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A-Rod Deserves Criticism

14
Vote

by user J Cunningham

Imagine my pleasure Thursday as I watched Detroit Tigers stud and Old Dominion alum Justin Verlander break Alex Rodriguez's knees with an 85-mph curve ball, resulting in the first of A-Rod's three strikeouts in a 4-3 loss in Game 2 of the American League Division Series.

It got better later in the game when I saw him whiff helplessly at a 103-mph heater from Joel Zumaya.

But the best part of all? The boos cascading from Yankee Stadium.

This isn't merely because I was raised to abhor everything that is the New York Yankees, and how I feel compelled to not feel sorry for a guy pulling in more money in six months than I'll ever hope to make it my entire life. No, this is because I feel A-Rod deserves all the scrutiny.

Every last bit of it.

I understand all the analysts and current players when they stare into the ESPN camera and tell everyone to lay off the guy, let him play the game that at times seems to come so naturally to him. I understand it, and if it were any other player, or any other team, I would agree.

But this is a guy some call the best ever, on a team that is all too quick to point out its 26 World Series titles...and even quicker to gripe about not winning one in the past five years.

Memo to Yankee fan: go through nine straight losing seasons, then come bitch at me.

A-Rod deserves every boo, every scathing New York headline he gets, and the reasoning is simple: he's playing on the highest-profile team in the majors, and he's making more money than anyone else who's ever picked up a bat or put on a glove.

Do you really think George Steinbrenner is paying A-Rod $25 million a year for sub-.200 postseason batting averages? Is he forking over the big bucks to see the player slap a grounder out of a fielder's hand?

I think not.

A-Rod's talent is unquestioned; he hits over .300 consistently, and he puts up at least 30 and 110 a year. But when it matters, when the calendar turns to October, A-Rod seemingly ships back to Seattle, because he's nowhere to be found. That might slide in a place like Oakland or San Diego, but an October slump is like sin in Yankee Nation.

He's the highest-paid player on a team where anything short of a World Series trophy is a disappointment. He deserves the scrutiny, he deserves the boos and the jeers and the constant hounding by the New York media. Sure, he'll hit a clutch 3-run bomb to take a regular-season win against the Cleveland Indians, but ask him for the big hit against the Red Sox with a trip to the World Series on the line?

Hope you like strikeouts with runners at the corners and two out.

In Yankee Nation, one's legacy is cemented in the playoffs. Just ask Derek Jeter or Reggie Jackson. A-Rod could break the single-season home run record, lead the AL with a .410 batting average and take home a Triple Crown and a Gold Glove...but if he gags it up in the playoffs, none of that is going to matter.

I've heard lately the question, 'Why doesn't Jeter face the same scrutiny?" Well, first of all, he doesn't make nearly as much as his pal over at third base. Jeter makes a ton of money, don't get me wrong, but it's not the biggest contract in the history of pressional sports.

Secondly, Jeter has, historically, performed in the playoffs. He's come through in the clutch, even as recently as Game 1, when he had five hits. Sure, he stmubled in Game 2, but Yankee fan can forgive that, because he's a perpetual clutch guy. He's come through before, and they know he'll come through again.

But I think it boils down to this key difference: Jeter was bred a Yankee, came up through the New York farm system. A-Rod, meanwhile, is one of many free agents to come in from elsewhere. But unlike the other free agents the Yankees have signed in recent years, A-Rod was touted as one of the best ever, and the Yankees managed to steal him away from the Red Sox.

That's built-in pressure.

Jeter's the hometown favorite; he's been a Yankee from day one. A-Rod's an outsider, one who came in with a lot of buzz. And in his three years in pinstripes, that buzz has remained just that: buzz.

To be fair, though, I do remember Yankee fan booing Jeter last year. I thought it was asanine, pointless to boo a guy who time and time again came through for your team. It made about as much sense as Oriole fan booing Cal Ripken.

But booing A-Rod? Makes perfect sense, go right ahead.

All because of his $252 million contract. You make the cash, you step into the spotlight, you've gotta perform. And A-Rod doesn't...not when it counts most.

