NEW YORK, Sept. 9, 2009

Jeter Ties Gehrig for Yankees Hit Record

Slugger Reaches 2,721 Hits in Yankees' Uniform to Reach Record Held by Gehrig for 70 Years

  • New York Yankees' Derek Jeter tips his cap after hitting a single during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays on Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2009, at Yankee Stadium in New York.

    New York Yankees' Derek Jeter tips his cap after hitting a single during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays on Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2009, at Yankee Stadium in New York.  (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun)

(AP)  Derek Jeter and Lou Gehrig are tied at the top.

Jeter matched the New York Yankees record for hits with a seventh-inning single Wednesday night against Tampa Bay. Jeter's third hit of the game gave him 2,721 in a Yankees uniform, tying a mark held by Gehrig for more than 70 years.

Jeter had a chance to break the record in the eighth inning, but he walked against reliever Grant Balfour.

Already on their feet in anticipation, fans at Yankee Stadium let loose with a roar when Jeter's sharp grounder inside the first-base line got by a diving Chris Richard in the seventh.

Jeter's parents, watching from an upstairs box between home plate and first base, raised their arms and exclaimed in excitement.

Jeter took off his helmet and twice waved it to the crowd of 45,848 during an ovation that lasted about 2 minutes. Rays players and coaches clapped as Jeter stood at first base.

After entering the game in an 0-for-12 slump, his longest hitless stretch this season, Jeter broke out of the rut with a bunt single toward third base leading off the bottom of the first inning. He beat the play without a throw, bringing a standing ovation from the crowd.

With cameras flashing all around the ballpark on every pitch to Jeter, he grounded out in the third inning against Rays starter Jeff Niemann and drove a ground-rule double to straightaway center in the fifth.

On his first chance to tie Gehrig, Jeter came through in fitting fashion - with an opposite-field hit.

In the middle of the eighth inning, the large video board in center field showed a replay and flashed "Congratulations Derek!"

Jeter also swiped second base in the first inning for his 300th career steal, which ranks second on the franchise list behind Rickey Henderson (326).

Gehrig's final hit came on April 29, 1939, a single against the Washington Senators. The Iron Horse had held the club record for hits since Sept. 6, 1937, when he passed Babe Ruth.


© MMIX, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by incog-nito September 10, 2009 4:22 PM EDT
Unless Baseball truly addresses the banned substances issue, any new record is suspect and should be marked with an asterisk.
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by rharrin1 September 10, 2009 5:52 AM EDT
The only difference Jeter has had many more at bats than Lou ever had, so it didn't break any record.
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by betterusa September 10, 2009 12:20 PM EDT
Hey idiot; that argument is as lame as you are.

Jeter has 8589 AB and Gehrig 8001 AB. Jeter has 873 Walks; Gehrig 1508 Walks. Total each was at the plate is Jeter (9462; Gehrig 9509). Stats are not consistent with Rose/Cobb for lifetime hits (Rose had over 2600 more at bats) or Ruth/Bonds for HRs. This is what baseball stats are all about - nuumbers.
by scubbasteve01 September 9, 2009 10:48 PM EDT
Jeter! JETER! JETER! Congratulations buddy! Have a nice day! JETER! JETER! JETER!
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