A few members of the Yankees front office are upset that Alex Rodriguez didn't tell them he had been contacted by the FBI to testify about Anthony Galea. Galea, a Canadian doctor, has been linked to the importing of illegal drugs. Rodriguez's first at-bat of the spring, televised by the YES Network, didn't go quite as planned. "That all amounts to a huge sigh or relief for Alex Rodriguez, who now comes into camp healthy," Michael Kay, play-by-play man, said as Rodriguez stepped in Wednesday against the Pirates. Ken Singleton, his partner, soon down-shifted. Singleton started talking about last spring, hip surgery and "uh, uh, steroids." Kay quickly said: "Now Alex was looking to have a very, very quiet spring this year with health and the world championship, but he was questioned by the media the other day because he's going to be questioned by FBI officials about the Canadian-based doctor Anthony Galea . . ." "They (Yankees brass) don't like being blindsided," said a television industry source who deals with the Yankees. "If Rodriguez isn't protecting the organization paying him a fortune, why should the organization go out of its way to protect him?"