USA TODAY US Edition

Alex Rodriguez bows out today

Emotions high, mixed as dramafille­d 22-year career closes out

- Maureen Mullen @MaureenaMu­llen Special for USA TODAY Sports

Controvers­ial Yankees slugger plays last game

The older you get, the faster it goes, as the old saw reminds us. This week, Alex Rodriguez found out just how fast 22 years goes by.

“Like that,” Rodriguez told USA TODAY Sports, snapping his fingers, sitting in the visitors dugout at Fenway Park. “Some moments faster than others. Some were really slow. But for the most part, it’s been a pretty good run. It’s kind of melancholy.

“It’s kind of all surreal right now, a little bit of a blur. I think the synopsis of it is a happy moment, and a lot of (contentmen­t).”

Rodriguez made his major league debut in 1994 at Fenway Park as an 18-year-old wunderkind who was “so damn nervous” starting at shortstop with the Seattle Mariners. Since then, he has packed 22 seasons with plenty of memories, from the highest of highs to the lowest of lows. The overall No. 1 pick in 1993 would become a three-time MVP, 14time All-Star and 2009 World Series winner.

And, yes, a performanc­e-enhancing drug user who served a full-season suspension in 2014.

Now, at 41, he is set to play his final game. Rodriguez and the New York Yankees announced Sunday that the team will give him his unconditio­nal release after Friday’s game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium. He acknowledg­es he’s been

counting down the hours.

“It’s been an emotional week, that’s for sure,” Rodriguez said. “I’ve had quite a few of those. But it’s certainly one with a positive twist on it.”

Rodriguez leaves the Yankees with several milestones just out of reach. He enters Friday’s game four home runs shy of 700. He was surprised and disappoint­ed when he learned he would not be in the starting lineup for the first two games of a three-game set against the Red Sox. He got a pinch-hit appearance Wednesday, flying out to move a runner to third base, and started at DH and went 0-for-4 Thursday in the Yankees’ 4-2 win.

“Disappoint­ed but understand­ing,” he said of his limited playing time. “Yeah, it’s a little difficult, for sure. You work for 22 years, and I would have loved an opportunit­y to get 700 and to keep helping the team win. But that option wasn’t in the cards.”

The option that was given to him was to take his release and remain with the Yankees as a special adviser, a role that is still being defined.

He doesn’t plan to pull punches with the young players.

“First, I’ll talk about a lot of my mistakes and I hope that they can learn from my mistakes,” Rodriguez said. “Look, I’m not in a position to be giving a lot of world advice. But I think there’s a lot to be learned from others’ mistakes, for one.

“And then one of the things I’m maniacal about is fundamenta­ls. That’s why I love players like (Red Sox second baseman Dustin) Pedroia. You think about winning world championsh­ips, it usually revolves around fundamenta­ls. I know we’ve got all these fancy words going around with mathematic­s and sabermetri­cs. But at the end of the day, it still comes down to whoever executes the fundamenta­ls when the game’s on the line usually takes the bacon home.”

Which is part of the reason Rodriguez was still working at third base in pregame drills this week. In 64 games, he has not played in the field this season. He played just four games (two starts) at third and two (one start) at first base in 2015.

For Rodriguez, though, the writing on the wall was becoming increasing­ly clear. He is batting .199 with a .595 on-base-plussluggi­ng percentage this season serving as the designated hitter. Before Thursdasy, his last start had been at Tampa Bay on July 30, when he went 0-for-4 with four strikeouts.

Asked if it was a difficult decision to accept his release, Rodriguez paused. “These decisions are never easy,” he said. “Yeah, it was difficult.

“To a degree, it was (my) decision. I am — regardless of anything that’s happened — extremely grateful for the way Hal Steinbrenn­er’s treated me. I certainly have an appreciati­on for the options he’s given me and the op- tion to stay involved in the game with the young kids.”

Rodriguez expects Friday to be very emotional. His mother — who was at Fenway 22 years ago, along with his brother and sister — will be there again, this time with his daughters, Natasha and Ella.

He’s not sure what the next chapter of his life will bring — fatherhood, certainly, possibly coaching, and perhaps the two will intersect.

“Yeah, I would love to maybe coach Natasha’s basketball team at Ransom (Everglades School in Miami),” he said. “She’s trying out for the first time. So if she makes the team, maybe I could volunteer. That would be very cool. But she’s like, ‘Dad, don’t mention me anymore in your press conference­s.’ ”

Since Sunday’s announceme­nt, there has been much speculatio­n that he might sign with another team, crossing off some more of those milestones.

“I’ve had a lot of those questions,” he said. “But I’m really just, especially this week, I’m down to my last (few) hours here. I just want to stay in the moment and kind of go down memory lane a little bit. It’s quite nostalgic.”

And it’s a complicate­d legacy that he is leaving behind. Asked if he thought he would get into the Hall of Fame, Rodriguez replied, “I don’t have a vote. I’m going to let (the voters) decide. I think over time things may look a little different. I don’t know that. But one of the things I learned while I was serving my suspension is that I screwed up and I screwed up in a big way. And acknowledg­ing that is Step 1.

“No. 2, I also learned that I have to surround myself with the right people. And No. 3, I have to make a lot of uncomforta­ble phone calls and meetings in person apologizin­g to a lot of people.

“Then you have to go out and carry out and behave in a totally different way.

“And I think for the last two years I’m most proud of that. I don’t know anything about numbers or Hall of Fame, but I am happy that I have been able to comport myself in a rightful way.”

What would he most like to be remembered for?

“Hopefully, you don’t have to be defined by your mistakes,” he said. “How you come back matters, too. That’s one, for sure. And someone who’s in love with the game of baseball.”

It’s a game he will miss terribly, he says. He knows because it was taken away from him once.

“I hear a lot of players retire and they say I’m going to miss from 7 to 10 (p.m.),” he says. “I’m going to miss all of it. All of it. I love, love the work.”

He knows the end is near. He’s not fooling himself into thinking someone will change his mind before the game and ask him to stay.

“No, no, I’ve played for a long time and baseball has a funny way of tapping you on the shoulder when you least expect it when you’re time is up,” he said. “I’m at peace with everything.”

What would he like his last atbat to be?

“A productive one,” he said. “Maybe a double in the gap and drive in a run. But I’ll let the moment come to me. I’m just so excited that I get an opportunit­y here down the stretch to have a last moment and share it with the fans.”

What will be going through his mind when he wakes up Saturday and the game that he loves so much has again — perhaps for good — been taken away from him?

Rodriguez takes a lengthy pause and looks out over the baseball field in front of him, composing himself before responding.

“Probably feeling grateful for the opportunit­y to come back,” he said. “Just grateful to a lot of people that gave me the opportunit­y to come back and make right with a lot of people.”

 ?? MARK L. BAER, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Alex Rodriguez emerges from the Green Monster before Thursday’s game at Fenway Park.
MARK L. BAER, USA TODAY SPORTS Alex Rodriguez emerges from the Green Monster before Thursday’s game at Fenway Park.
 ?? MARK L. BAER, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Alex Rodriguez, signing autographs before Thursday’s game against the Red Sox at Fenway Park, will remain with the Yankees organizati­on as a special adviser.
MARK L. BAER, USA TODAY SPORTS Alex Rodriguez, signing autographs before Thursday’s game against the Red Sox at Fenway Park, will remain with the Yankees organizati­on as a special adviser.

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