So Yankee fan, boo away...I'm right there with you.

Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
I am a cpcpMajor Leaguer
777 days ago
Score 0+-
Booing anyone everywhere is just dumb. It's rude and immature. A-Rods numbers are solid, no one had to offer him a contract that big, but they did and he would have been an idiot not to put his name on it. Get over the fact that the Oriols and Nationals don't have someone as good as A-Rod. And get over the thought that booing is a good idea. Nowhere else in society is it considered proper to go into someones office and start making strange noises usually only heard at Halloween, the sporting world should be no different.
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The sharkDraft Pick
777 days ago
Score 2+-
I dunno, I think that fans have a right to boo. They spend large dollars every day, week, year to support their team and they expect ownership (especially in New York) to put a winner on the field. When a player who makes as much as A-Rod comes up so small when the team (and the fans, by association) need him the most, they get upset and feel betrayed (for lack of a better word). Booing is their release. And their right in a free society.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
777 days ago
Score 2+-
why shouldn't we boo? the bronx cheer is famous. we expect better from him in the playoffs and clutch situations. yankee fans have booed jeter, giambi (unmercilessly), tino, randy johnson, mussina, mantle, maris, henderson, jackson, rogers, the list goes on. the difference with players that make it in new york is that the ones that can handle the pressure overcome that. alex and many others cannot....they eventually get shipped out. right or wrong you have to be mentally tough to play in new york. and most of all don't blame the media/umpires/teammates/fans...we don't care. produce, win!!
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XinophDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 1+-
Of course it's appropriate! We clap at plays, we cheer and boo at baseball games. It's part of the nature of the job. They all knew that when they signed up - if A-Rod didn't want to worry about getting booed, he could've been a banker. Hell, he could've stayed with the Rangers. He decided to enter a profession that by its nature gets boos and cheers, and he decided to go to the Yankees, one of the most pressure-packed teams in all of sports. He deserves no pity. Nobody grabbed him off the street and made him play baseball in Yankee Stadium. People who say fans shouldn't boo are apologists for bad players and aren't very good baseball fans.
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Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
776 days ago
Score 0+-
most people that boo don't even know why they are booing. I'll bet there are 10 million people out there (minimum) saying "A-Rod sucks", yet have never watched him play. Also, there are probably 100 million people who think Jeter is HoF worthy... A person can be smart, but PEOPLE are always dumb... mass psychology and peer pressure = BOOing...
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LaaksotSoccer Kid
777 days ago
Score 2+-
OVER - RATED! OVER - RATED!
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
777 days ago
Score 0+-
Watch out for MannyWAGON- He will tell you how great alexander is and how he dominates and that he is the best player of all-time. Meanwhile, this offseason you will see the Yankees trying to move him afterall, the Yankees don't pay his whole contract.....Texas screwed up too!!!
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Davis21wylieAll-Star
777 days ago
Score 2+-
"But this is a guy some call the best ever" Who said that? I want names!
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J CunninghamVarsity Captain
776 days ago
Score 2+-
Check out ESPN for a bit; I know I've heard John Kruk say it at least once, Mike Greenberg has uttered it repeatedly on his radio show, and a few other baseball analysts have tossed the phrase around.
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Davis21wylieAll-Star
776 days ago
Score 0+-
[1]
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The sharkDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 1+-
FANBOX, D-21-W! That is awesome!!!
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Davis21wylieAll-Star
776 days ago
Score -1+-
This is another good one. And this one. And no list would be complete without this one...
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The sharkDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 2+-
You are my new favorite person!!!

Fanboxes galore!!!


Image:GTlogosmall.jpg This User is a fan of User D21Dub
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The sharkDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 0+-
You may also like this:




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The sharkDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 0+-
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The sharkDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 0+-
Okay,

THIS:

Image:A-Purse.jpg
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The sharkDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score -1+-
Again, I apologize for offending anyone. Not my intention.
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DennisODellTee-Baller
777 days ago
Score 3+-
"Secondly, Jeter has, historically, performed in the playoffs. He's come through in the clutch, even as recently as Game 1, when he had five hits. Sure, he stmubled in Game 2, but Yankee fan can forgive that, because he's a perpetual clutch guy. He's come through before, and they know he'll come through again."

