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Wednesday, June 21
Yanks mapping out trade combinations for Sosa


BOSTON -- The Yankees have begun discussing possible trade combinations for Sammy Sosa, according to baseball officials, and while the two sides have more work to do, the Yankees have not blanched at what they heard from the Cubs and could close on a deal quickly, The New York Times reported in Wednesday's editions.

The Yankees have also moved deeper into trade talks for Detroit's Juan Gonzalez. Tuesday morning, Yankees officials faxed a list of prospects they would be willing to dangle for Gonzalez.

Sammy Sosa
Sosa

Cubs officials told the Yankees two weeks ago that they would need a significant package in return for Sosa, one of the game's most popular players. The Cubs have been scouting the Yankees' entire organization for about two weeks, and Yankees officials have been concerned, as they wait to hear from the Cubs, that the asking price will be exorbitant.

But the names forwarded by the Cubs make some officials believe that the teams can eventually reach an agreement. Before a trade is completed, the Yankees would have to negotiate a contract extension with Sosa, who possesses the right to veto any deal. Sosa could command a multiyear extension for about $18 million to $20 million per season; his current deal expires after the 2001 season.

The Yankees would have to surrender their top prospect, Alfonso Soriano, in a Sosa deal, and would probably include prospects like Randy Keisler, a minor league pitcher, as well as right-hander Jake Westbrook and outfielder Ricky Ledee.

The relationship between the Cubs and Sosa has deteriorated this year, part of the reason Chicago is considering trading the most popular member of the franchise.

There are about 10 to 15 players on the list submitted to the Tigers in the Gonzalez talks, an organization executive said. The Yankees are not eager to part with Soriano or another top prospect, Drew Henson, but that does not necessarily mean those players will not be included in the talks at some point.

Many of the players on the list are likely to be younger prospects who do not have credentials quite as impressive as Henson, a third baseman considered a top power hitter.

Dave Walling, the Yankees' top pick in the 1999 draft, likely was on the list, as well as Brian Rogers, a fifth-round pick from the 1999 draft, and outfielder Jackson Melian, who is batting .255 for the Double-A Norwich Navigators.

With several weeks remaining before the July 31 trade deadline, the pace of the negotiations has been slow. Executives from the Yankees and the Tigers spoke regularly last week, but did not communicate Monday, as Yankees officials prepared the list of prospects they forwarded to the Tigers on Wednesday. But club officials say George Steinbrenner is pressing his executives to make a move.

Both the Cubs and Tigers will at least ask for Henson, a player the scouts believe has a chance to make a major impact. He attends the University of Michigan and could be highly attractive to the Tigers, but he would be an enormous risk for Detroit, as well.

Henson is a quarterback for Michigan and is undecided about whether he wants to play football or baseball as a professional. For that reason alone, the Tigers would probably not want to build a deal for Gonzalez around Henson.

But if the size of the deal begins to expand, and the Yankees ask to include a pitcher -- such as starter Hideo Nomo or reliever Doug Brocail -- then the Tigers would almost certainly insist that Henson be part of the deal, in addition to other prospects.
 


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 Harold Reynolds does not believe Sammy Sosa will be in Chicago much longer.
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