He may not have made the play, but it's the effort shown in this photo that tells the story.
Jorgie made his first appearance for the Yankees against the Mariners on September 4th, 1995. He didn't bat in that game, which is kind of funny to look back at now. This is a guy whose Hall of Fame career (yeah, I'm calling it) is based around what he did with the bat, and not so much the glove. But instead of batting in his first game, he entered the game in the 9th inning for Jim Leyritz as the catcher. Posada actually didn't get his first hit (a single) until his 7th at bat over a year later against the Brewers. Another funny thing I saw here is that he moved to 2B on a groundout by Mike Aldrete, then scored from 2B on a single by Luis Sojo. Why is that funny? First of all, how often do you remember Posada advancing two bases on a single? Secondly, the guy that knocked him in was one of the reasons Posada was moved from 2B to C in the minors.
Jorge started one more game in 1996, and was a substitute in a couple more games after that, but his career with the Bombers didn't really start until 1997, when he walked up to the plate 224 times. From 1997 to 2010, when he was at least a part-time catcher (catching one game the following season doesn't do it for me), Jorge's WAR was 48.2. Looking at catchers over that time period, Posada was 2nd to another Hall of Fame catcher... Ivan Rodriguez. In that time he hit 261 HR, second only to Mike Piazza... another Hall of Famer. Over those 14 years he had the 2nd highest OBP (Mauer was #1, in 867 less games), and the most RBI (1021).
But as I alluded to in the opening paragraph, Jorge Posada's legacy goes further than that. I'll start with this quote from Mr. Posada during the press conference this morning, where he announced his retirement...
"I could never wear another uniform. I will forever be a Yankee."
I'm sure there will be people calling bulls*** on that, saying that he would have played elsewhere but he didn't get an offer. Well, the fact that he didn't wait another month or so shows that that's untrue. If he had held off on retiring I have to believe somebody would have stepped up, namely the Tigers after the loss of Victor Martinez. Not to mention that MLBTR reported that the Rays, Orioles, and Phillies had interest too. But the fact is that when somebody thinks of Yankee players, Posada's face is bound to pop into their heads. That's what'll happen when a guy was part of 4 World Championships with them (1998, 1999, 2000, 2009), played in two more World Series as a Yankee (2001, 2003), and 9 other postseasons in pinstripes (1995, 1997, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011).
I'm going to let others speak for me on Jorge's importance outside of the numbers...
"He plays the game, I think, the way Thurman played it. " - Diana Munson
"Jorge is a good kid and he had a wonderful career. The Yankees don't win those championships without him." - Yogi Berra
"Jorge was one of the cornerstones of all those championship teams, handling the pitching staff all those years." - Tino Martinez
"He was one of the greatest catchers of his era, and one of the best Puerto Rican players to ever play the game" - Bernie Williams
"He played under pressure as well as anybody for me." - Joe Torre
"We're going to miss that intensity and what he brought to the game everyday." - Joe Girardi
"He's a brother..." - Derek Jeter
"Jorge was obviously one of the heart and soul pieces of all those championships with us." - Andy Pettitte
"Jorge has bled the pinstripes for a long, long time, and he played with a passion that certainly rubbed off on his teammates." - Alex Rodriguez
"in my mind, he was the greatest catcher." - David Wells
"Jorge was one of my most favorite teammates of all time." - Paul O'Neill
Jorge didn't say he would try coaching, but there's no doubt in my mind that he'd make an excellent one. The game is played through catchers, so nobody knows the game like they do. And we're talking about a catcher that spent 17 seasons in MLB. I'd tell him to take a year off, where he can not only relax and enjoy things, but he can reflect on his career and think about what he wants from there.
He probably won't see this, but just in case I want to end this by saying "thank you, Jorgie".
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Sorry for the Capatcha... Blame the Russians :)