Posted On: June 5, 2009 by Schwartz & Perry

Age Discrimination Complaint filed against New York Yankees

In 2009, the New York Yankees opened a majestic new state-of-the-art stadium, replacing the legendary cathedral that had housed the team for over eighty years. The theme of replacing the old has not stopped there, according to a former long-time employee. JohnVendikos, who worked as a bartender at the old Yankee Stadium’s Stadium Club for twenty-seven years, filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on May 26, alleging age discrimination by the Yankees.

Despite his long-time employment, the team informed the 73-year old Vendikos that he would be required to re-apply for his job when the new stadium opened across the street. He dutifully complied with the demand, since he wanted to continue to work for the Yankees.
Vendikos said that after waiting in line for three hours to be interviewed with Legends Hospitality, the new merchandising/concessions company co-founded by the Yankees, the interviewer asked him, “Why should I hire you? You’re an old man!” Vendikos thought the interviewer was joking, but when he found him to be serious, Vendikos was shocked and insulted. Then the veteran drink-server, who had been a bartending staple at the stadium since the early 1980s, never even received a phone call from the Yankees.

A Yankees spokesperson told the New York Post that the team has hired many people over the age of 65 at the new stadium and that the organization did not discriminate against Vendikos.

Vendikos’s attorney Lenard Leeds sees it differently, stating, “We can’t believe that after 27 years, that John was told you’re just too old. We wonder what George Steinbrenner would say. He used to serve George Steinbrenner.” Leeds says that this is a textbook case of age discrimination.

Bookmark and Share