Dodgers tryout CANSECO!

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Jose Canseco better hope the book he claims to be writing is more successful than his performance in an open tryout with the Los Angeles Dodgers.


Canseco probably wrote his final chapter in baseball at Monday's workout, looking nothing like the slugger who intimidated opposing pitchers in the late 1980s and '90s.

"I think he swung the bat good, he hit a couple balls good," former Dodgers manager Tom Lasorda said afterward.

Now a senior vice president with the Dodgers, Lasorda seemed to realize he was being overly kind.

"He thought that coming out here and hitting off these guys wouldn't be too much to do," he said.

Matt Slater, the Dodgers' director of professional scouting, said he expected one or two of the 108 players who attended the workout would be signed, with a decision announced Tuesday.

Slater said Canseco was told several days ago there was a 99 percent chance the Dodgers wouldn't sign him.

"This is probably going to be my last attempt -- see you in the movies," Canseco told reporters afterward as he signed autographs.

Now living in the Los Angeles suburb of Encino, Canseco claims to have Hollywood connections.

"It could have gone better -- technique's a little off," he said. "I wish I had a little more time to get ready. I'm not going to hold my breath on it. It's basically out of my hands -- just being realistic."

The players took batting and fielding practice in the morning, with the group cut down for an intrasquad game in the afternoon.

A six-time All-Star who has 462 career homers, Canseco hit one ball over the fence in 18 batting practice swings and wasn't particularly impressive otherwise against pitcher Juan Bustabad, the hitting coach for the Dodgers' Vero Beach farm team.

Canseco had two singles in six official at-bats with a walk and two strikeouts in the intrasquad game.

Again, he didn't appear to be anywhere close to top form despite the fact that his representative, Doug Ames, said his client had been working out at UCLA for several weeks.

Canseco said he was serious about trying to get back into baseball and thought he could be successful.

"I think in three or four weeks I could be back to 100 percent," he said. "I'm excited to be here -- maybe they need some right-handed power hitting, a first baseman."

The Dodgers scored a big league-low 574 runs and have been in the market for a right-handed power hitter.

But it would be a shock if they signed Canseco, who played first base in the intrasquad game -- a position he's never played in the big leagues.

Now 39, Canseco last played in the majors in 2001, when he hit .258 with 16 homers for the Chicago White Sox.

Canseco and Mark McGwire teamed in Oakland as the "Bash Brothers," leading the Athletics to three straight World Series appearances from 1988-90, including the 1989 title.

Canseco won the 1988 AL MVP award and ranks 26th on baseball's career home run list.

He spent more than two months in jail last summer for testing positive for steroids while on probation -- a charge he denied. Prosecutors later dropped the charge, prompting his release from custody. He had been on probation since the previous November when he pleaded guilty to aggravated battery for a 2001 nightclub fight with two tourists.

Canseco smiled and said hello to Lasorda while registering for the tryout. He was handed No. 521, which Ames taped on the back of his T-shirt.

"I feel like I'm back in jail -- I've got a number on my back," Canseco said.

"It's a shock to me, to see him here for a tryout," Lasorda said.

Canseco said he believes he has been blackballed from the majors. When asked why, he replied: "Issues; the book I'm writing."

He said the book would be entitled: Dare to Truth, and answered most of the questions posed by reporters by saying, "Read the book."

Ames said a book deal has been finalized, with a September release date.

Canseco said he stood behind his allegation of a couple years ago that 80 percent of major leaguers had taken steroids, but added: "I think the numbers may have changed. Who knows? Maybe the numbers have diminished."

He also said there was a big difference in using and abusing steroids.

"Steroids don't give you hand-eye coordination," he said. "I think there's too much emphasis put on it -- too much negativity."

Canseco was one of six former big leaguers who took part in the tryout. The others were pitchers Bryan Rekar, Jeff Sparks and Rusty Meacham, infielder Alex Arias and first baseman-outfielder Doug Jennings.
 

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Canseco has no shot at making the Dodgers Major League roster. I watched a short interview on Sportscenter tonight, and he would not talk about anything except his up-coming book. The tryout was just a publicity stunt to hype the book. Conseco says he will not sign a minor league contract under any conditions.


wil.
 

The Great Govenor of California
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Canseco was treated unfairly by mlb, I will be first in line to buy his book. mlb is a fraud, mlb fans are ignorant, only player worth watching is Ichiro
 

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Canseco was probably blackballed by the majors, but it isn't like Canseco did anything to help his cause.

When you hit .258 and you've got lots of off-the-field problems, not many teams are gonna give you a shot. Why should a team sign Canseco when they can sign a good citizen who can hit .271?

If you wanna be a head-case, you need to do one of the following:

1) Hit at least .300
2) Steal lots of bases
3) Be a left-handed pitcher
 

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Yeah right Rail.........there's only one player worth watching ?


Why done you go get a bucket of rice and a five gallon pail of smelt
and go party your brains out with your boy Ichiro.
1034535174.gif
 

Pump n Dump
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I heard a clip of an interview he had yesterday - after his workout with the Dodgers.
He claimed that "if they just left him alone, I feel I have 45-55 HRs left in me."

I know he cant be talking about 1 season, how many seasons does he really think he has left? He would be lucky to make the cut on any time right now, much less be around for a few years.
 

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I've always liked that knucklehead Canseco but I wouldn't say Ichiro is the 'only' player worth watching. Though I can probably say he is 'roid' free.
 

The Great Govenor of California
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Degenrate,

I heard you got your job back, congratulations.
 

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One thing about Canseco, that jackass sure cracks me up every time he opens his mouth. I wish I had a nickle for every time they showed the replay of the ball bouncing off of his melon for a homer. How can he think people take him seriously anymore? Didn't he tell Jim Rome(who is an idiot in his own right)that he could still run a 4.4 forty? lol
 

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http://www.rantsports.com/bringingh...48-signs-with-north-american-baseball-league/

MLB Rumors: Former AL MVP Jose Canseco, 48, Signs With North American Baseball League

Published: 23 hours ago


63ade30de11f6f33b78417ffbfd326d5

by Bryn Swartz





RANT It!






jose-canseco.jpg




If you happen to follow former Major League Baseball player Jose Canseco on Twitter, you’ll notice that the 48-year old spends a lot of his time tweeting about wanting to play baseball again.
Canseco frequently tweets that he would be a designated hitter for any American League team, and he would play for free.
It’s more or less a fact that he’ll never be given another opportunity in Major League Baseball. After all, he’s close to 50 years old, so the talent is obviously long gone, contrary to what he thinks. But he’s also an admitted steroid user, and he embarrassed the game of baseball with his book Juiced, in which he publicly announced dozens of current baseball players on steroids.
On Friday, he was given his opportunity to play baseball, just three days after declaring for bankruptcy protection in Nevada. (The filing lists less than $21,000 in assets and almost $1.7 million in liabilities, including more than $500,000 owed to the Internal Revenue Service, according to NBC Sports.)
Canseco signed with the Rio Grande Valley WhiteWings of the North American Baseball League. This is his second stint in the NABL, as he played for the Yuma Scorpions last season. He was a player-manager, hitting .256 with eight home runs and 46 RBIs. (Now explain to me how Canseco thinks he’s going to make the major leagues if he is batting .256 in a baseball league that is probably about semi-pro caliber.)
Earlier this year, Canseco played in 20 games for the Worcester Tornadoes in the Canadian-American Association. He batted .194 with one home run in 72 at bats. But he was suspended for testing positive for a banned substance. (Shocker!)
I give props to Canseco for landing a spot with a baseball squad, although you have to wonder how much of the signing is for attendance purposes. I predict he’ll probably bat around .250.
In 18 major league seasons, Canseco collected 462 home runs and won the 1988 American League Most Valuable Player award, when he became the first baseball player ever to top 40 home runs and 40 stolen bases in the same season.
 

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Canseco's book was way less 'embarassing' than the cover up from Bud Selig...but the public could care less about some socially awkard swindolous Jew
 

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