Tag: Mariano Rivera

MLB Offseason Report: Mariano Rivera Hopes to Recruit Andy Pettitte For 2011

The Yankees have been doing a lot of waiting this offseason. They waited for Cliff Lee to choose his team. They waited for Derek Jeter to accept their offer. Then they stayed put a while too long and lost out on Zach Greinke. Now they await a decision from Andy Pettitte as to whether or not he will pitch in 2011. 

The Yankees starting rotation for 2011 may be in shambles if Pettitte chooses not to return. A few days ago, Brian Cashman said that he would not pressure Pettitte into making a decision quickly. Now there are reports surfacing that Mariano Rivera may be making a phone call to his long-time teammate to see if he can return to the mound in 2011. 

Cashman is optimistic about 2011 when he spoke, saying that he will bring back a 95-win team next year. Andy Pettitte definitely has to be in the equation for the Yankees to win 95 games next year. 

He excelled this year, but got hurt in the second half of the season. He was not as dominant, but he continued to show some consistency as a dominant veteran of the mound. 

The main factor surrounding the decision as to whether he will return will be money. Pettitte has expressed his desire to spend more time with his family in Texas, but the Yankees need him. 

In the past, the Yankees have been known to disrespect some of its aging stars by not offering so much money on the table. It happened to Bernie Williams and Joe Torre later on wrote about his unhappiness afterwards in The Yankee Years

Andy Pettitte has been a fan favorite for a long time in the Bronx, and seeing him leave due to financial unhappiness seems like the wrong way to end his story. The Yankees should reach into their pockets and put the right amount of money on the table, because the only perfect ending to Andy Pettitte’s story is one more World Series Championship. With Pettitte on the team, the ending seems possible.

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How Close Was Mariano Rivera To Signing with the Boston Red Sox?

It’s been a disappointing offseason for the New York Yankees. Normally a lock to sign the best free agents available, the Yankees whiffed on Cliff Lee, despite having the larger offer. Reliever Kerry Wood then signed a one-year, $1.5 million deal with the Chicago Cubs, leaving a big hole in the Yankees’ bullpen.

It’s still only December, so there’s plenty of time for the Yankees to make some quality moves to bolster their team for 2011.

There is one move however, which would have turned the Yankees’ offseason from “disapointing” to “disaster.”

A few weeks ago, the Yankees agreed on a two-year, $30 million deal with the greatest closer in baseball, Mariano Rivera.

Rivera, 41, has played his entire career in the Bronx and no one could envision him playing anywhere else.

But soon after the Yankees announced their deal with Rivera, it was reported that the Boston Red Sox had made an offer to Rivera to come pitch for them in Boston.

While most immediately assumed that their offer was simply to drive up Rivera’s price tag, which of course it did, Boston’s offer was very real and almost enticed Rivera enough to abandon his ninth-inning post with the Yankees.

When asked about going to Boston, Rivera said, “I was thinking about it…It was a hard decision.”

A hard decision!?

Rivera has played his entire career with the Yankees, has won five World Series Championships and holds the major league record for postseason saves (42) and is second only to Trevor Hoffman in regular season saves (559), and when offered a chance to pitch for the Yankees’ most hated rival, the Boston Red Sox, Rivera had to think about it to the point where it was actually a difficult decision?

So exactly how close was Rivera to pitching in Boston?

“It was close,” Rivera said. “I had to think about it.”

As a free agent, Rivera has the right to pitch anywhere he wants. If he is unhappy and wants a change of scenery, that’s one thing. But it’s impossible to think that Rivera is unhappy with the Yankees.

He didn’t say, “I heard their offer and decided I wanted to stay in New York.”

He said he thought about it, and it was actually a difficult decision. That’s just crazy to think about; Rivera in Red and White, closing out a clinching Game 7 in the 2011 ALCS against the New York Yankees.

Just imagine that. Mariano Rivera gets Derek Jeter looking to send the Red Sox to the World Series.

It’s enough to make any Yankees fan throw up their arms and become a Mets fan.

In the end, Rivera of course stayed with the Yankees.

“My heart is here,” Rivera said. “My family is here…In the end I don’t think I would’ve been able to do it.”

You don’t think you’d be able to do it or you love the Yankees and want to stay there?

Apparently, Rivera just loves the $15 million he’ll be making in each of the next two seasons.

