Mike Schmidt: A-Rod was cursed once he got big contract

There was a time when Alex Rodriguez was touted as the guy who could relieve us of Barry Bonds as the home run king. He was young, healthy and an MVP contender every year.
If anyone deserved $30 million a year, it was him. That's a stretch - "deserve" $30 million a year. Maybe discovering a cure for cancer, world hunger or global peace, but not playing baseball. Who's worth that number? Surely not a baseball player. Funny, Brad Pitt or Tom Cruise gets the same for a movie, no one raises an eyebrow.
No discussion about Alex Rodriguez can be complete without the subject of money. For an athlete who dedicates his life to his craft, the size of the paycheck is a major factor. No one has ever refused money or given money back. Athletes are entertainers, some ridiculously high-paid entertainers.
In a perfect world, entertainers would not be allowed to make more money than doctors, police officers or anybody whose work made a difference to society. Ours is not a perfect world, so things get out of balance. Something like a young super-athlete, who played baseball for an eccentric owner, in an era when expanded TV, media, Internet and general economic growth seemed evident, was part of a perfect storm.
Alex Rodriguez was cursed. At the time he had no idea, none of us did. That contract changed him and baseball and has been a burden to many. A burden under which he has to play, fans have to watch and baseball has to exist. Alex Rodriguez's career will never be appreciated.
Is the burden of money at the root of all of his problems? Alex Rodriguez, for all intents and purposes, is a good guy. His problem, at times, seems to be the perception that he comes off as insincere, insecure and even a bit fake. What mega-athlete doesn't have that side to their personality? I did. OK, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady, just off the top of my head, but that's about where it ends.
LeBron, Kobe and Tiger, there's a quick three for comparison. But then the anti-A-Rod - Derek Jeter - still at a level where salary could be an issue, is beloved and respected by everyone. CC Sabathia and Mark Teixeira also are on the Yankees and make over $20 million each, and they escape the daily wrath and scrutiny.
Is it money, personality or the combination that makes Alex so polarizing?
To make a point, two personal stories. After his first couple years as a teenage major league shortstop in Seattle, I met him before a golf event in Fort Lauderdale. I had retired several years earlier, he was just beginning his career, and I sensed a great respect as he addressed me as Mr. Schmidt. It made me feel old, but at the same time, he impressed me with his approach.
Fast forward to the All-Star Game at Yankee Stadium in 2008 when he was one homer away from my 548 on the all-time home run chart. We were standing at third base, I was a little uncomfortable not knowing what to say, so I tried to make conversation by mentioning the home run list. He asked me if I was planning on being there to see him match me. It was sort of an aloof response to my question - to ask if I was planning on following him till he tied me was a little presumptuous and a blow to my ego. It came off as the exact opposite of our first meeting. This was 500 home runs and $200 million later in life.
I may be reading too much into these moments, Alex wouldn't even remember them. He was there to play the game, not carry on a conversation about home run records with me. Just the wrong choice of words in a stressful moment, that can happen.
Alex has a very high profile, tries so hard to be normal, and can't pull it off. No one making $30 million a year could. If he were a rock star, who'd care? He plays America's game in front of us for seven months. He can't hide.
The reason he is so polarizing lies right in this story. In him, we all see a guy who hit the sports lottery and we think, if it were us, life would be a bowl of cherries and it would be easy to be everything to everyone. If the tables were turned in that exchange at the All-Star game, I'd have said to him that I'd be honored if he were present when I tied and passed him, and I would send my jet to bring him there. Is that crazy?
So many people say to me that I came along in baseball 20 years too early. They say imagine what you'd make if you played today. My answer is simple and has two parts: I'd be Alex Rodriguez, and I'm glad I'm not.
We are alike in that we both were shortstops and moved to third base. We both hit home runs, produced runs, won Gold Gloves, won MVP awards and a World Series championship. Most of my career I was the highest or close to the highest-paid player in baseball. Over the last decade, and forever, it's him. We played under the highest pressure and expectations.
I may be one person who has walked in his shoes. Of course, it was Philadelphia, not New York. It was $2 million, not $30 million. And the world in which he lives is drastically different than mine. Make no mistake, few would qualify to be both highest paid in the game and 0 for 20 in a postseason.
I know what it's like to be right on the ball and miss it, and the few times you connect it's caught. Imagine in the ALCS opener against Detroit, bases loaded, if Alex's rope in the hole in the second inning was 6 inches to the left. He'd drive in two runs, the pressure is off and maybe none of this happens.
