Jeff Kent uses broadcast moment to go off on ‘fat ass’ Alex Rodriguez

0



Jeff Kent still hasn’t gotten over Alex Rodriguez’s cheap shot.

Kent, who was recently inducted into the MLB Hall of Fame, was a guest on the KNBR broadcast during Sunday’s spring training game between the Giants and Cardinals.

One announcer brought up Rodriguez’s hard slide into second base in 1998 that caused Kent to miss a month with an injury. Kent didn’t hold back when discussing his feelings.

Jeff Kent spent 17 seasons in MLB across stints with six different teams, the most of which came with the Giants. AP

“He tore my knee up. He slid and rolled his fat ass past the base, the son of a bitch, and put me out for a little while. I was not happy about that,” Kent said of the play, which came when he was a member of the Giants, and Rodriguez was on the Mariners.

“He was a middle infielder, and we were beating them up pretty good. He didn’t need to be doing that.”

Kent continued, diving into his mantra as a second baseman back in his playing days.

“I would literally throw the ball between their eyes. If they came in and they weren’t ducking down, I was throwing the ball right between their eyes. They better get down,” Kent said.

At the time of his injury, Kent had started the year hot. In eight games, he was hitting .448 with two home runs and 13 RBIs.

In 17 MLB seasons, mostly spent with the Giants and Mets, Kent finished with a .290/.356/.500 slash line with 377 home runs. He also made five All-Star appearances and won the MVP award in 2000 when he hit .334 with 33 homers.

Jeff Kent received two more votes than he needed to make the MLB Hall of Fame in December. AP

He’s remembered as one of the best power-hitting second basemen of all time; Kent’s 351 homers at the position are the most in baseball history.

Kent was voted into the Hall of Fame by the contemporary era committee in December, receiving 14 of 16 votes. He’ll be inducted into Cooperstown on July 26 alongside Carlos Beltran and Andruw Jones, who were chosen by the BBWAA.

Despite a Hall of Fame resume, Rodriguez received just 40 percent of the votes (well below the 75 needed) to get inducted into Cooperstown. Rodriguez was one of the faces of the PED era and was suspended for the entire 2014 season due to his involvement in the Biogenesis scandal.

Alex Rodriguez at Yankees’ Old-Timer’s Day in 2024. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

After the announcement, Kent said he was overcome with emotion.

“I hugged my wife after the phone call had come in, and I told her that a lot of the game had come rushing back to me at that moment,” Kent said. “It reminds me of the ‘no crying in baseball.’ Well, I was bawling when I left the game because all that emotion just overcomes you.”

But before his official induction, Kent was in the headlines for a different reason Sunday.



LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here