Sporting News staff reports
Joba_62 (Yankees pitcher Joba Chamberlain) We all suffered a huge loss today! Mr. Steinbrenner was a great man, great owner, that did so many amazing things. You will truly be missed!
Adam_Schefter (ESPN reporter) RIP, George Steinbrenner. Bob Sheppard already is there to announce your arrival.
darrenrovell1 (CNBC sports business reporter) Money George Steinbrenner spent on the Yanks payroll since 2000: $1.87 BILLION
DickieV (ESPN basketball analyst Dick Vitale) George Steinbrenner was one of the most giving n generous person I ever met-he had a special fire in his belly to win n a Big HEART! RIP!
SI_JonHeyman (Sports Illustrated baseball writer) biggest memory of george was his return march 1, 1993, in ft. lauderdale. he was in all his glory. seems like yesterday.
KenDavidoff (Newsday baseball writer) George dominated my life, as a #Yankees reporter. When my wife called to say we were expecting, I was chasing him down a corridor in Tampa.
MrHoratioSanz (comedian) I wonder if Steinbrenner is already asking Jesus to shave and get a haircut.
michaelianblack (actor/comedian) Somewhere in heaven, Billy Martin just got fired. RIP George Steinbrenner.
LATimesfarmer (L.A. Times NFL columnist Sam Farmer) Al Davis to @MikeVacc: "I look at what my friend George has done with the Yankees and I’ve always said, ‘That’s how it should be done.’"
OHnewsroom (Overheard in the Newsroom) Associate Producer: "Do you know who George Steinbrenner is?" Producer: "Of course. I watched Seinfeld."
pgammo (Hall of Fame baseball writer Peter Gammons) The Boss began with Horace Clarke and died World Champion. He made his fellow owners a lot of money, and was very kind to many of us.
KingJames (Heat guard/Yankees fan LeBron James) R.I.P George Steinbrenner The Great. U will be missed dearly
sportswatch (Newsday media columnist Neil Best) Time travelers from 1990, when Yankee Stadium cheered Steinbrenner’s ban from baseball, would find today’s (deserved) accolades very odd.
TheMontyShow (Sporting News Radio host Tim Montemayor) I love the way Steinbrenner ran the Yankees, he made deals to put money and players in, never take them out…how many teams can say that?
chucktodd (NBC political reporter) R.I.P. George; He was good for the Yankees; but the debate about whether what’s good for the Yankees is good for the game is a real debate.
Sporting News staff reports
Joba_62 (Yankees pitcher Joba Chamberlain) We all suffered a huge loss today! Mr. Steinbrenner was a great man, great owner, that did so many amazing things. You will truly be missed!
Adam_Schefter (ESPN reporter) RIP, George Steinbrenner. Bob Sheppard already is there to announce your arrival.
darrenrovell1 (CNBC sports business reporter) Money George Steinbrenner spent on the Yanks payroll since 2000: $1.87 BILLION
DickieV (ESPN basketball analyst Dick Vitale) George Steinbrenner was one of the most giving n generous person I ever met-he had a special fire in his belly to win n a Big HEART! RIP!
SI_JonHeyman (Sports Illustrated baseball writer) biggest memory of george was his return march 1, 1993, in ft. lauderdale. he was in all his glory. seems like yesterday.
KenDavidoff (Newsday baseball writer) George dominated my life, as a #Yankees reporter. When my wife called to say we were expecting, I was chasing him down a corridor in Tampa.
MrHoratioSanz (comedian) I wonder if Steinbrenner is already asking Jesus to shave and get a haircut.
michaelianblack (actor/comedian) Somewhere in heaven, Billy Martin just got fired. RIP George Steinbrenner.
LATimesfarmer (L.A. Times NFL columnist Sam Farmer) Al Davis to @MikeVacc: "I look at what my friend George has done with the Yankees and I’ve always said, ‘That’s how it should be done.’"
OHnewsroom (Overheard in the Newsroom) Associate Producer: "Do you know who George Steinbrenner is?" Producer: "Of course. I watched Seinfeld."
pgammo (Hall of Fame baseball writer Peter Gammons) The Boss began with Horace Clarke and died World Champion. He made his fellow owners a lot of money, and was very kind to many of us.
KingJames (Heat guard/Yankees fan LeBron James) R.I.P George Steinbrenner The Great. U will be missed dearly
sportswatch (Newsday media columnist Neil Best) Time travelers from 1990, when Yankee Stadium cheered Steinbrenner’s ban from baseball, would find today’s (deserved) accolades very odd.
TheMontyShow (Sporting News Radio host Tim Montemayor) I love the way Steinbrenner ran the Yankees, he made deals to put money and players in, never take them out…how many teams can say that?
chucktodd (NBC political reporter) R.I.P. George; He was good for the Yankees; but the debate about whether what’s good for the Yankees is good for the game is a real debate.
Bucky Dent, for Sporting News
I was a player with the White Sox on the last day of spring training in ’77, getting ready to go to Toronto to open up their franchise.
The phone rang—I was putting a box in the car—and I ran back in and answered the phone. I heard this crowd in the background and this voice, and it says, "Bucky Dent?" I said, "Yeah." He goes, "This is George Steinbrenner, owner of the Yankees." And I went, "Get outta here!"
