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Do you think the yankees are going to stand firm or wind up getting in the AROD bidding? Should they? Do you think AROD does more good or bad for a team winning? How much would you give him?

2007-10-30 16:43:23 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous in Sports Baseball

17 answers

You Heard Cahsman and Hank Steinbrenner they will not go for Alex Rodriguez and if they do resign which i dont think they will he will not be welcomed back nicely in the clubhouse

2007-10-30 16:50:15 · answer #1 · answered by Janet ♥(YFFL) 7 · 0 1

I would give him what I think he is worth, which is absolutely nothing. In fact I think he should reimburse the Rangers and the Yankees every penny both teams paid him, over the last 7 years.

Oh lets see, in every clutch situation he does one of two things. He either makes and out or hits into a double play. In post season he holds the distinction of having the worst post season in MLB history. So you tell me if he did more good or bad for the team.

Now to your first question, the fact the Yankees are so firm about not bidding for him, and since they have said it so many times, means they can't change their minds now. If they did, the Yankees would forever lose all credibility negotiating future deals, because it will mean their word means nothing. Even if they wanted him back, it's too late now. A Rod is gone forever. And as a die hard Yanks fan, I couldn't be happier.

2007-10-30 19:31:57 · answer #2 · answered by pedrooch 4 · 0 1

If the Yankees signed A-Rod at this point, they would lose all credibility with every agent in the business. And Hank Steinbrenner's comments further slammed the door.

Interesting that Rodriguez didn't even give the Yankees a chance to make a face-to-face offer.

2007-10-30 16:57:05 · answer #3 · answered by wdx2bb 7 · 2 0

The Yankees desire their pitching to grow to be helpful. A-Rod shouldn't make that lots of a distinction. I advise, whilst grew to become into the final time A-Rod gained a pennant for all people? The Yankees ought to overlook approximately him and get their act jointly. This previous weekend in Boston is evidence sufficient that they could't be waiting around for A-Rod to shop the day. i'm getting somewhat uninterested in Joe Girardi and his likely loss of management. The honeymoon is over with him and he extra advantageous start up looking the dazzling mixture for victory.

2016-12-30 11:26:54 · answer #4 · answered by troche 3 · 0 0

I think its in the Yankees best interest to let him walk or work out a sign and trade deal so that they can get something in return.

A-Rod has always impressed me as a very good regular season player who has consistently disappeared in the playoffs. The money that the Yanks can save from his departure can be used to get some decent pitching.

And I don't want him in Philly.

2007-10-31 01:58:46 · answer #5 · answered by Awesome Bill 7 · 1 0

I think the Yankees will stand firm and not go after A-Rod now that he has declared. Let's face it, Alex does not want to play in New York. He will go to the highest bidder (outside of NY). He and his agent have stated that he wants to be the first $30 million a year player. One team will be stupid enough to agree to his demands!

2007-10-30 21:02:04 · answer #6 · answered by P.I. Stingray 6 · 2 0

I think the Yankees probably would...but A-rod is the one that choose not to go back to the Yankees but instead file for free agency

2007-10-30 16:52:28 · answer #7 · answered by Giants Fan! 4 · 1 1

I don't think they should. He's way more of a distraction to his team. And frankly, the fans hate him. He puts up MVP numbers, but then disappears in the post season. The guy (in my opinion) is one of the most overrated professional athletes. And definitely the most overpaid.

A-rod would do much better with a team like Boston where the people adore their players. And where he wouldn't end up on tabloids every few days.

2007-10-30 17:39:16 · answer #8 · answered by Jason The Great 6 · 2 2

For all his flash and panache, the guy doesn't perform in postseason. There are many other players who can bring a team to the postseason, can continue with their performances, and are cheaper with better attitude. Why pay that much for a player like him when they can spend less on someone like Mike Lowell? You get your money's worth with players like Lowell.

2007-10-31 00:31:45 · answer #9 · answered by Kutu 2 · 1 0

They won't. His opting out of the contract cost them about $20 million (the amount Texas would have covered over the next three years), so I don't see them going back and rewarding him for that.

2007-10-30 18:51:58 · answer #10 · answered by JerH1 7 · 1 0

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