Tag: Brian Cashman

Derek Jeter Will Have to Accept Pay Cut to Remain With New York Yankees

Courtesy of Yankees ‘n More

SI.com’s Jon Heyman chimed (oops…make that Tweeted) in with some new info on the Derek Jeter debacle tonight.

According to Heyman, while the New York Yankees are willing to sweeten their offer to Jeter “by a couple mil a year,” the Yankees captain will have to accept a pay cut to remain with the team.

Well, we would certainly hope so. Since when do 37-year-olds who have already hit the wall NOT take a pay cut on their next contract?

Jeter and the Yankees will eventually work out a new deal, and that deal will pay Jeter at least three times more than any other team would even think of offering the now-common-as-they-come shortstop.

And as overpaid as Jeter will be in the first year of this eventual deal, imagine what it’s going to look like when the Yankees are serving up $17-18 million worth of charity three (or four) years from now to the 40- and/or 41-year-old Jeter.

And don’t expect this contract to be the last major issue with Jeter and his massive ego. There will be more problems when Jeter is moved to the bottom of the batting order, and then again when he’s moved from shortstop—both things that should have already happened.

And speaking of Jeter moving from shortstop…Where exactly will he move to? Third base? Left Field? This over-the-hill goof doesn’t hit enough to play a corner anything for anybody NOW. What? He’s going to get his power back three years from now?

Brian Cashman should be taking a page out of his Bernie Williams playbook and just stop answering the phone when Jeter or agent Casey Close shows up on the caller ID.

Heyman also tweets that the Yankees “hope to make inroads with Jeter next week, and maybe even wrap things up by the Winter Meetings.”

Oh, what I wouldn’t give for Jeter to have already reached 3,000 hits. Were it not for that singular milestone sitting out there, waiting patiently for Jeter to limp on past, we wouldn’t even be having this conversation.

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Hot Stove 2010: What To Make of Derek Jeter and New York Yankees Negotations

Black Friday has come and gone and the Yankees and Derek Jeter have yet to strike a deal. Everyone knows what has gone on thus far. The Yankees have offered a deal to make Jeter the highest paid middle infielder in the big leagues when he is not performing like one. Jeter wants the Yankees to give him an Alex Rodriguez type contract, with rumors floating around of six years at $22-25 million per.

As a lifelong Yankees fan these are the toughest negotiations we have ever had to face and I think I speak for most Yankees fans on this.

This is what he know so far: We all love Derek Jeter and he is the one guy that even Red Sox fans respect, so that says something right there. We all want Jeter to be a Yankee for the last three or four or five years of his career and then retire into a Reggie Jackson type role in the front office.

He is the captain who’s led the team to five World Series rings and if he re-signs will become the first Yankee with 3,000 hits.

We also know he is coming off the worst season of his career, which is not the best move heading into free agency. Now Joe Girardi has said that it was partially his fault for playing him too much when A-Rod got hurt, but that is beside the point.

The Yankees want to pay Jeter a fair, above-market baseball contract at three years/$45 million when most executives around the league say he would be lucky to get $10 million a year anywhere else. Jeter wants the A-Rod type deal and, while the Yankees vastly overpaid A-Rod, the negotiations for his contract were different.

A-Rod was only 32 at the time, coming off a year when he hit 52 homers and a 156 RBI and won the MVP award as well. Plus the economy was not in its current state and other teams were considering serious offers for him also. Sure, the Yankees overpaid him greatly, but given the circumstances, oh well.

With the economy in the toilet and Jeter coming off a dreadful season, that type of contract doesn’t make sense and really makes Jeter look somewhat greedy at a time when about 10 percent of Americans are unemployed.

It is also baffling that the Yankees are picking Jeter to be the line in the sand of unreasonable contracts—he is the face of the franchise and the city. I understand Jeter wanting more money when he is on a roster where A.J Burnett is in the middle of a five-year, $82 million deal after pitching like the fifth guy in a rotation last season.

This is what should and needs to happen: Jeter should pull a page out of Mike Mussina’s playbook and volunteer to take less money than the $22 million he made last year.

Moose went to Cashman and said I will take less, but you have to pay me more than Carl Pavano, who was making $10 million. He ended up with a two-year, $22 million contract with a $1 million signing bonus. Jeter should ask to make more than A.J, who averages $16.4 million.

