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MLB legend gives former ASU star Pedroia ultimate complement

Arizona Sports News online

If Dustin Pedroia walked past you on a busy street you may miss him.

Standing just five feet, nine inches tall he’s always let his play do the talking. The Boston Red Sox second baseman has won two World Series titles, three Gold Gloves and appeared in four All-Star Games.

Not bad for a guy who almost never got a second chance a decade ago when he chose to play at Arizona State  after hitting .445 as a senior at Woodland High School in California.

“When he was at Arizona State he had a horrible fall season once,” ESPN baseball insider and Valley resident Pedro Gomez explained during his weekly interview with Sports360AZ.com’s Brad Cesmat. “The [Sun] Devils said ‘we need to get somebody in here to play shortstop this spring. There’s no way this kid can play a Pac-10 season at shortstop.”

As the story goes then ASU head coach Pat Murphy brought in now Detroit Tiger Ian Kinsler from Central Arizona College.

“Pedroia essentially said, ‘you don’t think I can play shortstop for a season, watch this,” he recalled to Cesmat. “I know Dustin very well…the drive to win will overcome so much.”

Pedroia’s name surfaced recently when New York Yankees legend and the game’s greatest reliever Mariano Rivera said in his just-released book “The Closer” he’d pick Pedroia as his ultimate second baseman before former teammate Robinson Cano.

“If I had to win one game,” Rivera said in his novel. “I’d have a hard time taking anybody over Dustin Pedroia as my second baseman…there is no doubt that [Cano] is a Hall of Fame [player]…I don’t think Robby burns to be the best.”

Gomez believes nearly every general manager in baseball would agree with Rivera’s assessment.

“Cano has more raw talent but in terms of wanting it,” he said. “Cano was criticized in New York for lack of hustle at times. You’ll never hear that about Dustin Pedroia.”

A lifetime .302 hitter, “Pedey” was named the American League MVP in 2008.

A Valley native, Eric has had a passion for the Arizona sports scene since an early age. He has covered some of the biggest events including Super Bowls, national championships and the NBA and MLB playoffs in his near 20 years in local media.

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