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NEW YORK: Keith Hernandez was startled to see Mets owner Steve Cohen calling out of the blue Tuesday, then put at ease when the pair spent 10 minutes talking about New York’s splashy offseaon.
Then he said, Thats not the reason I’m calling,’ and then he dropped the bomb on me, Hernandez said. Caught me completely by surprise.
A captain and commentator beloved in Queens for nearly four decades, Hernandez will have his No. 17 retired by the Mets prior to a July 9 game against Miami. New York announced the honor Tuesday, shortly after Cohen called to inform the 68-year-old Hernandez.
I had no idea, Hernandez said Wednesday. It’s just kind of soaking in and sinking in now, today, the import of this. It is really, to think of it, I’m so honored. This is the highest honor that an organization can give to a player.
Hernandez will be the fourth Mets player to have his number retired, with his No. 17 standing alongside Tom Seavers 41, Mike Piazzas 31 and Jerry Koosmans 36 at Citi Field. Koosmans number was retired in August. Managers Gil Hodges (14) and Casey Stengel (37) have also had their numbers retired.
You know, I grew up as a kid like everybody else, going to baseball games, and going to some of those parks with the names up on the wall, Hernandez said. This is unbelievable.
Hernandez was inducted into the Mets Hall of Fame in 1997 and also joined the St. Louis Cardinals’ Hall last year. He ranks second in Mets history with a .297 batting average, and he won a team-record six of his 11 Gold Gloves in New York.
The Bay Area native propelled the Mets to a World Series title in 1986 and was appointed the franchises first captain the next year by manager Davey Johnson. A fan favorite who parlayed his success into appearances on Seinfeld and elsewhere, Hernandez joined the Mets broadcast booth in 1999 and has won three Emmys for Best Sports Analyst.
He just brought a winning culture, former teammate and current TV partner Ron Darling said. In the way he moved, the way he acted and the way he played. The one thing I think Keith did for that entire ballclub, he was not a rah-rah guy, he was not a guy who said a lot in that clubhouse, but he brought it every night.
The five-time All-Star was on the Baseball Writers’ Association of America Hall of Fame ballot for nine years but never got more than 10.8% of the ballots, well short of the 75% threshold for enshrinement.
Baseball’s analytics wave has shined a fresh light on his talents. In particular, his .386 on-base percentage went underappreciated during his career, but through a modern lens, he compares well to others in the Hall. It’s possible he may find his way to Cooperstown yet via an era committee vote, and this recognition from the Mets could help.
The number retiring is something that is enormously significant, and such an honor, Hernandez said. Whether it turns into me getting consideration for that down the road, we’ll have to wait and see.
Fourteen players have worn No. 17 since Hernandez left New York, but none since Fernando Tatis in 2010. Hernandez retired in 1990, and the next year, ace David Cone wore it to commemorate Hernandez’s career.
I dont think bewilderment is the right term, but I do feel like Im lost in space that this happened to me, an honor like this, Hernandez said. Its something I never dreamed of.”
You dream of being on a world championship team, you dream of being a batting champion or an MVP, he added. The thought of having a number retired, I can tell you never crossed my mind as a kid growing up.
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