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On October 3, ], Jeter became the sixth player in ] history to collect five hits in a postseason game, going 5 for 5 in Game 1 of the ]. He cracked two singles, two doubles, and a homerun. After his homer in the eighth inning, the Yankee Stadium crowd chanted his name and he took a ]. On October 3, ], Jeter became the sixth player in ] history to collect five hits in a postseason game, going 5 for 5 in Game 1 of the ]. He cracked two singles, two doubles, and a homerun. After his homer in the eighth inning, the Yankee Stadium crowd chanted his name and he took a ].

==Awards==
*1993 South Atlantic League All-Star (SS)
*1994 Florida State League All-Star (SS)
*1994 Baseball America 1st Team Minor League All-Star (SS)
*1994 Minor League Player of the Year
*1994 New York Yankees Minor League Player of the Year
*1994 Baseball America Minor League Player of the Year
*1994 Florida State League Most Valuable Player
*1995 International League All-Star (SS)
*1996 American League Rookie of the Year
*1998 New York Yankees Player of the Year
*1998 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #3)
*1999 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #6)
*1999 New York Yankees Player of the Year
*1999 Baseball America First-Team Major League All-Star (SS)
*2000 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #10)
*2000 All-Star Game Most Valuable Player
*2000 World Series Most Valuable Player
*2000 New York Yankees Player of the Year
*2001 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #10)
*2004 AL Glove Glove Award (SS)
*2004 Baseball America 2nd-Team Major League All-Star (SS)
*2005 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #10)
*2005 AL Glove Glove Award (SS)


===Yankee captain=== ===Yankee captain===

Revision as of 04:08, 5 October 2006

Baseball player
Derek Jeter
New York Yankees – No. 2
Shortstop
Bats: RightThrows: Right
debut
May 29, 1995, for the New York Yankees
Career statistics
(through the 2006 season)
AVG.317
Hits2,150
HR183
Runs1,277
Games1,679
SB249
RBI860
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata

Derek Sanderson Jeter (born June 26 1974) is a seven-time All-Star shortstop for the New York Yankees, and is the team's captain.

He has won the American League Rookie of the Year Award, the All-Star and World Series MVP Awards and two Gold Glove Awards. Jeter has the 6th highest lifetime batting average of all active ballplayers. He has been in the top 7 in the American League in both hits and runs scored for 8 of the past 9 years.


Early life and Minor Leagues

Jeter connects for a hit against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

Derek Jeter was born in Pequannock, New Jersey, to Charles, an African-American, and Dorothy Jeter, an Irish-American. The family lived in North Arlington, New Jersey until he was four, then moved to Kalamazoo, Michigan, when he was five. Jeter was a star baseball player at Kalamazoo Central High School, where he also played basketball. Jeter batted over .500 and struck out only 4 times during his entire senior year playing baseball. In 1992, he was named High School Player of the Year by the American Baseball Coaches Association and won the Gatorade High School Player of the Year Award.

Although Jeter received a baseball scholarship to attend the University of Michigan, he was drafted by the New York Yankees with the 6th overall pick of the 1992 amateur draft and chose to go pro. Jeter has said though that he will eventually go back to college and earn a degree.

Jeter spent four years in the minor leagues, beginning in the Rookie League before advancing to Class A. He spent two years there (his first year wasn't the best by the look of his stats), collecting various awards, including Most Outstanding Major League Prospect of the South Atlantic League in 1993 and Best Defensive Shortstop.

In 1994, he advanced from Class A to Class AAA within the season.

On May 29, 1995, Jeter made his debut in the Major Leagues against the Seattle Mariners.

Professional career

Derek Jeter has played a key role in the Yankees' success since 1996. Jeter is one of four current veterans (the others are Jorge Posada, Bernie Williams, and Mariano Rivera) who came up through the Yankees organization, and has played his entire professional career with the Yankees.

Jeter, Nomar Garciaparra and Alex Rodriguez were considered the three top shortstops in the game during the late 1990s and early 2000s. Jeter is the only one of the three who is still playing shortstop.

Derek Jeter was first called up to the Major Leagues in 1995 and started 13 games before being sent back down to the minors. He returned on Opening Day of the 1996 season as the starting shortstop and hit into his first major-league double-play on that day. He played his way to a sucessful rookie season, hitting for a .314 batting average, 10 home runs and 78 runs batted in and simultaneously earning Rookie of the Year honors.

In 2000, Jeter became the first player ever to win the All-Star game MVP award and the World Series MVP Award in the same year.

As of 2006, Jeter has a career .315 postseason batting average with 17 home runs and 46 RBIs as well as reaching base in 102 of 116 postseason games. He has a record 147 career postseason hits, and also holds records for most postseason singles (107), at-bats (467), runs scored (84) and strikeouts (90). On Mother's Day, May 14, 2006, Jeter was one of more than 50 hitters who brandished a pink bat to benefit the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation. On August 22nd, 2006 Jeter became the all-time Yankee leader in singles.

In 2006, Jeter's batting average was an impressive .343, with 14 HRs, 34 Steals, and 97 RBIs and he seems a favorite to win the MVP award. Other contenders are Justin Morneau, Jermaine Dye, and David Ortiz to name a few.

