By JACK CURRY
Published: October 21, 2004
The Slap. That is what most of New England will gleefully remember about Alex Rodriguez now that Boston Red Sox shocked the Yankees, 10-3, to incredibly snare the American League Championship last night at a quiet Yankee Stadium. "Remember what A-Rod did the year the Red Sox went to the World Series?" That is what Boston fans will keep shouting.
For the Red Sox to be able to perpetually tease Rodriguez about slapping the ball out of Bronson Arroyo's glove in Game 6 on Tuesday night, they had to stop the Yankees for the fourth straight game last night. The Red Sox did so in dominant fashion, meaning they will not fade, and neither will the scrutiny of Rodriguez.
He has been in the vortex of this ageless and intense rivalry since Feb. 16, the day the Yankees swooped in and acquired him from the Texas Rangers. It took the Yankees a few days to complete a mammoth trade for a player the Red Sox could not get despite weeks of discussions.
But the team that failed to acquire Rodriguez will play host to the opener of the World Series on Saturday night at Fenway Park, and the team that did get Rodriguez will hear George Steinbrenner's rants, perhaps as early as today. Steinbrenner, the Yankees' principal owner, may well bash General Manager Brian Cashman, but he would be better off starting with the ineffective, aloof Kevin Brown.
Whether Steinbrenner will eventually tweak Rodriguez is uncertain, but the fans at Fenway will remind Rodriguez that they won the pennant without him and will remind him about the Slap, too. Rodriguez has one season under his money belt with the Yankees, but he became an instant symbol of the rivalry and maybe motivation for the Red Sox.
"Perhaps there's something there," Rodriguez said. "But this is a team sport, and you win and lose with 25 guys. One guy is not going to win or lose the World Series. But there might be some symbolism there."
Rodriguez ended his season lamely, by going 0 for 4. He looked too anxious as he grounded out in the first inning. After Derek Jeter's single helped the Yankees pull to 6-1 in the third, Rodriguez hit a squibber back to the mound. Rodriguez grounded out again in the sixth and struck out in the eighth, and he was booed both times. Forget the Slap. The Yankee fans simply wanted a single.
Rodriguez tried to diminish that his last memories of the stadium this season will be of being booed. Rodriguez said, "Everyone got booed," which is not true. The fans left Rodriguez with his ears ringing after he finished the series 0 for 7 with runners in scoring position, a situation in which he struggled all season.
"I don't know how to explain it," Rodriguez said. "I think being up, 3-0, and not being able to close the door is what I'll take with me."
While Esteban Loaiza warmed up for the Yankees in the fourth, Rodriguez and Jeter stood side by side on a pitch of grass in front of second base. They took off their caps and looked bewildered. They make a combined $44 million a year, but all those zeros provided no answers for the seven-run deficit that they most likely knew would result in a loss. Jeter said he did not remember what they talked about, if anything.
"We haven't won in a while," Jeter said after the Yankees failed to win a championship for the fourth straight season. "Every year is a different group. This group didn't get it done."
Curt Schilling, who made recruiting calls to Rodriguez while the Red Sox chased him last winter, criticized Rodriguez before Game 7 for the Slap in Game 6.
That was "junior high school baseball right there, at its best," Schilling told ESPN Radio, adding: "First off, Bronson wasn't in the base line to begin with. He could have easily broken his arm right there."
Schilling continued to malign Rodriguez by comparing him unfavorably to Jeter. He said Jeter would not have done what Rodriguez did because Jeter is a class act and a professional. Schilling said that Rodriguez could end up as the greatest player ever, but that he would not consider him classy.
The Slap came about with one out and Jeter on first in eighth inning Tuesday. Rodriguez, who declined to respond to Schilling's remarks, cued a dribbler that Arroyo scooped up near the foul line. Arroyo saw that first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz had also converged on it. With no one covering first, Arroyo reached to tag Rodriguez.
When Arroyo extended his left arm toward Rodriguez's chest, Rodriguez slapped down on it, causing the ball to shake loose from the glove and roll toward right field. Jeter rushed around to score and Rodriguez made it to second. The Yankees trailed, 4-3, and it looked as if another legendary Boston meltdown was imminent.
Randy Marsh, the first-base umpire, called Rodriguez safe, but Boston Manager Terry Francona argued the call. It was quickly reversed. Rodriguez was called out for interference. Marsh later explained the ruling, saying a player cannot use his hands or arms to commit an obviously malicious or unsportsmanlike act.
Malicious and unsportsmanlike are two words the image-conscious Rodriguez does not want attached to him, but his behavior was dubious. Rodriguez lamented how he would have been better off barreling into Arroyo, whose arm, but not his entire body, was in the baseline as Rodriguez scampered to first.
Rodriguez was perplexed by the play, but he should not have been. Surely he realizes that he cannot slap, smack or swipe at the ball when it is in a player's glove. He looked desperate in slapping a ball 50 feet in an important situation.
Rodriguez batted .258 with two homers and five runs batted in during the A.L.C.S. But, fair or unfair, Rodriguez will be remembered in Boston and other places for the Slap. He wanted to erase that image in Game 7, but the Red Sox made history, and Rodriguez will hear about it for a long time.