I call it the Curse of Giambino. Kinda catchy, right?
After the tough loss in seven games to
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Most agreed that Giambi sold his soul when he put on those pinstripes and lost the long hair and beard, but did the Yankees sell their soul as well? Since the Giambi signing the Yankees have continually followed the path of paying (perhaps overpaying) for the the best players in league, looking for the next big marketable player in New York. Feeling the pressure of New York mounting, owner George Steinbrenner began puppeteering GM Brian Cashman to sell their farm system and sign players--whom he thought--would help the Yankees win now. Not down the road.
Since the 2002 Giambi signing the Yankees have signed 14 top-flite players to mega deals; with the majority being busts.
1. Jose Contreras (4 Years $32 million)
2. Kevin Brown (7 Years $107 million; with the Yankees paying the remaining $36.2 million)
3. Javier Vazquez (4 Years $45 million)
4. Gary Sheffield (3 Years $35 million)
5. Hideki Matsui (4 Years $52 million)
6. Randy Johnson (2 Years $57 million extension)
7. Carl Pavano (4 Years $39.95 million)
8. Alex Rodriguez (10 Years $257 million and the majority of the Rangers original 10 Year $252 million deal)
9. Johnny Damon (4 Years $52 million)
10. Mike Mussina (6 Year $88.5 million)
11. Roger Clemens ($4.5 million per month)
12. A.J. Burnett (5 Year $82.5 million)
13. C.C. Sabathia (7 Year $160 million)
14. Mark Texeira (8 Year $160 million.
That's an insane amount of money to be spending on a team that hasn't even sniffed the World Series. (I won't even bring up 2004, Yankee fans.) Yet, teams like the Florida Marlins, Chicago White Sox, St. Louis Cardinals, and Tampa Bay Devil Rays (they will always be the Devil Rays. You can't just drop the Devil and suddenly become good. It can't work that way) all have had more successful seasons with a considerably smaller payroll.
What are these teams doing that the Yankees aren't? The answer is finding talent within their own organization, developing players, and piecing together a cohesive group of veterans, youth, and role players. Despite the possible creepy romance between A-Fraud and Derek Jeter, I can't imagine them
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While Cashman has tried to go back to the philosophy of home-grown talent (i.e. Robinson Cano, Melky Cabrera, Joba "the Hut" Chamberlain, Phil Hughes, and Ian Kennedy), it seems the Yankees have reverted back to their gluton ways. This past off-season the Yankees spent over $400 million on three players alone.
Money may be able to buy a person a lot of things, but as recent history has shown it does not buy a World Series. Leave it to the pig-headed Yankees to think otherwise.
1 comment:
I'm going to comment on this by not commenting on it.
You're welcome, Wes.
Though I have a feeling our blogs will quickly become rivals much like our teams.
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