Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us
 
  U.S. SPORTS
  scoreboards
baseball S
pro football S
col. football S
pro basketball S
m. college bb S
w. college bb S
hockey S
golf plus S
tennis S
soccer S
olympics 2000
motor sports
women's sports
more sports
 WORLD SPORT  

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Multimedia Central
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 Work in Sports

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 Television
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore

Yankees hope and cope

By Jeff Pearlman
Issue date: March 22, 1999

Sports Illustrated Flashback

On his first full day as the third baseman on a Yankees team without a manager, Scott Brosius assured himself that things would be O.K. Then, just to be certain, he prayed.

Last week's announcement that Joe Torre was suffering from prostate cancer and would miss at least the rest of spring training jolted the New York clubhouse. (Don Zimmer, 68, Torre's close friend and bench coach, will run the club while Torre is away.) Will Torre's absence have an impact on the Yankees' performance? Unlikely. The team that won an American League- record 114 regular-season games last year possesses a remarkable self-sufficiency, a by-product of Torre's hands-off, trust-the-players approach. As catcher Joe Girardi says, "Once you're on the field, you focus on the game. That's how it works."

Perhaps no Yankee took the news of Torre's illness harder than Brosius, a sensitive man whose mother died of lymphoma in 1989 and whose father, Maury, was treated recently for colon cancer. While many on the team were numbed by Torre's situation, Brosius speaks of cancer like a human Merck Manual. He knows the ins and outs, the good days and bad days, the victories and, in his mother's case, the defeats.

"My first reaction to Joe's news was shock, but my second thought is, No matter what people say, this is not a baseball story," Brosius says. "This is about a man with decisions that have to be made about life. Joe Torre is a husband, he's a father, he's a person before he's the manager of the Yankees."

Brosius spent part of his off-season visiting with seriously ill children. He recalls one girl, just nine years old, with tumors throughout her body. There was a boy, 16, dying of brain cancer. "You can't try and figure cancer out," he says. "Why does a nine-year-old girl have it, and some 80-year-olds who've smoked their whole lives don't? It's not a predictable disease."

The Yankees say they will not use Torre's cancer as a rallying cry for the season. The players consider this a situation that will pass, an illness, not an ending. "Joe's a very strong person," says reliever Darren Holmes. "Every day we'd see him lifting weights, working on the stair climber. He's in good shape, and they caught it early. We expect the best."

Issue date: March 22, 1999


CNNSI Copyright © 2000
CNN/Sports Illustrated
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.