Top News:
Michael S. Schmidt / New York Times:
A-Rod plans to issue response — Highly public flap likely to prove a distraction as spring training starts — Alex Rodriguez, who is the highest-paid player in baseball and is widely viewed as the most talented, tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2003, according to two people familiar with the results.
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Jayson Stark / ESPN:
A-Rod has destroyed game's history … In baseball, we love our numbers. And we love our heroes. And that brings us to Alex Rodriguez, a man who has committed a crime he doesn't even understand: — A crime against the once-proud history of his sport. — A-Rod didn't commit that crime alone, of course.
Jon Heyman / Sports Illustrated:
Heyman: The union is responsible for A-Rod's steroid predicament … When Alex Rodriguez was approached by Sports Illustrated writer Selena Roberts in the University of Miami gym on Thursday and presented with the bombshell that he failed baseball's 2003 steroid survey test …
Harvey Araton / New York Times:
Nine More Years of a Marriage Not Made in Heaven
Nine More Years of a Marriage Not Made in Heaven
Discussion:
NY Daily News, Bugs & Cranks, Hardball Times, WasWatching.com, Bats, MLB.com and New York Post
ESPN.com:
Phillies, 1B Howard agree to 3-year, $54M deal — The Philadelphia Phillies and first baseman Ryan Howard agreed Sunday to a three-year, $54 million contract to avoid an arbitration hearing. — Howard — “I'm happy to have this done and to know that I'll be in Philadelphia …
Discussion:
Bucs Dugout, Yahoo! Sports, Bugs & Cranks, Phillies Nation, Sons of Steve Garvey and The700Level.com
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Todd Zolecki / MLB.com:
Howard agrees to $54 million contract — Phillies come to terms on three-year deal with 2006 NL MVP — There will be no salary arbitration hearing later this week between the Phillies and Ryan Howard. — On Sunday, the Phillies and Howard reached an agreement on a three-year, $54 million contract.
MLB:
Andruw Jones OKs Rangers' minor league deal — Released by the Los Angeles Dodgers, Andruw Jones will have the opportunity to try to resurrect his career with the Texas Rangers. — Several media outlets reported Sunday that Texas will sign Jones to a minor league deal that will pay him $500,000 if he makes the major league team.
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Keeli Garza / Foul Territory:
Jones is coming — General manager Jon Daniels confirmed a New York Post report that says the Rangers will announce this week that they have signed free-agent center fielder Andruw Jones to a minor-league contract. The value of the contract would be $500,000 if Jones makes the big-league roster …
Joel Sherman / Hardball:
RANGERS TO SIGN ANDRUW JONES — The Rangers will announce in the next few days that they have signed center fielder Andruw Jones to a minor league contract that will pay him a base salary of $500,000 if he makes the majors, the Post has learned. — Jones will also have an opportunity …
Kevin Goldstein / Baseball Prospectus:
More Questions and Even Less Time — You may have noticed that today's column is titled “On The Beat.” That change will keep the name consistent with the columns that I write on Wednesdays, as well as on other days when I end up covering the postseason and the Winter Meetings.
Discussion:
Cardinals Best News Links
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Nat Boyle / MLB Rumors:
Perrotto's Latest: Angels, Mets, Mariners — By Nat Boyle [February 8 at 12:59pm CST] — John Perrotto's Sunday column is up, now called On The Beat (like his Wednesday articles) instead of Every Given Sunday. — According to the article, the Angels plan to use Kendry Morales at first base …
Kat O'Brien / Newsday:
Sabathia, Burnett give Yankees confidence — The Yankees made no secret of their primary objective during the offseason: upgrading their starting rotation. — They met that goal as well as anyone could have hoped, landing 2007 American League Cy Young Award winner CC Sabathia and the dominant if erratic A.J. Burnett.
Marty Noble / MLB.com:
Inbox: What's the plan for Castillo? — Beat reporter Marty Noble answers Mets fans' questions — It is recognized that the Luis Castillo contract is not working out. Could the Mets possibly buy out Castillo's contract, the way the Dodgers bought out Andruw Jones', and then sign Orlando Hudson to play second base.
Discussion:
Mets Fever
Nick Cafardo / Boston Globe:
A tough pitch to let go by — LA offering may be best Ramírez will see — Give Dodgers owner Frank McCourt credit. He made a heck of an attempt to sign Manny Ramírez with an offer that made sense for both sides: one year, $25 million. — It was a page from the book …