Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,491,257 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Ichiro Suzuki intrigued by free agency


Ichiro Suzuki didn't look particularly imposing. He never does. Not with his lithe body in prime condition, as usual. And certainly not with a pink T-shirt, black long sleeves, blue jeans with camouflage patches, shiny silver sneakers and black-and-white knit cap all clinging to him like a skateboarding teenager wearing his little brother's clothes.

Yet Suzuki still imposed his will _ and thoughts about free agency _ onto the Mariners during his first day of spring training Tuesday. Seattle's sleek, six-time All-Star and perennial Gold Glove outfielder raised the leverage bar on contract negotiations by saying "It is possible I will go to free agency" after the 2007 season.

Suzuki's $44 million, four-year deal ends this fall. This is the first time in his professional life with Seattle and with Orix in Japan that he's playing the final season of a contract.

"I've played 15 years of professional baseball and I have never filed for free agency. I have never had the choice, to choose for myself which road I want to take," Suzuki said through interpreter Ken Barron during a 25-minute session with English-language media, after a lengthy session with Japanese reporters.

"So if you ask me is it possible that I will go to free agency, yes, it is possible."

"But if you ask me what are my feelings toward it, at this point I cannot express it. I am not even sure myself. But what I can say is my mind is full of having the best season possible."

Suzuki said he doesn't know if the Mariners have approached his agent, Tony Attanasio, about a new contract. Attanasio didn't return a call Tuesday seeking comment.

"Up to this point, it's been an easy road," Suzuki said of always having a future deal. "(Now) what I need to do is make my own decision on something."

For now, Suzuki has no idea whether he'll stay with the only major league team he's known since Seattle won bidding to sign him out of Japan before 2001.

"I'm not ear-muffing my ears right now. I'm looking and I'm listening, but I don't know," he said. "I like baseball ... I know baseball is a job, but to me it's really closer to a hobby than a job."

Last Thursday, team chairman and CEO Howard Lincoln wouldn't say how far along the team is in negotiating a new deal with its franchise player.

"We have a team policy not to talk to the media about the status of contract negotiations," Lincoln told The Associated Press.

"But I will say this, that it's my hope Ichiro will finish his career as a Mariner _ and go into the Hall of Fame as a Mariner."

Seattle has finished last in the AL West three consecutive times. Suzuki said "the feeling of unhappiness is something you can't get used to in the world of winning or losing."

The Mariners added three starting pitchers this winter _ Jeff Weaver, Horacio Ramirez and Miguel Batista _ plus designated hitter Jose Vidro and outfielder Jose Guillen. Guillen's arrival in right field is moving Suzuki to center field, where he occasionally played for Orix from 1992-99.

Suzuki said how well those moves work will be one factor in his decision whether to stay or go.

Mike Hargrove said his experience of 15 seasons as a major league manager has shown that "sometimes" a player is affected by playing with contract negotiations looming.

"A lot of times, no. Players are really good at compartmentalizing things," Seattle's manager said. "He understands he's got a job to do and that affects how (a new contract) turns out in the end.

"Ichiro is a strong-minded person."

In his first spring workout, left-handed reliever George Sherrill buzzed two high-and-inside fastballs near his head during rare batting practice against live pitching. Suzuki bent his torso away both times, laughing with catcher Rene Rivera after the second one.

A third Sherrill pitch inside pierced Suzuki's black bat, part of a cherished collection that's specially cut from Japanese blue trees and stored in a humidity-controlled case. The bat splintered from the barrel to the handle, with the larger piece flying near first base. That created the rare sight of Suzuki holding little more than a wooden knob.

A female fan watching from behind a chain-link fence dashed to retrieve the surprise souvenir for her son, who proudly yelled, "We got a broken bat!" After the woman wrote "2-20-07 Ichiro" in black marker on the whitish inside portion of the fragment and joked about selling it on eBay, a Mariners official approached to ask for it back.

Why? Suzuki wanted to see why it broke, the spokesman said.

Sherrill has pitched the last three seasons for Seattle. He said the meticulous Suzuki doesn't break many bats.

"Not enough to remember," Sherrill said, smiling, as if proud of what he'd done.

Copyright 2007 AP News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright (c) Mochila, Inc.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:GREGG BELL
Publication:AP News
Date:Feb 21, 2007
Words:813
Previous Article:Luck of the Irish no longer with Celtics
Next Article:Brazil's famed carnival winds down



Related Articles
AMERICAN LEAGUE: AROUND THE HORN SUZUKI MAD AT JAPANESE REPORTERS.(Sports)
Baseball in Japan
Is Ichiro in Mariners' future?
Baseball: Ichiro homers on 1,000th major league appearance
Suzuki extends hit streak; Mariners win
Suzuki sets M's mark with 25-game streak
Baseball: Suzuki close to contract extension with Seattle: reports
M's give Ichiro $90M, 5-year extension
Fat contract caps a good week for Ichiro
Kyodo sports news summary

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles