ESPN: The Red Sox Legend and MLB Cheater Announce his Return to Baseball, Set to Join the Yankees.

The Boston Red Sox legend Manny Ramírez wants to make a comeback to the major leagues fourteen years after finishing his career as a cheater.
Ramírez said he is prepared to share his knowledge with the next generation, according to baseball writer Héctor Gómez.
On May 26, Ramírez declared, “I am available to work as a hitting coach for any of the 30 MLB teams.” “I have no doubt that I can greatly enhance any team’s offensive capabilities.”
A video of Ramírez hitting a pitch in a batting cage was posted by Gómez.
The 52-year-old Ramírez terminated his career with the Tampa Bay Rays five games into the 2011 season after testing positive for performance-enhancing substances during spring training. Ramírez remarked that ending his career instead of being suspended for 100 games made him “at ease.”
When Ramírez was with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2009, he too broke the drug code and was suspended for 50 games.
Prior to his abrupt departure, Ramírez established himself as one of the game’s most formidable sluggers, first with Cleveland and then for more than seven seasons with the Red Sox. Ramirez finished 20th in RBIs (1,831) and 15th in home runs (555) throughout his career. He batted 154 OPS+ (.312/.411/.585).
Ramírez was selected to 12 All-Star teams and won two World Series with the Red Sox. In 2002, he hit.349 to win a batting crown.
Ramírez was a member of the Chicago White Sox as well.
He now seems open to joining any baseball club, even the New York Yankees, the Red Sox’s opponents, who are fortunate for their supporters to have one of MLB’s top offenses and don’t require a hitting coach.