"No," he says, "this is George Steinbrenner," and he says, "I have a deal that will bring you to New York as a player if you’ll agree to a contract."
It took me about five minutes.
Nick Buoniconti was my agent at the time; I told Mr. Steinbrenner, "I’ll call you right back." I hung up and called Nick, and he called, and five minutes later they called back and said I was a Yankee.
That was a very special moment, one that I’ll always remember. Unbelievable.
Mr. Steinbrenner was a tremendous competitor, a guy that demanded excellence from you. You knew the bottom line when you were going to be a Yankee back then. The bottom line was you’re coming in there, and you’re going to win.
He was going to let you know about it if you didn’t play the way he wanted you to play.
Dent, an All-Star Yankees shortstop, was the 1978 World Series MVP.
— As told to Bob Hille
Bucky Dent, for Sporting News
I was a player with the White Sox on the last day of spring training in ’77, getting ready to go to Toronto to open up their franchise.
The phone rang—I was putting a box in the car—and I ran back in and answered the phone. I heard this crowd in the background and this voice, and it says, "Bucky Dent?" I said, "Yeah." He goes, "This is George Steinbrenner, owner of the Yankees." And I went, "Get outta here!"
"No," he says, "this is George Steinbrenner," and he says, "I have a deal that will bring you to New York as a player if you’ll agree to a contract."
It took me about five minutes.
Nick Buoniconti was my agent at the time; I told Mr. Steinbrenner, "I’ll call you right back." I hung up and called Nick, and he called, and five minutes later they called back and said I was a Yankee.
That was a very special moment, one that I’ll always remember. Unbelievable.
Mr. Steinbrenner was a tremendous competitor, a guy that demanded excellence from you. You knew the bottom line when you were going to be a Yankee back then. The bottom line was you’re coming in there, and you’re going to win.
He was going to let you know about it if you didn’t play the way he wanted you to play.
Dent, an All-Star Yankees shortstop, was the 1978 World Series MVP.
— As told to Bob Hille
ANAHEIM, Calif. — For all he did as a baseball owner, George Steinbrenner’s greatest legacy was leaving the Yankees in far better shape than when he bought them.
He wouldn’t want it any other way.
George Steinbrenner’s $8.7 million investment in the 1970s paid off well.
Steinbrenner died early Tuesday at the age of 80 as the most famous owner in American sports history. He was famous for his firings. His willingness to pay top dollar has made mega-millionaires of countless players. He also was known for his charity donations.
But most of all, he did his job better than the rest. He bought the Yankees for $8.7 million in 1973, according to a Yankees release. When Forbes again ranked the Yankees the No. 1 baseball franchise earlier this year, their value was estimated at $1.6 billion (the Dallas Cowboys are No. 1 at $1.65 billion). Under Steinbrenner, the Yankees won seven World Series and 11 pennants, moved into a new palace of a ballpark and launched their own television network.
Steinbrenner created his share of adversaries along the way because of his my-way-or-the-highway methods. Those who remembered him Tuesday — and reactions came from across the land — did so with respect and considerable admiration.
Said White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf in his statement: "George Steinbrenner was too complex a person to adequately describe in a short statement, but he was a great friend of mine and he will be missed. His impact on the game cannot be denied."
The key to Steinbrenner’s success was simple: Get the best players.
"He was the first owner who paid huge sums of money to players and he was very successful at it," says Tommy John, who signed a four-year, $1.4 million deal before the 1979 season. "He paid very, very well and expected you to play very, very well. He was very, very tough to work for but he was very fair. He expected a hard day’s work for a good dollar."
The Yankees made headlines in 1975 when they signed Catfish Hunter for $3.35 million over five years, and they won the World Series in 1977 and 1978. Before the 2008 season, they signed CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira and A.J. Burnett for more than $420 million, and they won the World Series in 2009.
"All the guys in baseball making any money should go to the funeral because George is directly responsible for their salaries," John said.
Steinbrenner’s death on the morning of the All-Star Game allowed the baseball world an All-Star send-off of sorts for the Yankees owner. Two press conferences were held before the game — one for Joe Girardi, Andy Pettitte and Alex Rodriguez, and another for one of the greatest Yankees, Derek Jeter. All have been made rich by Steinbrenner, and all have helped deliver the Yankees at least one World Series ring.
"He’s more than just an owner to me. He’s a friend of mine," said Jeter, who like Steinbrenner, has a home in Tampa, Fla., and talked about visiting his boss during the offseason.
Rodriguez talked about his first meeting with The Boss and how, "Within the first two minutes he said the words, ‘We have to win a world championship’ about three or four times, so really quickly I got a good idea of what his front and center thoughts were."
Pettitte remembered being a young minor leaguer who would be in awe — and a little scared — whenever Steinbrenner showed up at Yankees’ rookie-league games. "He was always down there and I was a 19-year-old kid at the time, and it was looking at him like, That’s The Boss walking by."
