Jeter’s Tax Woes

November 16, 2007

New York tax officials say Derek Jeter should have been taxed as a state resident from 2001-03, which potentially could cost the Yankees captain millions of dollars.

Yankees Memorabilia

 

Jeter says he is a Florida resident, but the State Division of Taxation of Finance argues that he had a New York residence during that period.

Jeter was given notice in February, then filed a petition for redetermination. In a five-page order from Administrative Law Judge Timothy J. Alston that was dated Nov. 7, the division was told to furnish Jeter with a more detailed bill specifying his “community involvement in jurisdictions other than Florida” and “public statements regarding his desire to be in New York.”

Alston also asked the agency to give specifics of its “vague claim” that Jeter became “immersed in the New York community.” He accepted the department’s assertion that Jeter had “items near and dear” in his New York apartment.

Florida does not have a state income tax, while New York state and city do have income taxes.

“As a Yankee, Derek has great affection for the people of New York and its amazing fans, but since the mid-1990s, he has made his home in Tampa, Florida,” Jeter’s agent, Casey Close, said in a statement.

The case was first reported by FoxNews.com.

Jeter’s contract with the Yankees called for him to receive salaries of $11 million in 2001, $13 million in 2002 and $14 million in 2003. In addition, he has a $16 million signing bonus payable between February 2001 and June 2008.

Jeter purchased an apartment at Trump World Tower in October 2001, according to New York City real estate records.


Jeter’s Tax Woes

November 16, 2007

New York tax officials say Derek Jeter should have been taxed as a state resident from 2001-03, which potentially could cost the Yankees captain millions of dollars.

NY Yankees Memorabilia 

Jeter says he is a Florida resident, but the State Division of Taxation of Finance argues that he had a New York residence during that period.

Jeter was given notice in February, then filed a petition for redetermination. In a five-page order from Administrative Law Judge Timothy J. Alston that was dated Nov. 7, the division was told to furnish Jeter with a more detailed bill specifying his “community involvement in jurisdictions other than Florida” and “public statements regarding his desire to be in New York.”

Alston also asked the agency to give specifics of its “vague claim” that Jeter became “immersed in the New York community.” He accepted the department’s assertion that Jeter had “items near and dear” in his New York apartment.

Florida does not have a state income tax, while New York state and city do have income taxes.

“As a Yankee, Derek has great affection for the people of New York and its amazing fans, but since the mid-1990s, he has made his home in Tampa, Florida,” Jeter’s agent, Casey Close, said in a statement.

The case was first reported by FoxNews.com.

Jeter’s contract with the Yankees called for him to receive salaries of $11 million in 2001, $13 million in 2002 and $14 million in 2003. In addition, he has a $16 million signing bonus payable between February 2001 and June 2008.

Jeter purchased an apartment at Trump World Tower in October 2001, according to New York City real estate records.


October 15, 2007

NY SPORTS GEAR.com welcomes you to shop on our site now before the holiday rush. Look for our Early Bird specials and our clearance items! Do not wait, some items are ONE and DONE!


Sox Fan Gets Snubbed

September 17, 2007

USA Today

Griffin Whitman, a 10-year-old Red Sox fan, asked Yankees outfielder Shelley Duncan for his autograph before Friday’s big game. The 27-year-old wrote “RED SOX SUCK!” and signed his name before returning the boy’s spiral-bound notebook.

“It was cool to get his autograph,” Griffin tells the Boston Herald. “It didn’t make me feel happy when he wrote that.

Duncan tells the paper he’s surprised that Griffith and his parents were offended. “I thought I was back in middle school or high school, where you try to make a joke or say something funny, and you end up saying something that gets you in trouble,” Duncan says. “I try to be interactive with people, be funny, have a good time and have a laugh. It’s not always Yankees fans that have us sign stuff. I try to rile ’em up and be fun. I don’t expect anybody to make a big deal about it. Nobody ever has before.”

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Bling

September 14, 2007

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Phil Rizzuto Dies at Age 89

August 15, 2007

NEW YORK – His speed and spunk made him a Hall of Famer. “Holy cow!” made Phil Rizzuto famous. Popular as a player and beloved as a broadcaster, the New York Yankees shortstop during their dynasty years of the 1940s and 1950s died Monday night. “The Scooter” was 89.

Rizzuto had pneumonia and died in his sleep at a nursing home in West Orange, N.J., daughter Patricia Rizzuto said Tuesday. He had been in declining health for several years.

“I guess heaven must have needed a shortstop,” Yankees owner George Steinbrenner said in a statement. “He epitomized the Yankee spirit — gritty and hard charging — and he wore the pinstripes proudly.”


