Strength in numbers behind A-Rod
TAMPA, Fla. -- It's become a near-annual February rite for the Yankees: the drug-related apology.
Jason Giambi gave an ambiguous one at Yankee Stadium on the eve of spring training in 2005.
A-Rod news conference on ESPNEWS
His Yankees teammates and more than 200 members of the media will be on hand Tuesday when Alex Rodriguez answers questions about his admitted use of banned substances. Coverage begins at 1 p.m. ET on ESPNEWS.
Andy Pettitte gave an emotional and lengthy one when he arrived at spring training last year.
Now it's Alex Rodriguez's turn, and he figures to draw a big crowd of teammates.
A-Rod was due to appear under the tent behind the third-base stands at Steinbrenner Field on Tuesday for a news conference addressing his admission last week that he used banned drugs. The Yankees still didn't know how many specifics of his drug use Rodriguez planned to divulge.
"I don't think it's necessary in my eyes that he answer every detail," manager Joe Girardi said Monday.
While Pettitte spoke from the heart during his news conference a year ago admitting use of human growth hormone, the image-conscious Rodriguez appears to be formulating his strategy surrounded by an entourage large enough to fill a television series.
Mike & Mike in the Morning
Speaking from Tampa, Bob Holtzman says it might have been a mistake for A-Rod to sit down for an interview with Peter Gammons because now the 200 reporters awaiting his news conference are armed with lots of as-yet-unanswered questions.
Even before Sports Illustrated reported on its Web site Feb. 7 that Rodriguez tested positive for a pair of steroids during baseball's anonymous survey in 2003, Team A-Rod included agent Scott Boras and his staff, manager Guy Oseary, the William Morris Agency and publicist Richard Rubenstein.
He has retained James E. Sharp, a lawyer who represented Pettitte and Sammy Sosa before Congress and then-President George W. Bush in front of a federal prosecutor. Rodriguez also brought in Outside Eyes, a media strategy and crisis management company based in Newport Beach, Calif., that includes communications specialists from Republican campaigns.
While Yankees officials were in charge of Pettitte's news conference, the team was uncertain who would run Tuesday's session, scheduled for live television transmission by the team's YES Network, which will provide its feed to other networks. It will be a must-see event for many, if not most, of the Yankees.
"It's part of playing here. Everything is somewhat magnified to a certain degree being here, and just some things you've got to deal with," said Pettitte, who planned to attend.
Pettitte was joined at his news conference by Yankees captain Derek Jeter, Jorge Posada and Mariano Rivera -- "like brothers to me" -- who joined him on World Series champions. Rodriguez, a three-time MVP who is on news and gossip pages in New York as much as the sports section, figures to draw a far higher percentage of teammates.
"I don't think it's window dressing," Girardi said. "I think it's out of their hearts and their feelings for Alex and them wanting to stand behind him and help him through this situation."
Stopping by the clubhouse to drop off gear, Mark Teixeira said he planned to go. The first-year Yankee was A-Rod's teammate on the 2003 Texas Rangers.
"When I see him tomorrow, I'm going to give him a big hug and just tell him I'm there for him. I'm going to be a teammate and a friend if he needs one," Teixeira said.
Girardi planned to speak with Rodriguez before the event "just to look him in the eyes and see how he's doing."
While Pettitte made his news conference his first public appearance after admitting his HGH use to a congressional committee, Rodriguez responded to the SI report by conducting a Feb. 9 interview with ESPN. He admitted using banned drugs while playing for Texas from 2001 to '03 but sidestepped saying exactly what he used, how often he used, where he obtained banned drugs, whether they were injected and whether he used them during the offseason.
Meanwhile, the editor of the Sports Illustrated Group has called on Rodriguez to publicly acknowledge that accusations he made against Selena Roberts, who co-wrote the SI report, were false. During his interview with ESPN, Rodriguez said Roberts stalked him and also accused her of trying to break into his home while his two daughters were sleeping.
"I want the record to be set straight," Terry McDonell, editor of the Sports Illustrated Group, told The New York Times. Rodriguez has apologized to Roberts privately, but McDonnell, who has spoken with Rodriguez's public relations adviser, said it's not enough.
"They've tried to get away with a private apology, which is outrageous and unfair and allowed the preposterous charges to stand," McDonell said, according to The Times.
