A-Rod and Jeter not as close



They use to be best buddies, but the relationship has cooled considerably.
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Yes, it's true, admitted Alex Rodriguez, his relationship with Derek Jeter is not what it once was.
Surrounded by reporters and cameras as he sat in the first base dugout Monday at Legends Field, A-Rod played true confessions, acknowledging they no longer have sleepovers and don't go out together all the time anymore.
"People start assuming that things are a lot worse than what they are, which they're not. But they're obviously not as great as they used to be. We were like blood brothers," Rodriguez said.
"You don't have to go to dinner with a guy four, five times a week to do what you're doing. It's actually much better than all you guys expect, but I just want to let the truth be known."
First-day interviews
On the first day of his fourth season with the Yankees, he did three rounds of interviews -- English-language television, Spanish-language television and print reporters.
He talked about his poor postseason ("I stunk"), his pride at being the highest-paid player in U.S. team sports ("It's pretty cool") and his refusal to rule out exercising the opt-out provision in his contract after this season ("I understand my options").
A-Rod and Jeter were buddy-buddy back in the 1990s, when Rodriguez was a young shortstop in Seattle and Jeter emerged as a force that helped the New York Yankees win four World Series titles in five years.
But A-Rod dissed Jeter in a 2001 Esquire article, saying "Jeter's been blessed with great talent around him" and "he's never had to lead."
"You go into New York, you wanna stop Bernie [Williams] and [Paul] O'Neill," A-Rod was quoted as saying. "You never say, 'Don't let Derek beat you.' He's never your concern."
Relationship dissected
Since Rodriguez was acquired by the Yankees in 2004, their relationship has been analyzed and dissected, a soap-opera sidebar to New York's repeated postseason failures.
Until now, A-Rod had denied their relationship had changed. Sitting in jeans and a black sweat jacket, Rodriguez said it was "important" that people heard the truth directly from him.
"Let's make a contract," Rodriguez said after the first Jeter question. "You don't ask me about Derek anymore, and I promise I'll stop lying to all you guys.
"The reality is there's been a change in the relationship over 14 years and, hopefully, we can just put it behind us," he went on. "You go from sleeping over at somebody's house five days a week, and now you don't sleep over. It's just not that big of a deal."
Jeter had left the clubhouse by the time reporters were allowed back in. His agent, Casey Close, said later that Jeter didn't want to comment.
Non-issue to teammates
Most of the Yankees have long concluded the relationship between their captain and Rodriguez is a non-issue.
"They're probably not as tight as they used to be, but it's not a situation where they don't look at each other and don't say, 'Hi.' They're teammates and they're still friends," Jason Giambi said.
"I suspect it's nowhere near as bad as the general perception is," general manager Brian Cashman added.
During the offseason, former Yankee Darryl Strawberry said Jeter needs to "embrace" Rodriguez. A-Rod said he didn't feel Jeter needed to support him more.
"I'm a big boy. I'm 31 years old now, so I should be able to help myself out there," he said.
"I care about what he thinks about me on the field. I think it's important for us to be on the right page. And we are. We're here to win a championship together."
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