Mets starting pitcher R.A. Dickey is planning to climb Mount Kilimanjaro next month for charity. The Mets sent a letter to Dickey’s agent warning him that the team can void the final year of his contract if Dickey is hurt on the climb, a team spokesman confirmed Tuesday.
Dickey’s agent, Bo McKinnis, did not return a call for comment.
Dickey, 37, is due to make $4.25 million in 2012 and has a $5 million team option (against a $300,000 buyout) for 2013. He has reached a career peak since joining the Mets for 2010, refining a knuckleball and becoming an important starting pitcher after years as a journeyman spot starter-long reliever. He is 19-22 with a 3.08 ERA as a Met.
A Mets spokesman confirmed that general manager Sandy Alderson told The Wall Street Journal in a recent interview concerning Dickey: “If we thought it was a good idea, we wouldn’t have sent the letter. Beyond that, have we tried to dissuade him from going? It seems to me that the letter is enough of an effort to dissuade him, and he intends to go on nonetheless.”
Dickey organized the climb largely to raise awareness for Bombay Teen Challenge, a charity that aids victims of sex trafficking in India.
Although the exact language in Dickey’s contract isn’t known, the player agreed that he will not engage in a list of sports and activities totaling more than 50, including “mountain climbing.”
Mount Kilimanjaro, in Tanzania, is the highest mountain in Africa, at 19,336 feet above sea level.
Newsday