In a radio interview, Dwight Gooden talked about his first meeting with Steinbrenner in 1996. The Yankees were interested in giving Gooden a comeback opportunity so Steinbrenner met Gooden for lunch and for two hours, Gooden said, never talked about baseball. After Gooden signed and started 0-3, however, he and his wife at the time were passing Steinbrenner after a game. Gooden introduced his wife to the owner, who replied, "When are you going to win a (bleeping) game?"
That was the Steinbrenner that made headlines for changing managers 21 times and general managers more than a dozen times. Girardi went out of his way to talk about another side of Steinbrenner — the one that John said regularly and without fanfare paid for children’s surgeries in New York.
"One of the things that is not talked enough about Mr. Steinbrenner is how giving of a man he is," Girardi said. "A man that really cared about people and tried to change people’s lives; whether it was a first chance, a second chance or a third chance. That’s who he really was."
Yankees critics, of course, tend to remember Steinbrenner as the man who bought championships and, as a result, is partly responsible for sports becoming a mega-business. His critics still howl over the unfairness of it all. Often you loved him or you hated him, depending on how you thought about the Yankees.
But even those who didn’t like his ways have to admit Steinbrenner cared about his job. Which is why, as he leaves, the Yankees are the biggest winners in our sports world.
Stan McNeal is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at smcneal@sportingnews.com.
ANAHEIM, Calif. — For all he did as a baseball owner, George Steinbrenner’s greatest legacy was leaving the Yankees in far better shape than when he bought them.
He wouldn’t want it any other way.
George Steinbrenner’s $8.7 million investment in the 1970s paid off well.
Steinbrenner died early Tuesday at the age of 80 as the most famous owner in American sports history. He was famous for his firings. His willingness to pay top dollar has made mega-millionaires of countless players. He also was known for his charity donations.
But most of all, he did his job better than the rest. He bought the Yankees for $8.7 million in 1973, according to a Yankees release. When Forbes again ranked the Yankees the No. 1 baseball franchise earlier this year, their value was estimated at $1.6 billion (the Dallas Cowboys are No. 1 at $1.65 billion). Under Steinbrenner, the Yankees won seven World Series and 11 pennants, moved into a new palace of a ballpark and launched their own television network.
Steinbrenner created his share of adversaries along the way because of his my-way-or-the-highway methods. Those who remembered him Tuesday — and reactions came from across the land — did so with respect and considerable admiration.
Said White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf in his statement: "George Steinbrenner was too complex a person to adequately describe in a short statement, but he was a great friend of mine and he will be missed. His impact on the game cannot be denied."
The key to Steinbrenner’s success was simple: Get the best players.
"He was the first owner who paid huge sums of money to players and he was very successful at it," says Tommy John, who signed a four-year, $1.4 million deal before the 1979 season. "He paid very, very well and expected you to play very, very well. He was very, very tough to work for but he was very fair. He expected a hard day’s work for a good dollar."
The Yankees made headlines in 1975 when they signed Catfish Hunter for $3.35 million over five years, and they won the World Series in 1977 and 1978. Before the 2008 season, they signed CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira and A.J. Burnett for more than $420 million, and they won the World Series in 2009.
"All the guys in baseball making any money should go to the funeral because George is directly responsible for their salaries," John said.
Steinbrenner’s death on the morning of the All-Star Game allowed the baseball world an All-Star send-off of sorts for the Yankees owner. Two press conferences were held before the game — one for Joe Girardi, Andy Pettitte and Alex Rodriguez, and another for one of the greatest Yankees, Derek Jeter. All have been made rich by Steinbrenner, and all have helped deliver the Yankees at least one World Series ring.
"He’s more than just an owner to me. He’s a friend of mine," said Jeter, who like Steinbrenner, has a home in Tampa, Fla., and talked about visiting his boss during the offseason.
Rodriguez talked about his first meeting with The Boss and how, "Within the first two minutes he said the words, ‘We have to win a world championship’ about three or four times, so really quickly I got a good idea of what his front and center thoughts were."
Pettitte remembered being a young minor leaguer who would be in awe — and a little scared — whenever Steinbrenner showed up at Yankees’ rookie-league games. "He was always down there and I was a 19-year-old kid at the time, and it was looking at him like, That’s The Boss walking by."
In a radio interview, Dwight Gooden talked about his first meeting with Steinbrenner in 1996. The Yankees were interested in giving Gooden a comeback opportunity so Steinbrenner met Gooden for lunch and for two hours, Gooden said, never talked about baseball. After Gooden signed and started 0-3, however, he and his wife at the time were passing Steinbrenner after a game. Gooden introduced his wife to the owner, who replied, "When are you going to win a (bleeping) game?"
That was the Steinbrenner that made headlines for changing managers 21 times and general managers more than a dozen times. Girardi went out of his way to talk about another side of Steinbrenner — the one that John said regularly and without fanfare paid for children’s surgeries in New York.
"One of the things that is not talked enough about Mr. Steinbrenner is how giving of a man he is," Girardi said. "A man that really cared about people and tried to change people’s lives; whether it was a first chance, a second chance or a third chance. That’s who he really was."
Yankees critics, of course, tend to remember Steinbrenner as the man who bought championships and, as a result, is partly responsible for sports becoming a mega-business. His critics still howl over the unfairness of it all. Often you loved him or you hated him, depending on how you thought about the Yankees.
