Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Rivera gets ready for his day at Hall of Fame

Relief ace remains humble after becoming first unanimous choice for Cooperstow­n immortalit­y

- By John Kekis AP Sports Writer

COOPERSTOW­N, N.Y. >> It never changed for Mariano Rivera — from his childhood in the fishing village of Puerto Caimito in Panama to the pitcher’s mound at Yankee Stadium.

“I always wanted to be the last guy to kick the ball or took the last shot at the basket. Give me the ball,” Rivera said. “I wanted to contribute to this victory. I wanted to help my team do whatever it took to win, and it worked many times.”

With that mindset came greatness.

A lightly regarded pitcher when signed as an amateur free agent with the New York Yankees in 1990, Rivera struggled as a starter but found his niche as a reliever with a devastatin­g cut fastball.

The Yankees won seven pennants and five World Series with Rivera in the bullpen. His major league record of 652 saves was his ticket to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Not for nothing was nicknamed Sandman, after the Metallica song “Enter Sandman” that boomed across Yankee Stadium whenever he headed to the mound, ready to silence bats.

His greatness on the mound and his humble spirit — win

or lose — helped Rivera achieve another milestone. He’s the only player in history to be elected unanimousl­y , receiving all 425 votes in the January balloting.

“I feel humbled that I was the one that the Lord blessed,” said the 49-yearold Rivera, who will be inducted Sunday. “It won’t change my life, but it’s something that you know that you were the first one. That is special.”

Rivera joins Rod Carew as the only Panamanian­s elected to the Hall of Fame. He heads a class that also includes pitchers Mike Mussina, Lee Smith and the late Roy Halladay, and designated hitters Edgar Martinez and Harold Baines.

Baines and Smith were selected in December by a veterans committee. Rivera, Mussina, Martinez and Halladay were elected in January by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America.

Rivera grew only stronger in the postseason, allowing just 86 hits with 110 strikeouts, 21 walks and only 11 earned runs in 141 innings and registerin­g 11 saves in the World Series. He also was 4-1 in World Series clinchers, the lone loss in 2001 to the Arizona Diamondbac­ks on a bloop single by Luis Gonzalez with the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth.

“When it comes to the playoffs, you’re talking about facing the best of the best in the critical situations and critical times,” said Rivera, who will deliver part of his induction speech in Spanish to a crowd local officials project to be around 50,000. “I wanted to be in those situations. I wanted to be the last guy that throws that last pitch. I have a passion for it.

“I maybe believe that that was the situation that my abilities went to a different level. Thank God that I was able to function on those critical times.”

And Mussina was thankful for that — Rivera saved 49 of his victories.

Drafted by the Orioles after helping Stanford to two straight College World Series titles in the late 1980s, Mussina went 270-153 in 18 years in the majors and became the first AL pitcher to win at least 10 games in 17 straight seasons. He spent his first decade in Baltimore before signing as a free agent with the Yankees in December 2000, but that elusive title he was chasing never came. The Yankees lost the World Series twice during his eight years in New York.

“I feel really lucky,” Mussina said. “It’s kind of neat ... to be in a situation like this with guys that you played with. I’m honored to be able to stand up there with those guys.”

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

TX Tagline: Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribu­ted.

Drawing Board

Gregorius, adding to his Twitter emojis after Yankees win, debuted his Instagam portraits of Yankees teammates this week with Edwin Encarnació­n with a parrot on his right arm, a reference to Encarnació­n’s parrot wing motion during home run trots.

Anniversar­y

David Cone worked the doublehead­er for the YES Network on the 20th anniversar­y of his perfect game against Montreal.

Buck’s Back

Former Yankees manager Buck Showalter, let go by Baltimore at the end of last season, is working this week as a studio analyst for the Yankees’ YES Network.

Four Hole

Kevin Kiermaier hit cleanup for the first time in his big league career and went 1 for 4 with a double.

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 ?? BILL KOSTROUN — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Yankees’ Mariano Rivera pitches against the Rays in September 2013 at Yankee Stadium.
BILL KOSTROUN — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Yankees’ Mariano Rivera pitches against the Rays in September 2013 at Yankee Stadium.
 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In a November 2009 photo, Rivera, right, and teammate Derek Jeter admire the world championsh­ip trophy after the Yankees defeated the Phillies in Game 6 of the World Series.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In a November 2009 photo, Rivera, right, and teammate Derek Jeter admire the world championsh­ip trophy after the Yankees defeated the Phillies in Game 6 of the World Series.

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