Cashman should say, “Absolutely, how about $17.5 million with a $1 million signing bonus for three years with an option for a fourth year?” Jeter takes a small pay cut (of only $400,000 off the average of his last contract) and the Yankees, who essentially print money, keep their superstar, fans and other players happy. They should also be thankful Joe Torre retired because Jeter would be playing in LA with him at this point.

It makes one wonder what would have happened if the Boss were still alive. Something tells me the negotiations would have been over for both Jeter and Rivera at this point.

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New York Yankees Should Turn Their Backs on Derek Jeter and His Obscene Demands

Courtesy of Yankees ‘n More

According to this Bill Madden column from Friday’s New York Daily-News, Derek Jeter has asked the New York Yankees to give him a six-year contract worth $150 million. Furthermore, while the Jeter camp might be willing to cave a bit on length, “They aren’t budging on $25 million per season.”

And people think Brian Cashman was being harsh when he told the captain of the Yankees he should take the team’s 3-for-45 offer to the market and see if he can do better.

By the way, it’s important to note that this information, according to Madden, is coming from “sources [as in multiple] close to the Jeter/[agent Casey] Close camp.”

Derek Jeter is either delusional or high or both. Regardless of his thinking, even his strongest supporters cannot possibly defend such a demand, not that you’d find any of those people around here. We saw Derek Jeter play last season, and think the 3/45 offer is way too high.

Jeter, at this stage of his career, has no range, no power and a mediocre arm. And he’s insisting that the Yankees gift wrap $25 million a season for him for each of the next five or six years?

Good grief; the Yankees refused to offer Jeter arbitration because they didn’t want to face the possibility of being forced to pay him in the $25 million range for ONE season—Now the 37-year-old shortstop is asking them to do it for SIX?

In an attempt to put Jeter’s request into perspective, ask yourself this question: If you had your choice of Cliff Lee AND another $10-20 million or Derek Jeter, which would you prefer?

For what Jeter is asking/demanding, the Yankees could EASILY cover Lee’s contract AND bring back Andy Pettitte, should he choose to return for one more season.

As far as we’re concerned, Derek Jeter can forget about it and try to find somebody else willing to give him three years and $45 million worth of charity, much less six and $150M!

We’re quite confident Eduardo Nunez (making the minimum) can start at shortstop next season and put up the same .710 OPS Jeter did in 2010, and he’ll do so while making the team’s defense SIGNIFICANTLY better than it was with Jeter.

And the bonuses don’t stop there. You also don’t have to worry about offending Nunez by hitting him at the bottom of the order, which is exactly where THIS Derek Jeter should have been hitting in 2010. The Yankees had MUCH better options than Jeter for each of the top two spots in their 2010 batting order (Brett Gardner and Nick Swisher) but cut off their noses, at least to some degree, to cater to the ego of the Yankee captain.

How can a name on the back of the jersey POSSIBLY matter this much to a team that doesn’t put names on the backs of their jerseys?

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MLB Hot Stove: Why New York Yankees Fans Should Choose Team Yankees

With each passing day, this seemingly solid and prosperous marriage between Derek Jeter and the New York Yankees seems to be on the verge of divorce.

No doubt the two are more perfect as a union, as I don’t know one baseball fan that can imagine either surviving without the other.

Whose side are you going to choose TEAM JETER or TEAM YANKEES?

Let’s take a look at TEAM YANKEES…(click on TEAM JETER to read that post.)

TEAM YANKEES

The other side to this saga has sent people into a tailspin, as $45-$50 million over three years is way more than Jeter’s athleticism is worth.

This is true, but Jeter would still be the highest paid shortstop in all of baseball by millions of dollars. Look at the players below in comparison to Jeter:

Jeter is by far the oldest active shortstop, as well as the highest paid in 2010, taking home a $22,600,000 paycheck.

No one can hide the fact that Jeter’s age started to show last season, as his skills took a dive.

He’ll turn 37 in June 2011, and inevitably the wear and tear will only get worse.

Also, considering the shortstop position is the most athletic on the field, Jeter is seemingly way out of his prime years of production.

