Logo

BALTIMORE – In about 10 days, the A’s ownership is going to decide what will happen to reigning AL MVP Jason Giambi. The team can make another effort to sign him, trade him or keep him for the remainder of the season and watch their best player walk out the door marked “Free Agency” with Johnny Damon.

If the A’s believe it’s in their best interest to deal the left-handed hitting slugger, the Yankees will be involved.

Even though their bats were responsible for their current six-game winning streak after last night’s 10-6 victory over the Orioles, there are key voices in the Yankees’ universe who believe more muscle is needed. And Giambi certainly is that. He went into last night’s play fourth (.337) in hitting and seventh (60) in RBIs among AL hitters.

Tino Martinez, who hit another home run last night, his fifth homer in six games, has been sizzling. Nobody is hotter than Bernie Williams, and Jorge Posada has been the Yankees’ MVP. Still, with Chuck Knoblauch and Paul O’Neill struggling and nobody knowing how long David Justice’s second trip to the DL with a groin problem will keep him out, there is a need for a bat.

Of course, Giambi would be costly on two fronts. First, the A’s will demand stud prospect Nick Johnson be the centerpiece of any deal. And they will want a pitcher, which could be Alex Graman, the Yankees’ top pitching prospect.

If the Yankees are going to give up those types of prospects, they will want assurances Giambi is willing to sign a multi-year deal. He turned down a six-year deal for $90 million from the A’s because they wouldn’t give him a blanket, no-trade clause. It stands to reason that the price will only go up.

Sure, the Yankees have helped themselves with the recent moves they made. Adding Mark Wohlers and Jay Witasick to the bullpen is expected to give Joe Torre right-handed arms to rest Mike Stanton. Getting Gerald Williams strengthens Torre’s bench.

Yet, while scouts and other talent evaluators are gushing about the addition of Wohlers and Williams, GM Brian Cashman is waiting to see how the moves unfold on the field.

“I hope we’ll be better,” Cashman said yesterday, “but being in first place is really what matters.”

Comments
anonymous profile image
Powered by RoundtableBuilt on infrastructure designed for real-time media. Learn more at RTB.io.© Roundtable 2026. By using this site you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy