Sammy looks good in that Oriole Jersey

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Tapping his heart and thrusting both thumbs upward, Sammy Sosa stepped to the podium and flashed the broad smile that Chicago Cubs fans know too well.

Sosa loved his 13 years with the Cubs, yet he happily put all that behind him Wednesday upon joining the Baltimore Orioles.

"I gave Chicago everything that I have. It was a beautiful experience for my wife and family," he said. "I had a great time in Chicago, but you have to move on. This is my new house, and I love it."

Sosa joined the Orioles after commissioner Bud Selig approved the deal and the slugger passed his physical. Chicago received second baseman Jerry Hairston Jr. and two minor leaguers, second baseman Mike Fontenot and right-handed pitcher Dave Crouthers.

Sosa was peppered with questions about his final days with the team and his shaky relationship with Cubs manager Dusty Baker. Sosa insisted that, while he will take nothing but fond memories from his days with the Cubs, it was time to start anew.

"My legacy is there, but I haven't finished yet. The best of Sammy Sosa is coming now," he said. "I wanted to finish my career there, but it didn't happen. I'm here now in Baltimore and I'm going to win the crowd."

Under terms of the addendum to Sosa's contract that he signed Wednesday, the Cubs will pay $16.15 million of the $25 million Sosa was still owed under his $72 million, four-year agreement, according to details obtained by The Associated Press.

Baltimore is responsible for just $8.85 million of Sosa's $17 million salary this year, with the Cubs paying the rest. Because Sosa is paid on a 12-month basis and already had received $1,307,692 of his salary this year, that amount was credited to what the Cubs owe Baltimore, meaning the Orioles will receive $6,842,308 in cash from Chicago.

As part of the trade, Chicago will pay Sosa $3.5 million in severance within 30 days. The $18 million 2006 option in his contract was eliminated, and the $4.5 million buyout was converted to a $4.5 million assignment bonus, which the Cubs must pay by March 15. He also agreed to eliminate the $19 million option for 2007 that his contract said would be added if he was traded.

"It's a good situation for Sammy, it's a good situation for the Baltimore Orioles and it's also something we feel is in our best interests," Cubs general manager Jim Hendry said. "Sammy has done tremendous things for this organization and the game, and we feel we should dwell on the positives that he's done for this franchise when we needed it, and when the game needed it. "The great things he did in a four or five-year stretch had monumental significance."

The man nicknamed Slammin' Sammy, whose 574 home runs rank seventh on baseball's career list, endeared himself to Cubs fans when he hit 66 homers in 1998 during a duel with Mark McGwire. Sosa maintained his popularity and sweet home run swing for three years after that, but his rapport with the team and its rabid fans began to sour in 2003, when he was suspended for seven games for using a corked bat.

After a 2004 season in which Sosa's batting average dipped to .253 and he walked out on the team before its final game, the Cubs began looking to deal the disgruntled star.

"Sometimes in life, change is good," Hendry said. "Certainly, we wish him the best."

Even though his bat isn't as potent as it was five years ago, the 36-year-old Sosa hit 35 homers in only 126 games last season.

"A lot of people say my numbers are down," he said, "but I was out for almost 40 games and I hit 35 home runs. C'mon."

Because Sosa came at a bargain price and because Hairston was merely a backup, the trade was an easy one for Baltimore to make.

"When Sammy was on the field, he produced. He may even spend some time as the DH," Orioles vice president Mike Flanagan said. "Our goal will be to keep him healthy; when that's happened he's been a very productive player."

The Orioles entered the offseason looking for a right-handed power hitter, and Sosa should provide some pop in the cleanup spot batting behind Miguel Tejada and ahead of Rafael Palmeiro. Tejada led the Orioles with 34 home runs -- in 162 games.

Now Tejada, who bats third, will have ample protection behind him in the lineup from Sosa, whom manager Lee Mazzilli said will bat cleanup.

"I'm very happy to have Sammy on my team," said Tejada, in Mexico for the Caribbean World Series.

Chicago made an immediate move to shore up its lineup, agreeing to a one-year contract with Jeromy Burnitz that guarantees the outfielder $5 million.

