Rays 4, Yankees 0: Closing Scene: Hugs and Tears in Rivera’s Last Home Game

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 September 2013 | 13.07

It was supposed to be a meaningless game, the first at Yankee Stadium in 20 years, but there was nothing meaningless about it for Mariano Rivera or the announced crowd of 48,675 that came to say goodbye to an icon.

In another emblematic moment in the Yankees' storied history, Rivera made an emotional farewell appearance at the Stadium on Thursday night, breaking down in tears on the mound in the embrace of Andy Pettitte, who had come to take Rivera out of the game.

"I knew that was the last time," Rivera said. "It was a totally different feeling. Something I've never felt before. I don't know how I got those two guys out."

After pitching his final one and a third innings at Yankee Stadium in his 19th and final season, Rivera, baseball's career saves leader, stood and watched as Pettitte and Derek Jeter, his longtime teammates, came to the mound as emissaries for Manager Joe Girardi.

Before the ninth inning of what turned into a 4-0 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays, Girardi went to Laz Diaz, the home-plate umpire, and asked for permission to let Pettitte and Jeter make the pitching change, and Diaz agreed.

As he walked to the mound alongside Jeter, Pettitte tapped his right arm to signal for the replacement pitcher, Matt Daley, then took the ball from Rivera's hand. Rivera wrapped his arms around Pettitte, who is also retiring after the season, and buried his face in his shoulder, sobbing.

"I didn't say anything at first, and I didn't expect for him to be quite so emotional," Pettitte said. "He broke down and gave me a bear hug, and I bear-hugged him back. I mean, he was really crying. He was weeping, and I could feel him crying on me."

With a gentle prod from Jeter, Rivera finally looked up, hugged Jeter and walked off the mound as the fans, the Yankees and the Rays stood and cheered.

 "I'm glad Joe let us be a part of it," Jeter said, "because we've been like brothers for 21 years."

After hugging all his teammates in the dugout, Rivera emerged for one last wave to the sold-out Stadium. But the tears did not end there.

Girardi, whose contract runs out after the season, broke down in tears during a postgame news conference as he recalled his career with Rivera, which evolved from battery mate (Girardi was Rivera's catcher from 1996 to 1999) to coach and finally to manager.

"This is as good as it gets, and it's probably as special a going-out for any player I've ever seen," Girardi said, adding, "One thing about our fans, they understand what Mo has meant to this organization."

Rivera was not the only one to be saluted. After Daley recorded the final out of the ninth inning, the Rays waited to take the field as the fans chanted for Pettitte, who at first was reluctant to emerge from the dugout, having already had an emotional farewell when he pitched Sunday. But when he saw that the Rays would not take the field until he came out, he finally emerged and waved.

"Sunday was incredible and great closure for me," Pettitte said, "and this was a bonus. It's kind of bittersweet about the playoff chances being done, but I don't think it would have been able to go down like it did tonight if we were still right there and fighting for it."

Rivera's final entry onto the Yankee Stadium field was dramatic. As the bullpen door swung open with one out in the eighth, a recording of the longtime announcer Bob Sheppard's voice announced his entrance into the game. Rivera trotted across the outfield grass for the final time as the crowd saluted him with a thundering standing ovation while the familiar strains of his theme song, Metallica's "Enter Sandman," rang out.

As Rivera warmed up, the entire Rays team stood at its dugout and clapped along with the fans, eliciting a tip of the cap from Rivera, who then got down to business.

He calmly recorded the two final outs of the eighth and then the first two outs in the ninth — another perfect outing, if not a save — even as the Yankees lost.

After the eighth, Rivera retreated to the trainers' room and as he applied heat to his arm to keep it warm, he started to have a flood of memories, flashbacks from his days in the minor leagues, through all five World Series championships he helped the Yankees win, his ascendancy as he became hailed as the game's greatest closer, and finally to that very moment.

"I was being bombarded with emotions and feelings," Rivera said.


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