Alex Rodriguez hits 600th HR

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http://sports.espn.go.com/new-york/mlb/news/story?id=5437158

NEW YORK -- Alex Rodriguez hit his 600th career home run on Wednesday at Yankee Stadium.
Alex Rodriguez ended a 46 at-bat homerless skid to reach the 600 club on Wednesday.
Rodriguez hit a two-run homer to straightaway center field in the first inning of a game against the Toronto Blue Jays, off Shaun Marcum. It came on a 2-0 pitch over the middle of the plate with Derek Jeter on first and two out.

At 35 years, 8 days, Rodriguez became the youngest player in history to join the 600 Club, and the seventh player in baseball history to reach the milestone.

He raised a hand slightly in triumph as he rounded first base, then completed his home run trot. He joined an elite club that includes Barry Bonds (762), Henry Aaron (755), Babe Ruth (714), Willie Mays (660), Ken Griffey Jr. (630) and Sammy Sosa (609). After Rodriguez, the next-youngest member of the 600 club is its' first -- Ruth, at 36 years, 196 days. Of the seven players with 600 homers, Rodriguez' 46 at-bats between No. 599 and No. 600 were the longest. His 600th HR ended a 12-game homerless slump and came exactly three years to the day after his 500th homer.

Entering Thursday's game, Rodriguez was 4-for-17 against Marcum with one career homer off the right-hander.

Rodriguez's 17th homer of the season sailed over the center field wall and landed in Monument Park. The ball was retrieved by a Yankee security guard and will be returned to Rodriguez.

As he rounded the bases, he was treated to a standing ovation from the crowd at Yankee Stadium. After he touched home plate he was embraced by Jeter, who had scored ahead of him, and by the next batter, Robinson Cano.

All of Rodriguez' teammates -- many of whom had raised their arms in joy when he finally connected -- then came out of the dugout to embrace him. After they had all retreated to the dugout, Rodriguez returned for his own curtain call.

"Congratulations to Alex on this great achievement and on adding another highlight to Yankees history. We are especially proud he accomplished this feat as a Yankee and here before the most loyal fans in baseball," team co-owner Hal Steinbrenner said of the achievement.

Rodriguez had gone 46 at-bats between home runs Nos. 599 and 600 -- 25 more than Willie Mays, who needed 21 at-bats to reach the milestone in 1970.

The Yankees immediately informed fans that a special program and T-shirt were available to commemorate A-Rod's achievement. One stand behind home plate sold out within two innings.

A-Rod hit his 599th off Robinson Tejeda of the Kansas City Royals last Thursday at Yankee Stadium. The ball he hit was the 104th specially marked one that had been used for each of his plate appearances since reaching No. 599.

The longest homerless streak of his career came in 1994 and 1995, when he was a young, skinny kid with the Mariners and went 102 at-bats without a home run.

As a Yankee, he had a 72 at-bat streak last year and a 61 at-bat stretch earlier this season.

A-Rod turned 35 last Tuesday, putting his home run pace far ahead of the rest. Ruth had been the youngest to hit 600, reaching the mark in 1931 at 36 years, 196 days. The Sultan of Swat did it in fewer games, though -- 2,044 to 2,227 for Rodriguez.


A-Rod's Road To 600

Alex Rodriguez became the seventh player in major league history to hit 600 home runs Wednesday. Here's how he got there.
Photo gallery

In the three years since hitting No. 500, much has changed for him.

During a tumultuous spring training of 2009, Rodriguez admitted to using steroids while playing for the Texas Rangers from 2001-03. He also had major hip surgery that kept him out the first month last year, as the team adjusted to high-profile newcomers CC Sabathia, A.J. Burnett and Mark Teixeira without him.

He returned with a fresh outlook that put the team first, helping lead the Yankees to their first World Series championship since 2000 and reversing a trend of personal playoff failures.

