The countdown begins on ARods chase of Babe Ruth
In the late afternoon shadows, the ballplayer jogging running laps in the outfield of Jackie Robinson Stadium at UCLA this winter had a familiar gait…
In the late afternoon shadows, the ballplayer jogging running laps in the outfield of Jackie Robinson Stadium at UCLA this winter had a familiar gait and and an even more familiar face once he comes into closer view.
It is Alex Rodriguez, ARod as he is known to his fans who remain legion, trying to improve his conditioning as he used this off-seaon to return to the New York Yankees after sitting out all of 2014 on a performance enchancing drug suspension.
He has a goal, after all.
Seven fourteen, he was heard to mumble by some of the college-age ballplayers who have worked out alongside. Seven fourteen.
It is a magic number to baseball fans, especially the Yankee faithful. It is the number of the legendary Babe Ruths career home runs, which stood as a record for decades after the Yankee known as The Bambino retired in 1935.
And it stands as ARods target as he prepares for a comeback that likely will be surrounded by as controversy as fanfare. He is baseballs prodigal son. Gifted with enormous talent, he went from being the poster boy for the national pastime to perhaps the most recognized face of the games steroid era.
But he still has two years left on a guaranteed contract that will pay him $61 million through the 2017 season a contract so big the Yankees cant really trade him, given that he will be 40 next season and remains a physical uncertainty after undergoing surgery on both hips.
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Commentators have already written him off as being virtually over the hill, unlikely to play a majority of the 162-game season and lucky if he can hit 15 to 20 home runs in 2015.
The guys almost half his age who have been around him when hes worked out dont buy any of that.
He looks like hes 10 years younger than he is, said one ballplayer who has worked out around him at UCLA. He strong and all muscle. Theres not an ounce of fat on him.
I wouldnt bet against him catching Babe Ruth.
ARods 654 home runs, after all, are only 46 shy of 700, and 50 behind Ruth. So the question becomes can he play out all three seasons and average 17 home runs each of those years?
Rodriguez also has tremendous incentives written into his contract. He is guaranteed an additional $6 million each for tying the Ruth at 714 home runs, Hank Aaron at 755 and Barry Bonds at 762 as well as breaking Bonds’ major league record.
The Yankees certainly could use that kind of offensive production, after one of the teams most unproductive offensive showings in 2014.
And after what become a heroic return from steroid suspension of slugger Nelson Cruz, who led the Baltimore Orioles to the American Leagues East Division title, its a safe bet that fans either have a short memory or dont care about PED use as much as some crusading baseball purists.