By
Steve Kallas (posted by Rick Morris)
By
now you have heard or seen Alex Rodriguez’s appearance on Mike Francesa’s show
on WFAN just a short time after walking out on his own arbitration. When arbitrator Fredric Horowitz ruled on
Wednesday that Commissioner Bud Selig did not have to testify in the
arbitration, A-Rod “lost his mind” (his words) and stormed out of the
arbitration.
BUT
WHERE DOES THAT LEAVE A-ROD’S LAWYERS?
While
one of A-Rod’s lawyers appeared with A-Rod on Mke’s show, when Mike tried to
pin him down as to what happens next, he gave Mike the obligatory “we will
weigh all of our options” or variations on that theme.
Well,
it says here that A-Rod’s lawyers should return to the arbitration and continue
until the end, with or without Selig’s testimony. While this writer believes that Selig
absolutely should testify, it could be a grave mistake for A-Rod’s legal team
to walk away from it now (A-Rod, of course, was never required to attend;
rather, he chose to, as is his right).
If
A-Rod and his team end the arbitration now, one of the biggest problems for
A-Rod if and when he goes to court to contest the arbitrator’s decision
(assuming there is one) is that a federal judge will look very unkindly at a
plaintiff who walked out on his own arbitration because a ruling on a potential
witness went against him.
IT’S
INCREDIBLY DIFFICULT TO OVERTURN AN ARBITRATOR’S DECISION
If
and when A-Rod goes to federal court with respect to his arbitration, his
attorneys will have an incredibly difficult hill to climb. By walking out on the arbitration now, that
will probably be viewed by a federal judge as a negative action by A-Rod.
How
can a federal judge, who will essentially review the arbitrator’s decision to
see if it was rendered in “manifest disregard” of the law, be inclined to
decide for a party that ended his own appeal?
It
says here that this would be a huge strike against A-Rod and his legal team.
BUT
THERE IS AN ALICE IN WONDERLAND ASPECT TO
THIS ARBITRATION
Down
is up; up is down. There are bizarre
things happening at 245 Park Avenue. You have an arbitrator (Rob Manfred of MLB)
who comes down off the panel to testify and then goes back up on the panel to,
what, judge the credibility of other witnesses?
Manfred
later made public comments about some of his own testimony. Does that hardly-adhered-to “gag order” apply
to a witness who is also an arbitrator?
Or an arbitrator who is also a witness?
Is that even legal? It offends
many notions of basic justice. Just
because “this is how we’ve done it for decades” doesn’t make it right. Or even legal, for that matter.
What
about this dopey “collectively-bargained” for absurdity where A-Rod was
supposed to give baseball some kind of pre-testimony interview, where, if MLB
thought he was lying (which, of course, they would think), they could add more
games to his suspension.
Are
we still in America?
It
makes no sense, even if it was collectively-bargained for (who was asleep at
the wheel when this happened?). The best
you could hope for if you are a player is that the players got some incredible
thing on their side for giving MLB some, arguably, unconstitutional right to
add penalty on top of penalty on top of penalty.
Hard
to believe a court would uphold a double (triple?) penalty for the same alleged
behavior (lying about steroid use).
So,
despite the above absurdities, it says here that A-Rod’s lawyers (if not A-Rod)
should continue the fight and prepare themselves for an almost impossible
appeal (in federal court) to win.
If
they end the fight prematurely, that could really hurt them down the road.
We
will just have to wait and see what happens.
No comments:
Post a Comment