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Eric Mack

Power Rankings: 'Fans' play ugly role in A-Rod drama

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Updated July 25

Hey, Yankee fans, be careful what you boo for.

It was once said here -- before Operation: Lightning-Rod kicked into hate alert -- those who boo A-Rod for his perceived failures in the clutch are ... well, we used a word perhaps too strong for some of you. We said morons.

A giant contract helps make Alex Rodriguez a target. (AP)  
A giant contract helps make Alex Rodriguez a target. (AP)  
But look what you damn Yankee folks have done.

You have Armando Benitez'd one of the greatest -- perhaps the greatest -- players of our generation. Melted him down to a psychological mess, much like that former Mets closer.

What is it with you player-hating New Yorkers anyway?

This is a hitter -- even in a season regarded by some accounts as a "disaster" -- on pace for 35 homers, 121 RBI, 114 runs and 15 steals. He is still one of the primary reasons the injury-hit Yankees are No. 4 in our latest CBS SportsLine.com Power Rankings.

He's not clutch? He is hitting .296 and a .988 OPS with runners in scoring position to date. And with RISP and two out? Even better at .300 with a 1.037 OPS. MVP numbers right there. Numbers, mind you, better in those categories/situations than the do-no-wrong David Ortiz.

Terrible. Boo. Hiss. That's awful. Go play in Kansas City.

Heck, if the Yankees pay the freight, at least Royals fans are smart enough to take him. They'll take that "disaster." It sure beats the one they have on their hands.

Former Mets GM Steve Phillips lived the Benitez thing in New York. He was also the one who opted out of A-Rod's free-agent sweepstakes to avoid a 24-and-1 structure of his team.

He is now the primary baseball analyst brave and smart enough to say A-Rod has to be traded. He knows if an AL MVP campaign in 2005 and a player of the month for May wasn't enough, nothing will ever be.

Yes, this is not quite A-Rod. Not quite worth $25 million. Perhaps not even the $16 million the Yankees are actually on the hook for (the Rangers are paying an average $9M a year on what remains from the 10-year, $250 million contract from December 2001).

"You can’t control people," A-Rod said Monday, amid the front-burning firestorm. "I wish every year I could hit .350 and 40 or 50 home runs. But I love the grind and am working to get better."

He also said he's not going to approve a trade that would waive a white flag and give up on this in New York. He's mentally tougher than you armchair boo birds. For what he's making, he should be.

Frankly, he should have said: "You what-have-you-done-for-me-lately New Yorkers should go watch football if you want instant results. This is baseball, a six-month ride of ebb and flow, streaks and slumps. Act like you've been there before."

Perhaps you should start booing a player the Yankees are actually paying more for: Derek Jeter, at $20.6M. No one is booing Jeter for his less-than-A-Rod pace of 10 homers, which would be a career low, 99 RBI and 108 runs. He is getting paid MORE money by the Yankees than A-Rod.

We understand the need to boo. It's a necessary form of fan feedback and disapproval.

But if you can't bring yourself to boo the kingly Yankees captain who hasn't won a World Series since the Clinton administration, and you have to boo someone?

Boo, or punch, the fan next to you who has relegated this future Hall of Famer to a cautionary tale.

Jeter can do no wrong. A-Rod no right. We get it.

But you're getting what you're booing for. Red Sox fans, who once almost had A-Rod on their hands and books, are laughing at you for it.

Enjoy it, dummies.

The complete Power Rankings for July 25:

