Yankees: Strawberry in Debt
George Steinbrenner says he’s delaying a decision on Darryl Strawberry’s option not because of baseball or health concerns, but because the outfielder is about $4.5 million in debt.
“What he really wants to do is help Strawberry straighten out his scrambled economic situation,” Howard Rubenstein, a spokesman for the Yankee owner, said Thursday.
The Yankees and Strawberry agreed Nov. 1 to extend the deadline for a decision on his $2.5-million option until on Nov. 11. Strawberry conditionally filed for free agency Thursday, meaning that if the Yankees decline the option and pay $100,000, he becomes a free agent.
Rubenstein said Strawberry owes the Internal Revenue Service $4.5 million.
Strawberry’s agent, Eric Grossman, said the $4.5-million debt is “grossly overstated.” Grossman said Strawberry owes less than half that amount.
*
Outfielder Moises Alou reached agreement with the Houston Astros and will not exercise his right to demand a trade to another team.
Alou had three seasons left in a $25-million, five-year contract before agreeing on the new deal. Details of the new agreement were not announced.
*
Lenny Dykstra retired after failing to come back from a debilitating back condition.
Dykstra, 35, asked the Philadelphia Phillies to put him on the voluntary retired list rather than become a free agent.
Dykstra missed the last 1 1/2 seasons because of a condition that narrows the opening where nerves go through the spinal canal.
*
Dave Burba, who won a career-high 15 games in his first season with Cleveland, was rewarded with a two-year contract extension through 2001 that’s worth about $9.5 million. . . . Outfielder Melvin Nieves’ $2-million option was declined by the Cincinnati Reds, who opted to give the outfielder a $500,000 buyout and put him on unconditional release waivers. In addition, the Reds agreed to offer salary arbitration to pitcher Jason Bere. . . . Reds’ owner Marge Schott has four offers to buy most of her stake in the team and is asking about $70 million for 5 1/2 of her 6 1/2 shares, the Cincinnati Post reported. . . . Pitcher Terry Mulholland agreed to a $5.9-million, two-year contract and will stay with the Chicago Cubs. . . . The Boston Red Sox agreed to a $7-million, three-year contract with outfielder Darren Lewis.
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.