Ah, yes the Jeter is clutch myth. As far as the playoffs go, this is abolute horseshit. Let's go to the videotape baseball-reference.com

Career playoff OPS: Jeter .842 (ARod is .927)

In the 2001 WS, Jeter had a stellar .438 OPS. Clutch, Baby! That's clutch! And his OPS percentage gets worse in the WS than in the playoffs.

Don't me wrong, Jeter has respectable post season numbers. Players of his skill can certainly hit well when ahead or when nothing is really on the line. But I would think "clutch" would be determined by how a player performs under pressure. So, let's look at Jeter's stats with RISP, RISP with 2 outs, and how Jeter performs in close games late:

avg OBP, SLG


RISP: 214/.421/.357 RISP/2 outs: .188/.381/.375 Close and late: .176/.263/.323

Clutch all the way, baby!!!
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
776 days ago
Score -2+-
Jeter is the Captain of the Yankees and is clutch, you don't like the Yankees, fine but don't make up crap. Why don't you look at his WS STATS which is the most pressure to win? Except for 2001, he has AWESOME STATS in the WS
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XinophDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 2+-
He didn't make it up. Those are actual, real statistics from the real world. What stats do you have to support your argument that he's clutch? Oh, I forgot, you don't. You're from NY, so you forego logic and just depend on saying it again and again to win arguments.
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XinophDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 1+-
He might look at WS stats, except it's been so long since the Yankees were there there aren't any current ones.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
776 days ago
Score -2+-
you are a little confused, the YANKEES were there in 2003 and 2001. They won it in '96, '98, '99 and '00!!! that's a long time ago? wow, you have a strange sense of time. you are an ANTI fan, get over the YANKEES. YANKEES are and always will be the most storied franchise in baseball or any other organized sport. 26 World Series Championships. Excellence from generation to generation. Yankee fans- don't listen to this drivel from these ANTI fans who love when the YANKS lose. they are losers who hate the YANKEES MORE than they like their own team!!!! if they even have a team because MOST of these losers are JUST FANS OF THE GAME> LOSER!!
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DennisODellTee-Baller
775 days ago
Score 0+-
Anon Fan #1, I have no feelings about the Yankees one way or the the other. I simply get tired of this crap about Jeter being clutch. I mean, geez, the dude hits a late inning home run in Game 4 of the 2001 WS (which if memory serves, was a series they ended up LOSING) and people live of that forever. I'd be happy to include more of Jeter's WS RISP RISP/2 outs and close and late game stats if there were more to choose from. But, it seems Jeters "clutch" playoff pressure stats have kept them from getting there.
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DennisODellTee-Baller
775 days ago
Score 0+-
And I'd be happy to go back to earlier playoff and WS games, but unfortunately I can't seem to find those detailed stats back that far. I'm happy to support the "clutch" theory with actual numbers, but it seems the most recent numbers I have don't support the theory. And be careful, if earlier stats show he was more clutch then it would seem that with the more recent stats it would prove Jeter is getting WORSE!
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The sharkDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 1+-
"Small-Rod" is a joke!!!

I am done listening to anyone who ranks him among the best players ever.