But even those who didn’t like his ways have to admit Steinbrenner cared about his job. Which is why, as he leaves, the Yankees are the biggest winners in our sports world.
Stan McNeal is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at smcneal@sportingnews.com.
Buck Showalter, for Sporting News
Everybody knew the job description and the accountability factor with George, and the mark that he left on me was that you know it’s your job description, you’re accountable for what you’re supposed to be doing there, and nobody wants to hear you complain about it.
I spent 19 years in that organization and basically grew up in it. My whole baseball education, for the most part professionally was under Mr. Steinbrenner’s tutelage.
I think Billy Martin allowed me to have a grip on, "A lot of guys would love to have an owner as in tuned to winning as Mr. Steinbrenner." And he made everybody accountable.
You know, they talk about great golf courses are run by dictators because you don’t have to go through 55 committees to get something done. One of the great things was we knew we had to please one person, OK? Him and the fans, and he told us that many times.
But there were some great moments, being on his farm in Ocala with him and his children and seeing him in that light.
I was one of the managers he never fired. I resigned because he wanted to get rid of my coaches. He knew where people’s buttons were, and mine were loyalty to my coaches.
I remember him coming back to my house after the whole thing, trying to get me to come back. As I got older and he got older there was really respect for what each had tried to accomplish.
Showalter managed Steinbrenner’s Yankees from 1992-95.
— As told to Bob Hille
Buck Showalter, for Sporting News
Everybody knew the job description and the accountability factor with George, and the mark that he left on me was that you know it’s your job description, you’re accountable for what you’re supposed to be doing there, and nobody wants to hear you complain about it.
I spent 19 years in that organization and basically grew up in it. My whole baseball education, for the most part professionally was under Mr. Steinbrenner’s tutelage.
I think Billy Martin allowed me to have a grip on, "A lot of guys would love to have an owner as in tuned to winning as Mr. Steinbrenner." And he made everybody accountable.
You know, they talk about great golf courses are run by dictators because you don’t have to go through 55 committees to get something done. One of the great things was we knew we had to please one person, OK? Him and the fans, and he told us that many times.
But there were some great moments, being on his farm in Ocala with him and his children and seeing him in that light.
I was one of the managers he never fired. I resigned because he wanted to get rid of my coaches. He knew where people’s buttons were, and mine were loyalty to my coaches.
I remember him coming back to my house after the whole thing, trying to get me to come back. As I got older and he got older there was really respect for what each had tried to accomplish.
Showalter managed Steinbrenner’s Yankees from 1992-95.
— As told to Bob Hille
Coming up with five memorable moments from a two-hour, 30-some minute event featuring some of baseball’s best hitters shouldn’t be this difficult. But perhaps that says something about the event, or the length of it anyway. As far as home run derbies go, this one had way more homers (95 total) than memorable moments. Here goes:
David Ortiz and Hanley Ramirez were rooting for each other in the Home Run Derby final.
1. The winner. David Ortiz is smiling again. And if he starts slowly next year, maybe he will be cut some slack and the smile won’t disappear. The way he bombed those majestic big flies into the right-field seats, the life in Ortiz’s bat is not likely to run out anytime soon. He hit eight, 13 and 11 homers to finish with six more than runner-up Hanley Ramirez. Not bad for a man who, at 34, is old enough for Ramirez to say he’s "like my dad." In a respectful way, of course. Ortiz looked out for his younger countryman when Ramirez was coming up in the Red Sox’s system. Ramirez went so far to admit that Ortiz was rooting for Ramirez to win the derby. "Like I was rooting for him," Ramirez said.
2. The runner-up. For a guy who admitted he was concerned about what entering the derby could do to his swing, Ramirez put on an impressive showing. While Ortiz launched his homers, Ramirez’s were more like line drives drilled over the fence. So why did he decide to enter? "My teammates kept saying why aren’t you doing it, why aren’t you doing it." And will it affect his swing? "I will hit more (homers) now," he said, smiling before adding, "I don’t think so. I know what kind of hitter I am. "
3. On the field. Matt Holliday didn’t make it out of the first round but he did hit the longest homer of the night, 497 feet. He also showed about as much emotion as he does during regular-season games when he slapped his bat after making his final out. With one out left, Holliday had only one homer but then he cranked four straight to make things interesting. He ended up two homers short of moving on.
4. On the sideline. First-time All Star and derby entrant Chris Young didn’t exactly join the ranks of notable sluggers by hitting only one homer, made doubly embarrassing because he had to go first. But give the young Diamondbacks center fielder credit for respecting those who came before him. Hank Aaron, Reggie Jackson and Frank Robinson were about to walk off the field after finishing an on-field interview when Young stopped them and asked them to pose for a photograph with him. "I had the opportunity and I went for it," Young said. "I’m framing that one, for sure."
