New York Yankee News: Health dept., Minor Leaguers, Mariano Rivera, and more!

Is the new medical staff as inept as the old?

The New York Yankees medical staff missed the boat last season when Aaron Judge diving for a catch in the outfield popped a rib.  Judge told the medical staff that he heard a crack and a pop when he hit the ground.  The Yankee medical staff rested him for a day, clearly not doing the tests needed.  Judge was in touch with the Yankees during the offseason, and they were aware that he was suffering some type of problem with his shoulder.   When he reported to spring training, he was still suffering the soreness.  Yet the response was to rest him.  If this staff doesn’t do needed tests first instead of last, we may expect more prolonged injuries again this season.

The status of Minor League COVID-19 patients

At about the same time that MLB canceled the remainder of the spring training season, a minor leaguer in the separate training complex in Tampa just a short distance from George M. Steinbrenner Field testest positive for coronavirus.  A couple of days after that, another tested positive.  Both only had mild symptoms.  The first, Denny Larrrondo, according to Aaron Boone, was released from quarantine yesterday, and the second who was never named will be in the coming days.

Will a Yankee World Series win be legitimate?

When the New York Yankees season finally starts, and if they win the World Series, will they be stripped of bragging rights?  Former Yankee Hall of Fame reliever Mariano Rivera chimed in on the subject recently on the Michael Kay show.  Rivera intimated that if the season is too short, it will have an asterisk attached to it and not be considered with the same bragging rights if the season was whole.

“Anything can happen in 60 games. I don’t think it’s enough. People don’t play on all cylinders, the whole teams are different. I don’t know. It’s a great question, because I don’t know what’s going to happen if the season is starting in June or July, I don’t think you can play a 60-game season and you call yourself a champion,” Mariano Rivera said.”

What’s new on the Yankee health front?

New York Yankee Manager Aaron Boone has said that Giancarlo Stanton (calf strain) is recovered and ready to go it the season started today.  Aaron Hicks (Tommy John surgery) is now throwing and will be prepared according to when the season begins.  James Paxton (back surgery) is another player that the loss to the team will be lessened by the season pushback.  He is recovering as expected.  Aaron Judge, who was initially supposed to be ready, now may not be ready even if the season starts in May or June while healing fro a rib fracture.  The Yankees have been unusually silent on Gary Sanchez’s back soreness.

Yankee neighbors will be playing catch together:

During the offseason, the New York Yankees acquired pitching ace Gerrit Cole for the largest contract in MLB history for a pitcher.  Cole, while settling in for his nine-year contract, purchased a beautiful home in Greenwich, CT, that’s just over the New York state line and near manager Aaron Boone’s home.  Over the weekend, Cole and his wife Amy made Instagram fame by releasing a video of them playing catch at their home.  Manager Aaron Boone said that he and Gerrit cole have shared a game of catch at Cole’s home and may again while they wait for the start of the season.

This day in Yankee history:

In 1951, during a spring exhibition game against the University of Southern California at Bovard Field, Mickey Mantle, batting left-handed, hits a home run off Tom Lovrich, which is estimated to travel 650 feet. The 19-year-old rookie’s performance, which includes a single, triple, and another homer, is one of the highlights of the Yankees’ first-ever West Coast trip.

On this day in 1957, Yankee manager Casey Stengel is arrested and released after posting a $50 bail.  He allegedly kicked a member of the media during a spring training game in St Petersburg, Florida.

 

New York Yankee News Recap: Gerrit Cole, Aaron Judge, Stanton, LeMahieu, and more!

New York Yankees, Gerrit Cole

Yankee News Recap:  Gerrit Cole and more

New York Yankee‘s newly acquired star pitcher Gerrit Cole is not laying back and resting; he is keeping his pitching form sharp by pitching to his wife, Amy.  Amy posted a video Sunday afternoon on Twitter, showing her style as well.   It’s evident from the video that she’s up to the job as she has quite a rocket of an arm.  It shouldn’t be surprising as she was a softball pitcher at UCLA.  She helped the team win the 2010 College World Series.

Aaron Judge

Yankees star slugger Aaron Judge, for the time being, is remaining at the Yankee training complex at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Florida.  He has recently undergone another MRI revealing that his fractured rib continues to heal.  This may mean that possible surgery may not be necessary.  The delay in the start of the baseball season makes it more likely that he will be ready to man right field when the season finally gets started.   In an interview from the parking lot, Judge commented on being happy to have a place to play:

“The great thing is they have this open so we can come here and do some baseball activity and stay ready,’’ Judge said. “You still kind of feel like we are in baseball mode, but it is kind of when you go home. … I have some stuff to do around the house, put some stuff on the wall and cleaning. But I think after I get all the stuff done in my apartment I think I will kind of going crazy.’’

