Jermaine Dye
Jermaine Dye
Jermaine Trevell Dyeis a retired American Major League Baseball right fielder. Dye grew up in Northern California and was a multi-sport star at Will C. Wood High School in Vacaville. Dye attended Cosumnes River College in Sacramento, where he played as a right fielder on a team that reached the playoffs. Dye played with the Atlanta Braves, Kansas City Royals, Oakland Athletics, and the Chicago White Sox. Dye won the World Series MVP with the White Sox in 2005. Dye...
ProfessionBaseball Player
Date of Birth28 January 1974
CityVacaville, CA
I knew our starting pitchers and bullpen had the capability to go out there and shut teams down. I knew with our offense we were good. From the start of spring training everyone was hungry, everybody's pulling on the same rope.
This is not necessarily a home run lineup, but we have guys who are strong enough to hit home runs. The guys are feeding off each other right now...and we're playing good team baseball.
Last year was the best team I've played on as far as an all-around team. Maybe not the best players. But as far as a team in the clubhouse, on the field, pulling for each other, it was the best. That's why we were able to win.
A couple of guys could have got it. We all worked hard to do whatever we could to help this team win and guys came up with big hits in a lot of situations. And it's just special for me to be thought of as MVP.
We're trying to win series. You feed off everything, and we're all doing well. It's an all-around team effort.
It gives your team a big boost. It not only helps the pitcher throw strikes, it takes pressure off the other guys to not try to do too much. We're rolling now and we have to keep it going.
Kenny Williams showed me on paper what the makeup of this team would be like. I always know that from being around this game, pitching and defense wins,
That's the sign of a good team, ... If the opposing team gives you extra outs, you know you're good if you can go out there and build on it.
I'm not really doing anything different. I'm usually a slow starter. We're playing well right now, and I just want to contribute.
I'm not going to tell him I fouled it off. Just go to first and, hopefully, we get a big hit and we did.
I hadn't thought of it that way. Our paths have just gone two different directions.
I had my chance and didn't do it,
It's a new year and he caught me when I was swinging good.
It just so happens that he hears stuff from what umpires say on certain calls like that,