5. In the press box. What better way to promote a movie than bring one of the stars into a press box full of folks looking for a break from watching the derby? Especially when that star is funnyman Will Ferrell? And there he was, appearing on behalf of his upcoming film "The Other Guys" (August 6), wiping sweat from his brow and trying to be quick-witted while squeezed in a room full of media hoping for a mini-monologue. His sports jacket was kind of funny, with an authentic Bobby Grich patch on the front (Ferrell grew up an Angels fan). He had at least one good line. Asked what his home run call would be if he were an announcer, Ferrell replied something like: "It’s back … to the wall. Check your watches (voice rising), it’s home run o’clock." OK, not his funniest one-liner ever but impressive without any notice.
Stan McNeal is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at smcneal@sportingnews.com.
Coming up with five memorable moments from a two-hour, 30-some minute event featuring some of baseball’s best hitters shouldn’t be this difficult. But perhaps that says something about the event, or the length of it anyway. As far as home run derbies go, this one had way more homers (95 total) than memorable moments. Here goes:
David Ortiz and Hanley Ramirez were rooting for each other in the Home Run Derby final.
1. The winner. David Ortiz is smiling again. And if he starts slowly next year, maybe he will be cut some slack and the smile won’t disappear. The way he bombed those majestic big flies into the right-field seats, the life in Ortiz’s bat is not likely to run out anytime soon. He hit eight, 13 and 11 homers to finish with six more than runner-up Hanley Ramirez. Not bad for a man who, at 34, is old enough for Ramirez to say he’s "like my dad." In a respectful way, of course. Ortiz looked out for his younger countryman when Ramirez was coming up in the Red Sox’s system. Ramirez went so far to admit that Ortiz was rooting for Ramirez to win the derby. "Like I was rooting for him," Ramirez said.
2. The runner-up. For a guy who admitted he was concerned about what entering the derby could do to his swing, Ramirez put on an impressive showing. While Ortiz launched his homers, Ramirez’s were more like line drives drilled over the fence. So why did he decide to enter? "My teammates kept saying why aren’t you doing it, why aren’t you doing it." And will it affect his swing? "I will hit more (homers) now," he said, smiling before adding, "I don’t think so. I know what kind of hitter I am. "
3. On the field. Matt Holliday didn’t make it out of the first round but he did hit the longest homer of the night, 497 feet. He also showed about as much emotion as he does during regular-season games when he slapped his bat after making his final out. With one out left, Holliday had only one homer but then he cranked four straight to make things interesting. He ended up two homers short of moving on.
4. On the sideline. First-time All Star and derby entrant Chris Young didn’t exactly join the ranks of notable sluggers by hitting only one homer, made doubly embarrassing because he had to go first. But give the young Diamondbacks center fielder credit for respecting those who came before him. Hank Aaron, Reggie Jackson and Frank Robinson were about to walk off the field after finishing an on-field interview when Young stopped them and asked them to pose for a photograph with him. "I had the opportunity and I went for it," Young said. "I’m framing that one, for sure."
5. In the press box. What better way to promote a movie than bring one of the stars into a press box full of folks looking for a break from watching the derby? Especially when that star is funnyman Will Ferrell? And there he was, appearing on behalf of his upcoming film "The Other Guys" (August 6), wiping sweat from his brow and trying to be quick-witted while squeezed in a room full of media hoping for a mini-monologue. His sports jacket was kind of funny, with an authentic Bobby Grich patch on the front (Ferrell grew up an Angels fan). He had at least one good line. Asked what his home run call would be if he were an announcer, Ferrell replied something like: "It’s back … to the wall. Check your watches (voice rising), it’s home run o’clock." OK, not his funniest one-liner ever but impressive without any notice.
Stan McNeal is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at smcneal@sportingnews.com.
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Plenty will be new at the All-Star Game Tuesday night and a little will be old. But the big question: Will the outcome be any different?
A look at what’s new, what’s old and the NL’s perspective on ending its 13-game winless streak.
Starting with youth
AL starting pitcher David Price is part of an influx of young pitching talent.
With a record 33 first-timers on hand, the selection of two of them to start on the mound was only fitting. Rockies right-hander Ubaldo Jimenez, 26, and Rays lefty David Price, 24, become the youngest starting tandem years since Roger Clemens, then 24, and Dwight Gooden, 21, took the mound in 1986. Gooden, however, by then was a three-time All-Star.
Plenty of inexperience will follow, too. Of 26 active pitchers on the clubs, only Roy Halladay has appeared in more than one All-Star Game. Sixteen never have worked in an All-Star Game.
"Young pitching is where baseball is at today," NL manager Charlie Manuel said.
Added AL manager Joe Girardi: "It seemed like 15 years ago, it was a time of young shortstops, and other times, it seems there’s an influx of great, young talent in outfielders. But right now the influx of young pitching in baseball is incredible, and not just guys with stuff; guys that know how to pitch."
Familiar faces
You should not, however, need a program to recognize the starting position players. Ichiro Suzuki will lead off for the AL, Derek Jeter will follow, Josh Hamilton will hit cleanup and Joe Mauer will catch. In the five-hole will be Vlad Guerrero, who should receive one of the night’s loudest receptions as he returns to his old home.
For the NL, Albert Pujols will hit third, just ahead of David Wright and Ryan Braun. All will be starting for at least the third time.