F-ROD

July 3, 2007

NEW YORK (AP) — While the Yankees were tanking on the field, general manager Brian Cashman had an additional headache — the tank top worn by Alex Rodriguez’s wife.

Cashman talked to both Alex and Cynthia Rodriguez about the shirt with foul language on the back she wore during New York’s 11-5 loss to Oakland on Sunday.

“I did speak to Cynthia, and she’s part of the family and obviously we just keep that in house,” Cashman said Monday. “I wouldn’t really comment any further than that.”

Asked if he talked to A-Rod about the issue as well, Cashman said yes. He also acknowledged that the team has a policy prohibiting profane language on clothing and banners in Yankee Stadium.

“Other than that it stays in house and within this family, and nobody else is invited in,” the GM said.

Rodriguez wouldn’t comment Monday before New York played the Minnesota Twins. Yankees manager Joe Torre also declined to comment.

The slugger’s wife wore a white tank top to the game against the Athletics. A common, two-word obscenity ending with “you” was clearly visible when she and her 2-year-old daughter, along with an unidentified older woman, took their seats in the players’ family section at Yankee Stadium.

A front-page photograph Monday in the New York Post showed the back of the tank top with the obscenity printed in Old English lettering between the shoulder blades. The first letter of the first word is visible; the three other letters are intentionally blurred. The second word is ‘You.’ The paper’s headline read: “F-Rod.”

In late May, A-Rod’s marriage was front-page news when the Post published a photograph of him and a woman — later reported to be a Las Vegas stripper — at a Toronto hotel. The Post said the pair entered an elevator in the hotel and later went to a strip club.

The Yankees have struggled all season, but Rodriguez is having an outstanding year at the plate. He was elected to start at third base for the American League in the All-Star game July 10 at San Francisco.

A-Rod also was chosen AL player of the month for April and June. He entered Monday night’s game batting .327 with a major league-best 28 home runs and 79 RBIs.

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The Mets Beat Clemens in Subway Series

June 16, 2007

NY Mets 2
NY Yankees 0
Fri, Jun 15 – Final

Here is the upcoming schedule

NY Mets at
NY Yankees
Sat, Jun 16 – 1:05 pm EDT
T. Glavine vs. T. Clippard

NY Mets at
NY Yankees
Sun, Jun 17 – 8:05 pm EDT
O. Hernández vs. C. Wang

NY SPORTS GEAR.com


Yankees have their game changer

May 7, 2007

Yahoo! Sports

Well, that changes everything.

Doesn’t it?

Roger Clemens is coming to the New York Yankees and bringing the pennant.

As the man himself said from the owner’s box at The Stadium, “How you doing, Yankee fans?”

Better, we’re guessing.

Because had the Yankees held tight, hoped it was forever April for Alex Rodriguez, duct-taped their starting rotation together, pretended it was time for Chase Wright and Phil Hughes, and figured the Boston Red Sox would just stop winning, well, we’d have seen better organizational strategies.

As it is, they’ll have only another few weeks of that and then the real season begins, the Yankees having spotted the Red Sox eight or 10 wins, but with a summer of baseball out there.

Assuming everyone’s hamstrings hold up between now and then, the Yankees’ rotation in a month will be Clemens, Chien-Ming Wang, Andy Pettitte, Mike Mussina and some other guy. Actually, that wouldn’t be a bad place for Hughes, once his hamstring heals, because, like with Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine and John Smoltz and a few others, Clemens, even at 44, makes the pitchers around him better, just by standing there.

Of course, if this doesn’t work, we can all say goodbye to Joe Torre and Brian Cashman. George Steinbrenner might be getting a bit sloppy, but he’s coherent enough to can everybody in sight if he was to throw another $4.5 million a month at this thing and still finish second to the Red Sox. Even if it was his idea.

In the meantime, all was well in the Bronx on a perfect Sunday afternoon. The home team was way ahead, the starting pitcher hadn’t put any infielders in danger, and the Red Sox hadn’t yet clinched the AL East when the thick-necked guy grabbed the microphone.

“Well, they came and got me out of Texas,” Clemens said, presumably meaning Yankees management and about $24 million of Steinbrenner’s money. “I can tell you it’s a privilege to be back. I’ll be talking to y’all soon.”

On the outfield scoreboard, a glowing, “Roger Clemens is now a Yankee.”

Meaning, not a Boston Red Sock. Not a Houston Astro. If he’s going to save a season, it will be theirs. If he’s going to bury someone, it won’t be them. And now everybody can forget about Carl Pavano again.

“Let’s face it,” Clemens told reporters in New York, “these guys know how to win.”

The prevailing opinion was they would, too, if they could keep their pitchers on the mound. As it was, Yankees starters had the 27th-worst ERA in baseball and had thrown less innings than every team but the Seattle Mariners, who had played three fewer games, when Clemens agreed to re-re-re-return from retirement.