 

 

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New York Yankees: Mariano Rivera in Place, but Rafael Soriano Deserves Look

As the Derek Jeter contract negotiations degenerated into a very public he-said, she-said battle of egos, Mariano Rivera and his representation quietly went about the business of re-upping with the only team he has ever known.

The two sides soon agreed on a two-year, $30 million deal, the news made official via press release. Apparently, an awkward press conference where the player appeared to be wondering if he could choke his GM to death and get away with it was deemed unnecessary.

And while many in the media, and even Brian Cashman himself, questioned whether the 36-year-old Jeter still deserved superstar money, no one said a peep about Rivera, a man five years Jeter’s senior who relies exclusively on a young man’s pitch.

There will never be an Al Leiter-like reinvention of Mariano Rivera. You’re not going to see Mo shaking off signs and battling through innings like Eddie Harris in Major League. Once Rivera’s inimitable cutter goes, so too does the G.O.A.T.

Of course, how the two Yankee lifers performed in their walk years had a lot to do with how their contract negotiations played out. While Jeter was coming off the worst season of his career, Rivera had a year that was in many ways nearly identical to its predecessor.

The numbers tell the story:

IP
2009: 66.1
2010: 61

H
2009: 48
2010: 39

ERA
2009: 1.76
2010: 1.80

ER
2009: 13
2010: 12

BB
2009: 13
2010: 14

K
2009: 72
2010: 45

WHIP
2009: 0.91
2010: 0.83

S
2009: 44
2010: 33

 

Three things jump out at you here:

1. This guy is freaking amazing.

2. The disparity in saves proves how misleading that statistic can be. In this case, the Yankees played an inordinate amount of games in 2010 where they badly beat an opponent. Blowout victories mean less save chances. In fact, Rivera actually finished the same amount of games (55) in both ’09 and ’10. That tells you the Yankees were going to him in non-save situations just to get him work.

3. OK, this is the one where the pitchforks come out. If you watched Rivera last season, you saw subtle signs of slippage.

(Ducking Molotov cocktails)

Let me explain. It wasn’t anything that could be seen on the surface, but Rivera didn’t possess the same ability to overpower an opponent. This is evident in the strikeout totals, which dipped significantly. Rivera’s 6.8 K/9 ratio was at its lowest point in three years, dropping three full strikeouts from the year before.

That’s not to take anything away from Rivera’s ’10 season, which was magnificent and in some ways better than the year before. But in his ability to make batters miss, he wasn’t nearly as dominant. As unique as Mo is, you can’t expect that to get better given his age.

Enter Rafael Soriano. The reliever had a breakout 2010 season with the Rays, just in time to hit free agency. With Kerry Wood taking a discount to return to the Cubs, the Yankees have a glaring need for an eighth-inning guy and also the $140M earmarked for Cliff Lee just burning a hole through their pocket.

If I’m the Yankees, I’m on the phone with Soriano’s agent yesterday.

“Brian Cashman here. OK, full disclosure: We can’t give you the closer’s job…at least not now. But we can give you a four-year deal that pays you like the best closer in the league. We see you as Mariano’s setup man, but we also envision you getting save chances since we don’t plan on using Mo in back-to-back days and we can’t rule out the possibility that he misses time due to injury. You will be both his understudy and successor.”

It’s a good pitch, but I’m not sure it works. The personality type of a closer—Rivera being a notable exception—oozes more machismo than Razor Ramon. These guys like to be El Hombre. It’s entirely probable that Soriano’s first prerequisite for a prospective suitor (other than being willing to hand over gobs of money) is that he be the hero in the back of the ‘pen.

But it’s worth kicking the tires on anyway. There were reports earlier Thursday that the Yankees were doing just that, but later we were being told New York wasn’t interested. I think that’s a mistake, for all the reasons I’ve brought up above, but also this: If the Yankees aren’t going to have a dominant rotation—and lord Jesus, it’s not looking that way—they should be doing everything in their power to put together a lights-out bullpen.

As we learned way back in 1996, being able to shorten a game to seven innings has the knack of turning a merely good team into a championship one.

 

Dan Hanzus writes three columns a week on his New York Yankees site, River & Sunset. He can be reached at dhanzus@gmail.com. Follow Dan on Twitter @danhanzus.

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Cliff Lee Signs With Philadelphia Phillies: The New York Yankees’ Reign Ends

George Steinbrenner was more than a mere baseball mogul. For better or worse, his time at the top of the New York Yankees ladder changed the game forever. During the latter years of the Steinbrenner era, as the landscape became the free market free-for-all Steinbrenner so encouraged during the first two decades of free agency, the Yankees became a symbol, an empire that ruled baseball with an iron (golden) fist.

Steinbrenner died in July though, and the evidence has rapidly accumulated ever since: Without the Boss behind the big desk inside the team’s new palace, the empire is in an irrevocable decline. Free agent ace Cliff Lee made that official Monday night. In a stunning resolution to a nearly James-ean free agent drama that unfolded after dark on one of the shortest days of the year, Lee chose the Philadelphia Phillies’ five year, $100 million offer over monumentally more lucrative offers from both the Texas Rangers and the Yankees.

Of course, there is so much more to the story. Lee did not merely pass up $50 million more to pitch in Philadelphia rather than New York; he did so despite perhaps the Yankees’ most aggressive courtship of a free agent since Roger Clemens. Lee spurned the Yankees in a way that no one, while Steinbrenner still breathed, would have dared to spurn them. Steinbrenner, for all his faults as a short-sighted and short-tempered personnel manager, had a certain charisma when it came to luring in their truly important targets.

As recently as two winters ago, the team rather easily scooped up CC Sabathia, A.J. Burnett and Mark Teixeira. The team simply did not miss when they really, truly committed themselves to a player. Steinbrenner was emperor, and he left no territory unconquered. Mere months after his death, their most prized target has rather easily defied conquest.

Meanwhile, as they always do when great empires begin to fall in on themselves, emboldened rivals have begun to directly attack the Yankees. The Red Sox, who never really displaced the Yankees as baseball’s unilateral power even during their mini-dynasty in the middle of the last decade, have so thoroughly beaten the Yankees this winter that, if the season began tomorrow, they would probably win the AL East by 10 games. They signed Carl Crawford, whom the Yankees had also briefly considered, and traded for Adrian Gonzalez.

With the Yankees missing out on Lee, the Red Sox may be better in every facet of the game next season: offense, pitching and defense. Meanwhile, the Phillies now look like a surefire favorite to win the NL pennant, and the Rangers are younger and deeper than New York. They reportedly have interest in Adrian Beltre as a consolation prize after losing Lee, which might make them as good as the Yankees.

Finally, consider the eroding talents and loyalties of the core group that made the Yankees so great over the past 15 years. These men are the generals who have facilitated this empire’s great military victories. In the wake of Steinbrenner’s retirement and subsequent depth, these generals have found themselves dealing with his son Hal, a rather bumbling (or at least underwhelming) successor. The ensuing frustrations and gaffes, while perhaps nothing George himself could have avoided, reflect the strain on New York’s critical power centers.

Derek Jeter squared off with Hal in a rather embarrassing exchange that was as bad for morale as it was for public perception of the unified Yankee front. Nor should Jeter have felt sufficiently entitled to assume such a standoffish posture: He had his worst offensive season in over a decade this year, and his defense at shortstop went from bad to worse. In other words, the empire’s greatest general is now a mildly rebellious and eminently impotent leader.

Mariano Rivera, whose contract negotiation ostensibly went much more smoothly, reportedly came close to an alarming turn of his coat. His representatives reached out to the Red Sox, who eventually (at the urging of his agents) made him a contract offer. That was probably a leverage move by Rivera and the agents, and it worked to the tune of a two year, $30 million contract. Still, it never used to be that Yankee legends would use the Red Sox (or anyone else, but especially Boston) to create leverage in a negotiation with management. Rivera had a great 2010, but at 41, he too is beginning to show his age.

If Jeter has gotten a bit big for his britches and Rivera has apparently pondered an unimaginable defection, the most outwardly rebellious and problematic of the old Yankee guard is still Jorge Posada. Posada had no contract disputes to muddy the water this winter, but he has spent the past two seasons as an aging malcontent, getting into tiffs with manager (and former teammate) Joe Girardi, ceasing to catch for A.J. Burnett and battling injuries that mount as he ages.

Mind you, it is not as easy as merely replacing those guys. They cannot be easily replaced. The Yankees farm system is decent, but they simply will not be producing five future Hall of Fame players again within the next decade. That was lightning caught in a bottle, and it’s tough to do twice.

Meanwhile, GM Brian Cashman may be running into more walls than he thought as he tries to hold the whole contraption together. Cashman recently called himself the “director of spending” for the Yankees, which could hardly have sat well with the younger Steinbrenner. The two men have struggled to present a coherent message about the Yankees’ plans for the offseason that it is not at all hard to imagine Lee electing the more stable environment of Philadelphia.