Giancarlo Stanton

When the New York Yankee season gets underway when the CDC guidelines allow it, along with Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton may be in the outfield as well.  During the shortened spring training, he suffered a grade one calf strain.  He has recovered well enough to partake in some baseball activities.  During the 2019 season, Stanton only played in 18 games due to a series of injuries that kept him off the field.  Manager Aaron Boone hopes he will be available at the start of the season.  If he is not, there are several players that can cover his position, including Mike Tauchman, Clint Frazier, and Miguel Andujar, who has played four games during spring training in that outfield position and has handled it well.

DJ LeMahieu

DJ LeMahieu is another New York Yankee major leaguer that has remained at the Tampa complex.  According to Yankee Tyler Wade, LeMahieu has taken the reins and is showing his leadership by setting the tone for the team’s informal workouts as the players make the best of the coronavirus situation.   Other players taking part and staying in shape at the complex are Judge, Stanton, Tyler Wade, Luke Voit, and Gary Sanchez, who is recovering from back soreness.  A full list of the remaining players is not available.  As the state of Florida prepares for the spread of the virus, gyms and sporting complexes may be forced to shut down, driving players to their homes.

According to Bryan Hoch of MLB.com, LeMahieu said being able to work out at Steinbrenner Field is keeping him “sane” amidst the coronavirus shutdown, adding that the gyms are closed in Michigan (where he lives), and the weather is better in Florida.

Mariano Rivera reflects on the coronavirus

Rivera reached out to the Michael Kay show to bring attention to the need for young people to protect themselves and their love ones.  The former great Yankee closer, Mariano Rivera, reflected on his dismay over young people disregarding the seriousness of the coronavirus.

“They have to take this thing serious…because it is serious,” Rivera said. “There’s no time to be playing around. There’s no time to [be] partying, there’s no time to be on the beach. Millennials believe that they’re invincible, you know, and they need to be aware that they can transmit the virus to a lot of their families and friends. People they love.”

 

New York Yankees: 300 Saves for the Cuban Missile

New York Yankees, Aroldis Chapman

The New York Yankees already have the greatest closer of all time in their history books. Mariano Rivera, the only unanimous hall of famer in baseball history, revolutionized the closer position. Rivera earned an astonishing 652 saves and had an incredible 2.21 ERA during his regular season career. Not too mention the incredible history he had in the postseason. The Yankees have been very fortunate when it comes to guys who have manned the closer position. Once Mariano retired, the Yankees transitioned to David Robertson. After David Robertson, the Yankees had Andrew Miller. Then the Yankees went out and acquired the flame thrower of all flame throwers to man the closing position. Aroldis Chapman came to the Yankees in 2016, and he’s been pretty dominant since he’s been here. Yes, there was a detour for a few months which led to the Yankees acquiring Gleyber Torres, but for the most part, Chapman is entering his fifth season for the Yankees and he’s actually getting better with age. He’s also coming up on a prestigious honor for any closer.

Chapman as a Yankee

The Cuban Missile showed some signs of the engine sputtering during his 2017 season. Chapman lost his closers position, and his confidence seemed to be at an all-time low. His ERA was approaching four, and he really couldn’t get anyone out. He couldn’t control his fastball, and when he did, he couldn’t get it by guys. Of course, Chapman was able to put it together by the end of the season and got his ERA down to 3.22. Entering 2018, Chapman started pitching with a new style. Yes, he could still flash 100 on the radar gun, but he started really going to his slider more. In 2017, Chapman threw his slider 172 times. In 2018, that slider usage went up to 234 times, and in 2019 Chapman threw his slider 307 times. Chapman’s increased slider usage has increased his performance across the board. Chapman lowered his ERA in 2018 to 2.45 and that number fell to 2.21 in 2019. Chapman’s slider now makes his fastball even more dynamic. If a player is sitting on a slider, Chapman can blow the fastball by them. If they are sitting fastball, he can buckle them with his slider. Chapman is becoming more of a pitcher rather than a pure flame thrower.

The 300 club awaits

Chapman enters the 2020 season as one of the best relief pitchers in the game. I expect his ERA to stay in the low twos this year, and I expect Aroldis Chapman to pick up his 300th save this season. As for a prediction, Chapman will join the 300 save club and he will have a career high 39 saves this season. Chapman is going to continue to dominate baseball and show why he’s been one of the best closers over the last nine years. Chapman is putting together a hall of fame career for a closer, now he just needs to go out and assist the Yankees with bringing home #28.

The 10 Best Yankees Moments of the Last Decade

New York Yankees, Aaron Judge

While the 2010’s was the first decade that the Yankees did NOT appear in a World Series since the 1910’s, there were still plenty of great moments that happened to our boys in pinstripes. And since everyone is reflecting on what happened to them this past decade, I thought I’d share my top 10 Yankees moments of the last decade.

10. Aaron Boone’s Hot Start

How many managers start their career with back to back 100 win seasons? I mean, seriously, how many managers start their managerial career’s with back to back 100 win seasons?! Aaron Boone’s first two seasons as skipper are about as productive as you can get for a manager. And this includes the copious amount of injuries the Yankees sustained in 2019.

9. Jorge Posada Clinches the Division

2011 was a crazy year for the Core Four. Andy Pettite was a year away from leaving retirement early. Derek Jeter got his 3,000 career hit on a home run in a 5-5 performance. And Mariano Rivera got career save 602. 2011 was also the last season for long time, home grown, Yankee catcher, Jorge Posada. Having a lackluster season, it was thanks to Jorge Posada that the Yankees clinched the 2011 AL East title.

8. The Emergence of the Baby Bombers

Gary Sanchez had a 2016 that would make Shane Spencer blush. In 53 games, he hit .299/.376/.657 with 20 home runs. 2016 also saw Aaron Judge’s first career at bat (I was there. Good golly that was a hot day. But such a majestic shot!). The very next season, the Yankees emerged as one of the most dominant teams in the American League. 

7. Mariano Rivera’s Final Game

It was crazy watching the Yankees pay to have Metallica play “Enter Sandman” exclusively for Mariano on Mariano Rivera day, but there’s just something about watching a grown man reduced to tears over something as simple as one of his lifelong friends saying “It’s time to go.” Watching Giarardi sending Jeter and Pettite out to pull Mo from his final appearance at Yankee stadium was a stroke of genius. But you just wish the Yankees were able pull out the win.

6. 2017 Wild Card Through ALDS

It seemed improbable that the Yankees were going to make it to the post season in 2017, a rebuilding year. But they did. And with their ace on the mound, Luis Severino, it seemed like a sure fire thing that the Yankees would dominate the Twins in the Wild Card game. They went down early. But thanks to Didi Gregorius, the Yankees mounted a first inning comeback to win. And then… there was the ALDS. Down 2 games to none, they improbably came back in 3 straight games to advance to win the series and advance to the ALCS against the 100 win Cleveland Indians.

5. Savages

Aaron Boone was ejected on July 18th. And in his parting rant left us with “savages”. The rest, as they say… is history.

4. Next Man Up

2019 was a disaster of a season with a complete roster of players (and not just any players our best players) ending up on the IL for lengths of time. But with the emergence of DJ LeMahieu and Gio Urshela, the team was able to stay afloat for the incredible 103 win season.

3. Derek Jeter’s 3,000 hit

5-5 with a home run to cross the 3,000 hit plateau… the Captain always had the flair for the dramatic.

2. CC’s Final Pitch

CC Sabathia was a warrior for the Yanks his entire stay. Through all his injuries, the decline in velocity, CC fought hard on every pitch for us in the Bronx. And when it came to Game 4 of the ALCS, literally throwing his arm out of its socket, the man left it all on the field in a way that made his former manager break down and cry on MLB Network’s coverage of the postseason.

Derek Jeter’s Final at Bat

Derek Jeter was the final member of the Core Four to retire. It was tough watching all those Yankees greats that I grew up with finally ride off into the sunset like the legends of baseball they became. So when it came time for Jeter’s final game at Yankee Stadium, people were obviously pretty upset watching how upset Jeter was for most of the game. They took a lead early, but gave it back late. And then, it was magic hour. Tied at 5, 1 out, runner on second, and Jeter lines a typical Jeterian single to right, winning the game. Watching reruns of that game to this day still causes me to tear up a little bit.

And those are my picks for the 10 best moments of the first decade the Yankees didn’t appear in a single World Series.

