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From:MLB.Com
Yankees' ace says contract will not be distraction this season
TAMPA, Fla. -- CC Sabathia's winter weight loss has the ace showing off a lighter look, and on the subject of a potential contractual opt-out, he sounds a little bit different as well.
Sabathia, 30, can become a free agent after this season if he decides to trigger a clause in his deal with the Yankees.
The left-hander has often said that he plans on fulfilling the entire $161 million commitment on a deal that runs through 2015, but his tone changed slightly on Monday as Yankees pitchers and catchers officially reported to George M. Steinbrenner Field.
"I have no idea [if I will opt out]," Sabathia said. "Anything's possible."
Now 25 pounds lighter after following a diet and exercise program intended to take stress off his surgically repaired right knee, Sabathia is set to earn $23 million each year for the length of the deal.
However, after logging 21 victories last season for New York, another good season could have Sabathia and his representatives wondering about a possible raise -- with the Yankees or elsewhere.
"I think personally, he absolutely loves it here," general manager Brian Cashman said. "Professionally, it's probably better to keep it broad and open and not lock it down one way or the other. You don't necessarily have to."
Cashman said that he believes Sabathia does not want to pin himself into a corner with his public statements about a sensitive subject. However, Sabathia promised the clause would not present a distraction.
"I'm here to try to help this team win," Sabathia said. "I went through it with the free agency thing [after the 2008 season] and it's not going to distract me at all."
When the Yankees were negotiating their deal with Sabathia in December 2008, eventually giving him the biggest contract issued to a pitcher, Cashman said that it was his decision -- and not Sabathia's demand -- to insert the opt-out clause.
With the Angels appearing unable to retain first baseman Mark Teixeira, who seemed headed to the Red Sox, Cashman felt it was important to get a deal done with Sabathia before Los Angeles took those dollars and knocked on Sabathia's door.
The prevailing thought at the time was that the Vallejo, Calif.-born Sabathia would prefer to play somewhere west of the Mississippi River, so Cashman floated the opt-out clause as a way of promising Sabathia that he could always leave New York after three years if he didn't like it.
"I needed to get CC done before that [situation] declared itself," Cashman said. "I had to do everything, because I felt that if Anaheim showed up, I would be in trouble and I might not secure the player.
"I did everything in my power. I know it gets constantly written about, how the Yankees were bidding against themselves. I don't believe, to this day, that I was. I had seen what the landscape was."
To this point, Sabathia had given no indications that he was thinking about leaving the Yankees. He has immersed himself in the clubhouse and built a large house in the leafy suburb of Alpine, N.J., considering the tri-state area his year-round home.
"He loves it here," Cashman said. "Liking it here and having contractual choices are two different things. I don't want to speak for CC, but he absolutely does love it here and he loves playing for the fans of New York. That's separate from him having earned opportunities that he can think about on another day."
For the moment, Sabathia would prefer to focus on this season. He said that the winter work has dropped him back to his listed weight of 290 pounds, taking pressure off his knee, which he'll test on Tuesday in his first bullpen session of the year.
The toughest part, Sabathia said, was giving up Cap'n Crunch cereal -- "I used to eat it a box at a time," he said -- and Gatorade.
"I want to try to pitch as long as I can, hopefully another eight to 10 years," Sabathia said. "This is just the first step in trying to do that."
But will those years all be in pinstripes? That remains to be seen. In a group interview with several reporters, Sabathia acknowledged that he has said in the past that he would not opt out, then attempted to steer the discussion elsewhere.
"Yeah, I've said that," Sabathia said. "But I'm here to try to help the team win and I don't want to talk about that all year. This will be probably the last time I address it. I'm here."
A reporter attempted to press the issue, but Sabathia put an end to that before the question was complete.
"I'm here -- in New York, in this clubhouse," Sabathia said