NEW YORK -- Joe Torre's name is on the book, but it's a fair estimate not even one-fourth of the words are actually his. He says he's read it six times, perusing line for line, scanning chapters for quotes or anecdotes that have caused so much fuss. It is clear the New York Yankees, Torre's former employer, aren't pleased with the book -- Torre's book -- and there is a decent chance their relationship is forever stained. And yet, here is Torre, calmly navigating another hot-stove controversy the way he did for 12 always memorable, sometimes controversial seasons as manager of the Yankees. Taking refuge from a snowstorm building steam outside, Torre brushes a few icy flakes from his shoulder and tells me he "wouldn't change a thing."
The lines of fans snake around the interior of a bookstore in Manhattan's Midtown, and hundreds more huddle outside on Fifth Avenue, happy to wait hours for a chance to meet Torre and have him autograph a copy of The Yankee Years, written with Tom Verducci of Sports Illustrated. Torre smiles at a guy wearing a Yankee cap and puffy Yankee jacket who bravely shouts something about Torre violating the "clubhouse sanctity." The same guy soon will be pushing his way to the front of the queue, pen in hand, practically slobbering on the book he's just purchased for $26.95. Torre hasn't forgotten how to charm the hecklers.
"You ask what motivated me to write this book, well, it's that kind of passion for the Yankees," Torre says. "And I wanted to celebrate the years I spent in New York and allow fans to see the larger picture. I wanted them to feel like they were in the bowels of the ship with us.
"No doubt, it's not just my memories. It's a chronicle of baseball at a certain time. It's a piece of history that covers a lot of ground, including changes in baseball. It's not just my voice but it is my celebration of what to me was and always will be an extraordinary time."
Torre seems stunned to hear his reputation as a classy, team-first competitor has taken hits from sections of fans and media who question why he would collaborate on a book that doesn't portray the sainted Yankees as the best thing to happen to baseball since seams were sewn into a ball. Mostly those screaming about sanctity of clubhouses or boardrooms are the folks devouring everything in sight relating to their team. The Yankee Years is hardly a lascivious kiss-and-tell, or a remake of Ball Four. It's a shrewd insider look at America's most successful sporting franchise, and Torre no more owes the Yankees loyalty than the Yankees owed him.
Still, it's as if a season in Los Angeles, where Torre manages the Dodgers, helped erase knowledge of how life works in New York: things are leaked, there is outrage, lots of shouting on the radio and in the newspapers, more leaks, and the sun rises again. Torre should hardly be surprised when anything gets taken out of context.
Torre insists he would've collaborated with Verducci on the book even if he had been retained to manage the Yankees another year, rather than splitting with the team in a manner that sullied all involved. Only the last chapter, says Torre, "would be different," and it is of course in this final chapter, aptly called "The End," where Verducci, writing in the third person, details how Torre's relationship with general manager Brian Cashman disintegrated and the Torre Era ended, as Torre says now, "not with bitterness, but relief."
Cashman politely says he'd rather not comment on the book. Someone with knowledge of the inner workings of the Yankee hierarchy says the organization is livid with Torre for violating some sort of Yankee omerta, but what are they going to do, not include him in the ceremony during the last game at Yankee Stadium?
Oh, right.
Torre's success with the Yankees -- 12 straight playoff appearances, six pennants, four World Series titles -- earned him the right to recall his tenure however and whenever he chose. He's 68 and a cancer survivor, and no matter how healthy and fit he now appears, every day is a blessing. I've had many conversations with Torre over the years about his emotionally damaged childhood -- his father was physically abusive, and Torre's work with his Safe at Home foundation has more societal impact than any trophy ever will. Torre is a survivor, someone who learned late in life how destructive it is to keep emotion coiled tight. So I believe him when he says he has "no regrets" -- over the book, over how his life with the Yankees ebbed and flowed. If he chooses to take some of the shine off his legacy as the protective, paternal face of the pinstripes, he can never be accused of not paying attention when others in the organization taught him how to handle the knife.
Randy Levine, team president, gets perhaps the harshest treatment of all from Torre's angle, especially on page 203 where, in the midst of an argument with George Steinbrenner about whether David Wells should be disciplined for writing a book about the Yankees -- and no, Boomer, irony is not a Flinstone vitamin -- Torre and Levine get into it over speakerphone.
