Rodriguez Tweets About Rehab Progress
By Tim Keeney
(Featured Columnist) on June 25, 2013
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Al Messerschmidt/Getty Images
New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman isn't very happy with Alex Rodriguez right now.
In an interview with Andrew Marchand of ESPN New York, the 45-year-old had some choice words for the oft-scrutinized third baseman.
"You know what, when the Yankees want to announce something, [we will]. Alex should just shut the f--- up. That's it. I'm going to call Alex now," Cashman remarked.
On Monday, Cashman shot down a report that A-Rod, who is recovering from a torn labrum, was ready for a rehab assignment, telling ESPN.com that "he has not been cleared by our doctors to play in rehab games yet."
But on Tuesday afternoon, Rodriguez tweeted a direct contradiction to that statement:
No matter the reason, and no matter who's at fault, whenever players and teams are making statements that completely belie each other, it doesn't exactly make the team or the communication within the organization look very good.
People are already beginning to take sides.
Sports Illustrated's Joe Sheehan notes that Rodriguez shouldn't be the bad guy:
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As Marchand states, this won't exactly help an already rocky relationship between the Yankees and A-Rod, who asked for a woman's phone number during Game 1 of last year's ALCS and is now a main target of an ongoing MLB investigation.
Rodriguez hit .272/.353/.430 last season with 18 homers and 57 RBI. In the postseason, he went 3-of-25 with just one run scored, zero home runs, zero RBI and 12 strikeouts.
He is expected to start a rehab assignment sometime soon, although now the exact details of that aren't exactly clear It's easy to see why Cashman is upset.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...er-alex-rodriguez-tweets-about-rehab-progress
By Tim Keeney
(Featured Columnist) on June 25, 2013
31,494 reads
45
Next
New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman isn't very happy with Alex Rodriguez right now.
In an interview with Andrew Marchand of ESPN New York, the 45-year-old had some choice words for the oft-scrutinized third baseman.
"You know what, when the Yankees want to announce something, [we will]. Alex should just shut the f--- up. That's it. I'm going to call Alex now," Cashman remarked.
On Monday, Cashman shot down a report that A-Rod, who is recovering from a torn labrum, was ready for a rehab assignment, telling ESPN.com that "he has not been cleared by our doctors to play in rehab games yet."
But on Tuesday afternoon, Rodriguez tweeted a direct contradiction to that statement:
https://twitter.com/AROD/statuses/349668933797818368Visit from Dr. Kelly over the weekend, who gave me the best news - the green light to play games again! http://t.co/RuzfXOJjHI
— Alex Rodriguez (@AROD) June 25, 2013
No matter the reason, and no matter who's at fault, whenever players and teams are making statements that completely belie each other, it doesn't exactly make the team or the communication within the organization look very good.
People are already beginning to take sides.
Sports Illustrated's Joe Sheehan notes that Rodriguez shouldn't be the bad guy:
https://twitter.com/joe_sheehan/statuses/349697594819231744Injured player Tweets excitedly about getting closer to playing. GM profanely upbraids player to media. Injured player is the bad guy???
— Joe Sheehan (@joe_sheehan) June 26, 2013
<form action="/polls/create" method="post" id="poll-vote-form">But The Boston Globe's Pete Abraham seemed to quite enjoy the straightforward nature of Cashman's statement:
That Cashman quote needs to get on a t-shirt.
— Pete Abraham (@PeteAbe) June 26, 2013
</form>
As Marchand states, this won't exactly help an already rocky relationship between the Yankees and A-Rod, who asked for a woman's phone number during Game 1 of last year's ALCS and is now a main target of an ongoing MLB investigation.
Rodriguez hit .272/.353/.430 last season with 18 homers and 57 RBI. In the postseason, he went 3-of-25 with just one run scored, zero home runs, zero RBI and 12 strikeouts.
He is expected to start a rehab assignment sometime soon, although now the exact details of that aren't exactly clear
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...er-alex-rodriguez-tweets-about-rehab-progress