Power Rankings
CurrentTeamPrevious
1Dodgers · Trends2
Look at what they're doing without Matt Kemp -- a six-game winning streak and seven-game lead in the NL West. Under new ownership, dare we say it's a Magic-al season in L.A.?
2Rangers · Trends1
One of my criteria in deciding between two teams in the rankings is to ask myself which team would I pick to win a seven-game series that started today. The Rangers are only 10-11 in May, but I'd still pick them to beat almost anyone in a series at any point in the season.
3Orioles · Trends5
MVP? If not for the Josh Hamilton explosion, Adam Jones might be the frontrunner at this early point. He's hitting .306/.349/.594 with 14 homers, 29 RBI, 32 runs and six steals. And to think, all the Orioles had to do to get Jones (and George Sherrill, Chris Tillman and two others) was to trade Erik Bedard.
4Braves · Trends3
Jair Jurrjens has a 6.10 ERA, 1.55 WHIP and just 16 strikeouts in 31 innings ... in Triple-A. Too bad the Braves weren't able to offload him in a trade during the offseason. With 21-year-old Julio Teheran getting close to being big-league ready and Mike Minor and Randall Delgado clearly having better upsides than Jurrjens, there's just no room for him here.
5Rays · Trends6
The organization might desperately need to get out of Tropicana Field, but the current team seems to love playing there. The Rays sport a 16-7 record at home. Only the Dodgers are better in that column.
6Nationals · Trends8
With all the great pitching, injuries and the promotion of Bryce Harper, the outstanding season Adam LaRoche is having has very much flown under the radar. He's hitting .298/.395/.532 with seven homers and 32 RBI. Interestingly enough, LaRoche's career splits indicate a slow starter who does his best work in July, August and September. If that happens, the result will be a career year.
7Blue Jays · Trends11
Is Brandon Morrow entering ace territory? The former fifth overall pick of the draft is rounding into what he has always looked like he could be. Walks are down, hits are way down (due somewhat to a high BABIP, sure, but it's still a great sign) and the ERA is on pace to shatter his previous career high.
8Marlins · Trends10
Josh Johnson's last three starts: 2-0, 2.14 ERA, 0.95 WHIP, 16 strikeouts in 21 innings. The Marlins won all three. Heath Bell has five consecutive scoreless outings, which includes converting all four of his save chances. And the Marlins are 16-5 this month.
9Indians · Trends9
Even if Chris Perez has a point -- the Indians are in first place in the standings and rank 30th in baseball in attendance by a pretty sizeable margin -- fans don't like hearing a millionaire tell them to spend more money. It's one of those cases where I don't disagree with a guy but feel like he should have kept it to himself. Then the only thing we'd notice is he's 14 for 14 on saves with a 1.62 ERA and 0.90 WHIP since opening day.
10Cardinals · Trends4
Alarming small-sample trends: They're now 0-6 against the Dodgers and Braves and were outscored 41-23 in those six games. And since May 9, three of their four wins (against eight losses) have come against the Cubs and Padres. On the flip side, Adam Wainwright's Tuesday night outing has to be encouraging, even if it was against San Diego.
11Reds · Trends13
Mike Leake has strung together two good starts, including a rather dominant one against the Braves. He's not exactly Greg Maddux, but there's a reason he skipped the minors after being drafted. He has the chance to make a big difference in the Reds rotation. They lost five of his first six starts before winning these past two.
12Giants · Trends14
It's easy to forget how young Madison Bumgarner is, considering we first saw him in The Show in 2009. But he doesn't turn 23 until Aug. 1, and he's likely on his way to the first of many All-Star appearances.
13Yankees · Trends7
Yes, Mark Teixeira is a notorious slow starter, but we're almost to June. He has traditionally started hitting by now, but he has been worse in May than he was in April. On a team that has pitching issues and needs to outhit people, the first baseman has to start pulling his weight as soon as possible. Even with a win Tuesday night, the Yankees have lost six of eight.
14Mets · Trends15
They were the lone oddity in the East records vs. other divisions exercise. The Mets are 14-7 against their NL East brethren, but 9-12 outside the division (the only East team without a winning record outside its division). If that's an actual trend -- and I'd personally pass it off as a coincidence -- that's good news for possible staying power with the unbalanced schedule.
15Red Sox · Trends17
I'm pretty sure they can give Mark Melancon a try in the bigs again. The right-hander has a 0.60 ERA and 0.87 WHIP and 23 strikeouts in 15 Triple-A innings. Then again, if that means seeing less of Vicente Padilla using the eephus, forget it.
16Phillies · Trends16
Huge stretch coming up: The Phillies don't play anyone with a losing record until June 12. Before then, it's the Nationals, Cardinals, Mets, Marlins, Dodgers and Orioles. Will Philly play like it did on the recent six-game winning streak or the current four-game losing streak? It had better be the former, lest they be buried by mid-June.
17White Sox · Trends19
Behold the Dayan Vicideo power potential. In a six-game stretch ending Saturday, he hit four homers and drove home 10.
18Athletics · Trends18
What a great find Josh Reddick has been for the A's. The 25-year-old is hitting for power, stealing bases and scoring runs. Remember, the Red Sox -- who are so desperate for outfielders now they're playing Adrian Gonzalez in right field and promoted Scott Podsednik to the majors -- traded him to the A's as part of the Andrew Bailey deal. It looks like there was a 2012 All-Star in the trade, and it's not the one in Beantown.
19Tigers · Trends12
Even if you won't say you're 100 percent worried, Tigers fans, at least admit the anxiety is mounting.
20Mariners · Trends26
Underrated player alert: Check out Mariners third baseman Kyle Seager. He leads the Mariners in OPS, doubles and RBI. On the other hand, Chone Figgins continues to be one of the worst players in the majors. And he's still signed through next season.
21Diamondbacks · Trends21
I guess they just had All-Star Game fever last season.
22Astros · Trends25
Is this Bud Norris' breakout campaign? Looks like it. Strikeout rate is up, walks are down and ground-ball rate is up.
23Royals · Trends23
Eric Hosmer's OPS-plus is only 55. He's far better than this. He's also only 22.
24Pirates · Trends24
NL offensive ranks for the Pirates: Last in runs, hits, walks, on-base percentage and OPS. Fifteenth in doubles, batting average and slugging percentage. Tough to string together wins when you don't get on base, hit for power or score runs.
25Brewers · Trends20
It's still too early to make a decision like this, but if things continue on this path for the next few weeks, the Brewers need to seriously consider trading Zack Greinke to help restock their farm system. The 28-year-old is a free agent-to-be and he's dealing right now. His numbers -- 5-1, 2.70 ERA, 1.11 WHIP, 59 strikeouts, 12 walks in 56 2/3 innings -- are great, yes, but a fluky start in Chicago earlier this season ruined them. Throw that out and he's 5-0 with a 1.53 ERA and 1.00 WHIP in eight starts. At this rate, his price will move into a stratosphere the Brewers can't afford in free agency.
26Padres · Trends29
At least they have a shot to avoid last place, being in the same division as the Rockies.
27Angels · Trends22
Small sample good news: Albert Pujols has three homers in his past seven games. Small sample bad news: The Angels lost four of those games and Pujols only had a .281 OBP during that stretch.
28Twins · Trends30
They've won five of six since Justin Morneau's return, and in that stretch he has a .937 OPS with two homers and nine RBI.
29Cubs · Trends27
Kerry Wood's retirement was such a bittersweet moment. I grew up a Cubs fan and my entire family is Cubs fans. Watching him struggle so mightily, I felt like I wanted him to retire. And then after watching that strikeout and seeing him leave the game for good was both sad and exhilarating. It'll be interesting to see what he does with the Cubs from here, whether it's a hands-off job in the front office or as much as a future pitching coach, perhaps?
30Rockies · Trends28
Their starting pitcher with the third-best ERA on the team debuted on Kerry Wood's ninth birthday (June 16, 1986).
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