Even though he went homerless in his first 41 at-bats this year and has connected at a much slower rate compared to the rest of his career, the 13-time All-Star has been saying that No. 600 is merely a springboard to better things -- mainly helping his team win, but also reaching Bonds' record of 762 home runs.

Being the home run king comes with a tarnished crown, though.

After Bonds eclipsed Aaron's record with his 756th in 2007 amid accusations of steroid use -- something Bonds vehemently denies -- talk immediately turned to A-Rod, who days earlier had become the fastest to No. 500. He was supposed to be the player who would restore credibility to American sports' most cherished record, but that all changed two years later.

In response to a SportsIllustrated.com report and mounting speculation, A-Rod admitted to using steroids as he hit 156 homers with Texas. He has 255 with the Yankees and 189 with the Seattle Mariners, who picked him No. 1 in 1993 amateur draft.

600 Club
Seven men have hit 600 home runs or more in the major leagues:

Player HRs
Barry Bonds 762
Henry Aaron 755
Babe Ruth 714
Willie Mays 660
Ken Griffey Jr. 630
Sammy Sosa 609
Alex Rodriguez 600
Rodriguez is among only three players, along with Reggie Jackson and Darrell Evans, to hit 100 home runs for three different teams.

For one of the most scrutinized players in baseball, there was little fanfare in the run-up to No. 600 -- perhaps it's Steroid Era fatigue or the fact that Rodriguez became the fourth player to reach the mark in the last 10 years after none in 31 years.

The pursuit of the home run record gets lucrative now. As part of his $275 million, 10-year deal signed after opting out of his contract during the 2007 World Series, Rodriguez can earn up to $30 million more for six milestone homers.

If Rodriguez ties Mays, he will receive a $6 million bonus. He'd get $6 million more each time for matching Ruth, Aaron and Bonds and breaking the record.

Rodriguez hit No. 100 in August 1998 with Seattle, No. 200 in May 2001 and No. 300 in April 2003 with Texas. His 400th home run came on June 8, 2005, against Milwaukee during his second season with the Yankees.

Information from ESPNNewYork.com's Andrew Marchand and The Associated Press was used in this report.
 
Joe Realist;3482231 said:
I think he will get to 700, but not get the record.

I think he'll get it as long as he's wearing pinstripes. Yankee Stadium is a launching pad.
 
Joe Realist;3482231 said:
I think he will get to 700, but not get the record.

He'll get it. Won't surprise me if he gets to 800. He can play til 40.
 
who cares? how many of those did he hit when he was on the juice?
 
Its weird, they give Bonds hell. But A-Rod they just sweep it under the rug like it never happened.
 
cowboyeric8;3482829 said:
Its weird, they give Bonds hell. But A-Rod they just sweep it under the rug like it never happened.

Bonds didn't admit it. A-Rod did so I don't know if that's part of the reason. I know that Bonds gets a lot of flak from the Press because he was always an arsehole to them. A-Rod, for the most part, has been very cordial to the Press. I'm certain that this is part the reason as well. When A-Rod gets closer to the record, you will start hearing more about that issue. It's really not news to talk about it when he's low man on the 600 club. It will be made into big news when he's pushing for the top spot on that list.
 
600 is not entirely meaningless in this drug era...but, let's just say, far less impressive.
 
I dont care what anyone says 600 is an ultimate accomplishment. Arod has the talent and the ability and nobody can deny that. The steroid issue is kind of a wash because if steroids were the reason he hit all of them then where are the other guys that should be close on his tail. The majority of pitchers also took roids so the competition of baseball also got harder so like i said i think its a total wash and he will break the record.
 
DFWJC;3483022 said:
600 is not entirely meaningless in this drug era...but, let's just say, far less impressive.

Well it's not as big of a deal because there's been 4 or 5 guys get to 600 in the last 10 years.

When A-Rod is closing in on 700 it'll be a big deal.
 
cowboyeric8;3482829 said:
Its weird, they give Bonds hell. But A-Rod they just sweep it under the rug like it never happened.

I think both should be erased from the books.

Neither deserves the numbers they have.
 
Yanks have a 4 game home stand coming up against the Sox starting tomorrow. Should be interesting to see how Rodriquez does in that series. A-Rod does not do well when he is trying to hit a milestone. Took him awhile to get 500. Took him awhile to get 600 but, once he gets them, he gets hot. At least, he did after 500. Hope he does again against the Red Sox.
 
basstapp;3483053 said:
I dont care what anyone says 600 is an ultimate accomplishment. Arod has the talent and the ability and nobody can deny that. The steroid issue is kind of a wash because if steroids were the reason he hit all of them then where are the other guys that should be close on his tail. The majority of pitchers also took roids so the competition of baseball also got harder so like i said i think its a total wash and he will break the record.

AN ultimate accomplishment?

Your argument about A-Rod and steroids doesn't hold up. Nobody is saying A-Rod didn't have talent or that he wouldn't have hit a sizeable number of homers without them, just that the numbers may not have been as huge or as notable. The reason others aren't there with him is that they didn't start with the same base talent.
 
Stautner;3483385 said:
AN ultimate accomplishment?

Your argument about A-Rod and steroids doesn't hold up. Nobody is saying A-Rod didn't have talent or that he wouldn't have hit a sizeable number of homers without them, just that the numbers may not have been as huge or as notable. The reason others aren't there with him is that they didn't start with the same base talent.

The argument that Pitchers and Hitters both took Juice is a valid point but I think it falls apart in the actual comparison of numbers. The biggest thing HGH or Roids do for you in Baseball is allow you to come back quicker. Your body recovers faster. But, since pitchers are now on pitch counts, rotations are expanded to 4 and 5 guys and middle relievers have become such a big part of the game, I think that this has probably had a bigger effect on pitching then has Juicing but the numbers have still gone way up for hitters. That would seem to suggest that Roids or HGH have had a much bigger impact on hitting then pitching. At least, that's kinda what I have seen over the last 15 to 20 years or so.
 
He'll have to hit over 30 home runs a year for the next 5 years to get the record. I don't know if he'll be able to do it.
 
I've watched him, day in, day out during his Yankee years.

He might be the least compelling "super star" I've ever seen.

I think in his last 42 at bats before the 600th, he only hit 12 balls out of the infield.

Yep, he had a great playoff last year...but I still see him as the softest player to ever wear a Yankee uniform.

There used to be arguments about who was better, ARod or Jeter.

Zero comparison when you watch them day after day.

Jeter by a mile.
 
Ware2010;3483464 said:
He'll have to hit over 30 home runs a year for the next 5 years to get the record. I don't know if he'll be able to do it.

I think he will get to 700, maybe pass the Babe, but that's it.
 
Ware2010;3483464 said:
He'll have to hit over 30 home runs a year for the next 5 years to get the record. I don't know if he'll be able to do it.


It's not a gimme for sure, but who knows, maybe he will play beyond 5 years, or maybe he has one more huge year left inhim that will reduce the numbers he has to put up the remaining 4 years to get there.

Juke99;3483510 said:
I've watched him, day in, day out during his Yankee years.

He might be the least compelling "super star" I've ever seen.

I think in his last 42 at bats before the 600th, he only hit 12 balls out of the infield.

Yep, he had a great playoff last year...but I still see him as the softest player to ever wear a Yankee uniform.

There used to be arguments about who was better, ARod or Jeter.

Zero comparison when you watch them day after day.

Jeter by a mile.

I saw the same thing when he was a Ranger. The fact is Jeter plays with passion with a pure love of the game, whereas A-Rod seems pretty stoic and matter of fact about it most of the time. Jeter exudes energy, whereas A-Rod goes about things in a dull, lifeless way. There is a spark every now and then, but it's just not a part of him the way it is with Jeter.
 

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