Sosa's era at Wrigley Field was over. "I'm hoping he will not be viewed as someone who did a lot of wrong things in his last few months on the job," Hendry said. "He was great to the fans to the fans for a lot of years, and that's how he should be viewed. When he's done, we're going to talk about 600, maybe 700 home runs, and certainly a place in Cooperstown. He did a lot of good things."
 

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I watched the news conference...Mike Flanagan said afterwards right now its a one year tryout basically....With Chicago picking up so much of the money its well worth it for the Orioles, even though Miguel Tejada (last years big free agent) at this point is a better player, the Orioles needed a marketable player the town could get excited about...

I see Sammy hitting close to 40...

Mora
Tejada
Sosa
Palmeiro
Javy
Gibbons

The Birds will score , that's fo sure!
 

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16122285.jpg


Who da man?
 

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I'll be able to see Sammy play the Yankees now, always wanted to go to Wrigley but now it won't be the same.
 

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Believe me, the Cubs liked to see him in that uniform too. That interview was a main reason the Cubs got rid of him - My House, etc. Never mentioned once about winning, just that it was a great fit for him.

I'm sure he will hit 30+ hrs and 100+ rbis. But as Branch Rickey said, its better to get rid of a player one year too early, than one year too late.
 

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the Cubs were one year too late. Should have traded him before last season when there was still interest.

Financially the Cubs got raped but this guy was hated in the clubhouse and it showed on the field last year.
 

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I have no doubt Cubs fans are rejoicing at this point...

BUT , you cannot tell me Cubbies fans, that 2-3 years ago Sammy hitting 50-60 homers you would have felt the same way about this being such a great thing for the Cubs, he was the same "Me Me" guy when he hit 60+ homers...

Its not a bad move for Baltimore...They're not going to win but 80-83 games tops...Also getting Sosa on contract year , they should get the best Sammy he has left...He could hit 50 he could hit 30...
 

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I hope Sammy has a great year. my favorite year when he played for the Cubs is 1998 when Sammy and Mcguire had that HR derby race.
 

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Sammy has always been a side show. He packed the park when the team sucked.

The key to the Cubs success is pitching and team ball. Sammy could never buy into that.

Every player hated him.....he had to go. Cubs fans, notorious for loving this guy jeered this guy when his picture was shown at the Cubs Convention (an annual love fest). That was all management had to hear to know that they had to move him. Thank god Delgado signed with Florida or the Cubs would have been stuck with him and his ME attitude.

I hope that Sammy tears it up for Baltimore but I will not miss his crap.
 

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Rainbow said:
I hope Sammy has a great year. my favorite year when he played for the Cubs is 1998 when Sammy and Mcguire had that HR derby race.
sorry for the bad grammar. was 1998.
 

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Journeyman said:
I have no doubt Cubs fans are rejoicing at this point...

BUT , you cannot tell me Cubbies fans, that 2-3 years ago Sammy hitting 50-60 homers you would have felt the same way about this being such a great thing for the Cubs, he was the same "Me Me" guy when he hit 60+ homers...

Its not a bad move for Baltimore...They're not going to win but 80-83 games tops...Also getting Sosa on contract year , they should get the best Sammy he has left...He could hit 50 he could hit 30...

What really exposed Sammy was the hiring of Baker. I think Baker is a very overrated manager, but he does raise the expectations. When Sosa's skills went down and Baker wanted him to work on his D, he was above it. Everything was about him and when they started getting team players who wanted to win, Sosa wanted his stats. Baker wanted to bat him elsewhere in the order, but didn't want to piss off Sammy. It took him 6 weeks to do so.

Sammy can still be a productive hitter, but you need some very strong team leadership to stand up to him. As soon as his skills eroded (hense the corked bat), he failed to change, then got mad when Prior, Nomar, etc got more attention.
 

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JohnnyDeMarco said:
How many times you think Rivera or Foulke blow Sosa away in the 9th this year?

Anyone who gives him anything but a fastball is nuts. He cannot get around one anymore.
 

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