Closer thinks team is saving too much
FORT MYERS, Fla. - With virtually no leverage in his contract situation, Jonathan Papelbon will probably end up with a 2008 salary north of Bobby Jenks's $550,000 and quite south of the $900,000 Ryan Howard got when the Phillies slugger had about the same service time.
But that didn't stop Papelbon from making some outspoken comments yesterday on his contract status, which will need to be resolved by next Tuesday's deadline. His agents, Seth and Sam Levinson, were in Fort Myers to discuss the situation with the Red Sox, but nothing was finalized. Papelbon did confirm that the sides won't be able to even get close on a long-term deal.
"It's a tough situation for me right now because basically I'm at a point to where I feel like the position I'm in, there's a certain standard that needs to be put in place here," Papelbon said. "I feel like with me being at the top of my position, I feel like that standard needs to be set and I'm the one to set that standard. And I don't think that the Red Sox are really necessarily seeing eye to eye with me on that subject right now. Hopefully, we can get somewhere.
"We're chugging away at this thing and we want to get it done, believe me, and we can move on. At the same time, I feel a certain obligation to not only myself and my family to make the money that I deserve, but for the game of baseball. Mariano Rivera has been doing it for the past 10 years. With me coming up behind him, I feel a certain obligation to do the same."
Rivera re-signed with the Yankees this offseason, getting a three-year deal for $45 million.
Papelbon said the contract has not been weighing on him, that he's far more concerned with the addition of a slider, a third pitch in his repertoire. He said at times last year he wished for another pitch to be able to throw in any count, at any batter. In the Sox' 5-3 win over the Pirates yesterday, Papelbon got two of the outs in a 1-2-3 fourth inning on his slider.
But that won't help with a contract. Not eligible for arbitration until next season, Papelbon has little to do but wait until the Red Sox decide on his salary, which was $425,500 last season. The Sox have the right to renew his contract.
"Yeah, I'm at the mercy of the club right now, to a certain extent," Papelbon said. "But it's just a matter of ironing out the numbers and we haven't ironed them out yet. Hopefully, we can get to a mutual agreement. I don't want to renew. I don't want to, but if I have to, I have to. That's just the cold hard facts of it."
A man of routine
He's in by about 6 or 6:15 a.m., done by 9:30 (30-40 exercises completed), and home before the rest of the team begins workouts.In a spring training completely different from any he's had, Curt Schilling, rehabbing his right shoulder, has focused on the cardio and strength training work he needs to get into the program set up by the Red Sox that they think will provide him a chance to pitch this season. He works with assistant trainer Mike Reinold, then strength and conditioning coach Dave Page, then finally massage therapist Russell Nua.
As to when he'll see progress, Schilling said that simply isn't the way his mind is working.
"It's what I have to do," he said. "I don't have a choice. I don't really think like that. I have a job to do and I come in and do it as good as I can do it and I move on to the next day.
"I don't sit around and dwell about what could be and how it could be different and what if this happened. That has no positive effect on anything I'm doing, so I don't think like that.
"I get here and I have a routine and I get through it as best as I can get through. When the day is over, I know what's on the agenda tomorrow, and I'll get ready to do that tomorrow.
"It's no different than in a normal spring training in that sense. I have to do what I have to do. Whether I like it or not's not really relevant. It's just what needs to be done."