Jamie Moyer's Off-Field Motivation
This pitcher shares his inspiring story of how he's helping families affected by drug abuse and death.
WEB EXCLUSIVE
Major league baseball is a sport populated primarily by men with large physiques and even larger egos.
Jamie Moyer has neither.
Through sheer moxie, determination and dedication, Moyer has made himself one of baseball’s top pitchers. He is small and thin-boned for a pitcher and lacks the power and strength that most of his younger contemporaries rely on to win in the big leagues. But Moyer compensates for his lesser physical gifts with guile, intelligence and industry.
“What makes him so successful” says Orioles pitcher Adam Eaton, who played with Moyer in Philadelphia during the 2007 and 2008 seasons, “is just what’s between those ears. He’s one of those people who learns the game and knows the game. He takes pride in being prepared…. His ability is what it is. [But] he gets the most out of it.”
Moyer is also nothing if not persistent. He refused to quit early in his career when he was struggling to keep out of the minor leagues.
“Sometimes I think it’s being in the right place at the right time,” he says, modestly, crediting his late-career success on the good fortune of playing for good-hitting teams, rather than acknowledging his own skills and hard work.
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But other players marvel at his work ethic—Eaton recalls that he rarely got to the field before Moyer and never left after him—and his competitiveness and grit when he’s on the mound, getting by without the blazing fastball that most successful pitchers need to vanquish hitters.
Ron Gardenhire, the manager of the Minnesota Twins, whose teams played Seattle when Moyer was with the Mariners, says that Moyer “understands what hitters are trying to do probably better than anybody in the game. And he works against that. He…pitches to his strength and goes away from the hitter’s strength probably as good as anybody.”
What is truly remarkable about Moyer is that he did not become a star in the big leagues until he was in his mid-30s, an age when most players still in the game are contemplating or edging into retirement. And today, at 46, the left-handed hurler is the oldest player in the big leagues.
Last year Moyer—almost twice the age of some of his teammates—helped the Philadelphia Phillies win the World Series championship. He led the team in wins and has won more games in his 40’s (82) than he did in his 20’s (59). More than 75% of his 246 career wins came since he turned 33.
As for his status as baseball’s reigning Methuselah, Moyer says, “I really feel like I appreciate things a little bit more now. I’m trying to enjoy it. You never know when your last pitch is going to be.”
Louis Berney is a Philadelphia-based writer who specializes in sports.










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I truly believe people who do such things will one day become Angels from Heaven...
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