Also signed Orlando Cabrera
A's announce Nomar, Cabrera signings
With newcomers, Oakland now has significant veteran presence
By Barry M. Bloom / MLB.com
PHOENIX -- It may only last a season, but the Orlando Cabrera and Nomar Garciaparra era in A's land finally opened on Friday with the official announcement by the club it had signed the free agents to a pair of one-year contracts.
The infielders join Jason Giambi and Matt Holliday on an Oakland roster that suddenly owns some veteran offensive pop. Giambi was also signed as a free agent and Holliday was obtained in a trade with the Rockies.
"A lot of my decision was just having Giambi back here and Holliday," Cabrera said during a hastily setup media conference. "[Eric] Chavez is one of my favorite third basemen and just the challenge of taking over the [American League] West. I think we have a good chance to do it and go to the postseason. I think we've got a great chance here."
Garciaparra seemed so thrilled with his new surroundings that he walked around a conference table set up for the occasion and shook hands with all the media in attendance.
Both players agreed to terms earlier and had passed physicals on Thursday, making the formal announcement somewhat perfunctory. Cabrera, wearing No. 18, was actually in uniform early on Friday morning, was on the field for drills and had his picture taken by the team photographer hours before the club was cleared by the Commissioner's office to make the official announcement.
Garciaparra was wearing his No. 1 white jersey and green workout shorts. When asked how long it would take him to play, he said, "About a day. Actually, I'm only kidding."
Exactly a month before Opening Night on April 6 against the Angels at Anaheim, an A's official said that the players won't be quickly pushed into action.
"I'm sure that they're anxious to get in the box, but we're not going to rush them," said A's assistant general manager David Forst, who sat in on the conference in lieu of general manager Billy Beane. "There's plenty of time. Both guys have been in the game a long time and won't need too many at bats to be ready to play.
"We'll wait for their conditioning to catch up. Most of these guys have been out here three, four weeks. If it's two weeks from now, fine. If it's a week we'll get them out there."
Both players waited the entire offseason and almost a month into Spring Training to sign for vastly different reasons.
The 35-year-old Garciaparra was considering retirement until he could determine whether his legs were in good enough shape to carry him for a 14th big league season.
He has lost his range at shortstop, and last season, playing through various injuries -- including a broken bone in his right hand and persistent calf problems -- he appeared in only 55 games for the Dodgers at short, third and first base and as a pinch-hitter. He batted .264 with eight homers and 28 RBIs and was placed on the disabled list three times, including one long stint on the 60-day DL.
"The biggest thing for me was to make sure I was capable of going out there and playing," said Garciaparra, who earned $8.5 million last year with the Dodgers and signed a one-year deal with the A's for an undisclosed amount.
"I had teams [during the offseason] that definitely talked to me. It just didn't feel right for me to commit to them without knowing whether I could give them what they deserved. I would hate to have committed early to a team, rehabbing and now knowing myself if I could play."
Cabrera, 34, was the last Type A position player to sign a free-agent contract this offseason. Ben Sheets, who contemplated arm surgery, is the only Type A free agent remaining on the market.
A veteran of 12 seasons, Cabrera played 161 games for the White Sox last season, batting .281 with 186 hits, 33 doubles and 93 runs scored. He's so durable that he hasn't played in fewer than 140 games since the 2000 season when he appeared in 125 for the old Montreal Expos.
"I don't know, it was just like a weird market," said Cabrera, who signed a one-year deal for $4 million, down from $9 million last year with the White Sox. "I talked to my agent four times the entire time. Other teams were interested, but there was nothing great, nothing exciting. I like to compete. I like to be with a team that has a chance to win.
"There's going to be more years to come. We're not worried about stuff like that. I'll let my agent worry about that stuff."
Now, all Cabrera and Garciaparra have to worry about is getting ready to compete, something Garciaparra now says he's prepared to do.
"That's why I'm here," he said. "I wouldn't be here if I didn't feel that way."