So it is. The builder and leader of a great empire is dead, and in his stead stands an insufficient successor upon whom only heredity has conferred that privilege. The public heads of state (i.e. Girardi and Cashman) seem intent on gaining increased autonomy within the reorganized regime. The men who have won the empire’s greatest battlefield victories are beginning to fade from their former glory, and discordant feelings among them threaten the unity of the troops in the field. The Huns are crossing the Alps, and the richest empire in the history of the baseball world lacks the wherewithal to hold them off. 

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MLB Free Agency: Cliff Lee, Carl Crawford and The Early Hot Stove

Baseball’s offseason hot stove continues to heat up as MLB’s annual winter meetings in Orlando, Florida roll right along.

As always, super agent Scott Boras has landed some monstrous deals for his clients, with outfielders Jayson Werth and Carl Crawford each garnering seven-year deals worth well over $100 million.

And with former Cy Young winner Cliff Lee yet to sign on with a club (i.e. the Yankees), Boras’ busy winter is far from over.

Of course, Boras isn’t the only agent with clients on the move. He just so happens to be the most powerful.

Either way, there’s still plenty of action yet to take place and plenty of mega-millions yet to be wasted…errr…spent before the start of spring training. In that spirit, let’s have a look at the biggest deals of the offseason so far and the most intriguing ones yet to be made.

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Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera Re-Sign with New York Yankees

Answering the Red Sox‘s acquisition of Adrian Gonzalez, Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera have officially re-signed with the New York Yankees

Yesterday, Rivera agreed in principle to a two-year deal worth $30 million and Jeter agreed to a three-year deal worth $51 million.   Jeter could also receive a fourth year if his option is picked up in 2014.

While negotiations with Jeter seemed tense, it seemed there was never a chance he would leave New York.  According to a Tweet from SI’s Jon Heyman, five teams called the shortstop to express interest in his services.  Jeter never expressed interest in any of the other potential suitors.

The deal will take Derek to age 39, and will most certainly put him in position for the Pete Rose’s all-time record for hits.  By the time this contract expires, Jeter should be around fifth on the list. 

It also gives the captain a chance to add more World Series rings to his resume.

Perhaps the tactics Jeter and his agent Casey Close were using was to get an extra $6 million out of the deal. 

As for Rivera, no one ever thought he would leave New York from the start.  Despite a three-year offer from the Red Sox, the Yankees‘ arch rival, Rivera took a two-year deal to stay in the Bronx.

Now that the top two Yankee free agents have been resigned, GM Brian Cashman can now focus on acquiring new talent.  The Cliff Lee sweepstakes will now heat up greatly and the Yankees are still in on Carl Crawford.

Several analysts on the MLB network are speculating CC Sabathia money for Lee.  However, rumors on ESPN seem to have the loser of the Cliff Lee sweepstakes winning the services of former Cy Young winner Zack Greinke.

On the Crawford front, the Yanks have been keeping tabs for weeks on Crawford’s negotiations with various teams. 

Lee seems to be higher on the Yankees’ wish list, but if Lee signs with another team, expect the Yankees to trade for Greinke and sign Crawford. 

There is also a chance both Lee and Crawford land in Pinstripes, if the Yankees saw fit.

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New York Yankees: Wild Ride Over as Derek Jeter Reportedly Signs New 3-Year Deal

The New York Yankees and Derek Jeter have reportedly agreed to a three-year deal worth about $51 million.

There is also an option for a fourth year that is worth less than the $17 million that he will earn on average for the first three years of the deal.

According to Sweeney Murti of WFAN, there are many elements that will determine the final number for the option in Jeter’s deal.

After signing closer Mariano Rivera, the Yankees managed to bring back Jeter and this move is important for both sides. Yankee fans can relax and the Yankee organization does not have to worry about Jeter going to another team.

The YES Network’s Jack Curry has reported that both Jeter and Rivera have agreed to defer some earnings in their deals in order to push their deals along.

Finishing these deals with Mo’ and Jeter were important because now general manager Brian Cashman knows his budget heading into the winter meetings in Orlando, Florida.

It has been reported that the Yankees are going to make a move for free agents Cliff Lee, and possibly outfielder Carl Crawford.

Things got ugly between the Yankees and Derek Jeter because Jeter and his agent were asking for a contract in the range of $22-24 million a year.

