While listening to the Red Sox-Yankees game on the radio this
afternoon, I learned that Manny Ramirez had abruptly announced his
retirement. Ramirez had signed with the Tampa Bay Rays this
off-season. In five games with the Rays, Ramirez had gone 1-for-17
with one RBI.
Major League Baseball
announced that Ramirez had failed a drug test for a performance
enhancing substance during spring training. Ramirez could have
faced a 100-game suspension. In 2009, while a member of the Los
Angeles Dodgers, Ramirez was suspended for 50-games for a positive
test.
In 19
big league seasons, Ramirez collected 2,574 hits, had a .312
lifetime batting average, hit 555 career homeruns, and collected
100 or more RBI a dozen times. Ramirez also won an American League
batting title in 2002, named to a dozen AL All-Star teams and
played in four World Series - two with the Cleveland Indians (1995
& 1997) and two with the Boston Red Sox (2004 & 2007). He
was named the 2004 World Series MVP.
But Ramirez also had a history of mercurial behavior,
unreliability and disrespect towards the teams for whom he played.
The very worst of this were his actions during his final days with
the Red Sox during the middle of 2008 season which I
wrote about in great detail.
Will Manny ever see Cooperstown? A lot of it will depend on how
the baseball writers treat Barry Bonds when he becomes Hall of Fame
eligible next year. Some argue that Bonds “pre-steroid” offensive
output are sufficient for him to warrant inclusion. The same
argument could probably be made for Ramirez. But if Bonds doesn’t
get in then Ramirez won’t either. And even if the baseball writers
do vote Bonds in one could also make the argument he, unlike
Ramirez, never tested positive or at the very minimum tested
positive when steroids and performance enhancing substances were
banned by MLB.
Richard Baker| 4.8.11 @ 8:40PM
Good riddance. The world has enough pampered prima donnas as it is. Francona got rid of him in Boston because despite his talent he was a Major League Pain-in-the-A**.
kingsmill| 4.8.11 @ 10:11PM
A blow to the suppliers of his performance enhancing drugs. The rest of us---don't care.
ejp| 4.9.11 @ 1:50AM
Good riddance indeed. And what I find amusing is how this vital cog in the 2004 Red Sox somehow managed to escape the notice of George Mitchell in his "investigation" that managed to avoid touching anyone associated with the Red Sox championship teams while trying to blacken as many people associated with the late 90s Yankees teams.
Will| 4.9.11 @ 6:46AM
Definitely a conspiracy against the Steinbrenner gang, good call there. I still remember riding the A train that Monday morning in 2004, the faces of disbelief and rage, glaring at the horrible full-page spreads of the Post and Daily News...the acrimony and bitterness. I shall always cherish that memory.
JimH| 4.9.11 @ 8:08AM
As a now Tampa Bay resident I can only say I'm glad this happened early in the year before this clown's attitude could infect the rest of the team. Just Manny being Manny I guess.
ejp| 4.9.11 @ 12:52PM
I still cherish the memory of seeing Big Phony's hand being held by the Union to try and rationalize that he wasn't really a dope user and forcing all the crybabies of Red Sox Nation to shut their mouths permanently about so-called "tainted" Yankee chamlionships.
Wayne | 4.9.11 @ 1:04PM
Some day people will appreciate Frank Thomas, the biggest loser in MLB's drug era.
Wayne | 4.10.11 @ 3:22PM
Of Manny and Barry should not be in the HOF. Their records should get expunged just like they do in track and field.
Occam's Tool| 4.11.11 @ 7:11PM
Thome and The Big Hurt deserve to go in. And I say this as a Cubs fan.
jethro| 4.11.11 @ 11:05PM
Substance abuse policy? after 100 plus years of being optional for players, I THINK NOT! the NHL didn't force veterans to be required to wear helmets when the league stepped in making it mandatory for the future and new players. THEY ACTUALLY GOT IT RIGHT ! unlike major league baseball . Veteran hockey players had the option to continue not wearing a helmet and being EXEMPT from the rule by a Constitutional Civil Rights Grandfathering policy.
Players that grew up with the "beef it up" perform to my best for the fans enjoyment attitude ,and optional use of enhancement performance drugs should NOT have been required to step away from them after their body and mind relied on them whether superstitiously or not . Major League Baseball dropped the ball again. They think they can make doctors decisions and tell players whats in their best interest. Sorta like an Arbitrary and Capricious Kangaroo Court.
Thanks Manny for giving us, the appreciative baseball fan's, many years of excitement.