Delgado and Marlins finalize agreement
Ordonez makes counteroffer to Tigers' proposal
NEW YORK Carlos Delgado is taking his anti-war protest to Florida.
While Delgado finalized his $52 million, four-year deal with the Marlins on Thursday, Magglio Ordonez made a counteroffer to the Detroit Tigers and Barry Larkin said he is leaning toward retirement.
Delgado, who accepted Florida's contract Tuesday, said at his introductory news conference that he will continue not to stand during the playing of "God Bless America."
He refused to stand when "God Bless America" was played last season. Instead, he would stay on the Toronto Blue Jays bench or go into the dugout tunnel.
"I wouldn't call it politics, because I hate politics," Delgado said. "The reason why I didn't stand for 'God Bless America' was because I didn't like the way they tied 'God Bless America' and 9-11 to the war in Iraq in baseball."
Marlins officials, who gave Delgado the richest per-season contract in the team's 12-year history, made no objection to his war protest.
"The Marlins don't support it, and we don't not support it," team president David Samson said. "He's an adult. The club's position is that what he does is up to him."
Ordonez, the last remaining premier free agent, told agent Scott Boras to make the counterproposal to Detroit. The outfielder met Monday with Tigers owner Mike Ilitch, team president Dave Dombrowski and manager Alan Trammell.
"Mike Ilitch indicated he was interested in making a move that would dramatically affect the franchise," Boras said.
Ordonez made $14 million last year with the Chicago White Sox and had been seeking a five-year deal before he became a free agent.
"Mike did a really good job in his meeting of expressing where the Tigers can be," Boras said. "He thought the Tigers have a very good chance of winning the AL Central. Magglio is very familiar with the AL Central and with Detroit."
Ordonez hit .292 last year with nine homers and 37 RBIs, missing most of the season with knee injury that needed two operations.
"They talked to the doctors and were very comfortable Magglio is healthy," Boras said.
Larkin said he has turned down offers to start for several other teams because he can't envision himself playing for anyone but Cincinnati.
- Vai's View: Vai's View: A return to church, a...
- BYU football: Cougars land massive defensive...
- Jerry Sloan interviews for Bobcats coaching...
- BYU doesn't have a corner on avoiding Sabbath...
- Blue roundup: Jabari Parker tells ESPN.com he...
- 5A high school baseball playoffs: American...
- Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
- High school sports: State tournament live...
- Blue roundup: Philadelphia Inquirer...
64 - BYU doesn't have a corner on avoiding...
49 - BYU football: Cougars land massive...
40 - Dick Harmon: BYU's Harvey Unga returns...
32 - Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
29 - Vai's View: Vai's View: A return to...
18 - High school baseball: Alta manhandles...
13 - Brad Rock: Jerry Sloan would be happier...
11






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments