Jackson, 74, has served in the role since the
late George Steinbrenner named him to the post in 1993. The
Steinbrenner family still owns the Yankees.
"I'll never have anything bad to say about George," Jackson
said. "It's just time to step back. I want to be around the
game, and I want to contribute. I want to leave my knowledge.
But it's just time to move on."
Jackson, a 14-time All-Star, became known as "Mr. October" after
hitting five homers in the 1977 World Series to help the Yankees
defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers in six games.
Overall, he clubbed 18 postseason homers, which matched Mickey
Mantle among all-time leaders at the time. Of his post-season
homers, 12 came for the Yankees. He also hit five for the
Oakland Athletics and one for the then-California Angels,
reaching the postseason in 11 of his 21 seasons in the major
leagues.
Jackson was MVP of the 1973 World Series when Oakland defeated
the New York Mets in seven games. He was part of three World
Series championship teams with the Athletics (1972-74) and two
with the Yankees (1977-78).
Jackson smashed 563 regular-season homers in 21 seasons with the
Athletics (1967-75, 1987), Baltimore Orioles (1976), Yankees
(1977-81) and Angels (1982-86). The homers rank 14th in major
league history.
Jackson won American League MVP honors in 1973 when hit a
league-high 32 homers. He tied for the homer lead three other
times (1975, 1980 and 1982).
He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1993.
--Field Level Media
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