The newer All-Stars really can be just in awe of the big-names as can fans. As NL players were leaving a media session Monday, Dodgers closer Jonathan Broxton was asked, "Would you like to meet Albert?" Broxton, a two-time All-Star, clearly was pleased for the opportunity, following Pujols and his entourage out of the room and into a meeting hall.
NL looking for a win
The National Leaguers say the right things about trying to win for the first time since 1996. As Manuel insisted, "Our priority is to win." He even added a second lefty to his bullpen for matchup purposes and named a utility player, Omar Infante, to his roster to ensure enough versatility in his lineup.
Besides the embarrassment of an 0-12-1 skid, the game does count for something because the winning league earns home-field advantage for the World Series.
"In our home games during the playoffs last year, we were 7-1, so we understand that that home-field advantage is very important to one American League club this year," Joe Girardi said.
But really, a little perspective. While important, winning is not the top priority to the players.
"We all going to try hard to have fun, one, and win the ball game," said NL right-hander Chris Carpenter, making it clear that was the right order "If you’re going to come here and try to compete and act like you do in a real game, it’s not going to be any fun."
And if the losing ever becomes such an albatross that the competition takes precedent?
"If it does, it’s going in the wrong direction," Carpenter said. "This is supposed to be fun. All the other All-Star Games are a lot of fun, too. That’s what it’s all about."
Stan McNeal is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at smcneal@sportingnews.com.
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Plenty will be new at the All-Star Game Tuesday night and a little will be old. But the big question: Will the outcome be any different?
A look at what’s new, what’s old and the NL’s perspective on ending its 13-game winless streak.
Starting with youth
AL starting pitcher David Price is part of an influx of young pitching talent.
With a record 33 first-timers on hand, the selection of two of them to start on the mound was only fitting. Rockies right-hander Ubaldo Jimenez, 26, and Rays lefty David Price, 24, become the youngest starting tandem years since Roger Clemens, then 24, and Dwight Gooden, 21, took the mound in 1986. Gooden, however, by then was a three-time All-Star.
Plenty of inexperience will follow, too. Of 26 active pitchers on the clubs, only Roy Halladay has appeared in more than one All-Star Game. Sixteen never have worked in an All-Star Game.
"Young pitching is where baseball is at today," NL manager Charlie Manuel said.
Added AL manager Joe Girardi: "It seemed like 15 years ago, it was a time of young shortstops, and other times, it seems there’s an influx of great, young talent in outfielders. But right now the influx of young pitching in baseball is incredible, and not just guys with stuff; guys that know how to pitch."
Familiar faces
You should not, however, need a program to recognize the starting position players. Ichiro Suzuki will lead off for the AL, Derek Jeter will follow, Josh Hamilton will hit cleanup and Joe Mauer will catch. In the five-hole will be Vlad Guerrero, who should receive one of the night’s loudest receptions as he returns to his old home.
For the NL, Albert Pujols will hit third, just ahead of David Wright and Ryan Braun. All will be starting for at least the third time.
The newer All-Stars really can be just in awe of the big-names as can fans. As NL players were leaving a media session Monday, Dodgers closer Jonathan Broxton was asked, "Would you like to meet Albert?" Broxton, a two-time All-Star, clearly was pleased for the opportunity, following Pujols and his entourage out of the room and into a meeting hall.
NL looking for a win
The National Leaguers say the right things about trying to win for the first time since 1996. As Manuel insisted, "Our priority is to win." He even added a second lefty to his bullpen for matchup purposes and named a utility player, Omar Infante, to his roster to ensure enough versatility in his lineup.
Besides the embarrassment of an 0-12-1 skid, the game does count for something because the winning league earns home-field advantage for the World Series.
"In our home games during the playoffs last year, we were 7-1, so we understand that that home-field advantage is very important to one American League club this year," Joe Girardi said.
But really, a little perspective. While important, winning is not the top priority to the players.
"We all going to try hard to have fun, one, and win the ball game," said NL right-hander Chris Carpenter, making it clear that was the right order "If you’re going to come here and try to compete and act like you do in a real game, it’s not going to be any fun."
And if the losing ever becomes such an albatross that the competition takes precedent?
"If it does, it’s going in the wrong direction," Carpenter said. "This is supposed to be fun. All the other All-Star Games are a lot of fun, too. That’s what it’s all about."
Stan McNeal is a writer for Sporting News. E-mail him at smcneal@sportingnews.com.
Sporting News staff reports
His team unable to get on a roll, Marlins president of baseball operations Larry Beinfest is exploring roster moves before the July 31 trading deadline.
"Will we be active? Yes, always, and it’s already starting," Beinfest told reporters Sunday in Arizona before Florida’s game against the Diamondbacks. "The chatter has picked up in the last week. Teams now have a pretty good idea of who they are and what they’re going to be heading into the break."
The Marlins are generally aggressive in making deals, and players such as second baseman Dan Uggla, third baseman Jorge Cantu and right-handers Ricky Nolasco and Leo Nunez frequently are mentioned in rumors. Still, Beinfest is downplaying the idea of wholesale changes.
"We have some people (in the minors) we think are ready that can help if we wanted to tweak, if we wanted to make a trade or two. I don’t think were going to force anything," he was quoted as saying.
