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The Greatest Second baseman of all time retires

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Alomar announces retirement


Sports Network



3/19/2005

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (CP) - Former Toronto Blue Jays star Roberto Alomar called it quits Saturday. The 12-time all-star signed with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays with hopes of playing one final season, but he announced his retirement Saturday.





It came one day after he committed two errors in one inning of a spring training game. The 37-year-old Alomar, a key in Toronto's back-to-back World Series titles in 1992 and '93, has been bothered by back and vision problems in recent weeks.



"I played a lot of games and I said I would never embarrass myself on the field," Alomar said. "I had a long career, but I can't play at the level I want to play, so it's time to retire."





This would have been the 18th major league season for Alomar, who also played for San Diego, Baltimore, Cleveland, the New York Mets, Arizona, and the Chicago White Sox.


He signed a $600,000 US, one-year contract with the Devil Rays in January, hopeful that he could end his stellar career on a high note after a swift decline the past three seasons. The team pencilled him in as the everyday second baseman and No. 2 hitter.


Alomar, though, said he had doubts even entering camp.


"I just can't go anymore," Alomar said. "My back, legs and eyes aren't the same. I don't want to embarrass myself or my teammates."


With Alomar leaving, Jorge Cantu - who hit .301 in 50 games for Tampa Bay last season, his first in the major leagues - figures to take over at second base.


"I learned a lot from him and I have all the respect in the world for him," Cantu said. "I watched him when I was a kid and looked up to him all through the minor leagues. You have to respect what he's done."


A 10-time Gold Glove winner and career .300 hitter, Alomar is 276 hits shy of 3,000. He was an all-star for 11 consecutive seasons from 1991 to 2001, but has struggled while batting .266, .258 and .263 the past three years.


In 2004, he missed two months with a broken right hand and finished with four homers and 24 RBIs in 56 games for Arizona and the White Sox.


Alomar's stellar career also included an infamous altercation with an umpire. In 1996, upset over strike calls, Alomar - then with the Baltimore Orioles - spat in the face of umpire John Hirschbeck in Toronto.


Alomar made matters worse afterward by saying he thought Hirschbeck was under stress because his eight-year-old son, John Drew, had died of a rare brain disease in 1993 known as adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD).


Yet soon, Alomar and Hirschbeck became friends, and even worked together to raise money earmarked for finding a cure for ALD. And Alomar hopes that mistake doesn't mar his legacy.


"I wish it never happened," Alomar said, "and I hope that's not how people remember me."


He'll likely be remembered in Toronto as a player that may be the best to ever wear a Jays uniform. The San Diego Padres traded Alomar and Joe Carter to the Blue Jays for Fred McGriff and Tony Fernandez in a famous December 1990 deal that put Toronto over the hump.


He was the MVP of the 1992 American League Championship Series, and few will ever forget his home run off Oakland closer Dennis Eckersley in that series.


Also Saturday, Tampa Bay right fielder Danny Bautista, who hit .286 with 11 homers and 65 RBIs last season with Arizona, announced his retirement.


Bautista was in the major leagues for parts of 12 seasons with Detroit, Atlanta, Florida and the Diamondbacks. He hit .272 in 895 career games, and was 7-for-12 to help Arizona beat the New York Yankees in the 2001 World Series. "





No matter what anyone says this man was an amazing player.
 

Triumph

Banned
Yeah, he WAS. Then he went and got himself traded to/signed with the Mets(can't remember which). The METS.

Come on. That's like career suicide.
 

Iceman

Member
Robby was the wizard of the right side of the infield.

Stupid Padres. We had Ozzie Smith AND Robby Alomar and let them both go.
 

theo

Contest Winner
I will always remember him for the spitting incident:

alomar.jpg
 
you know i bet if he slapped the umpire it would be less of an incedent. but whatever.

