Sean Avery Goes From Dallas Stars to New York Rangers
February 9, 2009 by Matt Lawrence · Leave a Comment
What is official is that as a Dallas Stars member he played 23 games, and had only 3 goals and 7 assists. At a price of 15.5 million over 4 years, this is not what you would call a good return on investment. This lack of production, comments about other players dating his ex-girlfriends, and poor behavior in the locker room have the Dallas Stars looking to get rid of Sean Avery.
At present it’s obvious the Dallas Stars are not missing Sean Avery. Sean Avery’s absence paired with the return of the Marty Turco that we remember from last year’s playoffs has the Dallas Stars moving towards the top of the standings again. Stars have gone 16-6-3 in their last 25 games, which has propelled them to 5th place in the Western Conference. They are now back in the playoff picture again instead of the Western Conference Cellar.
It is clear that Sean Avery will not be returning to the Stars lineup ever. There are several options for the Dallas Stars to dump Sean Avery, and the one that is being rumored now has him eventually ending up back with the New York Rangers, the team he skated with before becoming a Dallas Star. In this scenario Avery must pass through waivers and find an AHL team that is willing to put up with him. Hartford an AHL affiliate of the New York Rangers might just be that team, once he has played there for a while he will go through recall waivers. This is where the New York Rangers are rumored to plan on picking him up. During the recall waiver period they can grab him for half price, leaving the Stars paying the other half. Barring the very unlikely event of a trade, this is the best-case scenario.
The Stars last, and more expensive option is to buy Avery out. The price for a buyout is 11.5 million dollars, which can be spread out over 6 years. Either way the Dallas Stars end up paying around a million dollars a point. This makes Sean Avery’s signing a very high priced mistake for the Stars.
Video – Alex Rodriguez Admits to Taking Steroids While With Rangers
February 9, 2009 by Jerod-Morris · 1 Comment
Breaking news from ESPN this afternoon as former Texas Ranger and current New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez has given an exclusive interview to Peter Gammons in which he admits to using steroids.
I could summarize what ARod said, or just let you watch the video of the interview (at least, the portion that ESPN has made available online). Here is Alex Rodriguez, in his own words, admitting to his steroid use while with the Rangers:
First off, for those of you who also read Midwest Sports Fans, you may have seen my post yesterday about the revelation that Alex Rodriguez failed a steroid test in 2003. I was pretty harsh on ARod, and the other 140 players listed in the post who have either been explicitly linked to steroid use or failed an MLB steroid test, not unlike everyone else in the sports blogosphere and sports media.
With ARod’s decision to come clean today, he does deserve a small amount of kudos. Too many players who have gotten embroiled in steroid allegations have either not said anything (Mark McGwire) or continuously maintained their innocence despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary (Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Sammy Sosa) or given half-hearted apologies in which they apologize for nothing specific (Jason Giambi). Sure, Alex Rodriguez has had the opportunity to see these strategies fail, and he has already straight up lied about using steroids to Katie Couric on CBS last year, but at least he is not disrespecting baseball fans by attempting to deny, deny, deny when the facts are clear that he cheated.
I’ve become resigned to the fact, rightly or wrongly, that the majority of Major Leaguers were using steroids in the 90s and early 00s. I’m over it, and beyond being upset about it. The only thing that still pisses me off is when players think they just can lie about their use of steroids or deny it, hoping that everyone just forgets about it. In this sense, I have to give ARod a very tiny, miniscule amount of credit. He still cheated, he still lied repeatedly until he was outed, and none of his excuses of being “under pressure” and “the culture of the Rangers and the game” will exonerate him; but, at least he is facing the music now, and doing so publicly.
We’ll see how the rest of the sports world reacts to his admission.