Beinfest also pointed out that he wants to maintain a solid core into 2012 when the Marlins open their new stadium.
Mainly, Beinfest remains hopeful his players will finally make a run this year. "We’re not writing off the season," he said. "You can get hot, things can happen — the old Colorado Rockies thing. It’s just been frustrating because we haven’t seen that coming yet and it’s hard to foresee it at this point."
Sporting News staff reports
His team unable to get on a roll, Marlins president of baseball operations Larry Beinfest is exploring roster moves before the July 31 trading deadline.
"Will we be active? Yes, always, and it’s already starting," Beinfest told reporters Sunday in Arizona before Florida’s game against the Diamondbacks. "The chatter has picked up in the last week. Teams now have a pretty good idea of who they are and what they’re going to be heading into the break."
The Marlins are generally aggressive in making deals, and players such as second baseman Dan Uggla, third baseman Jorge Cantu and right-handers Ricky Nolasco and Leo Nunez frequently are mentioned in rumors. Still, Beinfest is downplaying the idea of wholesale changes.
"We have some people (in the minors) we think are ready that can help if we wanted to tweak, if we wanted to make a trade or two. I don’t think were going to force anything," he was quoted as saying.
Beinfest also pointed out that he wants to maintain a solid core into 2012 when the Marlins open their new stadium.
Mainly, Beinfest remains hopeful his players will finally make a run this year. "We’re not writing off the season," he said. "You can get hot, things can happen — the old Colorado Rockies thing. It’s just been frustrating because we haven’t seen that coming yet and it’s hard to foresee it at this point."
Sporting News staff reports
Red Sox All-Star DH David Ortiz tells The Boston Globe he wants to stay in Beantown at least another season.
He’s hopeful the team picks up its $12.5 million option (no buyout) on him for 2011. Such a move seemed highly unlikely the first month-plus of this season as Ortiz endured a second consecutive poor start.
Now, after earning berths in the All-Star Game and the Home Run Derby, Ortiz again is thinking long term.
"Hopefully, it gets done," Ortiz told the Globe. "I think I will be here. I may look crazy, but I’m not stupid. I don’t see myself playing nowhere else and that’s important to me."
"I want to stay here in Boston and always have a home here, go back and forth when I do retire. The people here have been good to me and I’ve tried to be good to them."
Red Sox owner John Henry, who backed Ortiz when the slugger was linked to performance-enhancing drugs last year, appears to still be in Big Papi’s corner.
"How could I not support someone who has meant so much to our franchise?" Henry told the Globe in an e-mail.
After batting .143 with one home run in April, Ortiz has put up a .297/.421/.641 line since. He has 17 homers and 53 RBIs over his last 57 games.
Despite the current good feelings, Ortiz remains upset that some believed he no longer could hit.
"I never thought I was finished," Ortiz told the Globe. "But other people, I know they did. I was a dead in their eyes, I saw that."
Ortiz also recounts a testy period between he and manager Terry Francona. Ortiz reacted angrily when he was benched and removed for a pinch hitter during his slump.
"I have seen tons of players in other places who struggle," Ortiz told the Globe. "All you hear is, ‘Oh, he’ll be fine.’ Why couldn’t they say that about Papi? But I understand it. (Francona) was under a lot of pressure and I wasn’t getting it done. That’s a bad combination.
"But we all forgot about one thing. I forgot for a minute who I am and what I’m capable of doing. And because of the pressure he was getting, he forgot about who I was, too. But things went back in place."
Francona knew Ortiz wasn’t his biggest fan at times.
"He was mad at me, he probably was mad at [the media]. There was a lot going on and there wasn’t a lot going right," Francona told the Globe.
Sporting News staff reports
Red Sox All-Star DH David Ortiz tells The Boston Globe he wants to stay in Beantown at least another season.
He’s hopeful the team picks up its $12.5 million option (no buyout) on him for 2011. Such a move seemed highly unlikely the first month-plus of this season as Ortiz endured a second consecutive poor start.
Now, after earning berths in the All-Star Game and the Home Run Derby, Ortiz again is thinking long term.
"Hopefully, it gets done," Ortiz told the Globe. "I think I will be here. I may look crazy, but I’m not stupid. I don’t see myself playing nowhere else and that’s important to me."
"I want to stay here in Boston and always have a home here, go back and forth when I do retire. The people here have been good to me and I’ve tried to be good to them."
Red Sox owner John Henry, who backed Ortiz when the slugger was linked to performance-enhancing drugs last year, appears to still be in Big Papi’s corner.
"How could I not support someone who has meant so much to our franchise?" Henry told the Globe in an e-mail.
After batting .143 with one home run in April, Ortiz has put up a .297/.421/.641 line since. He has 17 homers and 53 RBIs over his last 57 games.
Despite the current good feelings, Ortiz remains upset that some believed he no longer could hit.
"I never thought I was finished," Ortiz told the Globe. "But other people, I know they did. I was a dead in their eyes, I saw that."
Ortiz also recounts a testy period between he and manager Terry Francona. Ortiz reacted angrily when he was benched and removed for a pinch hitter during his slump.
"I have seen tons of players in other places who struggle," Ortiz told the Globe. "All you hear is, ‘Oh, he’ll be fine.’ Why couldn’t they say that about Papi? But I understand it. (Francona) was under a lot of pressure and I wasn’t getting it done. That’s a bad combination.
"But we all forgot about one thing. I forgot for a minute who I am and what I’m capable of doing. And because of the pressure he was getting, he forgot about who I was, too. But things went back in place."
Francona knew Ortiz wasn’t his biggest fan at times.
"He was mad at me, he probably was mad at [the media]. There was a lot going on and there wasn’t a lot going right," Francona told the Globe.
Sporting News staff reports
Cubs general manager Jim Hendry received a tepid vote of confidence from owner Tom Ricketts, the Chicago Tribune reports.
Ricketts, while saying he has the "highest level of confidence" in Hendry, also said, "The fact is right now Jim is our general manager. I support him. I think he does a great job, and we’ll just take it one day at a time."
Ricketts visited the Cubs in Los Angeles on Sunday before heading to Anaheim, Calif., for the All-Star Game.
Hendry and manager Lou Piniella are being criticized for assembling a team that’s mired in the middle of the NL Central, well behind leaders Cincinnati and St. Louis. Ricketts echoed Hendry’s recent support of Piniella, however, and was careful not to point fingers.
"Lou is a great manager, one of the best managers of all time, for God’s sake," Ricketts said. "Obviously the year hasn’t gone like we’d all hoped, but I don’t think the turning point is any one person."
"I’m not going to assign blame to anyone or anything," he said. "The fact is when we came into the season, we had what appeared to be a pretty strong lineup. It hasn’t worked out for whatever reason. Seems like the guys are putting it together now. Let’s just keep on winning."
Ricketts said that before the Cubs were shut out, 7-0, to end the first half.
Sporting News staff reports
Cubs general manager Jim Hendry received a tepid vote of confidence from owner Tom Ricketts, the Chicago Tribune reports.
Ricketts, while saying he has the "highest level of confidence" in Hendry, also said, "The fact is right now Jim is our general manager. I support him. I think he does a great job, and we’ll just take it one day at a time."
Ricketts visited the Cubs in Los Angeles on Sunday before heading to Anaheim, Calif., for the All-Star Game.
Hendry and manager Lou Piniella are being criticized for assembling a team that’s mired in the middle of the NL Central, well behind leaders Cincinnati and St. Louis. Ricketts echoed Hendry’s recent support of Piniella, however, and was careful not to point fingers.
"Lou is a great manager, one of the best managers of all time, for God’s sake," Ricketts said. "Obviously the year hasn’t gone like we’d all hoped, but I don’t think the turning point is any one person."
"I’m not going to assign blame to anyone or anything," he said. "The fact is when we came into the season, we had what appeared to be a pretty strong lineup. It hasn’t worked out for whatever reason. Seems like the guys are putting it together now. Let’s just keep on winning."
Ricketts said that before the Cubs were shut out, 7-0, to end the first half.
Sporting News staff reports
Bronson Arroyo wants to stay with the Reds beyond this season, but he won’t do it at a hometown discount.
"I gave a team a discount one time and they burned me," he told the Cincinnati Enquirer, referring to the three-year year deal he signed with the Red Sox in January 2006. Boston traded him to the Reds two months later.
"I got to look out for me," he said.
Cincinnati holds an $11 million club option for 2011 (with a $2 million buyouy) on Arroyo, but the Enquirer speculated the club might want to move Arroyo by the July 31 nonwaiver trading deadline if he isn’t willing to sign a more club-friendly extension.
"This is probably the last chance I’ll get to sign a good multiyear deal," Arroyo, 33, told the Enquirer.
Arroyo cites his durability and consistency as reasons why he shouldn’t sell himself short.
"For what I’ve done the last six years in this game," he said, "to sign back for less than what my option is would be insane."
Arroyo is on pace for a sixth consecutive season of at least 200 innings pitched. Since the start of the 2005 season, he is 76-64 with a 4.09 ERA and a 1.31 WHIP.
Sporting News staff reports
Bronson Arroyo wants to stay with the Reds beyond this season, but he won’t do it at a hometown discount.
"I gave a team a discount one time and they burned me," he told the Cincinnati Enquirer, referring to the three-year year deal he signed with the Red Sox in January 2006. Boston traded him to the Reds two months later.
"I got to look out for me," he said.
Cincinnati holds an $11 million club option for 2011 (with a $2 million buyouy) on Arroyo, but the Enquirer speculated the club might want to move Arroyo by the July 31 nonwaiver trading deadline if he isn’t willing to sign a more club-friendly extension.
"This is probably the last chance I’ll get to sign a good multiyear deal," Arroyo, 33, told the Enquirer.
Arroyo cites his durability and consistency as reasons why he shouldn’t sell himself short.
"For what I’ve done the last six years in this game," he said, "to sign back for less than what my option is would be insane."
Arroyo is on pace for a sixth consecutive season of at least 200 innings pitched. Since the start of the 2005 season, he is 76-64 with a 4.09 ERA and a 1.31 WHIP.