So, being offered $15-$18 million a season for a declining shortstop is beyond generous. It keeps Jeter way atop the payday list at his position.

It would seem ludicrous for him to not to be happy with that money. No other ball club is going to offer anything near that.

Who figured the player who says it’s not about the money would be baffled by this contract. If it is all about winning then why would he hold up more money that could be used elsewhere?

Could he be jealous of Alex Rodriguez’s bigger paycheck?

Well, then Jeter should never have signed for 10 years. He could have made his first big contract seven or six years and then we wouldn’t even be having this discussion.

At the time of his contract negotiations, A-Rod was younger and a better player than Jeter; he still is both of those.

Off the field Jeter’s behavior has been perfect, which can’t be said for the PR shit-storm A-Rod has caused the Bombers post contract.

Basically if you want a better friend, Jeter is your guy. Remember that baseball is about winning, not about who did what three years ago.

Jeter is already rich and it’s not like the Yankees are low balling him. Looking at the market, he is getting way more than his skills are worth.

The fact now is that GM Brian Cashman has made Team Yankees position clear with this statement:

“We understand his contributions to the franchise and our offer has taken them into account. We’ve encouraged him to test the market and see if there is something he would prefer other than this. If he can, fine. That’s the way it works.”

Jeter is going to get a big wake-up call when offers don’t come rolling in with his price tagged, but the fan backlash is what will sting for the Captain.

Jeter wants a bigger paycheck than $45 million in an economy where people can’t afford to eat and have lost their homes.

I would love to hear Jeter’s explanation to Yankee fans, listing all the reasons why that is not enough money to bring his talents back to the Bronx.

Jeter once said:

“We just want to win. That’s the bottom line. I think a lot of times people may become content with one championship or a little bit of success, but we don’t really reflect on what we’ve done in the past. We focus on the present.”

So, why is Derek Jeter so “baffled” by the Yankees offer if the focus is on the right now?

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Dear Brian Cashman: If Derek Jeter Goes, So Does This Lifelong Yankee Fan

One of my favorite pictures is of my brother, dad and I sitting together on the couch on Father’s Day with our Yankee hats on and watching the game.

In the picture, my brother is about three, I’m five and my dad is absolutely beaming with joy.

My brother, who happens to be named after a former Yankee team captain, now has two kids of his own, and they have their own Yankee hats (they just happen to be pink).

The only time in my life that I’ve seen my father cry was when my brother and I presented him with his 50th birthday present, which happened to be tickets to his first trip to Yankee Stadium.

A month later, when we went to the game, we got to see the Yankees beat the Red Sox in a day game with perfect weather. The experience was one of the happiest days of my life, and I have since had the date and interlocking NY tattooed on my left shoulder.

There’s no doubt about it: As Yankee fans we are spoiled. We are not just spoiled with the obvious stuff like the winning tradition, tons of media coverage and Monument Park. We have been able to be spoiled with an ownership that is committed to winning as well as upholding the Yankee tradition. Being able to go to spring training and see Ron Guidry work with pitchers and Yogi Berra hobble about the field is an absolute gift.

We have been able to rest assured that ownership will do whatever it takes to win and whatever it takes to keep us from losing our guys. With the days of free agency, something that we have lost in baseball is having a personal interest and relationship with our players (even if it is a one-sided relationship).

Every year fans in Seattle have to worry about losing Ichiro in a cost-saving trade, and fans in Cleveland have to worry about losing their latest prized possession. We New York Yankee fans don’t have to worry about that because good ol’ George had continually proven that he’d use our ridiculous resources to keep our beloved boys around, even if it meant overpaying for them (see Bernie Williams contract).

Now we have new boys in town. George’s sons have taken over, and understandably they are taking a very strong stance to show the world that they run the ship now. I would probably have done the same thing if in their shoes. The problem is that they’ve chosen to do it on the wrong guy (or two guys).

They are doing it with a man whose face would be on the Mt. Rushmore of Yankees. They’re doing it with a guy who has given his heart and soul to the franchise. They’re doing it with arguably the most beloved Yankees of all time.

There has been much written about the Derek Jeter contract situation recently. Most suggest that Jeter is doing something wrong. I believe that these aren’t the articles written by actual Yankee fans, and they are misleading the Steinbrenners into a false sense of security.

