Sunday, October 21, 2007

Two Teams, Two Different Directions


I just watched Dustin Pedroia hit a bases emptying double to put the Sox up 9-2 on their way to the World Series (make that 11-2) I came across this article about the managerial change in the Bronx. Clearly these apples (Steinbrenner's sons) don't fall far from the tree.
It is bad enough these two geniuses gave Torre an insulting 1 year offer with incentives, but bad mouthing him on the way out the door is classless that King George might not have stooped to. I have no doubt that despite their huge roster of talent, the Yankees will self destruct for a few years and miss the playoffs.

Enjoy the WS on TV and get used to it.

Sunday, October 21, 2007
Report: Hank Steinbrenner fires back at Torre
ESPN.com news services

The apple apparently doesn't fall far from the tree.

Hank Steinbrenner, who has begun to take control over the New York Yankees with brother Hal from their fiery father George, shot back at former manager Joe Torre's comment about the team's contract offer being an "insult."

"Where was Joe's career in '95 when my dad hired him?" Hank Steinbrenner told The New York Post. "My dad was crucified for hiring him.

"Let's not forget what my dad did in giving him that opportunity -- and the great team he was handed," Steinbrenner told the paper.

On Friday, Torre explained his reasoning for turning down the Yankees contract offer. The deal called for a one-year contract that included $3 million in incentives if the Yankees were to reach the 2008 World Series. Plus, if New York advanced to the Fall Classic, a second year would be added to the contract worth $8 million.

"I just felt the contract offer, the terms of the contract, were probably the thing I had the toughest time with -- the one year for one thing, the incentives for another thing," Torre said Friday. "I've been there 12 years and I didn't think motivation was needed."

"We knew exactly what was expected here," Torre added. "So, I just didn't think it was the right thing for me, I just didn't think it was the right thing for my players."

Hank Steinbrenner believed the Yankees' offer was fair and that Torre needed to accept some of the blame for the team's zero championships since 2000.

"You can't take credit for success when you're going good, and then not take at least some of the blame when things change," Steinbrenner told the paper. "I'm sorry he feels insulted, but that was not the intent."

Hank Steinbrenner said he was hoping Torre would agree to manage the Yankees for a 13th season.

"I sincerely wanted Joe to accept that offer," said Steinbrenner. "We all wanted him to accept it, probably me more than anybody else."

"You don't make an offer bluffing. What if he says yes?" he added. "I was hoping he'd say yes."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.