New York Yankees: The Unlikely Journey from Milk Carton Glove to the Baseball Hall of Fame

New York Yankees, Mariano Rivera

UNCLE BILL’S YANKEE LEGEND SERIES: MARIANO RIVERA.

It might be said that no baseball reliever ever affected a team as Mariano Rivera had on the New York Yankees. The Hall of Famer was the first player to be inducted in the Hall with a 100% vote the first time his name was presented. The boy in Panama that used a stick for a bat and a crushed milk carton for a glove would go on to be the greatest baseball closer of all time.

Mariano Rivera Girón was born in Panama City, Panama, on November 29, 1969. He lived in a two-room shack with a tin roof. His parents Delia and Mariano, his older sister, and two younger brothers lived together down a dirt road in the village of Puerto Caimito. Most of the residents of this seaside village were fishermen. Mariano’s Dad was no different, captaining his own boat. As a child, he loved playing soccer and baseball. One day while playing soccer, he would injure an eye. In his impoverished village, few kids had any sporting goods and fashioned equipment from what was available. A glove was a crushed milk carton, a bat was a selected tree branch, and the baseball was fashioned out of wrapped and taped discarded fishing nets. At the age of 12, his father bought him his first leather glove.

As a teen, his grandfather would take him to the sugar fields where he would be taught to cut cane with precision, with the last-minute flick of the wrist, a movement that would aide him years later with his fluid pitching style. At the age of 16, “Mo” would learn the fishing trade from his father. He would work six days a week, while his spare time was spent playing soccer and baseball. Sometimes his childhood girlfriend Clara would watch him play. One day while fishing, Mariano would nearly be killed in a fishing accident that killed his uncle. At the age of 17, after a series of soccer accidents, he would spend more time on his beloved baseball. The next year he would play shortstop for a local amateur team. In a game, their pitcher had pitched so severely that Mariano would be asked to pitch, even though he had no experience as a pitcher. He threw well and eventually went to baseball tryout in Panama City. Yankee scout Chico Heron was there, and while not impressed by Mariano’s fastball, he was impressed with his delivery and accuracy.

Heron arranged a tryout with Herb Raybourn, the head of Latin American scouting for the Yankees. Raybourn viewed the 155 pound Rivera as a raw talent with a beautiful fluid pitching style. He signed the amateur to a minor league contract with the Yankees in the living room of the family home on February 17, 1990, and thus would begin the 29-year journey to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Rivera reported to the rookie-level Gulf Coast Yankee affiliate. Being away from home, Mariano became homesick and would write home often. His family’s house had no telephone. In Tampa, he was not considered a significant prospect and often only pitched out of the bullpen. At the end of the season, Mariano was allowed to start in a doubleheader that would end the season. In his first and only start of the year, he would pitch seven scoreless innings. In 1991 he would be promoted to the Greensboro Hornets. He recorded 123 strikeouts and walked only 36 in 114 2/3 innings that year while learning the English language. At the end of the season, he would return to Panama and marry his childhood sweetheart Clara. Both he and Clara were very religious and were married in a formal ceremony in front of family and friends.

1992 would be a rough patch for Mariano, first sidelined with elbow stiffness and later in the season requiring surgery to his UCL. The operation was not Tommy Johns surgery, and the ligament didn’t need to be replaced, just repaired. Because it was only a replacement, the Yankee doubted he would miss the entire 1993 season. During rehab, he would play catch with Whitey Ford and Ron Guidry. In the spring of 93, he would return to Greensboro Hornets under pitching duration limitations. A young shortstop Derek Jeter would keep track of his pitch count in games. At the end of the season, the team official scorer didn’t see much of a future for Mariano, saying, “I thought he was on a one-way trip to nowhere.” How wrong was he?. In 1994 he would pitch for three teams, ending up at AAA Columbus. Rivera finished his season with a 10–2 record and a 3.09 ERA overall, but he struggled in Columbus, recording a 5.81 ERA in six starts. He would start 1995 with Columbus going 1-1 in four starts with a 1.50 ERA.

