[新聞] Rodriguez Talks Retirement and Attracts Silence
M.L.B. Roundup
Rodriguez Talks Retirement and Attracts Silence
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT
Published: December 16, 2006
http://tinyurl.com/ycrsfh
Toward the end of his most challenging season in baseball,
Alex Rodriguez told Bob Costas in a nationally syndicated
radio interview that he might not play once his current
10-year contract expired after the 2010 season.
“I don’t really see myself playing past this contract,”
Rodriguez said on “Costas on the Radio,” a weekly program
that is heard on 120 stations, but not in New York. The
interview was conducted toward the middle of September and
began airing Sept. 16.
In the interview, Rodriguez is less specific at other moments,
saying he might play beyond his current contract “but not way
past it.”
Professional athletes often speak of retirement, only to keep
playing for as long as they are capable of standing up. Nevertheless,
Rodriguez’s remarks, coming toward the end of a season in which
he struggled in the field and at the plate and was often booed by
Yankees fans, seemed to take Costas by surprise.
“I thought the phone would be ringing off the hook the next day,”
Costas said of an anticipated reaction by the news media that
never came, perhaps because many reporters were unaware of what
was said.
“I believe he was speaking honestly from the frame of mind that
he was in at the time,” Costas said in a telephone interview
yesterday. “He was very matter of fact and there was no anger
in his voice. It was a tone of resignation. He said a lot of the
joy of the game was gone, and even if had a reasonable shot at
breaking records, he would walk away from the game.” Rodriguez
will be 35 when his record-breaking $252 million contract expires.
“He has never said anything along those lines to me in all my
conversations with him,” Scott Boras, Rodriguez’s agent, said
in a telephone interview. “I just had a meeting with Alex, and
he is very enthusiastic about next year and the rest of his career.”
He has 464 career home runs, and if he keeps playing until he
is 40, or older, he would appear to have a good chance to set the
career home run mark, regardless of the number Barry Bonds
finally reaches. Still, Rodriguez told Costas that records would not
affect his decision.
“To me, I have never been a guy that worries about numbers or has
concerned himself with where I stand in the history books,”
Rodriguez said. “I care about one thing, and that is winning,
and that is it.”
The Yankees have not won a World Series in Rodriguez’s three
seasons in the Bronx, and he has increasingly struggled in postseason
play, to the point where he batted eighth in the Yankees’ final
game in October, when they were eliminated in the first round
by Detroit.
In the weeks that followed, there was speculation that the Yankees
might even look to trade Rodriguez. That speculation has died,
but the issue of Rodriguez’s comfort level in New York has not.
He seemed to acknowledge that point in the interview, telling
Costas, “I think the demand that is put on a player like me is
so much more then the generic everyday guy.”
WELLS STAYS IN TORONTO Vernon Wells and the Toronto Blue Jays
agreed last night to a seven-year, $126 million contract extension
through 2014.
“How can you not be happy?” Wells, an All-Star center fielder, said
during a telephone interview with The Associated Press several hours
before terms of the deal were completed. “Like I said, my family
comes first. Obviously this gives me an opportunity to set my
family up for a couple of generations. That’s the biggest part of
this thing. And this gives me a chance to do something special in
Toronto that hasn’t been done in a while.”
Wells hit .303 with 32 home runs and 106 runs batted in last season.
He would have been eligible for free agency after next season. (AP)
RED SOX ADD DONNELLY The Red Sox acquired the former All-Star
reliever Brendan Donnelly from the Los Angeles Angels yesterday and
agreed to a contract with the left-hander J. C. Romero.
Boston sent the rookie left-hander Phil Seibel to the Angels for
the 35-year-old Donnelly, who became expendable when the Angels
signed the right-hander Justin Speier and the left-hander Darren
Oliver. (AP)
BAGWELL RETIRES Jeff Bagwell’s 16-year career came to a close
yesterday, ending his time as one of Houston’s best-loved athletes.
Ultimately, his arthritic right shoulder forced him off the field.
“Physically, I cannot do it anymore,” the 38-year-old Bagwell said.
“I wish I could. I wish I could continue to play and try to win a
World Series in Houston.”
Bagwell retired as the Astros’ leader in home runs (449), R.B.I.
(1,529), walks (1,401) and extra-base hits (969). He finished with
a .297 career average. (AP)
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