‘It ended badly’: Yankees manager Aaron Boone on ALDS loss to Blue Jays
New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone spoke to the media after his team lost to the Blue Jays in the ALDS.
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Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez rebuked their former boss in their zeal to create glamorous studio television.
Brian Cashman, the longtime general manager and executive vice president of the New York Yankees, appeared on a local radio station to push back against criticism of his system and manager Aaron Boone’s response.
After the Yankees were eliminated by the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 4 of the American League Division Series, Jeter and A-Rod shot from their perches on Fox Sports’ postgame show.
Rodriguez called the Yankees “one of the worst compositions I’ve ever seen” after the Yankees won 94 games, defeated Boston in the American League Wild Card Series, and lost to the Blue Jays, who also won 94 games and won the division championship in a tiebreaker.
Jeter claimed he had no “inside information,” but repeated the well-worn claim that Boone was just parroting the front office’s strategy and that game-time operations were scripted by his superiors.
“I’m confident that it’s not Aaron that’s influencing their every move during the game,” Jeter said on the air.
Cashman appeared on WFAN, the Yankees’ flagship station, and fired back at two baseball legends who once patrolled the left side of the infield. He hinted that he called Jeter to discuss the criticism.
“Obviously they don’t know,” Cashman said. “I know DJ said that, but I don’t know what he meant. When he said it, he said he didn’t have inside knowledge, but for whatever reason, he certainly said it. And I think that’s a bug that people throw up there when they don’t have anything else to throw at it.”
Cashman bemoaned the concept of “analysis, analysis, analysis” and lamented that “none of it is accurate,” a perception that has existed ever since Boone took over as Yankees manager before the 2018 season, replacing Joe Girardi, who had just finished their 2017 ALCS trip.
Jeter retired as Yankees shortstop after the 2014 season and took ownership and president of the Miami Marlins, signing a five-year contract in 2022. Before his induction into the Hall of Fame that same year, he hinted that he was looking forward to having a more regular presence at Yankee Stadium, even if it didn’t involve an official role.
Rodriguez, who Cashman signed to a $275 million extension in 2008 when A-Rod refused to sign him early, was embroiled in performance-enhancing drug scandals in two of his final six seasons with the Yankees.
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