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Jeter, Walker take different routes to Hall

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK — Derek Jeter and Larry Walker rarely crossed paths during their time in the major leagues.

“There was one time in the Bahamas, playing blackjack, that we sat down for a little while with Matt Damon, and we sat there and played for a little while,” Walker recalled of a gambling evening where athletes and thespians mixed.

A baseball odd couple, they sat on the dais in a penthouse hotel ballroom, baseball’s newly minted Hall of Famers.

Jeter, a first-round draft pick, came within one vote of becoming the second unanimous pick.

Walker, a youth hockey player who took up baseball at age 16, was elected in his 10th and final try on the baseball writers’ ballot, making it with just six votes more than the 75% required.

Finding out his plaque in Cooperstow­n will be adjacent to bronze of Yankees teammate Mariano Rivera, the first unanimous pick in a writers’ vote, Jeter revealed some emotion.

“I don’t care where they put they put me — put me in the restroom,” he said. “But to be next to Mo is quite a thrill.”

As always Mr. Cool, Jeter was unassuming, humble, collected and quick with a quip to deflect. Walker was more raw as they told stories of their passage from amateurs to elite: Of the 19,960 players to appear in a major league game, they will be Nos. 234 and 235 inducted to the Hall, according to its tally, including 134 chosen by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America.

“It doesn’t get any better than this,” Jeter said. “There’s no more awards. There’s no other place you can go. This is it.”

Walker, like Jeter, put on the cream-colored Hall of Fame jersey. When he took the phone call Tuesday informing him of election, he was wearing a garish yellow-andblack Spongebob Squarepant­s shirt. His 20-year-old daughter Canaan sent a text “Way to go, dad . ... You’re trending,” he recalled.

“I knew we’re going to go sit outside and hang out up front, so I just wanted something a little warmer,” he said.

Jeter was an $800,000 bonus baby, won five World Series titles and became captain of the Yankees. Among baseball’s best-known stars, he was a GQ icon, no hair ever out of place — back when he had hair.

“How’s it look?” he said after putting on the Hall jersey.

Walker was somewhat dazed.

“Pinch me,” he exclaimed. Born in British Columbia, Walker signed with the Montreal Expos for $1,500.

“Bought my girlfriend a necklace and she dumped me and had only about $1,000 left from that $2,000 Canadian,” he said.

He was so unfamiliar with baseball that when he started that during a 1985 New YorkPenn League game he ran across the infield from third to first after a line drive on a hit-and-run, not realizing he had to retouch second. In 1994 while with Montreal, he handed the ball to a fan after Mike Piazza’s foulout, thinking it was the third out, allowing the Dodgers’ Jose Offerman to tag up from first and sprint to third.

Walker spent his best decade in the mile-high air of Colorado’s Coors Field, then finished in St. Louis. His only Series appearance was when the Rockies were swept by the Red Sox in 2004. He points out he was 0 for 18 in his career against Wally Whitehurst, a pitcher with a career record of 20-37.

Asked whether he would be in the Hall if he hadn’t raked in the thin air, he quickly replied: “absolutely not.”

“I get it. Coors Field’s a great place to hit. There’s no backing away from that,” he said. “But I believe with that, I did it better than anybody else at that ballpark. So that had to be some considerat­ion, I guess.”

Jeter, of course, played for the Yankees’ famously demanding owner George Steinbrenn­er.

“He had a real tough time comprehend­ing that over a course of a 162-game season you may lose a game,” he recalled. “I can say I had the same mindset on the field.”

He was the perfect pinstriped player, a Yankees lifer.

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