Instead, Jhonny Peralta dives and catches it for the third out, another failure in the clutch. In the 1983 World Series, I finished 1 for 20. But in my first two at-bats, I lined out to center field with men on base. Those balls find the gap and I'd go as far to say the Series outcome against Baltimore would have been different.
The postseason can be cruel, especially cruel to those hitters who are expected to produce and lead their teams. In baseball, players are supposed to be judged over an extended period, not a two-week postseason. Hitting comes and goes and never says goodbye. This time of year, the big, high-paid boys are supposed to hit, but most don't. Check it, there are more hitting stars who fail in postseason than succeed. Look at Robinson Cano and Curtis Granderson - even worse than Alex, but who's making the headlines?
Imagine if he had never signed that contract, made a normal amount and never had a brush with performance-enhancing drugs. Imagine if there were no Internet, no Twitter or Facebook, only a couple newspapers and radio shows, and limited television exposure. Would he be today's Mickey Mantle?
But that's the reality, and because of it he has his $200 million and the pressure that comes with it. He signed on for this and now he faces challenges few if any ever have. I was never benched, never removed for a pinch hitter. The Phillies believed I was always one swing from changing a game and a series. Apparently, Joe Girardi didn't feel the same about Alex Rodriguez.
Alex seems to my eye to still be a fundamentally sound and potentially very productive hitter. Staying healthy at 37 is the issue. Age is a funny thing. I seemed to hit a wall in my late 30s. I can't explain it other than to say fastballs I used to hit a long way ended up on the warning track, nagging injuries increased, I didn't get to groundballs I used to eat up.
And as this happened, I began to doubt my ability. I had an excuse: I was old, so I retired. It happens to all of us. But in Alex's case when it does - if it isn't happening now - it won't be that easy. He will be making $30 million a year, guaranteed! For that kind of money, you aren't allowed to get old.
If anyone deserved $30 million a year, it was him. That's a stretch - "deserve" $30 million a year. Maybe discovering a cure for cancer, world hunger or global peace, but not playing baseball. Who's worth that number? Surely not a baseball player. Funny, Brad Pitt or Tom Cruise gets the same for a movie, no one raises an eyebrow.
No discussion about Alex Rodriguez can be complete without the subject of money. For an athlete who dedicates his life to his craft, the size of the paycheck is a major factor. No one has ever refused money or given money back. Athletes are entertainers, some ridiculously high-paid entertainers.
In a perfect world, entertainers would not be allowed to make more money than doctors, police officers or anybody whose work made a difference to society. Ours is not a perfect world, so things get out of balance. Something like a young super-athlete, who played baseball for an eccentric owner, in an era when expanded TV, media, Internet and general economic growth seemed evident, was part of a perfect storm.
Alex Rodriguez was cursed. At the time he had no idea, none of us did. That contract changed him and baseball and has been a burden to many. A burden under which he has to play, fans have to watch and baseball has to exist. Alex Rodriguez's career will never be appreciated.
Is the burden of money at the root of all of his problems? Alex Rodriguez, for all intents and purposes, is a good guy. His problem, at times, seems to be the perception that he comes off as insincere, insecure and even a bit fake. What mega-athlete doesn't have that side to their personality? I did. OK, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady, just off the top of my head, but that's about where it ends.
LeBron, Kobe and Tiger, there's a quick three for comparison. But then the anti-A-Rod - Derek Jeter - still at a level where salary could be an issue, is beloved and respected by everyone. CC Sabathia and Mark Teixeira also are on the Yankees and make over $20 million each, and they escape the daily wrath and scrutiny.
Is it money, personality or the combination that makes Alex so polarizing?
To make a point, two personal stories. After his first couple years as a teenage major league shortstop in Seattle, I met him before a golf event in Fort Lauderdale. I had retired several years earlier, he was just beginning his career, and I sensed a great respect as he addressed me as Mr. Schmidt. It made me feel old, but at the same time, he impressed me with his approach.
Fast forward to the All-Star Game at Yankee Stadium in 2008 when he was one homer away from my 548 on the all-time home run chart. We were standing at third base, I was a little uncomfortable not knowing what to say, so I tried to make conversation by mentioning the home run list. He asked me if I was planning on being there to see him match me. It was sort of an aloof response to my question - to ask if I was planning on following him till he tied me was a little presumptuous and a blow to my ego. It came off as the exact opposite of our first meeting. This was 500 home runs and $200 million later in life.
I may be reading too much into these moments, Alex wouldn't even remember them. He was there to play the game, not carry on a conversation about home run records with me. Just the wrong choice of words in a stressful moment, that can happen.
Alex has a very high profile, tries so hard to be normal, and can't pull it off. No one making $30 million a year could. If he were a rock star, who'd care? He plays America's game in front of us for seven months. He can't hide.
The reason he is so polarizing lies right in this story. In him, we all see a guy who hit the sports lottery and we think, if it were us, life would be a bowl of cherries and it would be easy to be everything to everyone. If the tables were turned in that exchange at the All-Star game, I'd have said to him that I'd be honored if he were present when I tied and passed him, and I would send my jet to bring him there. Is that crazy?
So many people say to me that I came along in baseball 20 years too early. They say imagine what you'd make if you played today. My answer is simple and has two parts: I'd be Alex Rodriguez, and I'm glad I'm not.
We are alike in that we both were shortstops and moved to third base. We both hit home runs, produced runs, won Gold Gloves, won MVP awards and a World Series championship. Most of my career I was the highest or close to the highest-paid player in baseball. Over the last decade, and forever, it's him. We played under the highest pressure and expectations.
I may be one person who has walked in his shoes. Of course, it was Philadelphia, not New York. It was $2 million, not $30 million. And the world in which he lives is drastically different than mine. Make no mistake, few would qualify to be both highest paid in the game and 0 for 20 in a postseason.
I know what it's like to be right on the ball and miss it, and the few times you connect it's caught. Imagine in the ALCS opener against Detroit, bases loaded, if Alex's rope in the hole in the second inning was 6 inches to the left. He'd drive in two runs, the pressure is off and maybe none of this happens.
Instead, Jhonny Peralta dives and catches it for the third out, another failure in the clutch. In the 1983 World Series, I finished 1 for 20. But in my first two at-bats, I lined out to center field with men on base. Those balls find the gap and I'd go as far to say the Series outcome against Baltimore would have been different.
The postseason can be cruel, especially cruel to those hitters who are expected to produce and lead their teams. In baseball, players are supposed to be judged over an extended period, not a two-week postseason. Hitting comes and goes and never says goodbye. This time of year, the big, high-paid boys are supposed to hit, but most don't. Check it, there are more hitting stars who fail in postseason than succeed. Look at Robinson Cano and Curtis Granderson - even worse than Alex, but who's making the headlines?
Imagine if he had never signed that contract, made a normal amount and never had a brush with performance-enhancing drugs. Imagine if there were no Internet, no Twitter or Facebook, only a couple newspapers and radio shows, and limited television exposure. Would he be today's Mickey Mantle?
But that's the reality, and because of it he has his $200 million and the pressure that comes with it. He signed on for this and now he faces challenges few if any ever have. I was never benched, never removed for a pinch hitter. The Phillies believed I was always one swing from changing a game and a series. Apparently, Joe Girardi didn't feel the same about Alex Rodriguez.
Alex seems to my eye to still be a fundamentally sound and potentially very productive hitter. Staying healthy at 37 is the issue. Age is a funny thing. I seemed to hit a wall in my late 30s. I can't explain it other than to say fastballs I used to hit a long way ended up on the warning track, nagging injuries increased, I didn't get to groundballs I used to eat up.
And as this happened, I began to doubt my ability. I had an excuse: I was old, so I retired. It happens to all of us. But in Alex's case when it does - if it isn't happening now - it won't be that easy. He will be making $30 million a year, guaranteed! For that kind of money, you aren't allowed to get old.
I completely agree with Mike Schmidt on this.
A-Rod's problem is that he read too many of his own press clippings. Constantly told since childhood that he is the next Roberto Clemente, he really believes that he's bigger than the game he plays. When he lost respect for the game, the lost the fans.
I fully understand that baseball [or any major sport]Â is a business and players have to make the most money they can in their contracts because owners [and fans] will throw them away like used toilet paper if they don't perform. In that sense, every player of every team in every league has to be a serious Type A personality with unshakeable self-confidence. But A-Rod knew when he left Seattle for that huge contract that he was urinating down his own well. He might get paid big money, but he hadn't won a World Series and the public was going to be seriously torqued off at him. Then we find out about all the additional perks... his own office in Rangers Stadium, his own section of the team jet with no one sitting near him, free tickets to his extended family, etc, etc. Then the lackluster performance by the Rangers team... they could afford A-Rod or a pitching staff, but not both. And the minute he's able to he goes to the Yankees, which was his goal all along. And there is no team more polarizing in the MLB than the NY F-ing Yankees. All this just made it worse. In some respects, LeBron James can blame his PR troubles on A-Rod's behavior, as both players are seen to be arrogant, self-aggrandizing, and only concerned with their personal stats and not the team's benefit.