“Derek [Jeter] was on me once a week,” Clemens said, “especially when things weren’t working out. I see the problems with the pitching staff, too. The injuries were incredible.”

Clemens’ vibe alone was enough to beat the Mariners by a combined 13-1 the past two days, first Wang taking a perfect game into the eighth inning Saturday and then Darrell Rasner pitching into the sixth in an eventual shutout Sunday.

Suddenly, the Yankees have had four well-pitched games out of five. The stinker belonged to Kei Igawa, the guy who personified the distance between the Red Sox and Yankees over the first five weeks because he wasn’t Daisuke Matsuzaka.

So, give Clemens some time to bring his arm and legs around and give him three minor-league starts, and that puts him on the mound right around June 1. The Yankees open a three-game series on June 1 in … oh, Boston.

A Yankees insider said Sunday afternoon negotiations with Clemens became somewhat serious a week to 10 days ago, and his signing became inevitable two days ago. Randy Hendricks, Clemens’ agent, notified Astros general manager Tim Purpura of the outcome somewhere around the fourth inning. And now they have exactly what they needed, a front-end stud who also happens to have 348 career wins.

He was 7-6 last season and the Astros were just 45-44 with him on the roster, but the Yankees aren’t the Astros. The Yankees score runs. Clemens allowed four runs or less in all six of his losses and allowed more than two earned runs in only three of 19 starts.

Since that fall evening in South Florida, when Clemens tipped his cap during Game 4 of the 2003 World Series and said farewell and probably meant it, he is 42-20, including four postseason wins. He’s pitched in another World Series. He’s won a seventh Cy Young Award.

He’s still Clemens, and the game is always a little more interesting with Clemens around.

He still changes everything.

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Yankees fire strength and conditioning coach

May 3, 2007

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — The New York Yankees fired their strength and conditioning coach Wednesday following a rash of injuries to the pitching staff that has contributed to the team’s poor start.

Marty Miller was hired by the Yankees in the offseason as director of performance enhancement. He had been with the club only a few months.

“It got to the point where the perception is there’s a problem here,” general manager Brian Cashman said.

The 34-year-old Miller will be replaced on an interim basis by Dana Cavalea, who was Miller’s assistant.

“The knowledge that Marty had was certainly impressive,” Yankees manager Joe Torre said. “Now, does that mean that because you know a lot about the body, it relates to baseball? That’s what we don’t know.”

The latest injury to New York’s depleted staff came Tuesday night, when Phil Hughes carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning of his second major league start before a hamstring injury knocked him out of the game against the Texas Rangers. The 20-year-old right-hander, considered one of the top prospects in baseball, is expected to miss four to six weeks.

Hughes was called up from Triple-A Scranton to fill a spot in the team’s injury-ravaged rotation. Mike Mussina (hamstring), Carl Pavano (forearm) and Jeff Karstens (broken right leg) are on the disabled list.

Chien-Ming Wang also missed the first three weeks of the season with a hamstring injury. He is expected to start Saturday after breaking a nail on his pitching hand in his most recent start.

Yankees center fielder Johnny Damon, bothered by a bad back and sore legs much of the season, said Miller introduced conditioning tools that some players weren’t accustomed to using — but also agreed to bring in equipment that players requested.

Still, Damon thought it was unusual that so many pitchers succumbed to hamstring problems, an injury more common for position players.

“I think when you get a number of pitchers go down with the same problem, it opens up eyes and it makes you start thinking there might need to be a change,” Damon said.

The Yankees entered Wednesday night’s game at Texas with a 10-14 record that left them in last place in the AL East. The slow start roused owner George Steinbrenner to issue a statement Monday rebuking the $195 million team for its record but also supporting Cashman and Torre.

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A-Rod hits 2 more, fastest to 14 homers

April 24, 2007

St. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Alex Rodriguez became the first player in major league history to hit 14 homers in the first 18 games of a season and tied the record for April homers, connecting in the second and ninth innings of the New York Yankees’ 10-8 loss to Tampa Bay Devil Rays on Monday night.

Rodriguez hit a solo homer off Casey Fossum in the second inning, then hit a two-run drive against Al Reyes in the ninth.

A-Rod matched the record for April homers set by Albert Pujols last year. Rodriguez also leads the majors with 34 RBIs.

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Red Sox 4 Back To Back Homers Beat Yankees

April 23, 2007

BOSTON — The record-tying flurry of four straight home runs struck by the Red Sox in their stunning bottom of the third inning were all no-doubters. But quite a ways after, the outcome of Sunday night’s latest Red Sox-Yankees madness was still very much in doubt.