"I'm hoping this press conference will be a really fine hour for sports journalism. I hope it will be fair, direct and go specifically to answer questions that will shed light on the period when he was taking these drugs, and clarify things that have fallen off the story, like the attack on Selena."
While Rodriguez's admission of PED use just scratched the surface, Pettitte, in contrast, went into great detail.
"It didn't matter what lawyers said or whatever, I was going to get it all out," he recalled Monday.
Girardi could see merits in both approaches. The stakes are higher because Rodriguez is 12th on the career home run list with 553 and trails leader Barry Bonds by 209.
"It's going to be different, I'm sure, just because of the magnitude of who Alex is. I think the record that he's chasing has something to do with it, too," Girardi said. "Would he like to probably put it behind him tomorrow? Yes. But I don't think that's realistic."
A cartoon of a bulked-up Rodriguez signing autographs for bulked-up kids is on this week's cover of The New Yorker. He has been the subject of numerous jokes on late-night television.
He is the most prominent player to admit having used performance-enhancing substances.
"A lot of people think that, you know, this is going to tear the team apart," Teixeira said. "I think it's going to bring the team together."
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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A-ROD: I TOOK A BANNED SUBSTANCE
Alex Rodriguez told ESPN on Monday that he took performance-enhancing drugs while playing for the Texas Rangers during a three-year period beginning in 2001.
Story » | Transcript »
- Regarding steroids, Selig refused to take blame
- Teammates to back A-Rod Tuesday
- A-Rod apologizes to SI's Roberts
- A-Rod dedicates Miami field
- Torre: A-Rod numbers tainted
- Pettite understands A-Rod's woes
- Date for A-Rod book moved up
- Selig: A-Rod 'shamed the game'
- Ex-union boss rips probe | Initial report
- What now for other 103 players?
ANALYSIS
- Experts: A-Rod must have known
- Pedro Gomez: Tough part still awaits A-Rod
- The Biz: A-Rod's Fiscal Future
- Gene Wojciechowski: Another beanball
- Rob Neyer: A-Rod sorry he got caught
- Buster Olney: Blaming those in power
- Jayson Stark: Baseball's last hope is gone
- Buster Olney: A-Rod must decide on a path
- Howard Bryant: Future king tainted
- Buster Olney: A-Rod tarnished forever
- Mark Fainaru-Wada: How did we get here?
- "Baseball Tonight" reacts to A-Rod
- Rob Neyer: A-Rod still a great player
- Primer on Alex Rodriguez
- Dick Vitale: Three steps for A-Rod
VIDEO
- A-Rod admits using steroids
- Peter Gammons: A-Rod was emotional
- 1st and 10: Do you believe A-Rod?
- Tim Kurkjian: A starting point
- T.J. Quinn: Motivated by pressure
- Tim Kurkjian: Dark days ahead
- Michael Kay: A legacy destroyed
- Andrew Marchand: A-Rod's next step?
- Buster Olney: Analyzing the A-Rod news
- Buck Showalter: A-Rod, his former player
- T.J. Quinn: How A-Rod test was leaked
- Selena Roberts: Recaps A-Rod timeline
- Former Rangers employee reacts
- Looking at legal ramifications for A-Rod
- A-Rod reportedly tests positive for steroids
- A-Rod denies PED use to Katie Couric
AUDIO
- Steve Phillips: A-Rod will have a tough time dealing with his obvious distractions
- Mike Schmidt: No throwing stones at A-Rod
- Selena Roberts: Shares how the A-Rod story gained traction in her investigation
- Non-verbal expert believes A-Rod's apology was genuine
- Peter Gammons: Most remarkable day doing an interview
- Jayson Stark: Bonds, McGwire, Clemens and A-Rod must get into Hall of Fame
- Tim Kurkjian: Having a tiny bit more compassion for A-Rod
- Grading A-Rod's performance in interview
- Peter Gammons: The A-Rod interview
- Tim Kurkjian, Peter Gammons, John Kruk, Howard Bryant on A-Rod's admission
- Report didn't shock Ken Rosenthal
SPORTSNATION
FROM '07: MITCHELL REPORT
- Mitchell delivers his report | Read it (pdf)
- Players: Who's named in the report
- Recommendations from the report
SEIZURE OF SAMPLES: DILEMMA REVEALED
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