Yankees revived spring training guest list expected to include Roger Clemens' return, Bucky Dent, Jorge Posada and other legends
TAMPA -- The Yankees are reviving a tradition that once marked their Spring Training experience as unique and special, inviting a longer list of iconic players as guest instructors.
This year's expected list includes Jorge Posada, Mike Mussina, Bucky Dent, Joe Torre, CC Sabathia, Alfonso Soriano, and Tino Martinez -- and, for the first time in many years, Roger Clemens, according to sources briefed on these plans. Those names do not necessarily represent the complete list of guest instructors.
For decades, the Yankees welcomed legends back during spring training. The tradition never stopped, but the list has shrunk in recent years, due in part to the pandemic (and possibly Goose Gossage's rants against the organization).
Willie Randolph and Ron Guidry have remained regular presences, and will continue in their instructor roles this spring. Andy Pettitte, in his capacity as a special advisor, is around the team on an intermittent basis all year. Last year, Torre donned a uniform and made a pitching change in a spring training game.
But this year's volume of names across eras represents a bit of a callback to Yankee spring trainings of years past.
Word around the team is that there was no grand plan to re-open the floodgates this year; rather, manager Aaron Boone values the team's history, and has spearheaded many of the individual invitations.
Clemens' return is notable because, as far as anyone around here can remember, he hasn't been involved with the team since 2007, the final season of his playing career.
A beloved teammate when he pitched for the Yankees, Clemens ended his career on a sour note with his inclusion -- along with Pettitte's -- in the Mitchell Report. He was indicted and subsequently acquitted of lying to Congress about his alleged PED use. Pettitte testified against his longtime friend in that trial, but the two are on good terms now, according to a mutual friend.
Clemens was never persona non grata at Yankees camp. The team has reached out to him in prior years. This year, the scheduling worked and he agreed to re-enter the fold.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Aaron Judge's game-tying solo home run (26)
Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani, and the Yankees-Dodgers World Series rematch | New York 4 to 7 On New York 4 to 7 presented by Verizon, host Chelsea Sherrod is joined by WFAN's Emmanuel Berbari to break down this weekend's World Series rematch between the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers. The two discuss Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani, the pitching matchups, and if these two teams will make it back to the Fall Classic this year. 9:22 Now Playing Paused Ad Playing

Wall Street Journal
2 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
The Frenzied Pursuit of Wall Street's Low-Profile All-Stars
Billionaire Steve Cohen doesn't like losing out on superstars. In December, the New York Mets owner made headlines for paying $765 million to sign phenom outfielder Juan Soto, beating out the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Reggie Jackson says Judge's home run wasn't 469 feet
Reggie Jackson says Judge's home run wasn't 469 feet originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Aaron Judge hit a baseball Tuesday night that looked like it needed clearance from air traffic control. Statcast measured the New York Yankees captain's homer at 469 feet. Advertisement Yankees Hall of Famer Reggie Jackson respectfully — and very vocally — disagrees. New York Yankees Hall of Fame slugger looks out of the dugout during the 2019 Old Timers' Day at Yankee Stadium. © Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images 'I know what 500 feet feels like,' Jackson told YES Network's Meredith Marakovits before Wednesday night's game. He went on to explain if it hadn't hit the building where the Kansas City Royals house their Hall of Fame, that ball would have definitely cleared 500 feet. And when Mr. October says a home run felt like 500 feet, you at least got to take it into consideration. This is a man who hit baseballs into light towers. Who treated 1970s pitchers like they were throwing Wiffle balls. Reggie knows moonshots — and this one apparently made his inner seismograph twitch. Advertisement The blast in question came off the bat at 114.9 mph and crashed off the facade of the Royals Hall of Fame in left-center. Statcast gave it the 469-foot label, but the ball may have lost a few feet of travel time thanks to a premature collision with a wall, which was sporting some patching on it Wednesday. Judge didn't seem bothered. He flipped his bat, put his head down, and headed back to work. The Yankees slugger has a habit of humbling Statcast's tape measure. Tuesday's launch may have been one of those. Reggie seemed convinced. And honestly, we're not betting against the man who once hit a ball completely out of Tiger Stadium. Statcast is great and we love the information, but Reggie knows home runs. So, we're going to go with the Yankees legend on this one. Advertisement Related: Marcus Stroman Takes Surprising Turn As Yankees Face Big Decision Related: Aaron Judge's 469-Foot Blast Wasn't Even Close to Yankees Slugger's Longest This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 12, 2025, where it first appeared.