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  • Yankees Release Alex Rodriguez

    Alex Rodriguez to play final game with New York Yankees on Friday then become adviser

    NEW YORK -- The Yankees announced Sunday that Alex Rodriguez will play his final game in pinstripes Friday, then assume a position as a special adviser and instructor with the team.

    Following Friday's game, Rodriguez will be unconditionally released by the Yankees from his player contract in order to sign a contract to serve in his new role with the organization through Dec. 31, 2017.

    "This is a tough day. I love this game and I love this team,'' Rodriguez said, often choking up during Sunday's news conference. "And today I'm saying goodbye.''

    Rodriguez, 41, said the agreement arose out of conversations over the past few days with Yankees managing general partner Hal Steinbrenner. Relegated to little more than a spare part lately, the three-time AL MVP said "the last four weeks have not been fun.''

    "It's been very painful and embarrassing to sit on the bench. It's been awkward,'' Rodriguez explained.

    Yankees general manager Brian Cashman, however, acknowledged that Rodriguez has a right to change his mind and pursue any potential opportunity. And for his part, Rodriguez never used the word "retire.''

    So, if another team offered him a chance to play, would he consider it?

    "A lot's happened the last 72 hours,'' Rodriguez said. "You know, when Hal told me, I just told him: 'Give me a few days. I need to kind of think on this, sleep on it.' I have not thought past the pinstripes, and my horizon is Friday. And, I haven't thought much more than that.''

    Yankees manager Joe Girardi said he'd talk to Rodriguez about possibly playing this week in Boston before the team returns home.

    "He's earned the right for us to sit down and have a conversation,'' Girardi said, later adding, "If he wants to play in every game, I'll find a way.''

    The Yankees, who are pushing to play younger players, are contractually obligated to pay Rodriguez the remainder of his $21 million salary for this season and the $21 million he is owed for 2017, the final season of a 10-year, $275 million contract that was the largest in Major League Baseball when he signed it.

    Cashman confirmed that Rodriguez and the team did not reach any type of settlement regarding the remainder of his contract. Rodriguez, therefore, will be paid the full sum still owed on his deal, which is approximately $27 million.

    When asked if the Yankees considered letting Rodriguez play on another team in order to reach certain home run milestones, Cashman said no teams reached out to the Yankees to inquire about trading for him.

    Rodriguez has won three MVPs and has made 14 All-Star teams during his 19 full seasons in the big leagues. He is fourth on the all-time home run list with 696, trailing leader Barry Bonds (762) by 66.

    "Of course I think I can play baseball. You always think you have one more hit in you,'' Rodriguez said. "That wasn't in the cards. That was the Yankees' decision, and I'm at peace with it.''

    With Brett Gardner, Brian McCann and his teammates in attendance at a packed news conference, Rodriguez said he was thankful he would get a few more at-bats in front of family and friends.

    "We all want to keep playing forever," Rodriguez said. "But it doesn't work that way."

    Rodriguez's announcement comes just two days after Yankees first baseman Mark Teixeira announced he would retire at the end of the season.

    "I think the ultimate way to go out is to go out on your own terms and Tex is getting an opportunity to do that, and it's sad to see that Alex isn't," Gardner said. "If we had played better collectively as a team things wouldn't be unfolding this way. It's something that's kind of hard to swallow. I've been around for a little while and it's sad to see Alex going like this."

    Statistically speaking, Rodriguez is a first-ballot Hall of Famer, but he may never get in because he was suspended a then-record full season in 2014 for performance-enhancing drug use. It was the second time he had admitted to using PEDs.

    The Yankees had essentially made Rodriguez a full-time bench player this season one year after he was a vital member of the lineup during his 33-home run comeback in 2015. But he never could get going in 2016, hitting just .204 with 9 home runs and 29 RBIs in 62 games. His OPS is .609.

    Rodriguez recently sounded at peace with being cut, saying he would go home to Miami to spend more time with his daughters. Rodriguez mentioned his daughters this spring when he told ESPN he planned to retire following the 2017 season.

    Rodriguez was drafted by the Seattle Mariners as the No. 1 pick in 1993. By 1996, at 20, he was an All-Star and second in the MVP voting after leading the league in average at .358 and home runs at 36.

    By the time he was 25, he left Seattle for Texas for what was then the largest contract in American sports history, a 10-year, $252 million deal that exactly doubled the $126 million the Minnesota Timberwolves' Kevin Garnett was due to earn.

