Alex Rodriguez, contrary to popular belief, was not always the guy that was questioned whether or not he could hit in a big spot or in the playoffs. Believe it or not Alex Rodriguez was not always nicknamed A-Rod or Aroid or surrounded by steroid clouds or the New York media. Alex Rodriguez was not always the next guy to pass all the top home run hitters of all time and Alex Rodriguez did not always have an AAV of $30 million bucks a season. Believe it or not Alex Rodriguez used to be a quiet and humble kid who just wanted to play baseball. Let us meet him, ladies and gentlemen, Alex Rodriguez.
Alex Emmanuel Rodriguez was born on July 27th, 1975 in
Washington Heights, New York. Alex, born to two Dominican parents, moved back
to the Dominican Republic when he was four years old. When he moved
back to the states him and his family moved to Miami, Florida where he gained
an appreciate for guys like Cal Ripken , Keith Hernandez, and Dale Murphy and
grew up with the New York Yankees Mets as his favorite baseball
team.
Alex went to Miami's Westminster Christian High
School where he became the start shortstop for the school. In 100 games there
he batted .419 with 90 steals en-route to winning the high school national
championship in his junior year. He was first team prep All American as a
senior, hitting .505 with 9 home runs, 36 RBI, 35 steals in 35 attempts all in
33 games. He was selected as the USA Baseball Junior Player of the Year and
Gatorade's national baseball student athlete of the year as well that season as
a senior. Rodriguez was the first high school player to try out for the Team
USA Olympic Baseball team in 1993 and was quickly donned with the title of top
prospect in the country. After high school he signed a letter of intent
to play baseball for the University of Miami, who also recruited him to play
quarterback for their football team. Alex surprisingly turned down the baseball
scholarship and never played college baseball, instead signing with the Seattle
Mariners after being drafted in the first round of the MLB First Year Players
draft at the ripe old age of 17 years old.
Alex, after being drafted first overall in the 1993 draft,
was already playing for Seattle's AAA team in 1994. He played 32 games and had
37 hits, for a .311 batting average, in 119 at bats while knocking in 6 home
runs and 21 RBI. He made it all the way to the majors by July of the 1994
season, being the starting short stop on July 8th against the Boston Red Sox at
18 years old. Alex's rookie season was obviously cut short that season due to
the shortened strike season by the MLB Player's Association and the league.
Rodriguez split time between the big club and AAA in 1995 before joining the
Mariners permanently in August where he got his first taste of the post
season while still being the youngest player in Major League
Baseball. His first full season, 1996, was easily considered his
break out season as he hit 36 home runs with 123 RBI while leading
the American League with a .358 batting average, the highest BA for a right
handed hitter, since Joe DiMaggio hit .381 in 1939. He was also the first major
leaguer to win the batting title at short stop since 1960, the first in the AL
since 1944... All at 20 years old. Obviously he made the All Star team that
season while leading the AL in runs, total bases, and doubles while within
striking distance of the hits (2nd), extra base hits (2nd), multi-hit games
(3rd), slugging % (4th), RBI (8th), and On Base Percentage (8th). He set the
highest totals ever for a short stop in runs, hits, doubles, extra base hits,
and slugging while tying for most total bases and set Seattle Mariners records for
average, runs, hits, doubles, and total bases. Some say that this is still the
best season ever by a short stop. He was named the Sporting News and Associate
Press Major League Player of the Year and came in 2nd place, three points back,
in the MVP vote to Texas all-star Juan Gonzalez. After a "down year"
in 1997, that included an all-star appearance by being voted in ahead of Cap
Ripken Jr, he rebounded in 1998 setting the AL record for home runs by a SS and
becoming the third member of the 40-40 club with 42 home runs and 46 stolen
bases. He was the Players Choice AL Player of the Year that season, won his 2nd
Silver Slugger Award, and finished in the top 10 in the MVP Voting. Following
an amazing season he hit another 42 home runs in 1999 even though he missed
over 30 games with an injury. 2000 was his final season with Seattle, even
though he was the guy that they were building around after trading away guys
like Randy Johnson and Ken Griffey Jr to keep him. Even though he had a
great season and even hit well in the playoffs the Mariners lost to the Yankees
in the 2000 ALCS. He was selected as the Major League Player of the Year award
by Baseball America and finished 3rd in the Baseball Writers Association of
America AL MVP voting.
Alex signed the most lucrative and expensive contract in all
of baseball after that 2000 season, signing with the Texas Rangers for a record
10 years and $252 million dollars. A Texas Rangers team that finished last in
the division in 2000 signed Alex to a contract $63 million more than the
highest contract ever given out to date. In an article written years
later in the Daily News Alex said he regretted signing with the Rangers and
instead wanted to sign with the New York Mets. Rather than following his heart
though he listened to, then agent, Scott Boras and followed the money. He
did make the best of his time in Texas though, hitting 52 home runs and 133
runs scored with 393 total bases in his first season as starting SS for Texas.
He followed that up with a major league best 57 home runs with 142 RBI with 389
total bases in 2002. He won the Babe Ruth Home Run Award for leading the MLB in
home runs and win his first Gold Glove Award that season for his outstanding
defense. Despite 109 home runs in those two seasons the Rangers finished in
last place in the AL West both seasons. The Rangers losses are probably what
cost Alex the MVP Award in 2002, as he finished second to Miguel Tejada's 103
win Oakland A's who won that AL West that season. 2003 would be his last season
as a Ranger, but it may have been his best if that is possible. Alex won the
MVP award , finally, while leading the AL in home runs, runs scored , and
slugging &. He also won his second straight Gold Glove Award and Babe Ruth
Home Run Award while becoming the youngest player to 300 home runs.
