JeterRules20
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Can't believe I am writing this.
http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/yank...I?utm_medium=rss&utm_content= Yankees
Alex Rodriguez might make his Yankees debut tomorrow night, after all.
Major League Baseball will announce its Biogenesis suspensions Monday, at about noon Eastern time, and with no apparent negotiations occurring as tonight’s 6 o’clock deadline approaching, Bud Selig is poised to suspend A-Rod through the end of next season -- a total of 215 games.
The commissioner is leaning toward utilizing the Joint Drug Agreement to ban A-Rod, and through those rules, A-Rod could keep playing for the Yankees as he awaits his appeal. The JDA calls for a player’s appeal to be heard within 20 days of the suspension, and then for the arbitrator (Fredric Horowitz, in this instance) to render his decision within 25 days after the appeal hearing’s first day.
While Selig is wary of the circus atmosphere that A-Rod’s arrival with the Yankees would create -- Rodriguez finished an injury rehabilitation assignment Saturday night with Double-A Trenton -- he also doesn’t want to give Rodriguez the sympathy points that would come with keeping the 38-year-old off the field via the “best interests of baseball” clause of the Basic Agreement, a person close to the situation said. Already, there seems to have been some backlash generated toward Selig in his battle with A-Rod.
Of the other Biogenesis suspects, it appears that at most one player will appeal; The Post reported earlier this week that Texas’ Nelson Cruz was wavering.
Earlier today, A-Rod worked out at Arm & Hammer Park in Trenton before departing. He said repeatedly this weekend that he intended to meet his teammates in Chicago, and it’s looking like he could live up to those words.
http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/yank...I?utm_medium=rss&utm_content= Yankees
Alex Rodriguez might make his Yankees debut tomorrow night, after all.
Major League Baseball will announce its Biogenesis suspensions Monday, at about noon Eastern time, and with no apparent negotiations occurring as tonight’s 6 o’clock deadline approaching, Bud Selig is poised to suspend A-Rod through the end of next season -- a total of 215 games.
The commissioner is leaning toward utilizing the Joint Drug Agreement to ban A-Rod, and through those rules, A-Rod could keep playing for the Yankees as he awaits his appeal. The JDA calls for a player’s appeal to be heard within 20 days of the suspension, and then for the arbitrator (Fredric Horowitz, in this instance) to render his decision within 25 days after the appeal hearing’s first day.
While Selig is wary of the circus atmosphere that A-Rod’s arrival with the Yankees would create -- Rodriguez finished an injury rehabilitation assignment Saturday night with Double-A Trenton -- he also doesn’t want to give Rodriguez the sympathy points that would come with keeping the 38-year-old off the field via the “best interests of baseball” clause of the Basic Agreement, a person close to the situation said. Already, there seems to have been some backlash generated toward Selig in his battle with A-Rod.
Of the other Biogenesis suspects, it appears that at most one player will appeal; The Post reported earlier this week that Texas’ Nelson Cruz was wavering.
Earlier today, A-Rod worked out at Arm & Hammer Park in Trenton before departing. He said repeatedly this weekend that he intended to meet his teammates in Chicago, and it’s looking like he could live up to those words.