The book said that when Giambi went through a slump in the 2002 season, his first with the Yankees, Cashman was heard yelling at a television in the Yankees’ clubhouse during a game. Citing “one New York player,” the book said that Cashman screamed, “Jason, whatever you were taking in Oakland,” get back on it.As one might expect, Cashman denied the story:
The book said that Cashman then added, “Please!”
But Pearlman stands behind his account of the story:“That is completely false,” Cashman said.
He added, in reference to the author: “This guy never even called me and asked me if it was true. You think he would have done some fact-checking.”
Could this anonymous Yankee player just be angry at Cashman for some reason so he's throwing this out there to make him look bad? Possibly. But at the same time it's also possible this story is true.“The source was a Yankee player who was an eyewitness and in whom I have 100 percent confidence,” Pearlman said.
But he acknowledged that he should have called Cashman for his reaction. “He’s totally right,” Pearlman said. “I didn’t call him for comment and I should have.
“But that doesn’t mean the story isn’t correct.”
All you had to do was look at Giambi back then to know he did roids. I remember talking about it with friends of mine back when they signed him. If we know then Cashman and the Yankees had to know that Giambi had done something too. Otherwise, why would the Yankees specifically remove any mention of steroids from Giambi's contract? So I don't think it's that much of a stretch that Cashman would say something like this.
UPDATE 12:27 p.m.: Jason, from It is about the money, stupid, landed this quote from Pearlman:
"...I mean, the one thing I'll say—that you can write—is that, when it comes to performance-enhancers in baseball, Cashman's track record is brutally bad. He didn't merely employ users of performance-enhancers, but he signed three: Jose Canseco, Kevin Brown, Jason Giambi—who were known throughout the baseball world for their ways. We couldn't report it, because we, the media, didn't have proof. But all three were discussed among players ... writers ... executives; it was hardly a secret. So if Cashman wants to play the 'I had no idea, and any suggestion that I did have an idea is ludicrous!' card, well, I find it hard to fathom. That doesn't make him different than many (if any) of his GM peers, but it's odd to watch all these players go down in flames, while executives who paid huge salaried for 'enhanced' players walk away clean, with their jobs and reputations without stain."Well, he has a point.
7 Comments:
the stupid thing about this is that that comment is a comment that all fans scream as more of a joke than anything else. to take a comment like that and to run with it is really pathetic.. its not like he literally wanted him to take them, its a figure of speech
You have a point, but you have to admit, it's a good story as a throw-in for a book. It's things like this that make people want to read the rest of the book.
Selig was well aware of all this stuff too.
But he wears his boots well with all the sanctimonious BS that comes out of his mouth.
You're right Giuseppe, Selig has a lot of blood on his hands with the whole steroid mess. He doesn't deserve to keep his job.
People say this now about Giambi but when he signed with the yankees I didn't hear any media or fans screaming he was on steroids.
It was the elephant in the room. Why do you think Oaklands offer was 30 million less than the Yankees paid before Giambi walked.
In fairness, he didn't want to sign canseco. That was all george.
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