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Outfield must carry offensive load as injuries ravage infield

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They're all off to hot starts, but the Yankees will need their expensive outfielders more than ever as their infielders battle the injury bug.

With the infield dealing with an assortment of maladies, the Yankee outfielders will feel even more pressure to produce at the plate for the next few weeks. While Mark Teixeira is supposed to return this weekend, who knows how long he'll be back for, and how productive he'll be when he's out there. Outside of him, Brian Roberts is nursing a sore back, Derek Jeter's being cautious with his quad, and backup catcher/first baseman Francisco Cervelli is now on the 60-day DL, so the Yankees may not be getting a lot of offensive production from their infield for the near future. Scott Sizemore is up with the team (with no plans to sign Stephen Drew in the works), but the Yankee infield may be an offensively challenged unit for the near future.

Yangervis Solarte has been terrific so far this year, and so has Kelly Johnson (who has hit three homers in the past six games to boost his 2014 wRC+ to a 161), but outside of these two, the rest of the infielders have been average to awful at the plate. Derek Jeter has hit .286, but again, he's missed the last two games, and will no doubt miss a few more (hopefully just for a few rest days here and there, and not due to an extended DL stint - knock on wood). Dean Anna has an OBP of .222. Scott Sizemore's offensive abilities at the major league level are something of an unknown at this point after missing the past two seasons (although Sizemore has been hitting well so far in Triple-A). And frankly, even though Solarte and Johnson lead the team in wRC+ so far, I see a slump coming up for Solarte (he's got to regress at some point, right?) and Johnson, while a decent power hitter, is a bit too inconsistent to really carry an offense. And who knows if switching positions as people come back or get called up will have any effect on their hitting?

This means, outside of Brian McCann (who hasn't been much of a threat at the plate so far), the team will probably have to look to the outfield for major offensive production over the next few weeks. Luckily, the outfielders have already been doing this all along during this young season. Jacoby Ellsbury has begun the year looking like he might be worth the boatload of cash that the Yankees paid for him, hitting .362/.423/.447 with six stolen bases in seven attempts. Brett Gardner has also been terrific, batting .295/.367/.386. While they've provided little power, their outfield comrade Carlos Beltran has, hitting .311/.347/.622 while hitting three home runs and knocking in eight runs so far. With Ellsbury and Gardner getting on base in front of him, Beltran is getting ample RBI opportunities, and after starting slow, Beltran has heated up lately, hitting safely in six of the past seven games.

Even Ichiro (in a very small sample size) has hit .421, but he's appeared in nine of the thirteen games the Yankees have played If he can be serviceable at the plate, his great defense and speed on the base paths will give the Yankees lots of lineup options, depending on what pitcher is on the mound each night. Alfonso Soriano, the fifth outfielder/DH, has also been a solid offensive contributor, tying Beltran and Johnson for the team lead in homers and scoring the second most runs (behind Beltran). Overall, if Soriano is included (he's played four games in the outfield this year), the group of Ellsbury, Gardner, Beltran, Ichiro, and Soriano are tops in the team in runs, and Ellsbury, Beltran, Gardner, and Soriano are four of the top five in total hits so far this season (Solarte is second, between Ellsbury and Beltran).

With an infield that will feature Dean Anna, Scott Sizemore, Kelly Johnson, and Yangervis Solarte for the time being, the Yankees will need their outfielders to maintain their hot starts to keep pace in the AL East. If Solarte and Johnson start struggling, the Yankees will get little to no offensive production from their infield.

While, admittedly, the outfielders will have to produce all season for the Yankees to see the playoffs, it will be especially key for Gardner, Ellsbury, and Beltran (and to a lesser extent, Ichiro and Soriano) to keep producing at a high level during the near future, as the Yankees will be taking on the Rays, Red Sox and Angels over the next couple weeks, and all were above average offensive teams last season. If the Yankees want to keep pace in the early going, they'll need the outfielders to continue their hot hitting.


Yankees lineup vs. Rays - David Robertson on track to be activated Tuesday

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Roberts returns and Robertson is on his way back.

After a successful doubleheader sweep of the Cubs yesterday the Yankees travel to Tropicana Field for a four-game set against the Tampa Bay Rays. Tonight's series opener features Rays ace David Price against CC Sabathia, who is paid to be the Yankees' ace but hasn't lived up to that billing of late.