After that 2003 season the Rangers, who were going nowhere
with Alex, decided they had to move his expensive contract. Initially Alex was
traded to the Boston Red Sox that off season but the MLB Players Association
vetoed the deal because it called for voluntary reduction in salary.
After the Rangers named him the Team Captain for the team for the 2004 season
they quickly traded him to the New York Yankees for Alfonso Soriano and a
player to be named later. The Rangers agreed to pay $67 million of the $179
million remaining on the contract, dependent on Alex agreeing to switch to 3B.
Alex also had to switch uniform numbers because he wore #3 in Texas and
Seattle, retired number of Babe Ruth.
Alex has been the exact definition of an up and down career
while he has been with the Yankees. After an average Alex Rodriguez season in
2004, which included yet another All Star Game appearance, and a fight with
Boston catcher and Captain Jason Varitek the Yankees made the playoffs. Alex
absolutely destroyed the Twins in his first post season appearance as a Yankee,
batting .421 while slugging .737 with two key extra inning hits. The 2004 ALCS
that no one will ever began was set, the Yankees vs the Red Sox. Alex started
the series continuing to crush the ball, equally a single game post season
record with five runs scored in Game 3 in Fenway. While we will never forget
the Red Sox's 3-0 epic come back and breaking the "Curse of the
Bambino" while winning the World Series I wonder how many of you forgot
about in this series when Alex swatted the ball out of Bronson Arroyo's glove
after rolling a ground ball to the pitcher's mound. I certainly have not
forgotten. 2005 marked his first ever MVP award as a Yankee when he drove in 48
home runs and 130 RBIs, becoming the first Yankee to win the award since Reggie
Jackson in 1980. He also hit three home runs off of future teammate, and then
Angels pitcher, Bartolo Colon while driving in 10 runs in one single game.
2006 was yet another All Star Game appearance for Alex while compiling
his 2000th hit and playing for Team USA in the inaugural World Baseball
Classic. 2007 season was yet another MVP award for Alex, and had him hitting
his 500th career home run against Kyle Davies and the Kansas City Royals.
After the 2007 season all the talk was Alex Rodriguez and
his opportunity, written into his contract that he signed with the Rangers, to
opt out of his contract following the World Series. He did not wait until the
World Series was over though as he announced that he would indeed be opting out
of his contract but stated that he would like to be a Yankee for the rest of
his career. In November of 2007 the Yankees agreed to re-sign Alex on yet
another 10 year deal, this time worth $275 million with various incentives for
breaking career home run milestones. This contract would take Alex through his
age 42 season with the Yanks and could go as high as $320 million bucks.
Alex Rodriguez was actually the first player to have a home
run call disputed with Instant Replay when he hit his 549th home run against
the Tampa Bay Rays. The play was upheld by the umpires and the home run was in
the books. Prior to the 2009 season A Rod had a torn labrum in his right
hip and had an arthroscopic procedure that kept him out through the first month
of the season. He hit a three run home run on the first pitch he saw that
season, against the Baltimore Orioles, and helped the Yankees get back on track
after starting the 2009 season with a 13-15 record. We are all Yankees
fans so we know about the heroics against the Twins, the Angels, and the
Phillies in the World Series en route to the Yankees 27th World Championship.
Clutch Rod was born.
I do not want to touch on the whole steroid scandal too much
because everyone, Yankees fan or not, knows what happened. Actually the only
reason that I wanted to post anything about it was because of the picture below
that I thought was too good to pass up. In 2007 Jose Canseco planned to publish
a book about Major League Baseball and its steroid use, including dirt on Alex
Rodriguez. Some of the dirt, besides steroid use, was that he was a hypocrite,
gay, and a "loser". Alex Rodriguez denied all accusations in a 2007
interview with Katie Couric. Although he denied it only 2 years prior in 2009
it was reported by Selena Roberts that Alex failed a steroid test, testing
positive for two anabolic steroids, testosterone, and Primobolan during his
2003 season while playing for Texas. He tested positive for the same steroid
that Barry Bonds supposedly tested positive for in 2000 and 2001. So much for
that anonymous testing and such huh Bud Selig? Alex later admitted to taking
steroids in 2001 - 2003 after an "enormous amount of pressure to
perform" after signing that record breaking contract in Texas. He claimed
that he never took a steroid while in New York, but he did not mention his
seasons in Seattle. He later became the spokesperson for the Taylor Hooton
Foundation, which educated young people about the dangers of steroid use and
has spoken at schools about the dangers of steroids.
The 2010 - 2015 season were up and down for Rodriguez. The stat lines were there until a second hip injury and a second steroid allegation cost him much of the 2013 and 2014 seasons but Alex was back and in a big way in 2015. Alex had a resurgent 2015 campaign putting his name back on the map in Major League Baseball but his body faded down the stretch and so did his stats. Alex was not able to pick it back up in 2016 leading to a benching and the eventual announcement of his impending retirement effective in about nine more hours. We're going to miss to Alex.
Alex grew up with two half siblings, Joe and Suzy, who were
born in the Dominican Republic from his mother’s first marriage. Alex also has
a half-brother, Victor, who is from his father’s first marriage. Victor
is an officer in the United States Air Force. Alex himself has two children,
Natasha Alexander and Ella Alexander, with his now ex-wife Cynthia Scurtis, who
he met in a gym in Miami, Florida. In July of 2008 Alex and Cynthia
separated and divorce papers were filed among rumors of Alex and
Madonna having an affair. Madonna was one of Alex's many women to be on his arm
since his divorce including, but not limited to, Kate Hudson, Cameron Diaz, and
current girlfriend former WWE Diva Torri Wilson. Not too bad for a guy that
owns a Mercedes Benz dealership in League City Texas, has good friends like
Derek Jeter and collects art in his free time.
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Sorry for the Capatcha... Blame the Russians :)