If you can never come up big in a situation when your team needs you, screw your regular season numbers!!! You suck when it matters and therefore you suck, period. "Small-Rod" deserves to be booed every time he approaches the plate. And not just by Yankee fans but by all fans of baseball.
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J CunninghamVarsity Captain
776 days ago
Score 2+-
Don't have to tell me twice to boo him!
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AlanschechVarsity
776 days ago
Score 1+-
He deserves to be booed. Not that he doesn't have good overall numbers, but it is the clutch stuff. He never does anything in a big spot. And, you pay all of this money you have the right to give your opinion.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
776 days ago
Score 1+-
i agree and it's time to move e-5, he would be better going to a small market team and so would the yankees.
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XinophDraft Pick
776 days ago
Score 1+-
The Yankees would be better if they moved to a small market? What, like Staten Island? ;-)
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
776 days ago
Score 0+-
haha, no e-5 moving out of the bronx would be good for him. and him moving would also be good for the yankees...
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Anonymous Fanatic #2
776 days ago
Score -1+-
As the storm cloud gathers, far across the sea. Let us swear allegience to a land that's free. Let us all be greatful for a land so fair. As we raise our voices, in a solemn prayer. GOD BLESS AMERICA>
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I am a cpcpMajor Leaguer
776 days ago
Score -2+-
I don't really care how the player feels. I just think expressing dissapointment, anger, whatever in the form of an ignorant, caveman sounding noise is dumb. "Me Tarzan, you suck! Booo!" We're supposed to be highly developed forms of life here, why should we revert to our pre-speech days and make infantile noises? What I also don't get is why so many "fans" feel like they're better than a player just because they used this mindless noise. "Ha! I showed him! I booed! Now he'll go back to his mansion in his porche and cry himself to sleep because I booed him! Yeah! Take that from random fan in secton 147 row F, A-Rod! See if you can live with yourself now!" I feel sorry for those that boo to increase their own ego, it's sad.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
776 days ago
Score 1+-
how else would you express disappointment?! booing is perfectly fine and natural. is cheering infantile too? is laughing and smiling? how about crying, screaming? grow up. booing is fine and gets the point across, that the crowd is not pleaseed with a player's performance.
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I am a cpcpMajor Leaguer
775 days ago
Score 0+-
LOL. Booing is natural? So you're saying that in other cultures when people get upset with someone else they just start yelling "Boooooooooo" at the person? Much like clapping, booing was invented, yes invented, by humans. It's not at all "natural".

While people have expressed displeasure publicly since ancient times, the English word boo was first used in the early 19th century to describe the lowing sound that cattle make. Later in the 1800s, the word came to be used to describe the disapproving cry of crowds. Hoot, another onomatopoeic English word, was used as early as 1225 to describe the same phenomenon. (Ancient Greek and Latin both contain words resembling boo that mean "to cry or shout aloud," though there is no known etymological connection to the modern English word.)

Booing: It's natural... for cows.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
776 days ago
Score -1+-
God Bless the United States of America and God Bless Ronan Tynan. Go Yankees!!
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Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
776 days ago
Score 2+-
When something goes wrong, blame someone and fire them! It's the Yankee way!
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DennisODellTee-Baller
775 days ago
Score 0+-
To tie this off for anon fan #1, poring through the data on www.retrosheet.com, shows we can come up with Jeter's overall playoff performance in recognized clutch situations?

With runners in scoring position, in the ALDS's Jeter has a .200 AVG. in the ALCS .214, and in the WS it's .211. That's not yet counting this year.

It's also worth noting that Babe Ruth went 0-16 with RISP in all the WS he played. Now, by show of hands, based on these stats, who wants Jeter or Ruth up to bat in the bottom of the 9th, with two on and down 1 in game 7 of the WS?
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
775 days ago
Score 0+-
good work dennis, now look up a-hole
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DennisODellTee-Baller
775 days ago
Score 0+-
You might not like what you hear  ;-)
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
774 days ago
Score 0+-
i have to tell ya, i would still rather have jeter over a-hole. players on the yankees like him, fans like him, opposing players like him. not true of a-hole.
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Anonymous Fanatic #3
604 days ago
Score 0+-
a rod is gay he was better and one of my favorites in texas and seattle. Now that he is on the yannkes he suxsbig time so boo him on too the mets
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Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/A-Rod_Deserves_Criticism"

This page was last modified 21:26, 7 October 2006. Content is available under the GFDL.

Categories: Davis21wylie fan | Opinions | MLB Opinions | New York Yankees Opinions | Alex Rodriguez Opinions | October 6, 2006 | Opinions by User J Cunningham

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