RYE BROOK, N.Y. (AP) -Joe Torre heard enough. He felt insulted. He felt unappreciated.
He won’t even set foot in Yankee Stadium anytime soon, not even to clean out his office.
“I walked out of there, I’m not going back,” he said. “I just leave the memories.”
A day after he turned down a one-year contract, convinced the team no longer was committed to him after 12 seasons and four World Series titles, he went out his way – grateful, yet defiant; respectful but hurt.
He didn’t say goodbye in Yankee Stadium. Instead, he spoke for 67 minutes – one minute for each year of his life – in a hotel ballroom near his home in suburban New York, close to the Connecticut border.
There was no Yankees logo, just a simple desk – appropriately draped in black – and a velvet background in the team’s navy blue.
He was coming off a $19.2 million, three-year contract that earned him $7.5 million this season, double what any other manager made. When he heard the offer – $5 million for next year and the chance to earn $3 million more in bonuses – he knew the team’s management wanted him to walk.
“An insult,” he said, his voice choking up at times.
General manager Brian Cashman informed him of the proposal on Wednesday night, and Torre traveled from his home to the team’s Legends Field spring training complex in Tampa, Fla., the following morning to meet with 77-year-old owner George Steinbrenner, his two sons, team president Randy Levine, Cashman and others.
“Are you going down to make a deal or say goodbye?” Cashman said on the flight.
“I really don’t know,” Torre replied.
Turned out, the meeting lasted just 20 minutes.
Torre made a counteroffer.
“It was just mentioned and dismissed real quickly,” Torre said. “And at that point in time I realized that it was either the offer or nothing. So at that point is when I said goodbye.”
So long to the pinstripes. Farewell to the most exciting years of his baseball life.
Torre has spent his managerial career looking in players’ eyes and reading their minds. It wasn’t hard for him to figure out the Yankees’ offer was one they hoped he would refuse.
New York doles out multimillion-dollar deals to busts such as Carl Pavano, Kei Igawa and Kyle Farnsworth. The Yankees routinely tell players they have a policy against including bonuses in contracts.
“The fact that somebody is reducing your salary is just telling me they’re not satisfied with what you’re doing,” Torre said. “Two years certainly, I think, would have opened the door to have further discussion but it never happened.
“There really was no negotiation involved. I was hoping there would be. But there wasn’t,” he added.
Following the team’s third straight first-round elimination from the playoffs on Oct. 8, Torre waited to hear from the Yankees. With each passing day, he knew the likelihood of him staying on dwindled that much more.
“If somebody wants you to do a job, if it takes them two weeks to figure out, yeah, I guess we should do or we want do this, then you’re a little suspicious,” he said. “If somebody wanted me to manage here, I’d be managing here.”
His family stood and watched from the side of the ballroom. His voice trembled at times. When he saw several hundred media assembled, he was taken aback.
“You got to be kidding,” he said when he walked into the room.
Since the end of the season, his house had been staked out, O.J. style. Reporters were on the edge of his lawn, cameras everywhere.
“The worst part about the helicopters is they showed I had a bald spot,” he said.
Sons, by winning the World Series four times in his first five years. He hadn’t won it since 2000 and hadn’t even been there since 2003.
No other major league team has made the playoffs even two years in a row right now. As Torre spoke, Boston manager Terry Francona wanted to stay in his office at Fenway Park and watch.
“It’s unbelievable that – it’s almost like `The Bronx is Burning,”’ Francona said. “You’re watching something unfold that’s just unbelievable.”
Torre couldn’t fathom why the Yankees would offer a one-year deal tied to performance.
“I’ve been there 12 years and I didn’t think motivation was needed,” he said. “I felt pretty well renewed every year going after something and we knew exactly what was expected here. So, I just didn’t think it was the right thing for me. I didn’t think it was the right thing for my players.”
As the owner has aged, he’s allowed his sons to be part of the decision-making. Others, such as Levine and chief operating officer Lonn Trost, also have input.
In the end, Torre had few allies.
“I think Brian Cashman wanted me back,” he said.
Anyone else?
“I can’t be sure,” he said.
He went to Florida to look at them face-to-face and didn’t like what he saw.
“There was no response other than, you know, they had a business to run and this is the way they felt it was best to do it,” he said.
Now, he’ll think about going to horse races next summer, perhaps taking a trip to Wimbledon. If teams come to him with managing offers, he’ll listen.
Bench coach Don Mattingly is the leading contender to replace Torre. Yankees broadcaster Joe Girardi, the NL Manager of the Year with Florida in 2006, is another top candidate. Hank Steinbrenner said five or six people will be interviewed, with a decision likely announced after the World Series.
“I’m not sure if I’m in a position to recommend anybody. I just lost my job,” Torre joked. “They’ve both been exposed to what goes on there. And if either one of those are offered the job and they say yes, they’re certainly going in with their eyes wide open.”
Tony La Russa and Bobby Valentine also could be considered. The expectations will be the same: Win the World Series or else.
“I’d like to believe that with a new manager, a new legacy starts,” Torre said. “To expect a new manager to come in and right away get lucky like I did in ’96 is a little unfair.”
His fondest memories are of the World Series titles.
reer in Queens. “You have to be on both sides to understand how important that is. And I’ve been on both sides.”
He was asked how he felt about his decision when he got up Friday. Torre, as always, had the final laugh.
“Which time when I woke up? You’ve got to realize you’re 67 years old, you wake up a few times,” he said.
Then he turned serious.
“I was very much at peace with my decision,” he said.
—
AP Baseball Writer Mike Fitzpatrick, AP Sports Writer Jimmy Golen in Boston and AP freelance writer Mark Didtler in Tampa, Fla., contributed to this report.
Add A Comment
THIS IS NOT A GAMBLING SITE – If you think you have a gambling problem click here.
Disclaimer: This site is for informational and entertainment purposes only. Individual users are responsible for the laws regarding accessing gambling information from their jurisdictions. Many countries around the world prohibit gambling, please check the laws in your location. Any use of this information that may violate any federal, state, local or international law is strictly prohibited.
Copyright: The information contained on TheSpread.com website is protected by international copyright and may not be reproduced, or redistributed in any way without expressed written consent.
About: TheSpread.com is the largest sports betting news site in the United States. We provide point spread news, odds, statistics and information to over 175 countries around the world each year. Our coverage includes all North American College and Professional Sports as well as entertainment, political and proposition wagering news.
©1999-2023 TheSpread.com