debut as a starter against the California Angels.
The quiet Panamanian wore jersey Number 42. It what was handed to him by a
clubhouse attendant. The number had no special significance for the rookie.
Never did he even have the thought that he would be last to wear that number in
the majors, Jackie Robinson’s number retired by Major League Baseball.
It
soon became evident that the smooth-throwing right-hander was better suited to
working out of the bullpen. He proved that point in a setup role in 1996, going
8-3, setting a Yankee reliever record with 130 strikeouts.
John Wetteland left the Yankee and
signed as a free agent with Texas after the 1996 season. Rivera was given the
closer role. It was one of the of the smartest moves manager Joe Torre ever
made.
"He's the best I've ever been around,” Torre
said. “Not only the ability to pitch and perform under pressure, but the calm
he puts over the clubhouse. He's very important for us because he's a special
person."
“Mo” made terrorizing batters and
shattering pitching marks part of his method of operations. Averaging 41 saves
and a 1.86 ERA from 1997 through 1999, he was as dominant as any stopper had
ever been. He was the 1997 and 1999 Fireman of the Year
In 1999, the Yankee scoreboard
staff tried out different songs to use to introduce Rivera coming in from the
bullpen at home games. Finally, Metallica’s
“Enter Sandman” was settled on. The
image of Rivera jogging across the grass of the outfield in a straight line to
the pitcher’s mound, the blaring of the opening cords of the song, is a Yankee
ritual that will never be forgotten. It is now part of the legend and lore of
the franchise. “Mo” becoming “Sandman.”
Mariano Rivera was arguably the nuts and bolts of Yankee
success in the World Series from 1996-2000 and also 2009 – the seven pennants,
the 11 AL East wins.
In 2001, Mariano Rivera became the
best paid relief pitcher ever. He signed a $39.99 million, four-year contract.
And George Steinbrenner donated $100,000 to Rivera's church in Panama as well.
"I think
the good Lord is a Yankee,” Rivera said.
What hitters said about the modest Rivera was
something else. Facing him, they knew what was coming – the cut fastball that
moved as much as eight or nine inches ad shattered bats, the devastating pitch
that made him more times than not, unhittable.
"He's the most mentally tough person
I've ever played with," said Derek Jeter.
"He's
as automatic as anybody ever has been,” said Mike Stanton
The stats for one-time kid from
Panama who played with a cardboard glove are mind-boggling: He never allowed a
run to be scored against him in nine All-Star game appearances. He was the first
pitcher ever to make 1,000 appearances for one team. His 652 saves record with
one team is a stat that probably will never be broken. He saved 23 postseason
games in a row, and in 19 of those games he pitched more than one inning. A member of four World Championship teams,
Rivera was on the mound as the Yankees closed out titles in 2000, 1999 and
1998. He is just the third reliever to be named World Series MVP (1999).
A religious and charitable quiet man,
a competitor like no one else, Mariano Rivera had a plaque in August 2016
honoring him put up in the Stadium’s Monument Park. Deservedly, admission to
the Baseball Hall of Fame is part of the future for the closer of all
closers.
About Harvey Frommer
One of the most prolific and respected sports journalists and oral
historians in the United States, author of the autobiographies of legends
Nolan Ryan , Tony Dorsett, and
Red Holzman, Dr. Harvey Frommer is an expert on all things
baseball having written many books on the team including the highly praised Ultimate Yannkee Book, called by many
“the Ultimate Baseball Book.”
A professor now for more than two decades in the MALS program at Dartmouth
College, Frommer was dubbed “Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by their alumni
magazine. He’s also the founder of www.HarveyFrommerSports.com.
Mint, signed, discounted Frommer books are available from his
site.
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