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It's easy to see why Ortiz is more liked than A-Rod. A lot of it is as simple as the fact that Ortiz didn't play for most hated franchise in American sports (at the time, anyway, I think they were), and in fact, actually played a herculean role in taking them down (my sense is that, nationally, a lot of people are sick of the Red Sox, but when they won their first, I think a lot of people were rooting for them).
There is no way to defend A-Rod in certain respects, and again, I say that as somebody who liked him. The Arroyo swipe was an egregious violation of the game...the action itself was one thing (I can see it being rationalized as instinctual movement in the moment) but the way he tried to play dumb afterwards was just extremely cheapish and insulting to everyone's intelligence. He was the walking manifestation of fraudulence, somebody who tried to manipulate you at every turn, whether it was with his portrayal of a personality that none of his teammates or coaches could every verify (Joe Torre basically could not state with sufficient vigor how pampered he was) or getting busted for cheating twice, even after he sincerely pledged rehabilitation after the first time.
I will take up for him in this regard: all along, it seemed he was trying to compensate for something. He was a phony, but he was a phony because he was ridden with deep-rooted insecurity that probably stemmed from issues he had with his father as a child. His cheating appeared to reflect an addiction to perfection that anybody who watched him work would testify to. And for his flaws, he moved to third for Jeter, even when everything indicated it should have been the other way around. His love for the game was genuine, perhaps in a way that could not comprehend anything less than that (I always remember the passage from Torre's book in which A-Rod was incredulous that Jeter didn't have the baseball package).
I don't care to regurgitate the details of Ortiz's failed test. Sox fans will probably point out that it was administered under murky circumstances, and Yankees fans will express with conviction that he is a genocidal cheater. The media has been light on him, but they were light on Pettitte, too. Perhaps, in regards to A-Rod, some of the outrage is correlated with the fact that he could have gone down as the best to ever play...there was never that with Ortiz. Then again, people hated A-Rod before the steroids, and I won't argue with those people.
Maybe the better comparison is A-Rod to Manny. Manny was every bit the offender A-Rod was when it came to failed tests, and his off-field blunders rose to far greater levels of severity than A-Rod's. Yet...Manny is one of my favorite players of all-time, and if that demonstrates a certain hypocrisy that is consistent with many sports fans, then maybe that underscores what this all actually is...entertainment. Even as somebody who doesn't like baseball as much as other sports, the '03 and '04 ALCS's are two of the pantheon sporting events of my lifetime. A-Rod, Ortiz, and Manny were obviously prominently involved, so it's tough, as they depart the game, for me to grade them as anything other than flawed figures to greatly, greatly enhanced our experience as fans.
There is no way to defend A-Rod in certain respects, and again, I say that as somebody who liked him. The Arroyo swipe was an egregious violation of the game...the action itself was one thing (I can see it being rationalized as instinctual movement in the moment) but the way he tried to play dumb afterwards was just extremely cheapish and insulting to everyone's intelligence. He was the walking manifestation of fraudulence, somebody who tried to manipulate you at every turn, whether it was with his portrayal of a personality that none of his teammates or coaches could every verify (Joe Torre basically could not state with sufficient vigor how pampered he was) or getting busted for cheating twice, even after he sincerely pledged rehabilitation after the first time.
I will take up for him in this regard: all along, it seemed he was trying to compensate for something. He was a phony, but he was a phony because he was ridden with deep-rooted insecurity that probably stemmed from issues he had with his father as a child. His cheating appeared to reflect an addiction to perfection that anybody who watched him work would testify to. And for his flaws, he moved to third for Jeter, even when everything indicated it should have been the other way around. His love for the game was genuine, perhaps in a way that could not comprehend anything less than that (I always remember the passage from Torre's book in which A-Rod was incredulous that Jeter didn't have the baseball package).
I don't care to regurgitate the details of Ortiz's failed test. Sox fans will probably point out that it was administered under murky circumstances, and Yankees fans will express with conviction that he is a genocidal cheater. The media has been light on him, but they were light on Pettitte, too. Perhaps, in regards to A-Rod, some of the outrage is correlated with the fact that he could have gone down as the best to ever play...there was never that with Ortiz. Then again, people hated A-Rod before the steroids, and I won't argue with those people.
Maybe the better comparison is A-Rod to Manny. Manny was every bit the offender A-Rod was when it came to failed tests, and his off-field blunders rose to far greater levels of severity than A-Rod's. Yet...Manny is one of my favorite players of all-time, and if that demonstrates a certain hypocrisy that is consistent with many sports fans, then maybe that underscores what this all actually is...entertainment. Even as somebody who doesn't like baseball as much as other sports, the '03 and '04 ALCS's are two of the pantheon sporting events of my lifetime. A-Rod, Ortiz, and Manny were obviously prominently involved, so it's tough, as they depart the game, for me to grade them as anything other than flawed figures to greatly, greatly enhanced our experience as fans.