Well, this is supposed to be a Giants blog, but a local sportswriter has gotten me off the immediate subject. This past Saturday’s San Francisco Chronicle featured Bruce Jenkins’s hit piece on Alex Rodriguez, echoing the conventional wisdom (Mr. Jenkins is very good at this) from last fall to the effect that the Yankees collapse was the fault of Rodriguez, who is a “phony,” “oblivious to the acrimony that follows him around,” “a man at odds with himself.”
Jenkins, like many other writers, has bought into a myth certain Yankees created in order to absolve themselves of responsibility for their elimination from the playoffs this past season. Joe Torre and several players spent a season laying all failures at the feet of Alex Rodriguez, even going so far as to inspire and participate in a Sports Illustrated story furthering that storyline. Jenkins is just another of the media enablers in this sorry episode.
At any point during the last season, either manager Joe Torre or captain Derek Jeter could have come forward and said the obvious: Rodriguez is a great player, and in the worst season of his career he’s a star. Defining his season by his lowest points is a disservice to him, and the constant focus on his play is an insult to his teammates. Whatever Rodriguez’s performance issues, his overall contributions to the club were valuable. Beyond that, he’s one of the game’s model citizens, with barely a controversy to his name.
That statement, completely true, would have done more than anything else to alleviate the pressure on Rodriguez. They didn’t do so, instead allowing petty nonsense like his desire to please people (oh my!) and his performance in varied subsets (in Boston, in the playoffs, against certain pitchers, in 20 at-bats in July) to substitute for real information. They didn’t defend their teammate, and by allowing, even stoking, the situation, they absolved themselves and every other Yankee of blame for their fortunes. If they lost, it would be Rodriguez’s fault, no matter how the rest of them played.
Torre’s handling of the Rodriguez situation is the blackest mark on his record. Going so far as to bat Rodriguez eighth in a playoff game, a move guaranteed to make him a point of discussion, would have been the nadir had he not already reached that in the pages of SI. As far as Jeter goes, any claims to a captaincy and leadership are in doubt. His refusal to provide a full-throated defense of the player whose willingness to take his Gold Gloves to third base allowed the illusion of Jeter’s defensive prowess to grow to a point where he could get his own hardware is as much to blame as Torre. He could have stopped this with 50 well-chosen words. He didn’t, and it’s fair to wonder why.
Alex Rodriguez admitted he “sucked” against the Tigers. He’s part of the Yankees problem, but he’s not the biggest part, on or off the field, and I only wish sportswriters would take a good, long look at what happened last season before writing about it.