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Ortiz on the lookout for Ramirez   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #126 of 722 |
FORT MYERS, Fla. -- Memo to anyone headed off to Turin today: Check
the balconies of Palasport Olimpico, the slopeside galleries of
Sestriere, and the eateries of the Olympic Village for the Red Sox'
cleanup hitter. Your chances of glimpsing him early this week might
exceed those of the fans who began gathering here yesterday for the
first pitcher-and-catcher workout of 2006.

"I talked to Manny a few weeks ago," David Ortiz said upon arrival
yesterday, ''and he was going to Italy [today]."

The good-will DH, who reported to camp three days ahead of schedule,
instantly launched into a bellowing laugh. But, he didn't seem to know
what to make of what Manny Ramírez had told him.

"He said he was going there," Ortiz continued. "He probably was just
[kidding]."

Evidently, the conversation didn't last long enough for Ortiz to find
out for sure.

"When you talk to Manny," Ortiz said, "he says his phone bill is going
to be too expensive, so he can talk no longer than one minute."

That, one reporter pointed out, would be one minute longer than
Ramírez spent talking last season.

"You ain't lying," Ortiz said.

Ortiz was asked whether he ever asked Ramírez directly if he was
content with returning to the team, as the slugger told an ESPN
Deportes reporter in early January.

"Actually, no," Ortiz said. "We didn't talk about it at all. I read in
the news that he said he didn't want to leave Boston. Sounds good to
me. Having my man around once again. Hopefully, that will never change
again."

Ramírez, as a position player, is expected to report Wednesday and
begin workouts Thursday. However, MLB's mandatory reporting date isn't
until Feb. 28. Ramírez, meanwhile, is scheduled to play for the
Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic March 3-20. Most WBC
teams are holding meetings the night of March 2, which means
participating players are likely to leave their major league teams
that day. With such a small window between the mandatory reporting
date and the WBC reporting date, it's possible Ramírez could wait to
join the Sox until late March.

The likelihood of this scenario is, of yet, unknown. General manager
Theo Epstein continues to say the Ramírez issue is between player and
club. Ramírez's agent, Greg Genske, has not returned messages left for
him the last couple days.

Ortiz, meanwhile, acknowledged he's going to have to be an even more
active peacekeeper/sitter/confidant to Ramírez if the Sox expect him
to remain here for the three years remaining on his eight-year, $160
million deal.

It was Kevin Millar last summer who helped Ramírez back off his July
demand to be traded and who marched Ramírez into manager Terry
Francona's office the morning of trade-deadline day to make peace with
the media and manager. Millar, of course, is now a Baltimore Oriole.

"Millar, he did a lot with Manny, trying to get him going," Ortiz
said. "I guess, like you say, I'm going to have to stick with it. I
don't think anybody will be capable of [what Millar did]. Millar was
an outstanding teammate.

"I have talked to Millar. He misses us a lot. The longer he was here,
he kept this ball club going, one way or the other."

Ortiz, similarly, will miss Johnny Damon's presence.

"It sucks, man," Ortiz said. "He's my boy, man. I talked to him a lot
before and after he went to the other side. I wish him the best.

"When the opposing team [New York] is getting the first at-bat [at
Fenway May 1] . . . I want to see what happens. Hopefully, people
understand that this is a business. Players pretty much go for their
future. I think that's what happened with Johnny."

Ortiz's future, though less pressing, is also an issue this camp.
Ortiz is signed for $6.5 million this season with a
sure-to-be-exercised club option for $8.4 million in 2007. He said in
January that he'd like an extension of three or four seasons and, at
the time, was hopeful a deal would be struck before spring training.
On a three-year deal, he'd likely seek in the neighborhood of $40 million.

But Ortiz has no update on any talks, and the Sox, who have entered a
silence-is-golden era, aren't inclined to comment.

"I'm not involved with it," Ortiz said. "I don't know what's going on.
Hopefully, something works. I want to stick around."

If he were allowed to enter free agency, could he see himself
following Damon?

"I don't know," he said. "Like I said before, hopefully I stay here
the rest of my career. I like it here. Everybody's been really nice to
me in Boston. Hopefully, I don't have to go through that."

For now, his focus is on the Sox and the WBC, though he thinks the
event should be moved to midsummer.

"Everybody would be ready to go," he said. "I know some guys, they
take more than a month to get ready."

But, he added, "I want to play. In the Dominican, people are very
excited."

He laughed when apprised of White Sox manager Ozzie Guillén calling
Alex Rodriguez a hypocrite. Guillén contended that Rodriguez never
intended to play for the Dominican Republic but pretended to in order
to curry Latino fans' favor.

"I don't know about that," said Ortiz, who had A-Rod over to his
Boston-area home one day last season. "He's a professional and a very
smart guy."

Ortiz, who lost the MVP race to Rodriguez despite submitting as
compelling a case as any DH ever has, claimed "it wasn't hard" to
place second.

"I'm just happy and glad they thought I did a good job," said Ortiz,
who delivered 21 game-winning RBIs and belted 26 homers in or after
the sixth inning. "The most important thing is knowing that you did
what it takes to help your ball club.

"That's about it. I'm just going to try to keep doing what I'm doing,
keep it that way. If it ever comes, it comes. If it doesn't, hang with
it."

It will be difficult to replicate his 2005 season. For starters, he
was exceptional. Furthermore, the Blue Jays added lefthanded closer
B.J. Ryan. The Yankees added lefty specialist, and former teammate,
Mike Myers. And, with a weakened lineup -- and thinned-out clubhouse
-- Ortiz's responsibilities will grow.

"It's going to be a little hard, man," he said. "It's going to be hard
to not have those guys around, Millar, Johnny. Johnny, he was always
throwing parties and things for the team at his house."

Ortiz said his home is too small to throw the parties, but he said
he'll think of something. And, he'll prepare to be everything Ramírez
needs him to be. Ortiz often has called Ramírez "a box of chocolates,"
for his unpredictability.

"He won't surprise me anymore," Ortiz contended. "I'm telling you
right now."

But will Ramírez be with the Sox on Opening Day, ready to roll?

"He might," Ortiz said. "I don't know. That's a good question."

Source: Chris Snow / Boston.com






Tue Feb 21, 2006 6:38 am

cafedweller
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FORT MYERS, Fla. -- Memo to anyone headed off to Turin today: Check the balconies of Palasport Olimpico, the slopeside galleries of Sestriere, and the eateries...
Lynne
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Feb 21, 2006
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