NEW YORK —  Yankees manager Joe Girardi insists it will be “open season” on Alex  Rodriguez if Major League Baseball fails to suspend Boston’s Ryan  Dempster for hitting the star slugger with a pitch. “That baseball  is a weapon. It’s not a tennis ball. … It’s a weapon, and it can do a  lot of damage to someone’s life,” Girardi said Tuesday before the  Yankees played a doubleheader against Toronto. “And that’s why I  was so upset about it. You can express your opinion and be upset with  someone, but you just can’t start throwing baseballs at people. I mean,  it’s scary.” Dempster threw one pitch behind A-Rod’s knees and two  more inside in the second inning at Fenway Park on Sunday. Then his 3-0  pitch struck Rodriguez’s left elbow pad and ricocheted off his back. Girardi  sprinted onto the field, screaming at plate umpire Brian O’Nora for not  ejecting the pitcher. Girardi was tossed as the benches and bullpens  emptied, and Rodriguez homered off Dempster to spark a sixth-inning  rally that lifted New York to a 9-6 win. Girardi said his profane rant probably was the angriest he’s been on a ballfield. Rodriguez  was suspended for 211 games on Aug. 5 for violating baseball’s drug and  labor agreements but is playing while he appeals. Red Sox pitcher John  Lackey criticized the rules last week for allowing A-Rod to play. MLB  is expected to decide Tuesday or Wednesday on any discipline. Girardi  said if Dempster isn’t punished, it makes Rodriguez “open season for  people, and that can’t happen. It’s not fair. If a player is suspended  for throwing at someone, they’re going to get their appeal. Are we just  going to throw that out, too?” Dempster maintained he was just pitching inside and wasn’t trying to hit Rodriguez. New  York didn’t retaliate Sunday. Girardi wouldn’t say whether there is a  need to respond when the teams next meet, at Yankee Stadium on Sept. 5. Girardi  said “protecting your own” in baseball has gone on for “for a long  time. And unfortunately you’re part of those situations sometimes, but  that’s part of the game.” The manager also discussed the matter with his 6-year-old son, Dante. “Part  of pitching is pitching inside, that’s all part of it,” he recalled  saying. “But I don’t ever want you to hit anyone on purpose.”
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