On May 23, 1995, Mariano Rivera would make his major league debut as a starting in a game against the Angels. Rivera had always had a mediocre fastball in the low 90’s, but in his last game with Columbus, it would increase four mph, which was unexplainable, When Mariano would be asked how it happened, he would say it was an act of God. That increase in speed prevented the young Yankee from being traded. During 95, he would both start and relieve. John Wetteland was the Yankee closer. Rivera would not start another game when he was permanently assigned to the bullpen on September 10th. The Yankees would go on to win the first-ever wild card game. In-game 2 of the ALDS against Seattle, John Wetteland had yielded a two-out homer to Ken Griffey Jr., giving the Mariners a 5-4 lead, and he left the game after Edgar Martinez singled. In his first-ever postseason appearance, Rivera struck out the first batter he faced, and the Yankees retied the contest at the bottom of the inning. Rivera would come out at the top of the 13th and pitch 3 1/3 innings of no-hit ball. Yankee catcher Jim Leyritz would win the game for the Yankees with a home run. The Yankees would eventually lose the series when Seattle would take the last three games. In-game five Rivera threw 5 1/3 scoreless innings.

With Rivera’s winning ways and poise on the mound, the Yankees decided not to re-sign Wetteland, and Rivera became the Yankee’s closer. In 1997, he would blow 3 of his first six save opportunities. Joe Torre would speak to him about not demanding so much of himself and not try to be so perfect, and he would go on to 12 saves in a row. I could write volumes about how he would come out on the 8th or the 13th and save the game. But I won’t. I will say that when #42 entered the field to the Metallica tune, “enter sandman,” the Yankees, as well as the opposing team, felt the game was over.

There were very few hiccups in Rivera’s career; one was in game 7 of the Diamondbacks World Series when he failed to save the game in the ninth. He loaded the bases and allowed a bloop single giving the D-backs the 2001 World Series win. Rivera’s career was marked by the steady accumulation of relief pitching records. On June 6, 2006, he passed Dennis Eckersley for fourth place all-time in saves and six weeks later became the fourth major-league pitcher to reach 400 saves. He finished the 2006 season with 34 saves in 37 opportunities and an ERA of 1.80, his fourth consecutive season below 2.00. In 2007 he would sign a three year $45 million contract and would become the highest-paid reliever in baseball. On September 15, he recorded his 479th save to surpass Lee Smith for second place on the all-time save list. With his signature cutter pitch, every player knew what was coming, but few were able to hit it as Rivera would continue to amass saves.

On June 28, 2009, he would become the second pitcher with 500 regular-season saves. The Yankees would win the 2009 World Series under new skipper Joe Girardi. Rivera was the only closer who did not record a loss or blown save that postseason. With Trevor Hoffman retired and his save record for regular-season saves frozen after the 2010 season, Rivera would become all-time saves leader on September 19 at Yankee Stadium, by closing out a 6–4 win against the Twins. The President of Panama would congratulate him. In 2012 after just nine games, Mariano would injure his knee while catching a ball during batting practice that would end his season. Many thought it would be the end of his career. After successfully rehabbing the knee, he returned with a new one year contract. Before the season began, he announced that he would retire after the season was over. Throughout the year, he would receive gifts and be celebrated in ever away park for his incredible career. That final year he amassed a .750 winning record with 44 saves. In his last game at Yankee stadium, Andy Pettitte and Derek Jeter would walk to the mound to take the ball from Rivera; he would break down and cry on their shoulders before being given a loud standing ovation from an adoring Yankee crowd, many of which were crying themselves.

Mariano, in his 19 major league seasons with the Yankees, would be an All-Star 13 times, an MVP candidate nine times, and be a Cy Young candidate six times. Rivera won five American League (AL) Rolaids Relief Man Awards and three Delivery Man of the Year Awards. He also is the owner of five World Series rings. He would have a career of 652 saves and a career 2.21. ERA. In 2007 Yankee Manager Joe Torre would say, “It gets to the point where you take him for granted. You never want to assume anything, but for the 12 years I have been here, he’s the greatest assumption of my life. He has put himself in a place where nobody has ever been.” In his first year of eligibility, Mariano Rivera became the first player to be unanimously inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2019.

Since his retirement, Mariano and Clara reside in Westchester County outside of New York City. In 2009 they founded the Iglesia Refugio de Esperanza (Refuge of Hope Church). Clara serves as the pastor. The couple raised three sons. Mariano is involved with the church but also is active in philanthropic causes for needy families in the United States and his home country of Panama. In 2018, he was appointed to the President’s Council on Sports, Fitness & Nutrition. And so goes the very abbreviated story of the career of the greatest closer of all time.

 

How Blowing Game Seven of the 2001 World Series Saved a Yankees Life

New York Yankees, Mariano Rivera

All New York Yankees fans can remember the night of November 4, 2001. That Sunday night when the nearly impossible occurred: seeing Mariano Rivera blow a lead in the bottom of the ninth by surrendering two runs to the Arizona Diamondbacks in the Game Seven of the World Series and watch Arizona go crazy with delight. Little did anyone that night know that it would save the life of one of Rivera’s own teammates.

