Now A-Rod Wants to Return to the Yankees
Alex Rodriguez has released an official statement claiming that he'd now like to return to the Yankees.
Prior to entering into serious negotiations with other clubs, I wanted the opportunity to share my thoughts directly with Yankees' ownership. We know there are other opportunities for us, but Cynthia and I have a foundation with the club that has brought us comfort, stability and happiness.
As a result, I reached out to the Yankees through mutual friends and conveyed that message.
Now, this isn't a story I follow too closely, mostly because I'm more interested in, say, Omar Infante being traded than I am in following a soap opera involving a great player who happens to be a bit of a prick, a team, and that team's entitled and melodramatic fanbase. I'm especially uninterested in following it in the mostly troglodytic New York media, much of which is guaranteed to cast the drama in terms of storylines that would be too stupid even for Days of our Lives, and to publish those storylines with headlines featuring LOTS OF CAPITAL LETTERS and PUNS like I'm five years old. (And would the five year old me have found "STRAY-ROD" amusing, anyway? Probably not.)
But this particular development is interesting, in part because, thanks to the morons in the New York press and the ridiculous fans who actually debate about whether A-Rod is "a true Yankee" or whatever, it is impossible to believe that Rodriguez and his wife have "foundation with the [Yankees] that has brought us comfort, stability and happiness."
Instead, one wonders who misjudged what here - did A-Rod's agent Scott Boras suddenly realize that nobody was going to pay anywhere near the $350 million he was seeking? Did A-Rod suddenly realize that this whole situation was making him look greedy? Did the Yankees, who seem mutually interested in having Rodriguez back, suddenly figure they could somehow snag a playoff spot next year, leading to their attempts to re-sign Jorge Posada, Mariano Rivera and now Rodriguez? All of the above? Or none of the above?
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19 comments
Comments
hmmm
by bryanzane on Nov 14, 2007 7:36 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
NY media get a bad rap
I will agree the Yankees are A-Holes, Yankees fans are A-Holes and ARod is an A-Hole.
by haven on Nov 14, 2007 8:38 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
A-Holes
by Carnival Matleuse on Nov 15, 2007 4:04 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
calm down
by bryanzane on Nov 15, 2007 6:02 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
NY media
by NW Pirate fan on Nov 14, 2007 11:42 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
NY Print Media
- Media creates or overhears a rumor involving a valued player.
- Media produces scenarios by which NY team trades for player.
- I realize I'm pretty drunk and stop typing.
by bryanzane on Nov 15, 2007 10:59 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Boras
http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/mlb
by whygavs on Nov 14, 2007 8:14 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
I heard that...
by Charlie on Nov 14, 2007 8:24 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
The CBA
by matskralc on Nov 14, 2007 8:45 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Also
by matskralc on Nov 14, 2007 8:38 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Looks like it's done
http://yankees.lhblogs.com/2007/11/14/a-rod-slips-leash-and-returns-to-yanks/
http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/mlb
by whygavs on Nov 14, 2007 9:26 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
A-Rod just ****ed the Yankees
by Kosstic518 on Nov 14, 2007 9:30 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Actually
Also- the Rangers weren't paying $21 million a year in A-Rod money; I think they owed $21 million total over the remainder of the contract. $21 million is chump change to the Yanks. And the luxury tax? Please, they were paying that anyways.
http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse/mlb
by whygavs on Nov 15, 2007 1:28 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
troglodytic
As for A-Rod: what whygavs said. I'm cynical enough to believe that Boras told A-Rod to do exactly what he's doing to create a groundswell of support in NY (by publicly dissing Boras), which will force the Yankees back into the bidding process. Having the team with the biggest pockets and biggest impetus to sign him back in the bidding will drive the price way up. Great PR work.
by scoreboard on Nov 15, 2007 7:52 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
I don't think the money was out there
Sure, the Dodgers and Angels have the cash but could they really afford what baggage A-Rod brought to them? The Met's could have had him, but would you want to break up the left side of that infield (Reyes & Wright) for him? The Cubbies blew their budget last year and the White Sox won't move the fences in to make him happy. San Francisco benefitted from Bonds chase to oblivion but do they really want to go through that continual recurring media circus again?
The Yankees need A-Rod just as much as he needed them. He tested the market and it was not to his liking. Better to run back to NY with your tail between your legs than go elsewhere and have another fan base despise you as much as those in NY, Seattle, and Dallas-Fort Worth. Blame it on your mega-agent and let the NY media and Steinbrenners spank you publically until April 1st. Boras looks just as bad as his client and their "approval ratings" are now at an all time low.
by puget sound pirate on Nov 15, 2007 3:22 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
I'd happily carry A-Rod's baggage
For some reason this reminds me of an old joke. Guy sees a hot girl in a bar and asks her, "Would you screw me for a million dollars?" Girl thinks it over and says, "Sure, why not?" Guy says, "Would you screw me for a dollar?" She says, "What kind of girl do you think I am?" He says, "We've already established that, we're just haggling over the price."
Well, it made sense in an A-Rod context at the time ...
by bucdaddy on Nov 15, 2007 3:37 PM EST reply actions 0 recs

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