Beloved Yankees Pitcher Andy Pettitte Announces Retirement
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) -- A long and storied career is finally coming to an end.
Yankees pitcher Andy Pettitte will retire after this season.
The team announced Pettitte's decision in a news release Friday, hours before opening its final homestand. The 41-year-old left-hander initially retired after the 2010 season, but he sat out only one year before returning to the Yankees.
Mike On Andy Pettitte
"I've reached the point where I know that I've left everything I have out there on that field," Pettitte said in the statement. "The time is right. I've exhausted myself, mentally and physically, and that's exactly how I want to leave this game."
In a nice bit of symmetry, Pettitte is scheduled to make two more starts this season — one at Yankee Stadium and the other in his hometown of Houston.
Pettitte is set to pitch against the San Francisco Giants on Sunday, when the Yankees will honor longtime closer Mariano Rivera. Baseball's career saves leader also is retiring.
"One of the things I struggled with in making this announcement now was doing anything to take away from Mariano's day on Sunday," Pettitte said. "It is his day. He means so much to me, and has meant so much to my career that I would just hate to somehow take the attention away from him."
Rivera has saved 72 of Pettitte's 255 career wins, the most for any set of teammates in major league history.
Pettitte holds MLB records for postseason wins (19) and starts (44), but it would take quite a surge by the Yankees for him to get an opportunity to add to those marks. They began the day 3½ games behind Tampa Bay and Texas for the second AL wild card, with three other teams in between.
A three-time All-Star, Pettitte has helped New York to seven AL pennants and five World Series championships during 15 seasons in pinstripes. He was the MVP of the 2001 AL championship series and is the franchise leader in career strikeouts with 2,009.
He joined old buddies Rivera, Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada to make up the "Core Four" that has led the Yankees to more than a decade and a half of sustained success.
Jeter, limited by injuries to just 17 games this season, will be the only one left next year.
"I'm announcing my retirement prior to the conclusion of our season because I want all of our fans to know now — while I'm still wearing this uniform — how grateful I am for their support throughout my career," Pettitte said. "I want to have the opportunity to tip my cap to them during these remaining days and thank them for making my time here with the Yankees so special."
Pettitte is 10-10 with a 3.93 ERA in 28 starts this season. After a rough patch, he has pitched particularly well down the stretch with New York desperately chasing a playoff berth.
His final start is scheduled for next weekend against Houston, the only team Pettitte has played for besides the Yankees. He spent 2004-06 with the Astros, teaming with Roger Clemens to help the club make its only trip to the World Series in 2005.
Selected by the Yankees in the 22nd round of the 1990 draft, Pettitte is 255-152 with a 3.86 ERA in 18 big league seasons. That makes him one of 26 pitchers — the only one still active — with a record at least 100 games over .500.
Eighteen of those pitchers are in the Hall of Fame.
Pettitte is 19-11 with a 3.81 ERA in the postseason, giving him more postseason wins than eight major league teams. He also ranks first in postseason innings (276 2-3) and second in strikeouts (183).
In 2009 with the Yankees, he became the first pitcher to start and win the clinching game of all three series in one postseason.
Petite's teammate Mariano Rivera is also on the road to retirement. He will be honored with festivities at Yankee Stadium prior to Sunday's game.
Beloved Yankees Closer Mariano Rivera To Be Honored On Sunday
Rivera has already been honored by other teams during Yankees road trips throughout the season. He was also honored by Foley's Sports Bar where owner Shaun Clancy called the closer a role model.
"Played the game the right way. He's acted the right way and that's the thing with Mariano. You want your kids wearing number 42," Clancy told 1010 WINS reporter Glenn Schuck.
On Friday employees at Foley's were answering the phone "Mariano's Sports Bar".
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