Enrique Wilson was a backup infielder whom the Yankees acquired from the Pittsburgh Pirates during the season. He watched from the dugout as the whole thing developed.

Anticipating a Yankee win and subsequent parade, Wilson booked a flight back to his native Dominican Republic a week or so later. When the ninth inning went as it did, Wilson decided to take an earlier flight and canceled the original one. What a decision that turned out to be.

Wilson and his family were scheduled to fly on American Airlines Flight 587 leaving New York for the Dominican Republic. That plane crashed in Belle Harbor in Queens, a borough of New York, just after takeoff. All 265 people on board perished.

When Wilson told Rivera the story, the veteran closer was shaken, but at the same time grateful. He may have blown a World Series, but in losing the 2001 World Series he allowed a teammate to live. That just might be the biggest save of Mariano Rivera’s life.

Wilcy Moore, the First Great New York Yankees Closer

New York Yankees, Mariano Rivera

July 21 will be a special day for New York Yankees legend Mariano Rivera as he takes in the rightful place in the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. Acknowledged as the greatest closer the game has ever known, Rivera was naturally the strongest link in the chain of great closers that helped the Yankees win 40 pennants and 27 World Series. A chain that began with a man named Wilcy Moore.

Moore was a right hander who toiled in the minors for many years before finally getting his chance at the age of 30-with the “Murderers’ Row” Yankees in 1927. He appeared in 50 games that year. Thanks to his sidearm sinkerball, he notched a league-leading 13 saves as well as 13 wins in relief; he also started 12 games.

Throwing 213 innings, Moore went 19-7 with a 2.28 e.r.a. Despite having the lowest e.r.a., Moore did not win the e.r.a. title. Why? Baseball had a rule then that said that pitchers had to have at least 10 complete games with the required number of innings pitched to qualify for the e.r.a. title; Moore only had six. That rule was changed after the season.

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Moore capped off his season by getting the save in Game One of the World Series against the Pittsburgh Pirates, then starting and winning Game Four as the Yankees swept the Bucs on the only World Series ending wild pitch.

Perhaps all those innings had an effect on Moore, as he was not the same pitcher after that. Still, when Mariano Rivera thanks all the people who helped him get to Cooperstown, maybe he should thank the man who originated the role he perfected. Maybe, just maybe, he should say thank you to Wilcy Moore.

 

 

 

New York Yankees: Legend Mariano Rivera to be inducted into Hall of Fame

New York Yankees legend, Mariano Rivera, will be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday. “Mo” had an unbelievable career with the Yankees, and is credited to a lot of the club’s past success. Unsurprisingly, he was voted first ballot with an astounding 425 votes. Congratulations Mo!

River’s career is nothing short of special. A 13 time All-Star and a nine-time MVP candidate (Baseball Reference), Rivera goes down as the best closer in Major League Baseball history.  He holds the all-time record of 652 games saved and 952 games finished.

“Mo” isn’t known for the high-heat. His nasty cut fastball devastated hitters. According to Fan Graphs, Rivera threw his cutter 60.8% during his career. He threw it 80%+ from 2008 to 2013, where it was thrown 92.9% of the time in 2009. Take a look at this chart, some of his statistics are jaw-dropping.

Dominance in the postseason

As phenomenal as he was in the regular season, he is mostly remembered for his dominance in the playoffs. His unbelievable postseason 0.70 ERA among 16 years is nothing short of legendary. The most dominance Mo displayed was in the 1999 postseason and World Series. In three appearances in the World Series, he went 1-0 with two saves while only allowing four baserunners. Because of his dominance, Rivera earned the MVP award for that World Series.

Among all the monumental records and statistics Rivera posted, the most impressive one: more people have walked the moon (12) than men who have scored against Mariano Rivera in the postseason (11). That ridiculous stat sums up Rivera’s postseason career in one sentence.

Another Yankee legend and soon-to-be Hall of Famer, Derek Jeter, had this to say about his teammate in a blog post on his website, The Player’ Tribune: “The thing I respect most about Mo is that what you see is what you get. A lot of people I’ve met over the years, they’ve asked me what Mariano Rivera is like off the field. And I’ll tell you what I tell them – which is that he’s pretty much the same person you watched for all those years on the mound.”