Greenwich Time

Teixeira earns Georgia Tech degree

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ATLANTA — Mark Teixeira earned plenty of accolades over his long tenure in the big leagues. Five Gold Glove trophies. Three Silver Slugger awards. A World Series ring.

Made a lot of money, too. Still, Teixeira felt something was missing.

That gap in his resume will be filled Saturday when he graduates from Georgia Tech with a degree in business administra­tion, more than two decades after he left campus to pursue a profession­al baseball career.

“I’m super proud to able to say I’m a Georgia Tech graduate now,” Teixeira said on a Zoom call this week. “I’ve always said I’m an alum. It was weird saying that.“

Teixeira played three years for the Yellow Jackets, becoming one of the best college players in the nation (and meeting a fellow student who became his wife), before heading to the Texas Rangers as the No. 5 overall pick in 2001.

He made it to the big leagues two years later, launching a 14-year career that included three All-Star Game appearance­s, nine 30-homer campaigns, eight seasons with at least 100 RBIs, and a World Series title with the New York Yankees in 2009.

Teixeira spent most of his career with the Rangers and the Yankees, though in between he returned to Atlanta to play parts of two seasons with the Braves.

He retired after the 2016 season and moved straight into broadcasti­ng, spending four years as an ESPN analyst while also dabbling in real estate and investing ventures, much of it geared toward revitalizi­ng neighborho­ods on Atlanta’s west side.

When the COVID-19 pandemic struck, Georgia Tech joined most other schools in offering virtual classes.

Teixeira, who had left ESPN and moved to Austin, Texas, realized this was likely a once-in-a-lifetime chance to earn his degree.

“I didn’t need to do it,” he said. “But it’s something that was always in the back of my mind. I always wanted to finish my degree.”

Still active in Georgia Tech affairs — a terrace at the school’s baseball stadium bears his name — Teixeira got in touch with university President Angel Cabrera. Together, they worked out a plan that would allow the former big leaguer to complete the 41 hours he needed for his degree.

Teixeira conceded that academics was not his top priority during his first stint at Georgia Tech.

“I majored in baseball,” he said with a chuckle. “Let’s be honest. I majored in baseball and minored in business.”

He was much more committed to his schoolwork this time around, but the long layoff posed some challenges.

For starters, many of the classes he took the first time around were no longer part of the curriculum, so it took some finagling to make sure everything matched up and he didn’t lose any of the credit hours he had already earned.

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