In actuality, I think the Steinbrenners and especially Brian Cashman should be very careful about what they allow to happen. As a lifelong Yankee fan with the team logo tattooed on my shoulder, this is how I see it.

First of all, if George was alive he NEVER would allow this to happen. Jeter would get what he needed to stay, and he’d retire from baseball never having worn a uniform other than pinstripes. Second of all, that’s what Jeter wants to happen. Jeter clearly loves being a Yankee, which is only reinforced by his desire for a longer contract.

So, if Jeter wants it and George would have made it happen, then that means that if Jeter ends up with another team, as a Yankee fan, I have no one to blame but Cashman and the baby Steinbrenners. As a lifelong Yankee fan I would take that as a sign of things to come and be forced to cut my ties with the franchise that I have loved since before I could talk.

If I’m going to be a fan of a ball team like that—a regular old ball club with no sense of loyalty to its greats and that only thinks of its checkbook first—then I can root for someone else, someone that is closer to me and has cheaper tickets.

The reason Cashman needs to be especially careful is this: The other two guys OWN the team. This backlash that I’m warning you about is going to need a scapegoat, and it’s going to be the guy that can be fired. Then, Cash, your legacy changes from being a world championship-winning GM to being the GM who let Jeter become a Kansas City Royal. Ask Dan Duquette how it feels to be THAT GUY.

So guys, let’s stop playing games. Jeter has done more for this franchise than anyone in the history of the team (sans your dad). Regardless of his on-field production, he is the face of this team, he is the leader of the club and he is the fans’ favorite guy. Give Jeter what he wants and let’s move on… Play hardball with someone else. Jeter is not a normal situation.

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MLB Hot Stove: Why New York Yankees Fans Should Choose Team Jeter

No one suspected that New York Yankee captain Derek Jeter’s contract negotiations would start to resemble a page out of the Alex Rodriguez biography.

The new Yankee regime sans “the Boss” has made it very clear that this is a business decision and not a personal one. The rumored offer made was somewhere in $45-$50 million range for a period of three years.

Whatever exactly was left on the table did not go over well in Jeter camp, as Jeter’s agent Casey Close stated he was “baffled” over it.

Close’s public statements did not go over well. Yankees GM Brian Cashman, along with Hank Steinbrenner defended the decisions with an attitude that if the offer is not generous enough than Jeter should go test open market, and hear the other 29 teams offers.

This has caused pandemonium in Yankee Universe, as neither the media nor the fans can rationalize whose side to take. Unfortunately, I am having this same dilemma.

The predicament remains is it Jeter or the Yankees that needs to take a step back and get real? Will you be wearing a “TEAM JETER” or “TEAM YANKEES” t- shirt?

Speaking for myself, I can’t imagine life in Yankee Universe without Jeter, but than maybe Jeter is not the man I thought he was….

TEAM-JETER

Many feel the Yankees are victimizing Jeter, as Cashman and the Steinbrenner brothers’ open lack of appreciation for someone who is the face of the franchise.

What seems more insulting is the lack of respect for the Captain of the team, who single handily made the Yankee brand what it is today.

Justifying the significant salary reduction for Jeter makes no sense. This is an organization notorious for over-paying players and out-spending every other team in baseball.

Now is not the time for the Yankees to become spending thrifty. Jeter is a special athlete, in a world full of cheaters and quitters and he should be treated accordingly.

The Yankees are officially under new ownership with the passing of “the Boss” but his sons’ reassured fans that there dad’s motto and passion for winning would never change.

Hal Steinbrenner once described the Yankees big spending as “I look at it as reinvestment for the fans sake, like we always due”.

If that statement bears any truth than Derek Jeter would be back in pinstripes already. Jeter is a winner through his leadership. The Yankee fans get to be arrogant and proud because of Derek Jeter.

Derek Jeter is the Captain every other fan base, franchise and fellow players want because he makes baseball better at time when the game has taken it’s biggest fall.

Up next….MLB Hot Stove: Why New York Yankees Fans Should Choose Team Yankees.

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Derek Jeter: Does He Have Any Leverage in Public War with Yankees?

Derek Jeter isn’t budging on his contract demands, and the New York Yankees don’t appear to be willing to cave anytime soon.