Brett Gardner gets the night off with Jacoby Ellsbury sliding back into the leadoff spot. Scott Sizemore gets the start at first base while Kelly Johnson sits and Ichiro Suzuki takes Gardner's spot in left field. Brian Roberts' back must be feeling better, as he returns to the lineup for the first time in a few days to play second base.

As Jesse wrote earlier, Mark Teixeira could be activated as soon as Sunday after suffering a Grade 1 hamstring strain and more good news came along today in the form of David Robertson being on track for a return on Tuesday. The Yankees' closer pulled his groin in the second series of the season in Toronto, but should be able to return when he is eligible after getting into a minor league rehab game on Saturday.

If you want to read some more praise for Masahiro Tanaka and the amazing start he's gotten off to in his young MLB career, Jeff Sullivan at Fangraphs had a very nice write up about the Yankee right-hander today. It's definitely worth checking out.

Tonight's game will be on YES and MLB.tv beginning at 7:10 pm.

Pitcher preview: CC Sabathia

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When does he lose "ace" status?

All Rays fans will by now be familiar with CC Sabathia's stuff. The movement chart looks much the same as it has in previous seasons -- four-seam, sinker, changeup, slider.

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via pitchfx.texasleaguers.com

You would have to be living under a rock, though, to think that Sabathia is actually the same pitcher he's been in the past. The big lefty has lost his oomph.

Sabathiavelo_medium

Less famously, but also probably of some import, Sabathia's slider has shown less drop to it than it had in previous years. The result has been a lot of home runs. A full 38.5% of the fly balls that Sabathia's given up have left the park, and while he's racked up strikeouts (25.9%) and avoided walks (3.7%), that level of gopheritis can turn any statline ugly. Consider these ridiculous numbers: 2.26 xFIP; 4.73 FIP; 6.63 ERA.

Now, make a prediction. On the one hand, we have a pitcher who has failed to prevent runs. Yes it's over a small sample size, but that failure is backed up by tangible and easily identifiable erosion of his skills. On the other hand, this is a pitcher with a long history of success, and while he's allowed runs, he's excelled in the aspect of the game that's most predictive over small sample sizes: strikeouts and walks.

Here's mine. I have no doubt that CC has pitched badly this season. Pitching in the major leagues is a tough job, and when you make a mistake, you get hurt. His healthy peripherals, though, mean that he still has the ability to get batters out. His equation can work, and it's just a matter of the veteran figuring out the adjustment that will make it work. I see no reason to expect him not to figure it out tonight. There's no reason to be overconfident.

Poll
Will CC Sabathia pitch well against the Rays tonight?

  17 votes |Results

Yankees turn triple play against Rays

Yankees 10, Rays 2: Yangervis Solarte turns a triple play, offense destroys David Price

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Tonight's game featured a triple play, back-to-back triples, back-to-back homers, and a legitimately good start by CC Sabathia. Moar!

Oh man, this game. It was pretty tremendous for the Yankees, as basically everything went right and they walloped the Rays, 10-2. There was good pitching, a bunch of dingers, and even a bit of baseball history.

The Yankees wasted no time in teeing off against one of the best pitchers in baseball, David Price. Leading off, Jacoby Ellsbury beat out a high-bouncing grounder into no-man's land near first base, and Derek Jeter followed with a walk. Two outs later, it seemed like the inning might end in disappointment, but Brian McCann saved it with an opposite-field RBI single through the shift. We can only hope that Mark Teixeira was taking notes from the disabled list.

CC Sabathia quickly forced Price back to the mound with an 11-pitch first inning, and in the second, the Yankees really laid into the 2012 Cy Young Award winner. The bottom of the order deserves credit for starting the rally, as Scott Sizemore (playing first base for the first time in his professional career) laced a double past Evan Longoria and down the left field line. Brian Roberts, who had been out with back problems for a few days, surprised us all by crushing an 0-2 pitch into deep left-center field for an RBI triple. Ellsbury immediately responded with a triple of his own to right-center, scoring Roberts. Jeter then singled up the middle to run the score up to 4-0. It briefly looked like Sabathia might give some runs back when Longoria led off the second with a double and Wil Myers walked, but he was bailed out by a ground ball to the exact right location:

Yangervis_triple_play_medium

Sean Rodriguez bounced one directly to Yangervis Solarte at third base, who managed to turn three on Rodriguez. The Yankees have turned just three triple plays since 1968; they have all taken place within the past four years and all featured Sabathia on the mound. What luck!

