ADVERTISEMENT

CC Sabathia in Alcohol Rehab

Fordham_57

All World
Jun 3, 2001
5,400
326
83
A real shocker. CC Sabathia entered alcohol rehab and is out for the post season. Frank
 
Surprising indeed, but wishing him the best towards conquering this challenge in his life.
 
Yes, a shocker. Seems like a stand up guy not making excuses or being secretive.
 
He's being paid huge sums of money to pitch from April through October. He should have waited to the off season to enter rehab. He let his teammates and the organization down. How could he leave right before the postseason starts? Unforgivable in my book.
 
He's being paid huge sums of money to pitch from April through October. He should have waited to the off season to enter rehab. He let his teammates and the organization down. How could he leave right before the postseason starts? Unforgivable in my book.

Sorry, but imho your take is WAY too judgmental. The man has a family and a life...and the wild card game or ALDS pales to insignificance in comparison. He did what he needed to do and what anyone else thinks about it is irrevelant.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Pirate6711
Agree with '69 on this one. Whenever someone finds that "moment of clarity", they should act on it. Much more important things in life than baseball, even if you're being paid millions to play it.

Taking the human element out of it, not sure he'd be much help to the team anyways, even if they make it out of the Keuchel- Tanaka matchup.
 
For me the disclosure of CC going into rehab for his addiction was a surprise but the timing of his announcement is really strange and certainly has raised a ton of interest in finding out the answer to " Why Now". From everything you hear he's a good guy and one of the most popular players in the locker room. Wish him all the best and hope he gets well.
 
The Yankees paid him $161 million dollars to pitch both in the regular season and the postseason if necessary. Sabathia put himself in a position to jeopardize the Yankees' postseason. There has to be accountability.
 
He's being paid huge sums of money to pitch from April through October. He should have waited to the off season to enter rehab. He let his teammates and the organization down. How could he leave right before the postseason starts? Unforgivable in my book.
I'm sure he's well aware of what month it is, which I'm sure made it all the more difficult to do what he needed to do. I don't think someone would take this dramatic step if it was not what he needed to do. Wish him well. Baseball isn't the most important thing in the world.
 
  • Like
Reactions: HallLine69
The Yankees paid him $161 million dollars to pitch both in the regular season and the postseason if necessary. Sabathia put himself in a position to jeopardize the Yankees' postseason. There has to be accountability.

Well, I guess we'll just agree to disagree. I just admire him for coming forward and I salute the Yankee organization for the way they are handling it. The timing and contract are, to me, completely irrelevant.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Pirate6711
Well, I guess we'll just agree to disagree. I just admire him for coming forward and I salute the Yankee organization for the way they are handling it. The timing and contract are, to me, completely irrelevant.
I agree....kudo's for confronting the problem. Maybe he thought he would be doing the team more harm in it's post season efforts so best to bow out now.
 
Not sure he had much of a choice based on the story below.

He was losing control all season culminating in the following.....

The weekend-long bender behind CC Sabathia’s rehab stay
By Emily Smith, Danika Fears and Frank Rosario

October 6, 2015 | 1:52am

sabathia3.jpg

CC Sabathia celebrating the Yankees' wild-card-clinching victory. Photo: Charles Wenzelberg

Struggling Yankee pitcher CC Sabathia announced on Monday that he will spend the postseason drying out in rehab while his teammates chase a World Series title — a move that follows a weekend-long bender during a Baltimore road trip, sources told The Post.

“His drinking got really bad this weekend, and it put him in a really bad place,” said a source close to the team.

“He was afraid. He felt that if I don’t do this now and go into rehab, I don’t know what is going to happen.”

The last straw for Sabathia came during the team’s final regular-season series in Baltimore, where he spent most of his time pounding drinks at a hotel, the source said.

Sabathia, 35, arrived there with his teammates late Thursday after his home victory against the Red Sox clinched a playoff spot for the Yankees.

By Friday, the pitcher looked “out of it” as the team waited around Baltimore’s Camden Yards to play a game that was eventually rained out.

“He drank every day last week apart from the day he pitched,” the source said. “The tipping point was Friday when he was at the stadium. He carried on drinking Saturday.”

The team had been staying at the Four Seasons hotel during their Baltimore series. A bartender there told The Post he didn’t personally see CC, but said, “We have a strict policy. Whenever sports teams or big names come in, we give them whatever they need, no questions.

“We have 24-hour room service here,” he added. “Whatever happens in their private room is out of our control.”

