Alex Rodriguez opens up about his future beyond baseball

During his twenty years in the MLB, Alex Rodriguez solidified his place as one of the game’s all-time greats. The New York Yankees were his team for the majority of his career.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

He ranks in the top five all-time in home runs and runs batted in, has won the World Series three times, and was named the Most Valuable Player three times.

His private life is quite hectic. On television, he talks about baseball. The Minnesota Timberwolves count him among their half owners, and he’s also an entrepreneur.

He is also lending his support to a vital campaign promoting good dental hygiene.

Talking about his post-baseball plans, Rodriguez appeared on “News All Day” on Tuesday.

Alex Rodriguez may be the next MLB great who goes unrecognized, and his prospects of being inducted into the Hall of Fаme appear bleak

You can’t avoid talking about Alex Rodriguez in baseball circles. Even though we tried to put him out of our minds nearly eight years after he retired, we couldn’t since he was on two big networks. He will go down in baseball lore as one of the most productive players of all time, if not the most prolific. On the other hand, the possibility that A-Rod will ever be inducted into the Hall of Fаme by the BBWAA is probably something that can be easily overlooked.

He has been on the ballot for three years now, and his support has increased from 34.3% in the first to 35.7% in the second. According to Ryan Thibodaux’s ballot tracker, A-Rod has received just half of the votes from first-time voters and has actually lost one vote from returning voters from last year. He needs to reach 75% in order to be enshrined, and it’s really hard to imagine how he might gain that type of momentum.

The only thing that remаins is a baseball great who can be considered on par with Shoeless Joe Jackson, Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, and Pete Rose: Not quite a Hall of Famer, but everybody knows they were good enough. But no one will ever be honored with a bust at Cooperstown—whether because of intentional self-sabоtage or because of an unfair and uneven criterion, depending on your perspective.

Without exceptional conditions, no baseball fan could ever cast doubt on A-Rod’s Hall of Fаme eligibility. The three-time MVP topped the league in several categories, including runs scored, hits, doubles, home runs, RBI, average, slugging percentage, on-base percentage, оffensive quotient, and wins against average. In his career, he appeared in fourteen All-Star games. Aside with two gold gloves and ten silver sluggers, he also won a World Series ring. Without a defensive hiccup, he switched positions mid-prime. Final tally: 3,115 hits (23rd all-time), 548 doubles (33rd), 696 home runs (5th), 2,086 RBI (4th), 2,021 runs (8th), and 329 stolen bases. He ranks 12th all-time in wins among position players. He has seven extra-base hits, sixteen times on base, and seven total bases. Bаbe Ruth, A-Rod, and Hank Aaron are the only players in baseball history to reach the 2,000 RBI mark.It would be unnecessary for me to continue. In all honesty, he ranks among the all-time greats who stepped foot on a baseball diamond.

However, the conditions do exist, and the majority of individuals will not turn a blind eye to them. After being linked to performance-enhancing (PEDs) in reports and rumors several times, Rodriguez was suspended for a whole season as a result of his involvement in the Biogenesis controversy. While playing in the three seasons prior to Major League Baseball’s suspension of players for JDA violations, he confessed to using performance-enhancing . After the testing system was implemented, he vehemently denied using it until caught. Subsequently, he also admitted to using it under the enforcement policy.

Some individuals are so set in their ways that they won’t even consider A-Rod for the Hall of Fаme if he is even connected to performance-enhancing . There were still many lines that A-Rod crossed, especially for those like me who would have voted for Bonds and Clemens. I would have voted for A-Rod, Sammy Sosa, and Mark McGwire, but I refuse to do so because they all broke the JDA and were suspended by MLB.

Those who would merely vote for the top players without regard to PED ties are the only ones remaining. In A-Rod’s third year of eligibility, out of a possible ten, that seems to be somewhat more than one-third of the BBWAA Hall of Fаme voting body. No one on a veteran’s committee, even in a few decades from now, is likely to want to vote for A-Rod.

It’s important to adhere to the regulations, Rodriguez stated in an interview with Cigar Aficionado magazine from 2018. Ultimately, I must live with the consequences of those mistakes that I committed.

I think I have a better opportunity once again regardless of whether I get in or not—and let me be clear: I desire, hope, and pray that I get in. Plus, I’ve been able to use my successes and failures as a platform to speak out to the next generation, telling them to look at my career when they’re doubtful. Observe the pleasant, the unpleasant, and the unsightly. Plus, you’ll have the ability to limit yourself, which is something I lacked, and make wise selections.

Hope doesn’t seem to be working in this situation, and it’s hard to imagine that request being answered.

The world was fortunate to have Alex Rodriguez, one of the most gifted baseball players of all time, at birth. That, apparently, wasn’t good enough, so he dove headfirst into a career of performance-enhancing usage. He lost a lot of face, money, and maybe even the Hall of Fаme as a result of it.