So yeah, I'm kinda glad he'll be traded in the off season. Hopefully he'll realize that he poops sitting down just like the rest of us.
A-Rod was cursed the minute he left Seattle for money!
Poor Poor A-Roid !
"In a perfect world, entertainers would not be allowed to make more money than doctors, police officers or anybody whose work made a difference to society"...
Whatever to that statement. Â If a person brings in millions and millions of dollars to an industry, he/she is worth a certain percentage of that, otherwise it all goes to the owner. Â I think it's great people can achieve this kind of success. Â Regarding Arod, I hope he rebounds. Â Everybody seems infatuated with seeing him fail, even his hometown fans. Â After he gave them the failure they craved, that wasn't good enough, now it's time to kick him when he's down. Â He needs some sort of sports psychology help. Â I'd love to see him rebound. Â Hate to see an elite athlete who is a hard worker go down like this.Â
@Eichler4 " Everybody seems infatuated with seeing him fail, even his hometown fan" That is exactly what I meant when I said  he is  tarnished person, not athlete.
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People love to hate him-I'm not sure that is fair.
I will give A-Rod one benifit of the doubt about his career. He had a greedy agent who took advantage of a young 25 year old A-Rod . The moment he got that contract and went to Texas he was tarnished as a person-not an athlete. The press gave him all the attention and the rest of the Rangers were chopped liver. It was all about A-Rod and he could not turn it off even if he wanted to because he had an agent that saw to it. The agent kept the media pressure on because he knew he had one more big score with A-Rod. That came with the Yankees.
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Scott Boras was the greedy jerk that created the new A-Rod. Remember, we loved the first A-Rod
 @snoopy84 Except once Pay rod got a little older and wiser, he could have dumped his jerk of an agent, but chose not to. Â
 @stamperzann  @snoopy84 I agree with that though I will say this Boras didn't get where he is at by being an easy guy to get rid of.Â
@stamperzann Well, he finally did in 2010. I agree with you on that, 2010 was more than a little to long to make it count.
One shouldn't feel too bad for Ol' Alex........I think he's doing O.K. A couple hundred million can ease alot of problems.
As a fan of baseball in Seattle it's easy to hate Payrod. I will step up right now and admit I would have taken the money and ran just like he did. Let's be honest here. You would have taken the money also.We will never know for sure if he took enhancement drugs or not. I would like to hope he did not. I do think it's time for him to step aside to let the younger players make their marks on the game.
@Can't Spell Don't Care The worst part is that he said he wanted to play for a contender, then went to TEXAS??? If he was honest, I don't think Seattle fans would hate him as much as we do! Players have left before and get major respect when they are back at Safeco..that will never happen for Pay-Rod.Â
 @Can't Spell Don't Care I wouldn't take the money unless the environment around me was crap.  If the team and fans were treating met well, there is no reason to leave.  Let's be honest, the amount of money he was making was obscene even while with the M's.  I'd be more than happy to be making that kind of money.  Not everyone out there is that shallow.
 @Can't Spell Don't Care At least you are honest.  I would say 99% of fans that hate him for taking the money and running would not have turned down 10 years/$250 million either.  Regarding the steroids, it actually is a fact, and Arod finally admitted to using them a couple years ago.  He did have some amazing seasons after the steroids though (2007 was a season for the ages). Â
I'm not even much of a sports guy these days. Â That said.. Â what a great read by one of the greats.
Alex BOO BOO Rodriguez  as he is known here. MONEY over Team.
Actually...Arod was cursed as soon as he started juicin'...
What a classy guy Mike Schmidt is. I was stationed at Marine Barracks Philadelphia when I got back from Vietnam and getting treatment. I went to many many games there at Veterans Stadium. Philly Phanatic, Schmidt, Greg Luzinski, Tug McGraw, Steve Carlton, Larry Bowa, Bob Boone. Good memories. The Phillies provided free tickets to servicemen undergoing treatment there at the base hospital.
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The difference between Schmidt and Pay-Rod is like day and nite.
My kingdom for a curse! Please!
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How absurd...
 @bobalouie Well put, very well put!