Sabathia, a father of four, made the announcement the day before the Bombers’ do-or-die wild-card game Tuesday against the Houston Astros at Yankee Stadium.

cc11.jpg

The image that accompanied CC Sabathia’s Facebook post.Photo: Facebook

“I love baseball and I love my teammates like brothers, and I am also fully aware that I am leaving at a time when we should all be coming together for one last push toward the World Series,” the lefty hurler said in a statement.

“It hurts me deeply to do this now, but I owe it to myself and to my family to get myself right. I want to take control of my disease, I want to be a better man, father and player.”

He later put the statement on Facebook with a meme of a dog cleaning up its own poop that read: “Just trying to get my s- -t together.”

Sabathia left for a Connecticut rehab facility on Sunday — and will spend at least 30 days in treatment, forcing him to miss the entire postseason, sources said.

While he’s not regarded as a big drinker, Sabathia was the team’s celebratory booze wrangler.

He arranged for magnums of champagne for the playoff-clinching clubhouse party on Thursday, and also ordered the bubbly for Alex Rodriguez’s 3,000th hit, sources said.

Yankee manager Joe Girardi said Sabathia shared his decision with him on Sunday in Baltimore.

“The first thing he said is, ‘I need help,’ ” Girardi said. “I was shocked.”

Yankee general manager Brian Cashman also received the news on Sunday, during a conference call.

Your browser does not support iframes.
“I was unaware of the situation we are now dealing with,” he said, adding that he was “surprised” to field that call.

“But in most cases, you are. A lot of this stuff occurs behind the scenes and away from the professional world.”

He praised the six-time All Star for coming forward with his alcohol problem and “trying to tackle it head-on.”

“What CC is dealing with is a life issue,” Cashman said. “It is bigger than the game [Tuesday] night.”

sabathia1.jpg

Sabathia on the moundPhoto: AP

Cashman wouldn’t say how long Sabathia has been struggling with alcoholism, but Sabathia has found himself in a few troubling situations in the past year.

  • In December 2014, he became irate when his group was told they couldn’t board a flight from Newark Airport to Jamaica because they had showed up too late. Cops were called to calm him down, and they eventually took a later flight.
  • In August, the pitcher got into a confrontation outside a Toronto nightclub when hecklers taunted him in the wee hours of the morning. A friend forced Sabathia into a car, but not before he was caught on camera yelling and pointing in a video posted online by TMZ.
  • And recently, he angered team officials by failing to show up to a sponsored event with the team after a game at Yankee Stadium, sources said.
Sabathia led the Yankees to a World Series title in 2009, his first season in New York after signing a seven-year, $161 million contract.

But in recent years, the pitching ace, whose weight was regularly in the 300-pound range, began showing a marked decline. Last year, his season was cut short because of a knee injury that required surgery. This year, he finished 6-10 with a 4.73 ERA.

The 2007 AL Cy Young Award winner is still scheduled to rake in $25 million next season and has a $25 million vesting option for 2017.

Sabathia ended his statement by saying he anticipates playing in 2016.

“I am looking forward to being out on the field with my team next season, playing the game that brings me so much happiness,” he said.

Additional reporting by Marisa Schultz and Howie Kussoy
 
Well, I guess we'll just agree to disagree. I just admire him for coming forward and I salute the Yankee organization for the way they are handling it. The timing and contract are, to me, completely irrelevant.

Agree. I always wonder how some internet commenters would react to their "no excuses, zero tolerance" jurisprudence being applied to their lives. Safe bet they wouldn't like it.
 
“He was afraid. He felt that if I don’t do this now and go into rehab, I don’t know what is going to happen.”

This says it all. CC has a wife and kids and people that depend on him. I do not care if it is the middle of the World Series CC needs to do right for himself and his people. Good for CC I commend him for taking this stand and hope he is able to battle his addiction and come out on top.
 
This may be a better thing for the Yankees too that he gets treatment. I like CC but he was not setting the world on fire this year. Most of his starts you never knew how he would pitch. He has pitched a little better lately but rarely gave the Yanks innings. He would be a liability in the post-season if they were to advance right now. Might have made Girardi's decisions easier too. Bigger picture I hope he cleans things up and comes back in better shape next year with his head on straight. I wonder if the alcoholism stems from his bad few years of pitching and he is doubting his ability to be a good pitcher. Who really knows but I'm sure its harder for some of these elite athletes to admit when they are over the hill where I think he is right now. But he has no shot at a comeback unless he cleans up his act and can focus on his pitching and physical and mental health.
 
I've softened my viewpoint. The poor guy was an absolute mess. I'm glad that he sought help before was too late.
 
  • Like
Reactions: HallLine69
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest posts

ADVERTISEMENT