Brian Cashman and the Yankees were not willing to budge from their original three-year $45 million deal. It seems that the deciding factor was the option year, and adding $2 million more per year.

The captain will return in 2011. Now it is time for the Yankees to make moves on big-name free agents such as Cliff Lee and Carl Crawford.

 

Source: Sweeney Murti on Twitter, Jack Curry of the YES Network

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Deferred Dollars Are New York Yankees’ Key to Carl Crawford

Courtesy of Yankees ‘n More

Everybody knows the New York Yankees have their hearts set on adding lefty ace Cliff Lee this offseason, perhaps as early as the winter meetings next week. Of late, however, there has been a lot of talk about the interest being shown by the Bronx Bombers in free agent outfielder Carl Crawford.

Much of that talk has centered around the legitimacy of New York’s interest. Specifically, does New York really want to sign him, or are they just driving up the price for Boston—assumed to be one of the teams most interested in Crawford— while also paying that team back for their interest shown in Mariano Rivera?

We might have the answer to that question. The Boston Red Sox are on the verge of completing a trade that would bring them first baseman Adrian Gonzalez. Part of that deal will be a massive contract extension, which likely takes Boston all but out of the bidding for Crawford.

The Yankees, however, appear to remain, which could be the strongest sign yet of their desire to add the speedy outfielder. And New York might have found a clever way to add both Cliff Lee AND Carl Crawford while sticking to their word on “holding the payroll to about the same level as 2010.”

Deferred money. New deals for both Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter, which are all but done, BOTH include deferred money, and both are thought to be worth in the neighborhood of $15 million per year. We don’t know how much of the money is deferred, but $5 million per year on each doesn’t seem like a stretch.

But let’s be conservative. Let’s say the new deal for Jeter, not counting deferred money, pays him $15 million this year and the Rivera deal, after deferred money, pays the closer $12 million. $27 million this year for those two players would represent a decrease of $10.5 million from what New York paid those players in 2010.

If you then trade either Curtis Granderson or Nick Swisher—something that will absolutely happen if the Yankees sign Crawford, and we’re betting on Swisher—you EASILY have the money to sign Crawford without touching the money you’ve set aside for Lee.

All of the talk about the deferred money in the Jeter and Rivera contracts has dealt with saving the Yankees money on the luxury tax. We don’t believe it’s about that at all. We believe it’s about the Yankees getting the pitcher they love AND the outfielder for whom they have held a deep and longstanding infatuation.

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Derek Jeter To Re-Sign With New York Yankees

It is being reported that the Yankees captain and shortstop will re-sign with the only team he has ever known.

Jeter will re-sign with New York for three years anywhere between $45-51 million with a potential fourth year in place, according to Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports.

It’s about time the two parties were able to come to some sort of agreement.

This process took far too long for one of the Yankees’ all time greats and first ballot Hall of Famer. Derek Jeter is far too important to the Yankees, Yankees nation and Major League Baseball in general.

Jeter is the face of the team and the Majors. The amount of money the Yankees profit on Jeter alone made this re-signing a no-brainer. Money should never have been a topic of discussion. Jeter is worth every penny.

The Yankees just completed a two-year deal with Hall of Fame closer Mariano Rivera for $30 million.

Now that he Yankees has two of their staples back on the team, they can finally focus on bringing in free agent acquisitions such as Cliff Lee and Carl Crawford. Both are necessary acquisitions to bring a 28th championship to New York now that the Red Sox will bring in Adrian Gonzalez, one of the most feared hitters in the league, to Beantown.

The re-signing process took too long for Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera, but at least it’s over. Yankee nation can sleep softly knowing their Hall of Fame cogs are back with the Empire. The dynasty will continue in 2011 with two of the greatest players to ever grace the diamond on board.

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Jonathan Papelbon’s Position Is By No Means Secure In The Offseason

The hot stove is just starting to warm, and the Red Sox are making headlines alongside their rival Yankees. Not only are the Red Sox somewhat in the running for Cliff Lee (more likely just to up the price), they apparently were in the Mariano Rivera race. Whereas the Yankees invited captain Derek Jeter to test the free agent market, they made no such indications with Rivera, and for this exact reason.

Although they won in the end, they did not want a team such as Boston (who has the money) to bid on Rivera, because he really is worth that much to them. Not only does this create a stir within the Yankee fanbase, but it also makes you wonder: why would the Red Sox do this when Jonathan Papelbon is there?

Here’s why.

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