All the Red Sox had on their side were a few isolated moments that went their way. And they needed every one of them to separate themselves from the Yankees in what wound up a seat-squirming 7-6 victory that seemed to encapsulate so much of the tension that has taken place in this rivalry over the years.

“The games are always exciting,” said Red Sox manager Terry Francona. “Obviously, it’s more exciting when you win, but they’re never easy.”

Daisuke Matsuzaka, making his first foray into the rivalry, can now attest to that. He had to endure the indignity of allowing six runs to claim his first home victory in a Boston uniform.

Make no mistake about it, this one climbed high on the degree-of-difficulty scale. So much so that Yankees manager Joe Torre seemed to be at a bit of a loss for how his team didn’t escape Boston with at least one win.

“Three games, we battled,” Torre said. “That’s all you can do. We came out on the short end. They made some great plays. It was a great ballgame. You hate to think it’s a great ballgame when you lose.”

When it was over, the Red Sox had completed their first Fenway Park sweep of the Yankees since 1990, three moments that were all decided by a matter of inches.

The first was Mike Lowell’s second homer of the night, a literal wall-scraper that sort of nestled into home run territory. If the seventh-inning liner had caromed off the Monster instead of barely getting over it, the teams might still be playing. Instead, Lowell’s three-run long ball put the Sox ahead for good and made a 5-4 deficit disappear.

“I think I got it by about eight inches,” said Lowell.

Then came the top of the eighth, when the Yankees nearly stormed right back. Runners were at the corners with one out, the Boston lead back down to one. Brendan Donnelly’s pitch was smoked up the middle by Josh Phelps. It seemed like a sure hit to tie the game, but then Dustin Pedroia snared the sinking liner with a diving backhand. Inning over, crisis averted.

“The play he made, he willed himself to catch that ball,” said Francona of Pedroia.

Then just one more moment to create a ballpark full of tension. There were two outs in the top of the ninth and Bobby Abreu on first base after a walk. The hitter was Alex Rodriguez, the hottest hitter on the planet.

The closer was Jonathan Papelbon, Boston’s red-hot closer. A-Rod hit a crisp grounder, but right at Lowell, who fired to second, ending the wildly entertaining contest.

A-Rod vs. Papelbon was definitely a fitting grand finale.

“Yeah, but it’s still easier to enjoy when it was over,” said Francona. “That’s one of those things where you say, ‘Boy, that was cool.’ We obviously love our guy, but you respect what the other guy’s doing. So it’s a neat atmosphere, for sure.”

All the pregame hype was about Matsuzaka’s first encounter with the Yankees. Still, his performance (seven-plus innings plus, eight hits, six runs, seven strikeouts) became a bit of a blur by the end of an eventful night.

“I wanted very badly to record my first win at Fenway Park,” said Matsuzaka. “The opponent being the Yankees and the fact that my teammates had already defeated them twice made me want to win even more. All I can say is that I wanted to win.”

Matsuzaka had his heavy hitters to thank.

The Yankees led this game, 3-0, going into the bottom of the third. Who could have predicted how dramatically things were about to turn?

In an electrifying sequence, the Red Sox briefly turned the game into batting practice, tying a Major League record with four consecutive home runs against Yankees lefty Chase Wright, who was making his second Major League start.

Manny Ramirez put the dramatic power show in motion, hitting a towering drive over everything in left-center field and onto Lansdowne Street. Then it was J.D. Drew’s turn, and he belted a blast over the Boston bullpen in right-center field and into the bleachers. Lowell put one over the wall in left to tie the game, and Jason Varitek was the fourth member of the unlikely quartet, hitting a liner into the Monster Seats to put the Sox in front in the most dramatic fashion imaginable.

“I’ll tell you that I haven’t been a part of anything like that,” said Lowell. “Not even in Little League. I was happy that Manny got one. It looked like he was taking better swings. All right, now we’re on the board, then J.D. crushes one. I just wanted to hit the ball hard and keep the momentum going. I got a hold of one, and the dugout was going crazy. It was a really cool, really unique feeling that four guys tied us up and then put us ahead. That was big.”

It was the fifth time in Major League history a team hit four home runs in succession. The Dodgers, with Drew also teaming in that effort, did it last September in a pennant-race victory over the Padres.

“It brought some life back to the ballpark in a hurry,” Francona said.

But give the Yankees credit for this: The 1-2-3-4 punch didn’t demoralize them.

Derek Jeter tied the game at 4 by taking Matsuzaka deep to left in the fifth inning. In the sixth, the Yankees reclaimed the lead when Melky Cabrera’s 6-4-3 double-play grounder scored Robinson Cano from third base.

That wasn’t going to be enough to hold down the Red Sox on a night history and fortune were both on their side.