The Capital

For Jeter, 3 others, honor’s all theirs

Yankees captain, Walker, Simmons, Miller enter Hall

- By John Kekis

COOPERSTOW­N, N.Y. — Derek Jeter was simply Derek Jeter on his special day — smooth as silk.

On a cloudy Wednesday afternoon with the temperatur­e in the 70s and a few sprinkles in the air and adoring fans chanting his name, the former Yankees star shortstop and captain was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame after a long wait necessitat­ed by the pandemic.

Greeted by raucous cheers in a crowd that included NBA luminaries Michael Jordan and Patrick Ewing, several of his former teammates, and Hall of Fame Yankees manager Joe Torre on the stage behind him, Jeter took the stage after fellow inductees Ted Simmons, Larry Walker and the late Marvin Miller were honored. Jeter was touched by the moment and acknowledg­ed how different the ceremony seemed in the wake of the recent deaths of 10 Hall of Famers.

“I’m so honored to be inducted with you guys and linked to you forever,” he said. “The Hall of Fame is special because of those who are in it. We’ve lost way too many Hall of Famers over the last 20 months. These are all Hall of Famers who would have or could have been here, so for that reason it’s not the same.”

What was the same was the adoration displayed by the fans, who always marveled at his consistenc­y.

“I had one goal in my career, and that was to win more than everyone else, and we did that, which brings me to the Yankee fans,” Jeter said as the fans erupted again. “Without question, you helped me get here today as much as any individual I’ve mentioned.”

He gave much of the credit to his parents, who were in the audience with Jeter’s wife, Hannah, and their two young daughters.

The ceremony was delayed a year because of the coronaviru­s pandemic and it didn’t matter much to Walker, the second Canadian elected to the Hall of Fame. He gave up hockey when he was 16 to focus on baseball. He was selected in his 10th and final year on the writers’ ballot after a stellar career with the Expos, Rockies and Cardinals that inluded 383 homers and three batting titles.

“It’s taken a little longer to reach this day (but) for all your support I’ve received throughout the years from my home country, I share this honor with every Canadian,” said Walker, who retired in 2005. “I hope that all you Canadian kids out there that have dreams of playing in the big leagues that see me here today gives you another reason to go after those dreams.”

The 72-year-old Simmons, who starred in a 21-year career with the Cardinals and also played for the Brewers and Braves, punctuated his speech to thank four pioneers of free agency — Curt Flood, Catfish Hunter, Andy Messersmit­h, and Marvin Miller — “who changed the lives of every player on this stage today by pushing the boundaries of player rights.”

“Marvin Miller made so much possible for every major league player from my era to the present and the future,” the former catcher said. “I could not be more proud to enter this great hall with this great man. Even though my path has been on the longer side, I wouldn’t change a thing. However we get here none of us arrives alone. I’m no exception.”

Miller, who transforme­d baseball on the labor front by building a strong players union and led the charge for free agency in the mid-1970s, was honored posthumous­ly. Four years before he died at 95 in 2012, Miller respectful­ly asked to be removed from considerat­ion for the Hall of Fame after being passed over several times.

“One thing a ... union leader learns to do is how to count votes in advance. Whenever I took one look at what I was faced with, it was obvious to me it was not gonna happen,” Miller, head of the Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n from 1966-83, wrote in 2008. “If considered and elected, I will not appear for the induction if I’m alive. If they proceed to try to do this posthumous­ly, my family is prepared to deal with that.”

The family didn’t. Instead, Don Fehr, who was hired by Miller to be the union’s general counsel in 1977 and succeeded him eight years later, had the honor.

 ?? HANS PENNINK/AP ?? Former Yankees shortstop and captain Derek Jeter speaks during the National Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony Wednesday in Cooperstow­n, New York.
HANS PENNINK/AP Former Yankees shortstop and captain Derek Jeter speaks during the National Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony Wednesday in Cooperstow­n, New York.

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