Yanks honor Martinez with plaque

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NEW YORK (AP) — Some of the most memorable moments of Tino Martinez’s life were packed into one hectic day: Dec. 7, 1995.

NEW YORK (AP) — Some of the most memorable moments of Tino Martinez’s life were packed into one hectic day: Dec. 7, 1995.

It was his 28th birthday. His daughter, Victoria, was born. And he was traded from the Seattle Mariners to the New York Yankees.

Nearly two decades later, Martinez was honored with a plaque in Monument Park.

The slugger’s tenure in pinstripes was celebrated during a 17-minute ceremony on the field before New York’s 6-1 loss to the Baltimore Orioles. The former first baseman credited his teammates and said he never dreamed of such a moment back when he was playing.

“I’m totally overwhelmed,” Martinez told the sellout crowd of 47,165 from a podium near home plate. “I’m honored and humbled by it, but as I said, it’s really a result of the success of the team I played on.”

Martinez’s plaque becomes the 27th placed in the elegant area behind the center-field fence at Yankee Stadium, where all-time greats such as Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle are feted with monuments, along with late owner George Steinbrenner.

A clutch hitter with left-handed power, Martinez helped the Yankees win four World Series championships and five AL pennants from 1996-2001. He returned for a seventh season with New York in 2005 and finished his Yankees career with a .276 batting average, 192 homers and 739 RBIs.

“He was a great Yankee,” former teammate and current New York manager Joe Girardi said. “Tino brought an edge. He brought a real edge to the game and had high expectations.”

Two of Martinez’s signature swings were World Series home runs at the previous Yankee Stadium — a go-ahead grand slam during Game 1 in 1998 against San Diego, and a tying shot with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning in Game 4 of the 2001 classic against Arizona.

“The team rallied around Tino,” former Yankees pitcher David Cone said. “Tino was the key power piece in the middle of that lineup that really set up that run.”

When he learned the Mariners were planning to trade him after the 1995 season, Martinez told Seattle manager Lou Piniella he would like to go to New York. That meant replacing retiring Yankees captain Don Mattingly at first base, but Martinez took on that unenviable task and soon became a fan favorite himself.

For the deal to be completed, Martinez said, he needed to agree to a contract with the Yankees. Going into the meeting, he said he told his agent: “Whatever they’re going to give me, I’ll take it.”

“He had some really big shoes to fill,” said Girardi, who escorted Martinez’s mother, Sylvia, to her seat on the field. “Tino had to kind of earn his stripes. He did it fairly quickly.”