    Though he personally produced for the Rangers, the marriage would last only last three years. After winning the MVP in Texas in 2003, Rodriguez was nearly dealt to the Boston Red Sox, who were still in the middle of their 86-year championship drought. A trade for Manny Ramirez was agreed upon, but it was foiled by the MLB Players' Association, which wouldn't allow Rodriguez to give back money from his initial contact.

    With Derek Jeter at shortstop and Aaron Boone -- who had just beaten the Red Sox with a game-winning home run in Game 7 of the American League Championship Series -- at third base, the Yankees did not have a need for Rodriguez. But when Boone tore ligaments in his knee playing pickup basketball, Cashman swooped in, dealing Alfonso Soriano and Joaquin Arias for Rodriguez. The Rangers chose Arias over a minor leaguer named Robinson Cano, who was on a list of players from which Texas could choose. Texas also paid $67 million of the $179 million that Rodriguez was still owed.

    Rodriguez agreed to move from shortstop to third base in order to play next to Jeter. Rodriguez went on to win three MVPs, and he finally shook off his postseason troubles by leading the Yankees offensively during their 2009 World Series run.

    Prior to that season, Rodriguez first admitted to PED use after a Sports Illustrated story outed him.

    Rodriguez said after the SI story that he was a changed man, but his involvement in Biogenesis and subsequent fight to try to overcome the allegations led him to file lawsuits against baseball, the players' association and a team doctor. He questioned the integrity of then-commissioner Bud Selig, as well as other executives, during a controversy-filled attempt at a defense.

    There was a thought Rodriguez may never play again after the suspension, but with the Yankees still owing him $61 million, Steinbrenner decided to let him return.

    Rodriguez, looking for forgiveness, carried himself with contrition and helped lead the Yankees to an AL wild-card berth in 2015.

    This year, though, he and the team have not had the same results.

  • #2
    Thunderstorm douses New York Yankees' pregame fete for Alex Rodriguez

    NEW YORK -- Alex Rodriguez's Yankees career ended the way it began a dozen years ago, with a game against the Tampa Bay Rays in which he went 1-for-4 with a double.

    The evening began with a violent thunderstorm that descended upon the Bronx just as a ceremony commemorating A-Rod's years in pinstripes was about to begin. The storm forced the participants, who included Reggie Jackson, Mariano Rivera and Hal Steinbrenner, to scramble for cover from the lightning and torrential rains barely five minutes after it had begun.

    Friday night's 6-3 Yankees victory ended with the most unlikely sight: Rodriguez heading out for the ninth inning with a fielder's glove on his left hand, sent out to play one final inning at third base, a position he had not started at in a game since April 27, 2015.

    The sellout crowd of 46,459 was predictably A-Rod mad all night, and they were never louder than when chanting his name for its traditional roll call in the first inning, an honor usually reserved for position players, not designated hitters.

    But the crowd also rose to its feet for all four of his at-bats, erupting wildly when he stroked a 2-2 fastball from Rays starter Chris Archer into the right-center gap in his first at-bat for an RBI double that tied the game at 1. He clapped his hands and shouted into the muggy Bronx air in celebration as he reached second base. It was Rodriguez's first extra-base hit since a home run against the Baltimore Orioles on July 18 at Yankee Stadium.

    Rodriguez's ensuing at-bats were increasingly anti-climactic -- a groundout in the fourth, a swinging strikeout in the fifth and a final groundout to shortstop on the first pitch he saw from reliever Ryan Garton in the eighth.

    As A-Rod headed back to the dugout, the crowd began a chant of "We want A-Rod!'' The chant grew in intensity as the Yankees batted in the bottom of the eighth. YES Network television cameras caught Rodriguez having a dugout conversation with manager Joe Girardi before dashing into the clubhouse, presumably to grab a glove.

    When Rodriguez sprinted out to third base at the start of the ninth inning, the crowd erupted once again. On a night of drama, this might have been the most dramatic moment of all. On the big video screen in center field, Rodriguez could be seen breathing heavily as if even he were exhilarated, and perhaps unnerved, by the moment.

    The moment, however, lasted just one batter. After Dellin Betances struck out Mikie Mahtook, Girardi sent Ronald Torreyes out to replace Rodriguez, allowing the 41-year-old superstar to bask in one more ovation as the crowd chanted "Thank you, A-Rod!''

    Rodriguez accepted hugs from all his teammates, waved his cap to the crowd and entered the dugout, where Girardi was waiting for him on the top step. And then he was gone -- 12 seasons, 351 home runs and 1,096 RBIs -- after it all began as the crowd chanted his name. Many of them then headed for the exits before Betances could nail down the final out of the game. They had seen what they came to see. The rest was just bookkeeping.

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