On the whole, Jeter's 2006 campaign has so far been one of his best years ever. He finished second behind Twin's catcher Joe Mauer for the batting title with his teammate Robinson Cano coming in at 3rd.

On October 3, 2006, Jeter became the sixth player in Major Leagues history to collect five hits in a postseason game, going 5 for 5 in Game 1 of the 2006 ALDS. He cracked two singles, two doubles, and a homerun. After his homer in the eighth inning, the Yankee Stadium crowd chanted his name and he took a curtain call.

Awards

  • 1993 South Atlantic League All-Star (SS)
  • 1994 Florida State League All-Star (SS)
  • 1994 Baseball America 1st Team Minor League All-Star (SS)
  • 1994 Minor League Player of the Year
  • 1994 New York Yankees Minor League Player of the Year
  • 1994 Baseball America Minor League Player of the Year
  • 1994 Florida State League Most Valuable Player
  • 1995 International League All-Star (SS)
  • 1996 American League Rookie of the Year
  • 1998 New York Yankees Player of the Year
  • 1998 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #3)
  • 1999 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #6)
  • 1999 New York Yankees Player of the Year
  • 1999 Baseball America First-Team Major League All-Star (SS)
  • 2000 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #10)
  • 2000 All-Star Game Most Valuable Player
  • 2000 World Series Most Valuable Player
  • 2000 New York Yankees Player of the Year
  • 2001 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #10)
  • 2004 AL Glove Glove Award (SS)
  • 2004 Baseball America 2nd-Team Major League All-Star (SS)
  • 2005 AL MVP (Voting Rank: #10)
  • 2005 AL Glove Glove Award (SS)

Yankee captain

The Yankees named Jeter the 11th captain in Yankees history on June 3, 2003. He is in the 6th year of a 10-year contract and is currently making over $20 million a year.

Turn 2 Foundation

Jeter began the Turn 2 Foundation, a charity organization, in 1996. The Foundation was established to help children and teenagers avoid drug and alcohol addiction, and to reward those who show high academic achievement. The organization's name was chosen, besides the baseball reference to a double play (and Jeter's uniform number), to demonstrate the goal of giving youths a place to "turn to", besides drugs and alcohol.

World Baseball Classic

Derek was the starting shortstop for the USA team in the first ever World Baseball Classic. Jeter hit .450 (9/20) for Team USA and scored 5 runs in 6 games. Only Ken Griffey, Jr. (.524) and Cuba's Yoandy Garlobo (.480) had a higher batting average with a minimum of 20 at bats. Jeter's exploits earned him recognition as the shortstop selection on the All-Tournament

Trivia

  • Dated former Miss Universe and Indian actress Lara Dutta from 2000-2001.
  • Hosted Saturday Night Live in 2001 and dressed up as a woman in one skit with former Yankees David Cone, and David Wells. He played Alfonso Soriano's wife, "Candice Soriano".
  • Was the subject of a 2005 segment on the TV news magazine 60 Minutes.
  • Was voted the most overrated player in MLB in a Sports Illustrated survey of 470 major leaguers in 2006. Numerous players were mentioned in the survey. Jeter received 9% of the vote. Jeter hit .343 the following season.
  • Was voted the majors' top shortstop in a Sports Illustrated player poll in 2005.
  • Has his own line of sneakers under the Jordan brand, a division of Nike.
  • Has appeared in national ad campaigns for Nike, Gatorade, Fleet Bank, Discover Card, Florsheim, VISA (with Yankees owner George Steinbrenner), Skippy Peanut Butter, Ford Motors, XM Satellite Radio, and Ford Mustang (in 2006, with Spike Lee).
  • Endorses a cologne named Driven made by Avon.
  • Holds the record for most singles All-time by a Yankee.
  • Is Bob Dylan's favorite baseball player .
  • In a playoff win against the Oakland A's on October 13, 2001, Jeter made a play that was later voted #7 in Baseball Weekly's 10 Most Amazing Plays of all-time. With Jeremy Giambi at first and the Yankees leading 1-0 in the 7th inning with 2 outs, Terrence Long hit a liner down the right field line. Shane Spencer fielded and overthrew both his cutoff men. Jeter swooped in, grabbed the ball and backhanded it to catcher Jorge Posada, who reached blindly and tagged Giambi on his right calf, a half-second before touching home.


See also

References

  1. http://newyork.yankees.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/team/player_career.jsp?player_id=116539&y=1996
  2. World Baseball Classic Stats, accessed July 2, 2006
  3. World Baseball Classic All-Tournament Team, accessed July 2, 2006

External links

Template:Incumbent succession box
Preceded byMarty Cordova American League Rookie of the Year
1996
Succeeded byNomar Garciaparra
Preceded byAlbert Belle American League Player of the Month
August, 1998
Succeeded byAlbert Belle
Preceded byPedro Martinez Major League Baseball All-Star Game
Most Valuable Player

2000
Succeeded byCal Ripken, Jr.
Preceded byMariano Rivera World Series MVP
2000
Succeeded byRandy Johnson and Curt Schilling
Preceded byMariano Rivera Babe Ruth Award
2000
Succeeded byRandy Johnson and Curt Schilling
Categories: