His face cemetery serious, Derek Jeter briefly watched
Joe Torre answer questions from reporters at Yankee Stadium 
Tuesday before announcing that he could handle Torre's job as 
the Yankees' manager. Jeter walked away, a sliver of a grin 
giving away his true feelings. 
	Jeter already has responsibilities that he is tending 
to with great success, as the shortstop and No.2 hitter on the
Yankees, perhaps the best team of his generation. Jeter, 24, 
"is getting better in all aspects of his game," Brian Cashman, 
the Yankees' general manager, said. 
	"It's scary how good he can become," he added. 
	Jeter's offensive production has exploded as he has got
stronger and come to know himself and the
      American League pitchers. His batting average has 
increased more than 30 points from last season, to .325.. He 
is on a pace to surpass 200 hits and approach a total of 200 
runs scored and runs batted in. Learning how to read pitchers 
better, Jeter has 24 stolen bases in 29 attempts, after
stealing 23 in 35 attempts last year. 
	"I still need to cut down on my strikeouts," he said. 
He has 84 strikeouts and 37 walks. 
	More subtle is his defensive improvement. When Jeter 
became the Yankees' everyday shortstop in 1996, he relied on 
the fundamentals he established in years of practice with his 
father -- who also played shortstop -- and on his extraordinary
physical ability. 
	Experience has honed those skills. It's too simplistic, 
as the veteran infielder Luis Sojo pointed out, to say Jeter is 
concentrating better than he did as a rookie or as a second-
year player. 
	Jeter plays hard, he wants to get better and he loves 
to play, and refining his offensive and defensive ability is a
natural result of those three factors. Early in the 1997 
season, Sojo approached Jeter's best friend on the team, Jorge 
Posada, explaining that he had been with the team in parts of 
two seasons, before asking, "Do you think Jeter would mind if 
I make a few suggestions about his defense?" 
	Posada encouraged him to do so, and Sojo approached 
Jeter and mentioned some possible improvements, probably 
repeating some suggestions that the Yankee coach Willie 
Randolph had made before. Randolph and Sojo feel Jeter's 
defense has improved, with some specific alterations. 
	Jeter is much better at making plays in the shortstop 
hole, on ground balls hit to his right. He is in better 
position to catch the ball, Randolph said, because he is moving 
his feet more. "And that's extremely important," Randolph said. 
In the past, Jeter might have reached a ball hit to his right, 
but then he would be off balance and unable to throw the runner 
out. 
	When Jeter catches a ground ball in the hole, either 
backhanding the ball or reaching it with the glove facing 
forward, Jeter will set his body, planting his right foot in 
the dirt and powering a throw across the infield with his 
exceptional arm. Formerly, Jeter liked to reach a ball, jump 
into the air and fire the ball acrobatically -- a more 
spectacular approach that is less reliable, particularly as 
Jeter ages and gradually loses his arm strength. 
	Scouts chatting before games will sometimes mention 
Jeter's progress as a shortstop, his increased range, and one 
statistic supports this. For each player, STATS Inc. tracks a 
number called a zone rating, a somewhat subjective analysis of 
how successful a player is at reaching balls within or outside 
a standard range for his position. No number can define range
precisely; even so, Jeter's zone rating has increased from .914
last year to .964, far above the major league average of .927. 
	Jeter preferred leaping over runners as he turned 
double plays, stomping on the bag and jumping toward first 
base. Sojo told him: sure, you can do that now when you're 
young. What happens when you can't jump so high? "You can get 
into a lot of trouble doing that," Sojo said. 
	So Sojo explained to Jeter that the safest place to 
hide from the runner in turning a double play is behind the 
base; no runner slides hard across second base, which serves 
as breastwork for the middle infielder turning a double play. 
Stay behind the base as you prepare to take the throw, Sojo
showed Jeter, then hit the back corner of the bag with your 
right foot and push away, toward the outfield. This is what 
Jeter does now, for the most part. 
	Jeter makes the routine play better than he used to, 
Randolph said. Jeter has only 7 errors in 103 games, and he 
didn't make his first throwing error until June 20, in the 
Yankees' 67th game. His fielding percentage entering last 
night's game was .984, or 10 points higher than the major 
league average for shortstops last year. 
	Randolph remembered when Jeter first arrived in the 
majors, in the middle of expectations that he would take years 
to reduce the great number of errors he committed in the 
minors. "He's really surprised even me a little bit," Randolph 
said, "making a lot of routine plays and dispelling doubt he
could keep that error total down." 
	Jeter still has a lot to learn, he knows -- "You can 
always get better defensively," he said. In particular, 
Randolph wants him to concentrate from pitch to pitch better, 
to anticipate that he is going to get the ball, to be in 
position on every pitch. Sometimes, Randolph said, Jeter gets 
surprised. But he will get better, the Yankees are sure. He is 
always trying to get better.

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