American baseball shortstop who captained the New York Yankees to five World Series championships and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2020
Born in Pequannock, New Jersey in 1974, Derek Sanderson Jeter grew up in Kalamazoo, Michigan, where he developed his baseball skills and dreamed of playing for the New York Yankees. His exceptional high school performance caught the attention of major league scouts, leading the Yankees to select him sixth overall in the 1992 MLB Draft. After four years developing in the minor leagues, Jeter emerged as the Yankees' starting shortstop in 1996. Jeter's peak years coincided with one of baseball's most dominant dynasties. He captured American League Rookie of the Year honors in 1996, helping lead the Yankees to their first World Series championship in 18 years. The late 1990s established him as the cornerstone of a team that won four championships in five seasons (1996, 1998, 1999, 2000), with Jeter earning World Series MVP honors in 2000. His clutch performances in postseason play became legendary, exemplified by "The Flip" — his instinctive relay throw that cut down Jeremy Giambi at home plate during the 2001 American League Championship Series. The Yankees captured a fifth championship with Jeter in 2009. Over his 20-season career, spent entirely with New York, Jeter accumulated 3,465 hits while maintaining a .310 batting average. He earned 14 All-Star selections and holds Yankees franchise records for hits, games played, at-bats, doubles, and stolen bases. Despite criticism of his defensive range, he produced memorable plays and won five Gold Glove Awards. Jeter's impact transcended statistics. His leadership, professionalism, and consistency made him the face of baseball's most successful franchise during his era. The Baseball Hall of Fame inducted him in 2020 with 99.75% of the vote, the third-highest percentage in history. Following retirement, he became chief executive and part-owner of the Miami Marlins, cementing his status as the most celebrated Yankees player since Joe DiMaggio.
Championship leadership, clutch hitting, and iconic moments as Yankees captain
"The Flip" — a blind relay throw in the 2001 ALDS that cut down Jeremy Giambi at the plate — is the most celebrated individual defensive play in the past 30 years of baseball.
Did You Know?How They Played
Clutch hitter, excellent baserunner, strong defensive shortstop
Lasting Impact
One of baseball's greatest shortstops and leaders, 5-time World Series champion
Career Honours
- World Series Champion 5x
- World Series MVP (2000)
- Rookie of the Year (1996)
- Hall of Fame (2020)
- 14x All-Star
- 5x World Series Champion
- World Series MVP 2000
- AL Rookie of the Year 1996
- 5x Gold Glove
- 5x Silver Slugger
| Team | Period | Games |
|---|---|---|
| New York Yankees | 1995–2014 | 2747 |