Alomar still was the greatest. I remember when he gave the atlanta idiots the sideways tomahawk when he it the game winning homerun is the world series. :lol
 

placebo

Member
Greatest of all time? Nah, screw that. Top 10? Sure, but considering the competition -- Rogers Hornsby, Joe Morgan, Bill Mazeroski, Jackie Robinson, Sandberg, Eddie Collins, Nap Lajoie, etc...there's no way I'd consider Alomar topping that list. And no, I can't forgive or forget the spitting incident either -- that was totally classless bullshit right there.
 

Shinobi

Member
Kuroyume said:
The guy couldn't cut it in New York because he is weak.

Yeah...guess the two World Series rings he won while playing here wore his hands down. BTW, what have you guys won since '93?

Roberto Alomar is one of the best players I've ever seen. His defensive wizardry at second base was second to none...ridiculous range, godly instincts. Great clutch performer too...best Alomar moment ever was when he smacked Eckersley's ass out of the park to tie up an ALCS game in the top of the ninth after Dennis was talking shit the inning before. Robbie hit it and immediately threw both hands in the air, even though the ball cleared the wall by like a foot. :lol He's without question the best ball player the Blue Jays ever had. Alas he probably shortened his career by about five years playing the way he did on Skydome (now Rogers Centre) ridiculous surface, which was literally cement with green felt covering it. Thank Christ they're finally getting with the program and installing field turf this season.

Anyway, I hope the last three seasons haven't diminished his accomplishments too much...he should make it into the hall of fame, being the best second baseman of the 90's and one of the best of all time. Then again it took Sandberg almost a decade to get into the hall, so who knows with these dumb fuck voters.

Anyway, my hats off to Robbie...he'll be missed by this fan. Hell, I still miss his "Catch de taste!!" ad. :lol


alomar93-1.jpg


AlomarRoberto.JPG


lg_alomar_ap.jpg


_1299226_010426puerto150b.jpg


ralomar00cos-1.jpg


robthro.jpg
 
Ninja Scooter said:
Pfew! That was close. For a second there, i had thought Bret Boone retired.

Yeah he could have more time to work on frosting his hair.

One of the things I've always been sorry for as a Met fan is that Alomar never worked out in NY. Watching him and Vizquel turn DPs for Cleveland was just amazing.

As for the Sandberg comment: come on. There's no contest.
 

Musashi Wins!

FLAWLESS VICTOLY!
His career really is marred by the spitting incident. I've never liked him since then, though I certainly realize that he was a fiery competitor and things happen in the space of a moment.
 

Shinobi

Member
Desperado said:
Biggio~Alomar

:lol :lol :lol

Robbie I thought got a raw deal from that spitting incident. I was watching that game live, and the pitch Hirshbeck called him out on for a strike was literally a half foot off the plate. Robbie obviously didn't like that, said some stuff to Hirshbeck as he walked to the dugout, while Hirschbeck responded in kind. Robbie then sits in the dugout, while Hirsh was still glaring after him. From what I remember, Robbie had stopped talking. Hirschbeck then says something else, Robbie responds, and then he's ejected. After that he ran out, and thusly followed the lugie seen around the world. Robbie was clearly goaded on during that exchange (nevermind the fact that it was worst strike call in the history of baseball), so while there was no excuse to spit, he wasn't the only party in the wrong. Thankfully they were both able to mend the fences shortly after that, something that barely gets a mention by the sensationlist media (didn't even know they'd gotten together on charity work till I entered this thread).
 

calder

Member
Props to Alomar for his amazing career and for being the best Jay of all time IMO. One of my favourite Jays players (although Delgado and Henke are still my #1 and 2) and a huge part of the fantastic Jays teams of the early 90s.

I also lost a lot of respect for him for the spitting incident... not so much for the spitting itself, although that was clearly a terrible decision and wholly classless it was made on the field in the heat of the moment. But it was his insane comments after the game trying to justify spitting in a guys face by theorizing his son dying might have made him a bad ump - that shit was just inexcusable.

But anyway, while I can never respect him as a person like I had as a player he deserves a speedy trip to the HOF and accolades for his amazing ability and accomplishments.
 
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