Levine started to say something, but Torre immediately cut him off.The vignettes are loaded with rich detail, flushed out in Torre's voice. There is the vivid picture of Kevin Brown curled into a corner of the clubhouse after a brutal outing, more truth about Wells being baseball's biggest diva and Roger Clemens receiving special treatment and, of course, the well-excerpted portrayal of Alex Rodriguez that includes a clubhouse fractured by A-Rod's presence. In a voice that is distinctly not Torre's, A-Rod is said to have a "single white female" crush on Derek Jeter. Torre recalls how teammates and coaches called A-Rod "A-Fraud," a tidbit Torre might have hesitated to reveal if it hadn't already been chronicled in the New York newspapers hundreds of times.
"Randy," Torre said, "shut the ... up."
The room went silent for a just a moment, a small moment, but one packed with awkwardness.
Said Torre, "I found out Randy had been trying to find a way to get rid of me from that moment on. Understood."
Indeed, I can think of a handful of moments when I was in a scrum around A-Rod's locker either before or after a game, and coach Larry Bowa would walk by and make a loud wisecrack. "Who's it going to be today, A-Rod or A-Fraud?" Bowa might yell, and A-Rod would almost always laugh. Years ago, the tabloid back pages exhausted usage of puns on A-Fraud, so anyone who says they weren't aware of the nickname or thinks Torre broke some sort of clubhouse code by repeating it is either disingenuous or hasn't learned to read.
"I don't believe in my heart that I violated anything," Torre says. "Yeah, I talked about stuff that went on in the clubhouse but if you read more than excerpts you'll see it in the correct context."
Torre says he respects any parts of the book Verducci wrote on his own, including the portions where Mike Mussina dissects Mariano Rivera. Nor does Torre seem too concerned that his current players in the Dodgers system might now be hesitant to confide in him. Indeed, Torre is especially circumspect in the book over issues like performance enhancing drugs, allowing Verducci, in a chapter titled "Getting an Edge," to explain why the Yankees (like other teams, including the Mets) allowed steroid-pushers on staff and fielded rosters with players pumped up on illegal drugs. The line about Yankee trainer Steve Donahue rubbing "the hottest possible liniment on (Clemens') testicles" was especially revolting.
Torre says, in retrospect, he should have paid more attention to the spread of PEDs, that he didn't realize their use was so wide-spread until the Mitchell report came out. "Maybe I didn't want to see it," he admits, which is exactly what he used to tell reporters in his office, off the record, when we were reporting on the proliferation of steroids in baseball long before it became a common part of the sport's fabric.
If the book is Torre's way of getting even, he is doing so with a dull knife. If the Yankees retaliate by never retiring his number or honoring him with the proverbial day, they will again prove to be as petty and vindictive as they were when Yogi Berra was sent into exile.
"I gave them the best years of my professional life," Torre says. The Yankee Years were Joe Torre's years, and he deserves to re-tell them however he sees fit.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
2-04-2009 @ 12:24AM
Julian said...
You're heavily biased, and it's obvious. For some reason the media loves Clueless Joe. Too bad he doesn't know how to manage a bullpen (or keep his mouth shut).
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2-04-2009 @ 6:15PM
rharrigfeld124 said...
Julian, you're an idiot!!!
2-04-2009 @ 3:57AM
FGENT1110 said...
No Matter how the Media trys to make light of Torre's comments, I still believe that he sould of kept his mouth shut. I hope it kicks him in the ass in LA. If I was playing for Torre I wouldn't tell him anything. He's a RAT! He Managed the Yankee's but it was still his PLAYERS that got Him The Status he has today! I used to like Torre but to me the lowest thing is a RAT! I Think we should have a book burning to open the New Stadium.
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2-04-2009 @ 8:10AM
Al said...
Lisa, get off your knees and stop kissing Torre's ass. He sucked at managing the pitching staff, which caused the Yankees to have no arms left at season's end in the playoffs. Torre's the reason the Yanks lost the series to the D'Backs, Mariano was so over used, he had nothing left to get those crucial last outs. Mariano stated after the series his arm was fatigued. Don't make Joe out to be a saint, he was lucky to manage some off the greatest teams in history, and they won in spite of him, not because of him. Tore was a below average manager before the Yankees, and he's shown to be a below average manager after. Don't say he won the division with the Dodgers proves anything, remember they were barely over .500, in the weakest division in baseball.
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2-04-2009 @ 10:51AM
martdad626 said...
you right- a phony- the press drank his kool aid- kool joe can do no wrong
he blew sox series in 04 and 2 world series- A PHONY
2-04-2009 @ 6:17PM
rharrigfeld124 said...
Al, as a Yankee fan I'm embarrassed that the Yankees didn't make the playoffs last year, but guess what, Joe Torre's Dodgers did, and they had a decent shot to win it all. Enough said!!!
2-04-2009 @ 10:21AM
stagloinc said...
