Sean Casey says he’s going to now not go back because the New York Yankees hitting schoolteacher later season, mentioning his need to spend extra hour together with his population.
Casey introduced his resolution Wednesday on his podcast, “The Mayor’s Office with Sean Casey,” finishing hypothesis concerning the three-time All-Superstar first baseman’s presen with the Yankees.
Casey emphasised that spending extra hour together with his daughters, ages 13 and 17, is a concern as a result of his dissolution from a couple of years in the past.
“I have those girls 50% of the time,” Casey stated. “I just can’t imagine being away for eight months in New York while they’re here in Pittsburgh.”
Casey stated he knowledgeable Yankees supervisor Aaron Boone of his resolution sooner than the workforce even introduced him with a proper deal.
“[Boone] and I had talked about coming back next year and what that would look like, and really before any offer could be exchanged between both of us, I just told him that I’m not going to be able to come back next year because I’ve got my two daughters at home,” he stated.
Casey, 49, joined the Yankees in July to interchange fired hitting schoolteacher Dillon Lawson, whose dismissal marked the primary in-season training alternate throughout Brian Cashman’s tenure as Unused York’s common supervisor.
The Yankees batted .221 with a .688 OPS in 71 video games with Casey as hitting schoolteacher.
“That whole experience was one of the best experiences of my life,” he stated Wednesday. “Being able to wear the pinstripes was actually a dream come true. Brian Cashman was incredible, that whole coaching staff was great, the organization, Hal Steinbrenner, everybody I came across. Nothing like having a chance to walk out to Yankee Stadium every night.”


