Jeter thrilled to see Rivera be a unanimous Hall of Famer

MIAMI (AP) — Mariano Rivera's first victory for the New York Yankees came on May 28, 1995. A day later, Derek Jeter made his debut with the club.

They've been linked ever since.

Rivera will go into the Baseball Hall of Fame this year as the first person to be chosen unanimously by the voting members of the Baseball Writers Association of America, and Jeter seems very likely to be enshrined at the hall in Cooperstown, New York next year in his first season of eligibility.

And Jeter, now the chief executive officer for the Miami Marlins, is thrilled that Rivera is the first to carry 100 percent of the vote.

"First, it's hard to believe that no one has gone in unanimously prior to him," Jeter said. "But no one deserves it more than him. You're talking about someone that did his job as well as anyone that played the game. He's a quality individual. He's a Hall of Fame person outside of just being a Hall of Fame player."

Both spent their entire big-league career with the Yankees. Rivera pitched for 19 seasons and retired after 2013 with a record 652 career saves; Jeter played for 20 seasons and retired after 2014. They helped the Yankees win five World Series titles from 1996 through 2009.

"I had the privilege and pleasure to play with him since I was 18 years old," Jeter said. "We grew up together. We're like brothers. I couldn't be more excited for him."

Jeter, who is overseeing the latest rebuilding effort by the Marlins and spoke Monday while several construction crews were working behind him on various parts of Marlins Park, said he hasn't given much thought to the likelihood of his own enshrinement in Cooperstown in 2020.

"I've got a lot of other things to think about," Jeter said.