My 98 year old Grandmother could have brought those yankee teams to the world series and won!He was a bum on the outside looking in when the Yankees gave him a shot, he has zero respect for the team who made him who he is. Without the Yanks he is a bum trying to drain a few more bucks from a post yankee losing career
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2-04-2009 @ 10:53AM
martdad626 said...
Lisa
Shows what you know about baseball-
There's 20 better managers in the game
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2-04-2009 @ 6:25PM
rharrigfeld124 said...
martdad, How many of those managers have 4 rings??? If you are a Yankee fan, you're an embarrassment!!! Firing Joe was one of the worst thing the organization has ever done. They should have fired Cashman and themselves first!!! Torre didn't make the decision to bring in an old and tired Randy Johnson or a juiced up Giambi. Nor did he make the decision to bring in A-fraud, who can't hit when it counts to save his life. How about Carl Pavano?? That was a great move. Kevin Brown and how many other bad personnell moves did Management make??? Torre wasn't the problem, the Yankees Front office was and is the problem!!! Enough said!!!
2-04-2009 @ 11:12AM
mikerat42 said...
All of those who are spending their waking hours basking in the reflected glory of the Yankees need to get a life...Ease up, Suzy Waldman will sniffle and cry for all of you...
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2-04-2009 @ 11:41AM
GrumpyOldMan said...
Any true Yankee fan will always cherish Joe Torre. He is a great man and an awesome human being. It's the worms in the front office feeding off the still living carcass of the Boss that emit the stench of decay.
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2-04-2009 @ 11:53AM
jan miller said...
FORGET JOE FIRE CASHMAN IT HIS JOB TO BUILD PITCHING , NOT TO SUCK UP TO AFRAUD
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2-04-2009 @ 1:12PM
kevin thistle said...
i'm a red sox fan been one since i can"t remember or as people would say.born into it met mr torre at dodger game vs marlins in florida.just talking too him and watching him i have so much respect for him.and what he has accomplished.even as a red sox fan.
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2-04-2009 @ 12:24PM
red white & YOU said...
When your winning your the best thing that ever happend to a team, when your losing your a BUM...Great people talk about ideas....Average people talk about things.....SMALL people talk about OTHER PEOPLE
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2-04-2009 @ 12:36PM
dinohealth said...
LISA, YOU GOT YOURSELF A STORY! JUDGING FROM THE MAJORITY OF THESE COMMENTS, THERE ARE A LOT OF YANKEE-HATERS OUT THERE. WHO CAN BLAME THEM, THE YANKS BEAT THAT CRAP OUT OF EVERYONE FOR SO LONG UNDER TORRE! YANKEE FANS KNOW, THAT UP TO THE TIME THAT TORRE GOT THERE, THE MANAGER'S JOB IN THE BRONX, UNDER STEIN-BURNER, WAS NOTHING MORE THAN A GAME OF MUSICAL CHAIRS! I REMEMBER HAVING NOTHING BUT RESPECT FOR THE WAY TORRE HANDLED IT ALL THOSE YEARS! LA IS LUCKY TO HAVE HIM, AND HE PROVED IT THE FIRST YEAR! TORRE IS AN ICON! THE YANKEES SHOULD ERECT A MONUMENT IN THE NEW STADIUM....THE HOUSE TORRE BUILT!
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2-04-2009 @ 12:41PM
glamazon27 said...
I couldn't believe when I saw Derek Jeter on TV last night saying he had never heard the name A-Fraud. What a liar!
It's Joe's right to write a book but maybe a better time would have been after he left the game, though nothing is every promised so maybe he didn't think there would be time. Still, I'd hate to see this become a distraction for my beloved Dodgers as well.
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2-04-2009 @ 1:57PM
Keith said...
Baseball manager is probably one of the most overated positions in sport. That being said, Joe was a good one for the Yankees because he projected an air of class. He had every right to write the book and clear the air as he sees it but there goes Joe's class. Now he's just another disgruntled jock.
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2-04-2009 @ 2:16PM
dinohealth said...
Keith, if every athlete/manager that writes a book during his active career, is, as you conclude, "another disgruntled jock", we have an epidemic of disgruntled, active, athletes and managers!
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2-04-2009 @ 2:34PM
brc11296 said...
Wow Lisa, are you getting a cut of the sales of this book? No matter how you want to sugarcoat it, this is the behavior of a bitter, childish man who didn't mind taking all of that lovely Steinbrenner money for years and given the best ball players so he could win. What a hug disappointment Joe Torre has turned out to be, and you as well.
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2-04-2009 @ 3:36PM
Keith said...
whats your point Dino
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