It’s no surprise that the “Captain’s” contract talks have gone public, but few expected negotiations to go public this early in the process.

Despite coming off the worst season of his career, Jeter still has more value than any other shortstop that the Yankees would be able to land in the offseason.

But does Hank Steinbrenner really want to break the bank to retain a player on the downside of his career?

Apparently not.

Steinbrenner told the Associated Press he wants to keep Jeter at a reasonable price and added that he doesn’t feel like the Yankees owe him anything.

As the negotiations continue to go public, let’s take a look at exactly how much leverage Derek Jeter has in his quest to get paid one final time.

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New York Yankees and Derek Jeter: Ownership May Tarnish Years of Greatness

Shortstop Derek Jeter just finished his 15th year with the New York Yankees, the final year of a 10-year deal. Prior to this off-season, many believed that the Yankees organization and Jeter would work out a new deal in no time. Well, things have gotten ugly and Yankees fans are beginning to think about life without No. 2

The problem with contract negotiations is that a player’s agent can be the one making all the demands, as we witnessed with Alex Rodriguez a few years back. Rodriguez went on to fire his agent Scott Boras and handle the negotiations himself.

The Yankees captain is coming off his worst year offensively, batting just .270. Yankee fans are used to seeing Jeter bat well above .300. With Jeter’s sub-par 2010 season, the question is now should the Yankees pay him like the great icon that he is? Or should they pay him like the .270 hitter he was this past season?

The Yankees have offered Jeter $45 million for three years, and that deal remains on the table. With Jeter and agent Casey Close wanting more money, they must wonder if Jeter will get at least $15 million a year elsewhere.

The answer is no.

Jeter and Close need to realize that this is an extremely generous offer from the Yankees and that he is not going to find another offer like this around the league. Granted, Jeter may be offended by general manager Brian Cashman’s comments about testing the open market but at the end of the day, Jeter signing this deal will make both parties happy.

The fact remains that the Yankees cannot let Jeter walk, and Jeter needs the Yankees as well. Fans are outraged at the situation already and things will only get worse if a deal does not get done. Fans have called in to radio shows, going as far to say that they will never step foot in Yankee Stadium if a deal does not get done.

As if things were not ugly already, the New York Post‘s sports cover page was a picture of Derek Jeter in a Boston Red Sox uniform with a title saying “Picture This!” This is the absolute last thing the Yankees and their fans want to see.

It is extremely unlikely that Jeter will ever play in Boston, but seeing that image of the captain in a Red Sox uniform should give the Yankees and their fans nightmares.

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Derek Jeter Watch: New York Yankees Lose Containment on Hank Steinbrenner

Tsk, tsk, Yankees. You should have known better.

Once agent Casey Close made the Derek Jeter negotiations public this weekend, proving Hal Steinbrenner’s “things could get messy” prophecy as true, the team needed to be thinking two steps ahead.

Unfortunately, Yankee officials were playing checkers when they needed to be playing chess, and that’s how a reporter from the Associated Press managed to get through to Hal’s loquacious brother, Hank, on Tuesday.

I worried about this exact scenario just a day earlier. After the agent told the Daily News he was “baffled” by the Yankees’ negotiation strategy, I braced for a reaction by Yankee brass that would further divide the gap between icon and team.

As I said Monday, we’re talking about very rich men with very rich egos, and Close insinuated someone was dropping the ball. That’s a big rich dude no-no. Rich dudes live to project infallibility.

I figure there has to be a panic room at the Yankees’ Tampa headquarters, a place where George was hidden away in his “fuzzy” years and the skeletal remnants of the scout who vouched for Hideki Irabu could be safely stored. That poor man’s family…

And if this mystical panic room does indeed exist, Hank Steinbrenner should have been resting there comfortably with a gallon of whiskey, six cartons of Marlboro Reds and all of Andrew Dice Clay’s stand-up specials on VHS.

Brian Cashman had to have realized the press would want Hank’s thoughts on the situation. After all, this is same man who once said, “Red Sox Nation? What a bunch of bulls**t that is.”

Because of his propensity to speak his mind, Hank is a reporter’s wet dream. When Close challenged the organization, it was obvious the media would come after Hank the way your skeevy college roommate came after the drunkest girl with the lowest self esteem at a frat party.

It was all so inevitable, and yet, late Tuesday came word that Hank had been compromised.

“As much as we want to keep everybody, we’ve already made these guys very, very rich, and I don’t feel we owe anybody anything monetarily,” the Yankees co-chairman said. “Some of these players are wealthier than their bosses.”

Never mind the fact that it was during Hank’s brief reign of terror as chief decision-maker that the franchise signed A-Rod to the worst contract in the history of mankind. Seriously, as insanely clueless as his commentary is, let’s set aside that irony for now.

Instead, we’ll focus on the smaller picture, which is we now have another member of the Yankee brass on record basically calling Jeter’s bluff.

It’s now being widely reported that New York’s offer stands at three years at $15 million annually. Earlier in the day, Cashman expressed his surprise at Close’s “baffling” dig, and was blunt in his assessment of the situation.

“We understand his contributions to the franchise and our offer has taken them into account,” Cashman told ESPNNewYork.com. “We’ve encouraged him to test the market and see if there’s something he would prefer other than this. If he can, fine. That’s the way it works.”

Then, curiously, he added a little dagger.

“We’ve made an offer and we hope they strongly consider it,” he said. “[But] there are things we have concerns with — his recent performance over the last few years, and his age. And that has to be factored into this negotiation.”

Ugh. With every day that goes by it, the teeth seem to be getting a little sharper on each side. Again, this was Jeter’s choice to go public. You have to wonder if he’s regretting that decision now.

As for Hank, we need to get him in that panic room. I absolutely adore the man and all the limitless entertainment he brings both to this blog and my life in general. But he needs to be muzzled. If we need to put the Dice Man himself in that room, make it happen.

I’m guessing he’s available.

Dan Hanzus writes the Yankees blog River & Sunset and can be reached at dhanzus@gmail.com. Follow Dan on Twitter @danhanzus.

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New York Yankees: The Derek Jeter Dilemna

Picture a franchise player who was once considered one of the best players in baseball.  Fans watched him grow from an ambitious kid to a superstar, to now what could be the twilight of his career.  This is the case of Derek Jeter and the New York Yankees.

Ten years ago, Mr. Jeter signed a 10-year deal worth $189 million.  He earned every penny of that contract as he perpetually hit over .300, played stellar (and underrated) defense and won more championships than any other player in baseball except for his other core four teammates.

However, last year was his walk year, and Mr. Jeter had undoubtedly the worst season of his career.  He hit a paltry .270, and despite winning the Gold Glove, seemed a step slower in the field.  2010 was most definitely the worst season of his career.  Also, he turns 37 next June and it could be a recipe for disaster.

Any 36-year-old shortstop would have no business demanding a four-year deal.  Like catchers and pitchers, they have a short shelf life as they rely on their speed and athleticism to thrive in the field.  Couple that with naturally slowing bat speed—and a four-year deal usually does not work well for the team that signs the player.  Only two shortstops in recent memory were still playing at a high level into their 40s: future Hall of Famers Barry Larkin and Omar Vizquel.

That being said, Jeter’s agent, Casey Close, is pushing for a four or five-year deal.  Any other 36-year-old shortstop would never receive a deal of four years, and would likely get two at most.  The Yankees seem to be targeting a three-year deal.

So now, Yankees GM Brian Cashman is now stuck between a rock and a hard place. He must find a way to sign Jeter to a new deal because he is still the best shortstop available, and he is still Derek Jeter.  Jeter’s place in New York is so solidified that a failure to re-sign him would vilify Mr. Cashman for the rest of his tenure in the Bronx.

Both sides should agree to a three-year deal worth $45 million.  Jeter’s production was way down last year, but it could also be an anomaly, where he reverts back to form in 2011.  The deal would also give him a chance to reach 3,000 hits, a feat no Yankee has achieved, as well as the possibility of getting close to Pete Rose’s all-time hits record.   Most importantly, it keeps Derek in the Bronx for the rest of his career—a rarity in this business.

While newspapers, websites and ESPN seem to be making a big deal of the contract negotiations, and Yankees officials calling the negotiations a “messy” process, a deal will most definitely be done.  Expect Jete’ in pinstripes on opening day 2011.

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