There was a bit of a scare in the third inning when Carlos Beltran ran into a close wall in right field foul territory chasing a foul ball, but he fortunately seemed to be fine. As Tanya noted, if it was 2013, he probably would have disintegrated. Instead, he stayed in the game. The Rays finally got on the board against Sabathia in the fourth when they scored a run on a passed ball, though a convenient ricochet almost led to them staying scoreless. Having none of this, the Yankees' offense responded against Price during the next half-inning with back-to-back homers from Alfonso Soriano and McCann. Sori made his blast extra fun with this plus-plus bat drop:

Sori_bat_drop_medium

The rest of the game was smooth sailing, as Sabathia went seven strong, allowing just two runs (one earned) on seven hits and two walks, striking out six Rays along the way. It was an encouraging performance for the veteran lefty; perhaps there is some craftiness in his repertoire after all! Dellin Betances finished up with two scoreless innings, walking a pair of batters and striking out three. (A sketchy strike zone by home plate umpire Rob Drake was not especially kind to him on the walks, either.)

Everyone in the Yankees' starting lineup got a hit except for Beltran and Ichiro Suzuki. Ellsbury, Jeter, Solarte, Roberts, McCann, and Soriano all notched multi-hit games. Roberts fell a homer shy of the cycle, and Solarte missed it by a triple, too. In the ninth inning, "Never Nervous Yangervis" added his first major-league homer, a two-run bomb off Rays closer Grant Balfour. This happened just minutes after Eduardo Nunez badly struggled to get a bunt down in Minnesota. I think the Yankees might have made the right decision in picking Solarte over Nunez. Maybe.

Hiroki Kuroda will try to give the Yankees a 2-0 series lead tomorrow night against veteran lefty Erik Bedard, who is apparently still pitching. Good for him, I guess. Hopefully that turns out as well as Price's pitching did tonight.

Box scoreGraph score

Cubs Minor League Wrap: April 17

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Kane County is an unstoppable force right now. Daytona can't buy a break. Iowa wins and the Smokies split.

Iowa Cubs

The Iowa Cubs derailed the New Orleans Zephyrs (Marlins), 5-4. Iowa won despite committing six errors in the game.

Starter Eric Jokischpitched the first 5.2 innings and allowed three runs on three hits. All three runs were unearned, of course, although both times it was his own error that led to the unearned runs. Jokisch walked two and struck out five.

Alberto Cabrera relieved Jokisch and got the win when Iowa scored twice in the bottom of the seventh. Cabrera pitched 1.1 innings and allowed no runs on one hit. He walked one and struck out two.

Neil Ramirez faced four batters and walked one of them and struck out the other three.

Brian Schlitter allowed a run in the ninth, but was still able to get the save, his second of the season. Schlitter allowed one hit and one walk. He did not strike anyone out.

Shortstop Logan Watkins extended his hit streak to five games by going 2 for 2 with a walk. He scored one run and had one RBI.

First baseman Chris Valaika went 2 for 3 with a double and a walk. He scored one run and had one batted in.

Catcher Eli Whitesidewas 2 for 3 with a walk. He had one run batted in.

Tennessee Smokies

The Tennessee Smokies split a doubleheader with the Jackson Generals (Mariners), losing the first game 4-0 and taking the second one 3-2.

In the first game. starter Corey Black had some control issues. He pitched four innings and allowed three runs on two hits and five walks. He also hit two batters. Black threw 83 pitches, only 36 of which were strikes. Black did strike out three.

Dustin Geiger had a single in the second inning. That was Tennessee's only hit of game one.

Game two went much better. Starter Dae-Eun Rhee allowed two runs on six hits over four innings. Rhee struck out four and walked one.

Hunter Cervenka took the win with two scoreless innings of relief. He allowed three hits. In fact, he allowed a single and a double to the first two batters he faced, but he pitched out of the jam with no runs scoring. Cervenka struck out three and walked no one.

Armando Rivero pitched the seventh inning and got his third save. Rivero struck out the first two batters he saw, then he gave up a hit, a wild pitch and a walk with two outs. But then got his third strikeout to end the game.

The Smokies took the lead for good in the fourth inning when first baseman Charles Cutler and shortstop Jeudy Valdezhit back-to-back doubles and catcher Taylor Davis singled Valdez home. Cutler was 1 for 2 with a sac bunt. Valdez and Davis were both 1 for 3.

