Freakonomics Radio - Extra: Mark Teixeira Full Interview
Episode Date: January 19, 2019A conversation with former Major League Baseball player and current ESPN analyst Mark Teixeira, recorded for the Freakonomics Radio series “The Hidden Side of Sports.” ...
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Hey there, I'm Stephen Dubner, and this is a Freakonomics Radio Extra, our full interview with Mark Teixeira, the former baseball all-star who's been appearing in our Hidden Side of Sports series.
Teixeira retired after the 2016 season, having played 14 years in the big leagues.
He hit 409 home runs, he won lots of offensive and defensive awards, and he helped lead the New York Yankees to a World Series title in 2009. Hope you enjoy this conversation with Mark Teixeira, and thanks for listening.
Mark, if you would, then just start by saying your name and what you do. Mark Teixeira, currently an ESPN analyst and real estate developer in Atlanta, Georgia.
Very good.
How old are you now?
I am 38.
Okay.
You played, what, 14 seasons?
15 professionally, 14 in the bigs.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's go back.
So for people who know baseball, Mark Teixeira is a big, big, big, big name.
For people who don't know baseball, and there are people out there, you know, we'll expose them to you. Let's start with you as a kid. Talk
about growing up Baltimore, I believe. Talk about growing up as a kid, your family, your dad was a
Naval Academy graduate. Just describe you, your family, and especially sports.
Yeah. So I kind of had one of those just really
cool childhoods where both my parents were around. I had an older sister. My dad, being a Navy guy,
graduated from the academy, was tough on me, but fair, and really kind of gave me a blueprint
of how to act and treating people with respect and keeping my hair short and making
sure I said, yes, sir, and yes, ma'am, and those type of things, things that he learned at the
Naval Academy. And so I was just really lucky to have a family around me that gave me every
opportunity to succeed. I played every sport as a kid. We didn't have the cell phones and all the
cool technology back in the
day when I grew up in Smyrna Park, Maryland. So I went outside and played.
Was baseball your best sport from the outset?
Always was. And I actually enjoyed playing basketball more. I played backyard football.
I played soccer, tennis. But I was always good at baseball. So I knew baseball was going to be
a sport for my future.
Can you pinpoint the moment or whatever, day, month, year, when you kind of said to yourself,
like, oh, I'm way better than everybody else at this?
Yes. And most kids grow up being, if you're an elite athlete, you're going to be the best kid
on your team. But you never really think you're going to make it until you get that first call or letter from
a pro scout. And I was a sophomore in high school and pro scouts started showing up to my games.
And that's when I was talking to my coaches and talking to my dad and talking to some of
these scouts saying, wow, I could actually play professional baseball. How cool is that?
Right. Now your role model, as I understand it,
was Don Mattingly. Yes. Was he the one? Well, my favorite player, my role model was my dad.
My favorite player growing up was Don Mattingly. Gotcha. And so he was a guy that I loved the way
he played the game. I loved his sweet swing, so smooth at first base. And growing up in Baltimore,
I loved Kyle Ripken, loved Eddie Murray, but Mattingly, there was something about Donnie baseball that just really grabbed me as a young kid.
Right. Okay. So, of course, he was a longtime and beloved and very, very good first baseman for the Yankees, also a very good defensive first baseman.
You became exactly that many years later.
I'm just curious, more of a character issue.
You said your dad was your role model and one can see how that worked
for you. Mattingly was your favorite player. It strikes me that his character was not that
different from your dad's. Keep your head down, right? I'm just curious, what if your favorite
player had been, you know, Reggie Jackson? Would you have become a different kind of player in
person? You know what? I think that's a great question. I think I chose somebody like Don Mattingly because of his character. And, you know, I, while some of
these players, you know, today have lots of flash and flair and, you know, I like the grinders. I
wasn't blessed with amazing speed and just athletic ability that oozed out of my pores,
but I felt like I had a gift to hit a baseball,
and I grinded with everything else. Everything else in my career, I had to work for.
When you say a gift, there's this huge debate in everything in life, anything that involves what we call talent. So it could be sports, but it could be medicine, you name it, about the
difference between A, nurture and nature, and B, talent versus work and what's called deliberate
practice, the 10,000- work and what's called deliberate practice,
the 10,000-hour rule. Tell me where you come down on that. Obviously, you have yourself as an
example, and we know that you were physically talented from an early age, but talk about
what it was that got you to be a professional at the highest level.
I think the gift is number one, because without the gift, you can't take a kid
that has zero athletic ability
and just happens to be a hard worker and he goes to the big leagues. At any given time,
there's a thousand big leaguers out there, but there's probably 10,000 players, whether in
college or amateur baseball or low professional ranks, that are good enough to someday make it.
Talent-wise, you're saying?
Yes. There's 10,000 talented players with
a gift. It's of those 10,000 players, which are the ones that work hard enough? Which are the
ones that figure it out? Which are the ones that get it, that make the right decisions and train
the right way and eat the right way and do preparation for games? Those are the ones that
make it. So I think the gift is first, but then you have to put the time in can you think of a particular player or a group of players who when you were either in high
school or college obviously we know you were very very good but maybe you saw some guys who looked
to be on the surface more talented than you and didn't make it. Yeah, the most talented player that I ever saw as an
amateur was Corey Patterson. And guys that know baseball, he was the fourth or fifth overall pick
from the Chicago Cubs my draft year. And he had a decent big league career. But talent-wise,
I would kill for his talent. And he had some injuries and just couldn't quite make it over
the top. But talent-wise, there were a ton of guys that I thought had more talent than me.
But I thought I figured it out at a young age.
What do you mean by that?
Figured it out means in high school, by the time I was a sophomore and I knew I had a chance, I started preparing.
So I started working out and actually called the Florida State baseball coach because they were
the number one team in the country at the time and said, can you please just send me your workout
regimen? And so I started doing the Florida State baseball workout regimen. I didn't go to my high
school homecoming for three straight years because I was playing fall baseball. I didn't do a lot of
stuff in the summertime. I played 70 games every summer. My friends are going to concerts. My friends are having a good time at the beach and all these kind of things.
