In a post on his Facebook page, Jeter, 39, widely considered one
of baseball's greatest shortstops, said he made the decision
following a tough 2013 season when he struggled to recover from a
broken ankle and other injuries.
"Last year was a tough one for me. As I suffered through a bunch of
injuries, I realized that some of the things that always came easily
to me and were always fun had started to become a struggle. The one
thing I always said to myself was that when baseball started to feel
more like a job, it would be time to move forward.
"So really it was months ago when I realized that this season would
likely be my last. As I came to this conclusion and shared it with
my friends and family, they all told me to hold off saying anything
until I was absolutely 100 percent sure.
"And the thing is, I could not be more sure. I know it in my heart.
The 2014 season will be my last year playing professional baseball."
Jeter, a winner of five World Series rings and a 13-time All-Star
who stands 10th on MLB's all-time hits list with 3,316, played only
17 games in 2013 as the Yankees missed the playoffs for only the
second time in Jeter's 19 years with the club.
The shortstop was a late-season call-up for the Yankees in 1995
before claiming the job for his own in 1996 and winning American
League Rookie of the Year honors. He helped the Yankees win the 1996
World Series, their first championship in 18 years.
That began a glorious run for the Bronx Bombers, who also won three
Fall Classic crowns in a row from 1998 under manager Joe Torre.
Jeter and his teammates also reached the World Series in 2001 and
2003 before returning to the winner's circle in 2009.
MOMENTOUS FAREWELL
His departure will mark a second momentous farewell in as many
seasons for the Yankees following the retirement announced ahead of
the 2013 season by all-time saves leader Mariano Rivera.
Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig said the sport would be saluting the
future Hall of Famer during the upcoming season.
[to top of second column] |
"In the 21-plus years in which I have served as commissioner, Major
League Baseball has had no finer ambassador than Derek Jeter," Selig
said in a statement.
"He is one of the most accomplished and memorable players of his — or any — era.
"Derek is the kind of person that generations have emulated proudly,
and he remains an exemplary face of our sport. Major League Baseball
looks forward to celebrating his remarkable career throughout the
2014 season."
The announcement by Jeter, who will turn 40 in June, seemed to take
the Yankees off guard.
"It surprised me a little bit," Gene Michael, senior vice president
of the Yankees and the team's general manager when Jeter joined the
club, told ESPN radio.
"Eight years ago he told me he wanted to play 10 more years and this
is only nine."
Jeter was a steadying force for the Yankees over nearly two decades,
rarely making a misstep on the field or off, and he has been hailed
as a clutch performer who often performed his best under the
brightest spotlight.
His sense of the occasion may best be illustrated by the June day in
2011 when Jeter reached the 3,000-hit milestone.
The Yankee captain went 5-for-5 at the plate, hitting a home run in
his last at-bat for hit number 3,000 in front of an ecstatic Yankee
Stadium crowd.
"It won't surprise me if he has a good year and steps out," Michael
said. "He knows what he wants to do. He's smart.
"He's handled himself as well as anybody could ever do it. He's been
a great, great, great asset for the Yankees and we've been lucky to
have him."
(Reporting by Larry Fine; editing by Paul Simao)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |