The New York Yankees star walked out in the middle of a session
Wednesday, furious that arbitrator Fredric Horowitz refused to order
baseball Commissioner Bud Selig to testify. The move, followed by
angry statements accusing Selig of bias and the entire arbitration
process of flaws, appeared to be a prelude to a lawsuit challenging
whatever ruling Horowitz makes on A-Rod's 211-game suspension.
Horowitz was in the midst of the 11th day of hearings on the
grievance filed by the players' association to overturn the penalty
given to the three-time AL MVP by Major League Baseball in August
for alleged violations of the sport's drug agreement and labor
contract.
"I lost my mind. I banged a table and kicked a briefcase and slammed
out of the room," Rodriguez said during a 40-minute interview on
WFAN radio. "I probably overreacted, but it came from the heart."
Rodriguez has not testified in the grievance and said he had been
warned that repeating his denials of wrongdoing on the stand could
result in attempts at additional discipline by MLB.
MLB argued that it could decide what witnesses it wanted to present
to justify the discipline, since the penalty must meet a "just
cause" standard. The league said Chief Operating Officer Rob Manfred
spoke to reasoning behind the discipline during his six hours of
testimony.
Rodriguez and the union asked Horowitz to compel Selig to testify.
After the arbitrator refused, Rodriguez uttered a profanity at
Manfred just before leaving the hearing room at MLB's office, two
people familiar with the proceedings said. They spoke on condition
of anonymity because what takes place at the hearing is supposed to
be confidential.
"In the entire history of the Joint Drug Agreement, the commissioner
has not testified in a single case," the commissioner's office said
in a statement. "Major League Baseball has the burden of proof in
this matter. MLB selected Rob Manfred as its witness to explain the
penalty imposed in this case. Mr. Rodriguez and the players'
Association have no right to dictate how baseball's case is to
proceed any more than baseball has the right to dictate how their
case proceeds. Today's antics are an obvious attempt to justify Mr.
Rodriguez's continuing refusal to testify under oath."
The hearing continued for about two hours after Rodriguez left the
room, one of the people said, and was scheduled to resume Thursday
morning.
Horowitz, chosen by management and the union as their independent
arbitrator last year, has the discretion to eliminate the suspension
or alter it. The statements by Rodriguez and lawyer James McCarroll
made it appear the 14-time All-Star intends to sue MLB and the union
unless the penalty is eliminated.
Rodriguez already has filed one suit against MLB and Selig, accusing
them of a "witch hunt," and another against the Yankees team
physician and his hospital, alleging malpractice in the diagnosis
and treatment of a hip injury.
Manfred is technically part of a three-person arbitration panel that
also includes union General Counsel David Prouty and is chaired by
Horowitz
"I'm done. I don't have a chance," Rodriguez said during the WFAN
interview.
He issued a statement earlier in the day attacking the procedures
established in the agreements between MLB and the union.
"I am disgusted with this abusive process, designed to ensure that
the player fails," Rodriguez said. "I have sat through 10 days of
testimony by felons and liars, sitting quietly through every minute,
trying to respect the league and the process.
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"This morning, after Bud Selig refused to come in and testify
about his rationale for the unprecedented and totally baseless
punishment he hit me with, the arbitrator selected by MLB and the
players' association refused to order Selig to come in and face me.
The absurdity and injustice just became too much. I walked out and
will not participate any further in this farce."
McCarroll blamed Horowitz for precluding evidence Rodriguez wanted
to introduce and hinted of a court fight.
"Whether the case is finally decided in this forum, created by Major
League Baseball, Bud Selig's forum, or another forum, nobody is
throwing the case out," he said.
Rodriguez denied using performance-enhancing drugs or obstructing
MLB's investigation into the Biogenesis of America anti-aging
clinic. Rodriguez was the only one of the 14 players disciplined
this summer to challenge his suspension.
"Over time, the arbitration process in baseball has been amazingly
pro player," MLB spokesman Pat Courtney said. "It was that process
which created free agency. It allowed Steve Howe to remain on the
field despite numerous drug violations and resulted in the
shortening of suspensions like John Rocker's. The notion that this
same process is not fair enough or good enough for Alex Rodriguez is
ridiculous."
Rodriguez said he had hoped to testify Friday. MLB had insisted
Rodriguez submit to an "investigatory interview" prior to his
testimony, but he canceled his scheduled appearance last week,
claiming illness. MLB agreed to waive its right to penalize him for
testimony during an interview it might deem untruthful, one of the
people said.
"The system is wrong, and whether you're in federal court or state
court or in kangaroo court that we are today, players need
protection," Rodriguez said on WFAN. "The union has already told me
that if I go on on Friday and they think I lied, they can give me
say another 100 games, so now you're to 311. So now we'll appeal
that. In the appeal process, I would say I didn't do it, so now
you're up to 411, and this can go on for the next seven or eight
years."
He repeatedly disparaged Selig, who has been in charge of baseball
since 1992 and said in September he plans to retire in January 2015.
Rodriguez said Selig wants him as "a trophy" to put "in his big
mantel on his way out."
"My only message to the commissioner is, I know you don't like New
York, but come to New York and face the music. He hates my guts,
there's no question about it," Rodriguez said. "One hundred percent
it's personal, and I think this is about his legacy, and it's about
my legacy, and he's trying to destroy me."
Rodriguez said four years ago he used PEDs while with the Texas
Rangers from 2001-03. He has denied using them since.
He briefly discussed his relationship with Biogenesis head Anthony
Bosch, who is cooperating with MLB's investigation.
"It was nutrition and it was weight loss," Rodriguez said. "And
Bosch wasn't the only guy. I traveled the world to see doctors,
cutting-edge stuff, but always between the parameters of Major
League Baseball. And I have hundreds of emails that will be part of
evidence which I can't get into that backs me up 100 percent." [Associated
Press; RONALD BLUM, AP Sports Writer]
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