And I just figured out young how to make it. And I think that helped me as I went along in the big
leagues because you don't have your A stuff every day or every year even. You got to figure it out
as you go. Right. Okay. So you were a phenomenally talented and bettable, let's say,
high school prospect. Yeah, I became a really top prospect before my senior year. So in my junior
summer, before my senior year, I went to a wood bat tournament, which was all the top prospects
in high school baseball, went to this tournament, and I was the only guy to hit a home run. So all
the scouts, oh my goodness, look at this kid from Maryland.
We've heard about him, but he hit a home run in this tournament.
And now he jumps to the top of the list of high school players.
And Scott Boras' office called me that summer and said, we'd love to talk to you.
Met with Scott and his group, and they were far and above anybody else in the business.
In terms of professionalism?
Professionalism, their preparation, their knowledge of the market,
their knowledge of amateur baseball.
They gave you a really good sense of, okay, this is the landscape of baseball.
This is what your career is going to look like,
and this is how you should make decisions based on that.
So you signed with Boris.
We'll jump ahead now.
We'll come back.
You signed with Boris, and he was your agent for many years, and he helped you sign or helped you get or you signed with Boris. We'll jump ahead now. We'll come back. You signed with Boris, and he was your agent for many years.
And he helped you sign or helped you get or you got with him your ultimate deal, which was in 2009 coming to the New York Yankees, correct?
Yep.
Eight-year, $180 million deal, correct?
Yep.
All guaranteed?
All guaranteed in baseball, yep.
Great.
Now, interestingly, however, you split with Boris a few years into that.
And I guess on the one hand, I understand, like, why do you need an agent anymore once you're signing what's going to be the last deal in your career?
But why did you split?
And talk to me about the relationship of an athlete like you and an agent like him.
Yeah, you know, when I split with Boris, it was more practical reasons than anything else.
It wasn't – we didn't have a falling out.
There was none of that.
But I was in New York, and he was in L.A.
And when you play for the New York Yankees,
and you're the starting first baseman,
and there's all these things that are put on your plate,
you kind of need your agent closer.
And so, no pun intended, I hired Casey Close,
who happens to be a New York guy.
He'd worked with Derek Jeter and the Yankees for years and
years. And so really understood the landscape of the Yankees and New York and charity and marketing
and all these things that happened. And so it just made me a little bit more comfortable being
with an agent. Again, I didn't really need an agent, but just someone that could help me in
New York and be closer. So I guess that gets to the question of what does an agent actually do
for an athlete like you at that level?
And also maybe help people understand the difference between – in some industries, in entertainment, a lot of entertainers have an agent and a manager.
And they may have 18 other advisors and so on.
When we think of an agent, we usually only hear of an agent with an athlete when they're negotiating or signing the deal or when something goes wrong and so on.
But you're talking about all the different elements that come with being a major league
athlete. So A, what does an agent do or should they do? And then B, what did you get Casey
Close involved in? Yeah, well, what an agent does is he really helps support you from the time you
sign your first contract or even before your first contract, and navigate you through the
business waters, the professional waters, and all of the things that can happen to you until you're
a free agent. In baseball, you don't make your living, your career, until you're a free agent.
And so what Scott Boras did for me, which was, and he's the best at it, at 18 years old, we started
our relationship, and he taught me so much about the game. Him and
some of his associates, Bob Brower was kind of my right-hand man. Mike Fiore, he has a great group
of guys around him that said, okay, text your 18 right now. When you're 26 or 28, you're going to
be a free agent. And these are the things that you have to accomplish in your life and your baseball
career to get you to free agency. That's where I think agents in baseball provide the most value. Once you sign your eight-year deal, you don't really need them that
much. But what Casey did for me when I hired him in 2011, I believe, was the Yankees, there's a lot
of charity stuff that you're involved in. There's a lot of off-the-field distractions. And I started
getting hurt a little bit. And you deal with second distractions. And you know what? I started getting hurt a little bit,
and you deal with second opinions, and you deal with general managers questioning,
hey, what's going on with Tex, and does he need surgery? That's where an agent later in your
career can really help, is helping you take some of that pressure off your shoulders when problems
happen. And what about business opportunities? Is that their job
to help bring some to you or maybe filter out the bad from the good? Yeah, marketing opportunities,
yes. But honestly, baseball players don't have a lot of marketing opportunities unless you're
Derek Jeter or Mike Trout. I did a handful of deals a year. So I knew I was going to do my
Nike deal. I knew I was going to do my deal with Steiner Sports for my autographs. And then I had a handful of other print or local media type stuff, local appearances. So it wasn't overwhelming.
What about non-sports related investment though? So I know you're involved in a number of things.
Some of them predate your retirement a couple of years ago. Where do those typically come from?
Are they kind of a la carte ad hoc or do you have a way for
soliciting and sorting? Yes. Most agents don't do that for you. What they will do is they will
hire somebody or point you in the right direction for financial literacy and for financial help and
estate planning. And so I'm with a group called Winpoint, Joe Geyer and his group out of Baltimore.
Joe went to my high school at Mount St. Joe years before me,
but had a really great relationship with a lot of the ex-Orioles and current players in Major
League Baseball. And so he's my business manager. He's the one that handles all of my estate
planning and all of my investments. And I like keeping them separate. If you have all of your
eggs in one basket as an athlete, sometimes you'll make wrong decisions or sometimes your decision-making will get clouded.
So I like having that separation of power when it comes to business deals or investment opportunities.
Now, Scott Boris encourages people to put a lot of eggs in one basket, yes, in terms of investment and mental guidance and so on, yeah?
Yeah.
Scott has – he has so many things that you can take advantage of
under his umbrella. And investment advice is one of them. But the mental conditioning that he has,
Harvey Dorfman was kind of his right-hand man for mental conditioning, literally wrote the book,
The ABCs of Pitching, The Mental Game of Baseball. Harvey Dorfman was one of those guys that when I
was young, when I was learning how
to become a great major leaguer, I leaned on him immensely. And one of the great relationships of
my young career was Harvey Dorfman. Gotcha. Okay. Well, one more thing about agents before we move
on to your playing career. There are those who argue that an inevitable conflict is, especially a very successful agent, Boris maybe being the most, you end up having a roster, a lot of players in your stable.
And then you're dealing with a market where you're only dealing with a limited number of buyers.
There are only 30 teams and for any given player, there might be a very limited pool of let's say two, three, four teams that have the money and the need and so on.
So there are those who argued that if you're with an agent, there may be an inherent conflict of interest in that they may gain leverage by dealing you low, by making a suboptimal deal.
You're exactly right. And this is where every player needs to take control of his career.
You're right. If I'm a first baseman and I want to go to a team that is also looking
at another player that my agent has in his roster, there might be some horse trading there.
Okay, well, take him, but then I got to find a place for Tex and there's back and forth.
Ultimately, the player has to take control. And I tell every young
player, hire a great agent, but also know what he's doing. And the best agents are good at that
horse trading. They're good at getting their clients the best deal no matter what, but you
have to pay attention. So walk me through the deal that you signed with the Yankees again. That was
your final deal. And it was a massive free agent deal that set you and your family up for life, for generations.
So that's amazing, and congratulations because that's a great accomplishment.
Going into that, you were coming most directly from the Braves?
Braves and Angels.
Braves and Angels, right.
Walk me through that deal.
What were the possibilities?
And then talk about the negotiation of that deal and how you made the decision to come to the Yankees. There's probably only five or six that are really interested and really want you.
And I had a family.
I had two young kids and a wife that I wanted to make sure they were happy as well.
So the process for me was not a lot of fun.
Ultimately, it came down to the Yankees, Red Sox, Nationals, Angels, and Orioles.
Those were the five teams that I had face-to-face meetings with.
I wanted to go to a place that had a chance to win every single year.
And one of the things that Scott Boris always told me is,
don't look at the Yankees' current roster.
Don't look at their minor league system.
This team does what it takes every year to be competitive.
And playing in New York, put those pinstripes on, just had too much allure.
And it helped that they matched the offer of some of the other teams okay you come to New York New York loves
you even though you're not a typical you know New York has gotten behind a lot of
guys who are a lot more aggressive than you a lot cockier than you and you were
like the nice good hard-working guy who also happened to be a phenomenal
baseball player very good hitter and a great defensive first baseman.
And then you get here, and first season out, you go and win the World Series.
Talk about setting expectations.
Talk about the high and then the inability to win another one after that and what that was like.
Yeah, my first year in New York in 2009 was a complete whirlwind. I'm getting lost on the way to the ballpark because the new Yankee Stadium was literally brand new.
They opened the doors like three days before the season started.
So all the navigation systems back in 2009, Waze and Google Maps weren't around or weren't as good at least.
So I'm getting lost getting into the ballpark in the Bronx.
And then you have to worry about, you know,
hitting 98-mile-an-hour fastballs that night.
So it was a complete whirlwind.
We win the World Series, and before I knew it,
spring training was around the corner.
And when you get to the top of the mountain, you want to stay there.
The pressure is always there.
But, you know, the rosters just weren't as good.
I mean, I think we can look at ourselves and say 2010 was the best chance we had to win again. I thought we
had a pretty good team in 2010. By 2011, 2012, we just ran out of gas at the end of the season. We
didn't have the team that could make it that far. How much of that is age? A lot of it's age.
We had a team that in 2009 were called old. At 28 years old, I was one of the kids on
the team. And so you get here and you win, but then you look at the best players. You look around
that locker room and go, man, we have a short window here. And that window closed in four years.
But listen, in those four years, we made three ALCSs. We won a whole lot of games. And, yeah, we didn't win another one, but, you know, not a lot of regrets there.
Yeah.
Your ultimate, I guess, decline as a player, you know, it's what happens.
Players get older.
They don't keep getting better, except in rare cases like, you know, Barry Bonds.
And those are usually a little bit chemically aided, as it turns out.
I'm curious about one thing.
So you're a relatively rare
power hitting switch hitter. There aren't a whole lot of them. During your career,
more and more teams started using more and more analytics. Some managers used to put a defensive
shift on some players who pulled the ball a lot, but it became a lot more common. And so now
defenses were putting a shift on you from the left side and the right side,
and your numbers were going down.
Now you were also getting older and declining as a player.
No offense, that's what happens.
I'm curious, in retrospect, whether the degree to which you think that rise in analytics
and the use of the shift and so on was a contributing factor to your decline
and how much of it was just the on was a contributing factor to your decline and how much
of it was just the natural cycle of an aging baseball player? Yeah, I think it's probably,
you know, 70, 30, just the natural age. Without analytics, I still would be retired.
Yeah, I still, my body, you know, analytics doesn't, you know, make your wrist blow out.
Analytics doesn't make you tear up your knee, you know, the things that I had to deal with. So,
but I would say that analytics, you know, took numbers that should have been better and decreased. I mean,
you know, studies show that left-handed hitters hit 20 points lower just across the board because
of analytics and because of the shift. But, you know, for me, I was lucky enough to have a really
great career for the first 10 years. I had a really great 10-year
run. I blew out my wrist in year 11, and that just became very tough. I felt like I was playing
catch-up. I had one more all-star season that I felt really good about, but for me, it was much
more the physical decline. And the analytics side of it, listen, if you're walking, if you're hitting
doubles and home runs, the shift doesn't matter.
And the one year that I did make it back to the all-star game, it's because I was really locked in.
Physically, I felt good, and I was hitting doubles and home runs again.
Right.
What are some ways that you benefited from analytics?
Did you – I don't know if you were a tape rat, if you watched a lot of tape, and I'm curious whether you studied pitchers and so on for their tendencies.
I didn't benefit, I don't think, at all. I was not a tape rat. I was one of those guys,
because I was a switch hitter, I had too many things to think about anyway. I had two full swings, right? One swing is hard to keep up in Major League Baseball. I had two of them.
So early on in my career, I basically told myself, I'm not adding more junk
to my head and complicating things. I'm going to see the ball and hit the ball. Now, did I watch
tape? Absolutely. Did I have positive reinforcement? It's called our hit tape, right? So you look back
at when you're good, what are the pitches you're swinging at? Where are you hitting them? Where are
your hands and your feet and your legs? And what do you look like when you're swinging at, where are you hitting them, where are your hands and your feet and your
legs, and what do you look like when you're hitting those balls? So I use positive reinforcement,
but I wasn't the guy that went up there and said, okay, it's two to one. This guy has a 73%
chance to throw a backdoor slider here. I'm going to look. I never did that. And there's a whole
bunch of players that still don't look at tape. Right. Talk about that for a minute. You don't do that in part, I guess, because you don't think it's going to be productive.
But also, I'm curious, you know, when you talk about sports where there's live action,
as the batter, you're reacting to someone else throwing.
As a pitcher, it's a little bit different.
You're generating the action.
As a golfer, it's different.
You're generating the action from the ball at stop.
And in those cases, we know that the mind can really get in the way, right? When you're reacting theoretically to some
benefit because you don't have the time to quote think, but on the other hand, when you're in the
batter's box and you're dug in and waiting for the pitcher, talk for a moment about that thought
process and maybe when your mind does get in the way. Yep. I had two different swing thoughts that, depending on the pitcher, was my plan. Everyone
says, when you go up to the plate, you need to have a plan. And a guy that threw hard, say 95
and above, my plan was get the head of the bat on the ball. Put the barrel of the bat, square the
ball up, wherever it goes is a positive.
If a guy threw soft, a Greg Maddox type guy, I looked for a location. I said, okay, I'm going
to look for the ball away here. I'm going to stay on it. I'm going to stay square. I'm going to hit
the ball the other way. Or say a guy threw a lot of curve balls. Okay, I'm going to wait for a
curve ball. I'm just going to sit, sit, sit. So that was my plan on fast guys or guys that threw softer. Where you get into problems was your first swing against
that guy who's fast and it was a bad swing. You go, oh, wait a second. I'm going to change my
plan here. And I think he's going to throw, I think he's going to throw me a curveball and I'm
going to sit on curve and he throws you another fast ball and you break your back because you're late. That's where your mind gets in the way
when you should be keeping it very simple and reacting. You complicate things and then are
slow to react or late to react and then you're done in baseball. Did you see great hitters,
however, who did think a lot at the plate in a way that you're describing was not productive for you?
Yes, some players, you know, some guys joked, you know, he's so dumb he's a great hitter.
See it, hit it, react, and there are a lot of great hitters that did that.
Then there's Chipper Jones, just went into the Hall of Fame yesterday. Chipper Jones knew exactly what he was gonna do on every single pitch.
He looked at the tape, and he was a switch hitter too, so don't tell me how that worked.
But he really looked at pitchers. He set pitchers up. He sat on pitches. And it helps that he was
so talented eye-hand contact. His coordination was just amazing. But he was one of those guys
that fought through every at-bat. Coming up after the break, the mechanics of Mark Teixeira's swing.
Hitting a baseball is still the hardest thing
to do in sports. And how do you
break a slump? I would go
honey sometimes.
Peanut butter and honey. And if you haven't
heard it yet, check out our ongoing
Hidden Side of Sports series on any
podcast app or on
Freakonomics.com. We will be right
back.
Let's get back now to our lightly edited full interview with Mark Teixeira,
the former New York Yankees first baseman, one of the many athletes we've been speaking with for our Hidden Side of Sports series. I've heard you talk in the past about spring training. So
I'd love you to describe this for people, again, who don't know baseball, but even who do.
You've talked about every year you'd show up and it's like relearning, like both from a confidence
and a physical level, relearning to swing. I find it hard to believe that, but I'd love to hear you
talk about it. Yeah. You know, when I say that it's, it's true. Every year I showed up to spring training,
I had to learn how to hit major league pitching again, because timing is so important, right?
You know, if I got into a cage today, I'd still probably look like a big leaguer, you know,
put me on a tee or throw, you know, 60 mile an hour softballs to me. I could probably still hit
some balls, you know, and, and look like a big leaguer. If you put me in a 95 mile an hour fastball situation with a guy
that's got a slider and a changeup, I would look like I never played the game because I have no
reference point. I haven't had one in a year and a half since, you know, since I retired,
almost two years now. I have no reference point to the timing of when I need to start my
swing and where that ball's going to be at the plate. And so that's what I mean when I say you
have to figure out, you have to relearn how to hit major league hitting. It's all about that timing.
It's not like riding a bike. Some guys it is, but for me, it wasn't. Every year, my timing from both
sides of the plate had to get right. And that's one of the reasons most of the time I had a slow
April. All right. And then for both sides of the plate, you've also referred to how your right hand
swing and your left hand swings were really different. So I'd like you to talk about that
also. Again, for people who don't know baseball, it'd be a little bit like watching, you know,
a great basketball player with a jump shot start to shoot left-handed sometimes, right? When the
situation called for it. It doesn't happen in other sports.
In baseball, it does for a variety of reasons, and it's an advantage, obviously.
But can you talk about, I would imagine that one swing is a mirror image of the other.
I gather, however, that it's not, correct?
It's not because of right-hand domination.
So I throw right-handed.
I right right-hand.
I do everything right-handed, I right right-hand, I do everything right-handed. So as a
right-handed hitter, my top hand, my right hand is the steering mechanism for the bat. And because
of that, I was a better contact hitter right-handed because, you know, that dominant hand, your top
hand steering it, I could steer the bat where I wanted. Left-handed, that right hand, dominant hand, is the bottom hand.
And that's my pull, trigger.
The bat gets through the zone quick.
I hit longer home runs left-handed.
I hit more home runs left-handed.
I was a much more power hitter, much more pull hitter left-handed.
More strikeouts lefty?
Probably.
I'm sure.
I'm sure I had more strikeouts lefty.
I also hit the inside pitch way better left-handed. Right-handed, you could bust me in all the time. I was not a good inside
hitter right-handed because I just didn't have the bat speed right-handed. And so that's why
I had two different swings. It's not by design. It's just I picked up a bat left-handed and I
just had a different swing. What about dominant eye, though?
I always wondered about this.
When I played baseball growing up, I was a right-handed batter.
But then when I played wiffle ball, I could hit great lefty.
And I thought, why was this?
Obviously, it's a different ball.
Everything's different.
And I was an okay switch hitter as a kid, but not good enough to actually do it in games.
And then I started to wonder, maybe I'm just seeing it better or it's different.
I'm curious about that.
You were.
You were seeing it better.
I am right eye dominant.
How can you tell?
I see you holding up your hands here.
Put your hands in front of you in like a triangle.
Keep both eyes open and point to a spot.
Get the microphone or something here.
And then close one eye or close the other
one. Whatever eye you see it with, that's your dominant eye. So I'm right eye dominant.
That being said, I could stay closed left-handed. Right-handed, I had to open up my stance and
actually point my face towards the pitcher more so my right eye could see the ball better, but I'm naturally right-handed.
And so because of being naturally right-handed, I was able to always have better plate discipline right-handed. But because I'm right-eye dominant, I was able to become a switch hitter.
I'd like to see a statistic on switch hitters that are naturally right-handed
that are right-eye dominant. I would probably
guess most of them are right eye dominant. Now, considering that you figured that out,
did you think about training your left eye? I tried. It's one of those, you know, when you
work out and you feel sore the next day, you know that it worked. What I did in the gym worked. I
don't know if it works. I did exercises for like two months,
kind of messing around with it. And I don't know if it worked. And so I just, I ended up
letting it go. Again, I try to keep things simple. Baseball is a, when you break it down,
is a very simple game. They throw a ball at you and you got to hit it. And I didn't want to
complicate things. I'm not a quarterback in the NFL with 15 different
plays or 50 different options of that play. I'm see the ball, hit the ball.
Describe briefly your game day routine. Let's say it was a home game playing for the New York
Yankees. You've got your family, you live in Connecticut. Describe kind of from morning
to night what the day was like. Yeah, so I slept in because your games
are over at 10.30, 11 o'clock. You're not getting home until 12.30 or 1. So I slept in because your games are over at 10, 30, 11 o'clock. You're
not getting home until 12, 30 or one. So I slept in until probably 10 or 11 every day, just hung
out the house, did nothing usually. Tried to spend some time with my kids. When I was on the road,
I'd sit in the hotel room or maybe take a little stroll and have breakfast or lunch. But
I really tried to conserve as much energy as possible before the games. Leave for the ballpark around two o'clock. No golf on game days. No, never. I would probably
golf once or twice during the entire season. And I love golf, but I just didn't have the energy
to swing a golf club or be outside for four hours and then go play a game.
And some guys do it. I could never do that. So leave at about 2 o'clock, get to the ballpark no later than 3, and then start the process.
I call it start the process, which is you maybe grab a quick bite to eat because you have a long day ahead of you.
Is this a peanut butter and jelly sandwich or is that right before the game?
So, yeah, before I became gluten-free, it was always peanut butter and jelly sandwich before the game. But usually at three o'clock, it was like a grilled chicken sandwich or something semi-healthy, but it gets you to
that pregame meal. And so I would do my stretching and kind of get ready for my batting practice
session, take batting practice in the cage, kind of get loosened up in the cage, which is a T-drill,
do that T-drill for 15 or 20 minutes.
Go back, do all my interviews, get that out of the way before batting practice. You go out to
the batting practice and stretch, run, throw, take your ground balls, take your round of BP.
And then it's like an hour of chill time before the game. So that's when you kind of let everything
sink in. If you do need to get treatment on injuries, whatever, you do that. If you need
to get extra stretching, if you need to watch video, whatever it might be, you do that in
between batting practice and the game. Then at about 6, 6.15, I grabbed that peanut butter and
jelly sandwich, again, before I became gluten-free, and then a cup of coffee because it's a long day
and you kind of need a little jolt before the game. And I was on the field by 640.
Did you, was there any mental concentration, meditation, prayer, anything like that?
It was more of the routine got me locked in. I knew while I was doing my routine,
the closer I got to game time, I looked at the clock, you know, and you always knew there's
clocks all over big league clubhouses, right? No one wants to be late for a stretch or a meeting
or a game. So there's clocks everywhere. And as the clock got closer to 7.05, I just slowly got
locked in. I didn't talk to a lot of people before the game. I didn't, you know, I wasn't
very chatty. I was focused. And I knew every single night that the fans of New York expected
me to go out there and make my plays at first and hopefully get a hit or drive in a run.
So I took that very seriously. Were you an anthem singer or an anthem hummer?
I prayed during the anthem. That was my time. My Christian faith is very important to me.
And if not for the God-given ability that I have, I wouldn't be playing Major League Baseball. So always gave thanks to God during the National Anthem and said some
prayers for my family and friends or people that were struggling or whatever was happening. And
that also helped too, because that was a minute or two where I could kind of lock in and get
burdens maybe that are on my heart or on my mind, get them off my chest, and then go out and play the game. The anthem protests that have become a big deal in football have not hit baseball,
and there might be a million different reasons why.
I'm just curious your thoughts on that.
You're not only a longtime athlete, now retired athlete, sports commentator,
but a bright guy who's involved in the real world.
I'm curious what you make of those protests and especially how it's affecting
professional sports and the perspective that the public has on professional athletes.
Yeah. First of all, I definitely think that players in leagues all over the world should
speak out either for or against things that they feel strongly about. The problem is, is, you know, the Yankees
pay me to play first base. They pay me to get hits. They don't pay me while I'm on the field
to be a distraction. And whether you agree or you disagree with whatever I'm standing up for
during the game, you know, during the national anthem, especially when we're honoring the
country and we're honoring those who have fought for our
freedom. I just don't think that's the right platform. Now, after the game, in the off season,
when you're home or you're in your own community that there's issues going on, absolutely speak
up because athletes and celebrities have a very strong platform. But whether it's the Dallas
Cowboys or New York Yankees or Golden State Warriors, we are paid to play a sport and we're paid to, while we're on the field, while we're
in the uniform, to respect the rules of that league or that team. And I just don't think that
the national anthem is a time to make that stand. So I hear that argument. Here's a counter. Some
people would say that a pro athlete, it's a little bit like Cinderella.
When you're in the zone, when you're wearing the dress before midnight, you're a different
person.
Everyone's paying attention.
When you're in uniform during a game, that's when you have the most leverage.
And then no matter how prominent an athlete you may be, if you're doing an interview,
even immediately after the game or during the offseason with your local media or whatnot, and you say, hey, listen,
this is a big problem that I see. It might be domestic violence, income inequality, police
brutality. We know those stories get coverage. But compared to the leverage that you have during
the game, it's like, what, one one-thousandth, oneth, 1,000th. And so, you know, so on the taking the
devil's advocate position, I could see why, man, if I'm an athlete, I know that the only way I have
a chance to really raise hell is to do it right now. And you're saying that's inappropriate because,
you know, you're essentially there to do one job and... Well, you're also an employee, right? So I have a really cool
job at ESPN, right? If I took baseball tonight, tomorrow, during the trade deadline show and said,
hey guys, just stop for five minutes because I have something I want to talk about, I'd probably
be fired because I'm an employee and I have to do what I'm told when it comes to certain rules and
regulations. Now, if the league says, hey, you guys do
whatever you want, then hey, that's great. Do whatever you want. But I think the NFL has seen
the protests be a double-edged sword. While they're proud of their players standing up for
certain things or whatever it might be, they also have to understand that there's a whole lot of
people that don't appreciate it.
And probably not the best time to be taking a stand right before a game when they know it's going to be a distraction.
There's also obviously a lot of class and ethnic racial considerations here.
And I want to ask you about that on a baseball team.
There are scholars who argue that sports teams are among the best institutions, along with the military,
by the way, at building what they call social trust, meaning basically you feel someone's got
your back, even if you don't know them. And they say that sports teams in particular, and again,
the military, where people from very different backgrounds come together, you emerge from that
as if you've got a lot in common.
I'd love you to talk about that for a moment, A, if you experienced it, and B, if you think
there's any way to kind of port that over into the real world without making everyone
join the Yankees.
I agree completely.
During my career, I played with black, white, Asian, people from Dominican, Venezuela, wherever it might be,
and we all got along. I mean, 99.9% of athlete teammates get along. Now, they don't be best
friends, but get along on the field. Why? Because there's a common goal in the military. Why do
people in the military get along? Because there's a common goal. And where I think we can use that in society is let's not always harp on our differences.
Me and you could spend an hour talking about what we disagree with.
That would not be a productive hour time together.
We would rather talk about interesting things in economics and sports and life and things that we enjoy about life, happy things in life, things that are positive.
If we continue to harp on negative things in society or the mainstream media, you're going
to have these issues. But sports and the military, as you said, we're always focused on how do we
win this game? How do we become a closer team to win this game for our fans and for our front
office and our ownership or whatever it might be? because let's not talk about, I'm sure we have differences.
I'm sure we don't agree on every single thing.
That's human nature.
But what we can agree on is working hard together and showing up on time and being accountable
to each other and working towards that common goal.
Let me ask you this about something you just mentioned about how we focus on the negative.
It does seem to be a human trait. It does, however, also seem to be magnified by the current,
meaning contemporary landscape, meaning communication media and so on. There are
people who will do a comparison. If you look at like a European king in the 17th century versus
like the middle billion of the world right now, that the life of the middle billion today
is better than the king on every ground except housing, because palaces and castles are hard to
be. But in terms of just about everything else, life has gotten so, so, so much better. And yet,
we don't talk about that too much and acknowledge it. We do tend to focus on these differences
often.
And I'm curious, look, you're an athlete. You're not a philosopher or a psychologist or whatever,
but I'm curious to know if you have a perspective on that. Yes. It's a great perspective. One of the things I do when I pray is I thank God for being born in
the United States. So I won the lottery just by being born in the United States. The freedoms
that we have, the opportunities that we have,
there's no guarantee. Obviously, there's a lot of pain and suffering and poverty
that we're all trying to help and fix. But you have the opportunity because of the freedoms
that we have in our country. And so we can sit here and focus on all the negative things in
our country, and there's plenty of them. We could fill a hundred of these podcasts with all the negative things that are happening in our country. Well, we do that most weeks.
But let's wake up a little bit and be thankful for what we have, because there's a lot of places
in this world that if I was born into, I would not be even close to the person I am today or
even have close to the opportunity because you start life with
two strikes against you in third world countries or countries where you have no freedom. And so
I'm lucky to be born here and to live here. Scholars say another way in which athletes
and sports teams produce a social cohesion is that conflict resolution is handled really differently on sports
teams. They say that outside of sports and the military, there's a lot of passive aggressive,
right? So in an office world, you might send someone email with some snarky wording as opposed
to going up and saying, hey, listen, you did this, I did that, blah, blah, blah. Tell me about a case
or maybe a general scenario. Maybe it's a teammate, Maybe it was something, you know, Jeter was famous for being a good captain on a number of dimensions.
Talk about a way that you saw a problem get resolved on a team that you think is very different from the real world.
That's a great point because I love it when guys bark at each other real loud for 20 seconds and it's over. Because that is way more effective
at conflict resolution
than a guy for three weeks
or the whole season, right?
Being passive aggressive
and then creating this really weird situation
around both these players.
And then it permeates to the rest of the team.
Then you start having clicks.
I would much rather,
and I've done it with coaches, with players, where we've had it
out, almost fist fight, and then 20 minutes later, you're fine.
Give me a for instance.
What's the scenario?
What do you say?
In 2015, my third base coach, Joe Espada, who I love, told me to hold up at third base
because I was going to score easily. Ended up getting thrown out. And he just missed, just totally just kind of botched the situation.
And he knew he botched it.
And I almost got hurt.
I had to kind of half slide.
And it looked terrible.
And we needed to run and all these things.
And so I went into the dugout.
And I just started throwing stuff.
I just went nuts.
I had this like rage.
That doesn't sound very text to me.
No, I had this like rage inside of me
because I was so mad at the situation.
The situation lasted 15 minutes.
I told Joe after the game,
we're all good.
Hey, I know you're trying your best.
And it was done.
It was over with.
And I think those type of situations,
you see Tom Brady,
one of the best of all time,
barking at his coaches,
barking at his offensive linemen, barking at his receivers. But guess what? People take less
to go play for the Patriots. Coaches take demotions to stay with the Patriots because
they want to be a part of the Bill Belichick, Tom Brady atmosphere that they create there.
My Freakonomics co-author, Steveitt did some research and he found that pitchers essentially throw too many fastballs.
So part of this is maybe mistaken belief
and part of it is that many people are not good at randomizing,
which is a useful trick when you're trying to, you know,
in any game theory kind of thing.
So let me just read you a tiny bit of this.
I'm really curious to know what you have to say.
When there are two strikes is when the scenario really happens. When there are two strikes, fastballs generate an OPS that's on base plus slugging percentage that is more than 100 points higher than non-fastballs. The authors calculate that if a team's pitchers reduce their share of fastballs by 10 percentage points, they would allow roughly 15 fewer runs in a season, about
2% of their total runs. Yep. And I agree 100%. The issue is, is you have to take the pitcher's
skill and ability to perform that skill with two strikes. So the pitchers that can throw curve
balls and change-ups and sliders with two strikes do it.
The guys that maybe bounce that pitch or hang that pitch are going to throw fastballs,
and so they're going to get hit.
So the best pitchers in baseball, they throw more sliders and curveballs and change-ups with two strikes
because they can control it better.
And the last thing you want to do is get a guy down
0-2, throw three straight sliders in the dirt because you can't control that pitch, and then
have to come back with a 3-2 fastball because the hitter knows that you can't throw a slider for a
strike. You don't have any confidence. Your catcher doesn't have any confidence, and you throw in an
off-speed pitch for a strike, and the hitter's geared up for a fastball, and that's why those
numbers get up there. So what we need to ask Levitt, and I'm sure this is in the paper and I don't have it off the
top of my head, is whether they controlled for the efficacy of the pitcher. Yes. Because you're
saying the good pitchers won't do it. I agree. I think that's the issue. I think the best pitchers
can execute those pitches. I feasted, my entire career was based on a guy, you know, not getting
me to chase the curve balls and the sliders and the dirt and having to come with a fastball over the middle of a plate.
That was the style of hitter that I was.
So did you in your mind know whoever's on the mound, you know that they're the kind of pitcher who doesn't have the ability to throw the cutting?
Yes.
So that was the preparation that I had.
So I would ask the pitching coach if I didn't know this guy.
Now, once I was in the big leagues for four or five years,
I started knowing the players, and then I would only ask the hitting coach,
hey, this guy's a rookie.
What's his percentage of off-speed strikes?
And if his percentage of off-speed strikes was really low,
I'm just sitting dead red fastball.
Why would I take into account a slider or change up or split finger fastball
that he doesn't throw for strikes?
I'm going to bet that the numbers hold up.
He's not going to throw a strike with that off-speed pitch,
and he's going to have to throw me a fastball that I can then hammer.
Who were the pitchers that just plagued you during your season,
during your career, sorry?
The guy that I had the worst time against was James Shields.
Did not hit him well. Did not hit Justin Verlander well. Well, joined the crowd. Yeah. And then you
have weird guys like Aaron Seeley, who didn't throw more. By the time I faced him, didn't throw
more than 86 miles an hour. I just could not hit him. And so some really good pitchers had my
number, but there are also some guys that weren't all-stars every season that had my number as well.
And does it become self-enforcing after a while, a pitcher like Sealy, you think, man, I can't hit the guy?
Sometimes it does.
Yeah, confidence is huge in baseball.
That's why baseball teams and baseball players are so streaky.
You have these guys that hit seven homers in a month and don't hit one for six weeks, or a pitcher that wins 14 straight games and then the
last month of the season can't get out of the third inning. Because the confidence to swing at
good pitches, to get good results, it builds on itself. And you've heard hitting is contagious.
Well, it's not physically contagious, but mentally, when I see the three guys in front of me
just got hits, I go up there going, hey, this guy can be hit three guys in front of me just got hits,
I go up there going, hey, this guy can be hit today. He might be an all-star, but this guy's
going to get hit because those three guys in front of me just got base hits, and now I'm next.
Were you ever totally lost at the plate? Absolutely. I mean, yeah, it happened. I had
stretches, whether it was a week or even a month, where I said, this might be my last week
in baseball. I am so bad right now. There is no way I'm getting another hit in Major League
Baseball. I look awful. I feel awful. I can't get a hit. But then something just snaps. And it's
just like in golf when you can't make a short putt. You go an entire round or maybe an entire
week where you play three rounds and you don't make anything within four feet. You just can't make a short putt. Like, you know, you go an entire round or maybe an entire week where you play three rounds and you don't make anything within four feet. You just can't make that putt
or your driver, your snap hook and everything. And no matter what you do, no matter what you try,
you just can't hit that driver straight. Happens in baseball all the time because it's a very hard
skill. Hitting a baseball is still the hardest thing to do in sports. And, you know, you have
guys on the mound that are trying to get you out.
And if you're off a little bit, mechanically, mentally, confidence-wise, and he's on,
you can have some bad nights. So how do you get back to success? Because I'm sure you're trying to adjust. You're trying to adjust mechanically, psychically, and so on. What
actually works? Shock the system. So we talked about tricking the system,
shocking the system. So it's either taking more batting practice or taking no batting practice.
It's changing your bat. It's changing the way you stand just a little bit, altering your stance
just a little bit. Maybe just get a hard workout in. Maybe I'm a little too jumpy. I got a little
bit too much energy. Let me get a hard workout in before the game.
I'm going to be a little slower, a little bit tired during this game.
Or the opposite.
Hey, I'm exhausted, so I'm going to sleep all day.
I'm not going to take batting practice.
I'm going to get a massage and really try to be fresh.
It's just completely changing up your system.
Would you ever change the PBJ?
Yeah.
I would go honey sometimes.
Oh, big. That was your-
Peanut butter and honey. That was my-
Is that your slump food or-
That was a slump break.
Yeah, that's radical.
I'm crazy.
Yeah, you are. For people, again, who don't play baseball or know baseball,
I'd like you to describe a scenario. So you were a very, very, very good defensive first baseman,
which is valuable, but not necessarily so appreciated by the casual fan. There's one aspect of playing in the field that I think people would love to
hear about, which is what you're doing in your mind before every pitch. So I'd love you to
describe, pick a scenario. If it's a real one, all the better. And maybe it's a tight game,
and maybe there's a runner on first and maybe second and maybe you're holding the
runner depending. And then you're thinking, here's my pitcher, there's the batter, what pitch is
going to be thrown and what do I do if it's hit to third, to short, to second, to me on the ground,
in the air and so on. Just talk about that moment. Yeah. So when I was at first base, I would actually play the entire scenario in my head. So
I would say two and one, one out, ball hit to me, to my left, I'm going a second, ball hit to my,
you know, ball hit in front of me, I'm just getting the out, whatever it might be. So I
would play the entire scenario ahead of time. And I would actually position myself and then look to
my right and left, and maybe sometimes even behind me and say,
okay, well, if the balls hit this way, I'm going to do that. If the balls hit like this,
I'm going to do that. So I was kind of, I got bored during games. And so I started doing this
probably five or six years into my career where I would actually play the game in my head in
between pitches. And it kept me from getting getting bored but it also had a really nice
result that I actually was prepared for when those different balls were hit to me and it
actually worked out now it doesn't everybody do that I mean I remember learning that in little
league I mean that's well everyone's supposed to do that but a lot of guys don't really a lot of
guys completely space out I mean listen you when no one's on, it's pretty easy. But when there's guys on base, it kills me to see fielders going to the wrong base,
not being prepared for different situations, outfielders not hitting the cutoff man.
These are little things in baseball that I learned when I was young
that I don't think get taught anymore.
I think you have a lot more players that are worried
about analytics and don't spend the time on the nuances of baseball and the skills and the
subtleties that make you a great player. Right. We recently interviewed Lance Armstrong on the
show, and he argued that he and his team started taking EPO because everybody else was doing it,
and that if they didn't, they were gon goners that there was just no way to compete. Uh, you played in an era,
um, in which, uh, kind of the end of the big steroid era in which some of the best home run
hitters in history were turned out to all, many of them doping Mark McGuire, Barry Bonds. Um,
and then a few of your very prominent teammates, great baseball players, Alex Rodriguez, Robinson Cano, Melky Cabrera also were found to be doping.
I'd love to hear about – first of all, let's start with this.
Did you ever use performance-enhancing drugs?
No, never.
And I told myself – I got offered my rookie year.
What did you get offered?
I don't know what it was. Like pennies or something you get offered? I don't know what it was. I don't
know what the name was. Some pill? I'm not sure what it was. Who offered it? A teammate. I'm not
going to say who offered it. But I mean, it was a teammate? A teammate, yeah. And he said, Tex,
you can't play this game on milk and cookies. And I kind of just told him, like, my flippant self at 22 years old, I said, well, I'm going to try.
And I told myself right then and there, if I have to take drugs, illegal steroids, to play this game, I'll retire.
It's not something –
That's the way I was brought up.
It's wrong.
I can't stand people that make excuses for breaking the rules. Our union has made rules and agreed to
rules because it's for the betterment of our entire union and for the betterment of the game
of baseball. We agree to these rules. If you knowingly break those rules, you should be
punished to the utmost degree. And I don't think our punishments are hard enough. I think
we should have much stricter enforcement of the rules and much stricter punishments.
And I was just, one of the highlights of my career is I can look at kids. I speak to kids
all the time, speak to kids in Harlem and the Bronx and at home in Baltimore, wherever it might
be. And one of the things I'm proudest to say of them is like, yeah, I had a nice career,
but I didn't have to take steroids to make it. And you don't have to cut corners because what kind of message am I telling kids or telling my own children? I have
a 12, 10 and seven-year-old. What kind of message am I telling them? Hey kids, it's okay to break
the rules. It's okay to cheat. It's okay to lie. It's okay to steal. These are just terrible things
that we're teaching our children that you can go do these things in professional sports and get away with it and really just get
a slap on the wrist. I know you got to go. One more question for you. As I said, you had a very,
very good career, way better than solid. Some people say about different players' careers,
solid. It was a long and very good career. There was a World Series. There were a lot of individual honors. You hit very, very well.
You fielded great. The Hall of Fame, it's a funny thing. Election these days is contentious in part
because the baseball writers who elect the Hall of Fame candidates, they've decided they don't
want steroid players in the hall, which is controversial. So there are a lot of guys who are not going in. I'm curious to know
your feelings about it. Obviously, you want to get in. I'm curious to know whether you feel
you deserve it. I know you're a humble guy and you're probably not going to say yes,
but I'd love to know what that thought process is like as you're in this period right now between the end of your career and when you're eligible. Yeah. You know, I think about it,
you know, definitely, but, um, I don't think I'll get in. I, I think that I had a great career,
uh, under different metrics. Um, I, I do believe that some of the steroid guys are already in
and they're, you know, there's some guys that have taken, um, PEDs that are in the Hall of Fame. Everyone knows that.
But I think you're going to start seeing some of those players get in.
And I just think that under those metrics, I'm not a Hall of Famer.
400 home runs when guys were hitting 50 a year, my 30 a year didn't look so good.
Don't you think they might redo the metrics a little bit
and give extra points for playing clean?
I hope so.
If that's the case, I have a much better chance.
But it's not something I think about more than a few times a year
when we have these type of conversations.
But it's not something that I think about all the time.
Did you lead the league in PBJs or were a lot of guys doing that?
I'm sure I did.
I'm sure I did.
And I also, one of the cool stats that I do own is most hit by pitch in my career by a switch hitter. Oh, nice. Yeah. So I got that,
I got that hanging. And, you know, one of the things I'm most proud of is hitting 30 homers
and driving in a hundred runs for eight straight years. Because the first time I did it, I had to
pinch myself. I said, I was a second year player playing for the Rangers. And I said, oh my
goodness, I just, I just hit 30 homers and drove in 100 RBIs.
And being able to do that eight straight years is the thing I'm most proud of.
Yeah.
It was a great career as a New Yorker.
I enjoyed watching you with the Yankees,
and I especially enjoyed getting to talk to you today.
So thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you.
As you could probably tell,
I really enjoyed this conversation with Mark Teixeira.
I hope you did, too.
And I hope you enjoyed getting this bonus episode.
We will be back with our regular weekly episode, as always, Wednesday at 11 p.m. Eastern Time.
Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Dubner Productions.
Our Hidden Side of Sports series was produced by Anders Kelto and Derek John, with help from Alvin Melleth, Matt Straup, and Harry Huggins. Thanks for listening. Check your local station for the schedule. Also on SiriusXM, Spotify, and even your better airlines.
Thanks for listening.