Daytona Cubs

The Daytona Cubs at least took the game to extra innings, but they dropped their fifth straight game, 6-5 in ten innings to the Tampa Yankees.

Starter Rob Zastryzny went four innings and allowed four runs on nine hits over four innings. He fanned one and did not walk anyone (or things would have been a lot worse).

Arodys Vizcaino pitched the ninth inning. He allowed a one-out double, who went to third on a wild pitch with two outs and a two-out walk. He struck out the other three batters he faced. Sean Kernan of the Daytona Beach News-Journal said he had great velocity throughout and topped out at 98 mph.

Andrew McKirahan took the loss after allowing a run in the tenth on three hits. He struck out one and did not walk a batter.

Daytona had fallen behind 5-1 in the sixth inning, but rallied to tie the score in the eighth. Leading the Daytona charge were second baseman Tim Saunders and DH Rock Shoulders. Saunders was 2 for 4 with a walk and a solo home run in the third inning, his first of the season. He had two total RBI.

Shoulders was 3 for 4 with a walk and one run batted in.

Kane County Cougars

The Kane County Cougars slew the Dayton Dragons (Reds), 13-1. The win was Kane County's eighth straight.

Starting pitcher Daury Torrez retired the first 16 batters he faced before allowing a one-out walk in the sixth inning. He allowed his first hit two batters later. Torrez's final line was one run on two hits over eight innings. He walked one and struck out four.

Coming into today's game, catcher Will Remillardhad two hits all season. Tonight he went 4 for 5 with two doubles and 5 RBI. He scored two runs.

First baseman Jacob Rogers went 3 for 6 with two doubles. He scored two runs.

Second baseman Danny Lockhart was 2 for 3 with two walks. He scored four runs.

DH Ben Carhart also had two doubles in a 2 for 6 game. He scored one run and had two RBI. Center fielder Jacob Hannemann went 2 for 6 with a stolen base. He scored one run and batted one run in. Shortstop Carlos Penalver was 2 for 5 and was hit by a pitch. He scored once and had one RBI.

Right fielder Yasiel Balaguert was 2 for 5 with a walk. He scored once.

The win improves Kane County's Midwest League best record to 11-3. Even after the loss, Dayton has the second-best record in the league at 9-4.

Around the Empire: New York Yankees News - 4/18/14

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Last Time on Pinstripe Alley

Yankees News

Fangraphs | Jeff Sullivan: Masahiro Tanaka has been so impressive so far because he can move in and out of the zone whenever he needs to.

CBS Sports | Jon Heyman: The Yankees were one of many teams to scout Joel Hanrahan at his recent showcase, and the right-hander was impressive.

Pinstripe Pundits | Chris Mitchell: Who is Mike Ford of the Charleston RiverDogs?

NoMaas | Vizzini: Here are some reasons to not worry about CC Sabathia in 2014.

The Record | Bob Klapisch: Masahiro Tanaka has been so impressive so far that it's time to put his skills to the test.

It's About the Money | Michael Eder: It's hard to make sense of Yangervis Solarte's hot start when there is so much conflicting evidence.

RotoGraphs | Alan Harrison: A look at Dellin Betances and Adam Warren in the back of the bullpen.

Baseball America | J.J. Cooper: Dante Bichette and Rafael De Paula have been impressive early on in High-A Tampa.

NJ.com | Brendan Kuty:Eduardo Nunez got called up to the Twins for a doubleheader yesterday.

Newsday | John Lennon: Masahiro Tanaka is already living up to the hype.

LoHud | Chad Jennings: Scott Sizemore played at first base for the first time in his life while Mark Teixeira makes his way back.

The Rays Tank: About Last Night…

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Rays fall to the Yankees 10-2 in game one of the four game series.

Last night was a disaster, to put it kindly. It was the one game of the series that the Rays should have won. They had their ace on the mound, and all day yesterday everyone went on and on about how terrible CC Sabathia has been historically against the Rays. Well, Sabathia was not terrible last night. The Rays defense was less than spectacular, the pitching allowed the Yankees to score in six separate innings and collect nine extra base hits, and every time the offense had runners in scoring position, the bats fell silent as the Rays were 0-7 with runners in scoring position. Oh, and just in case you missed it, the Yankees turned a triple play against the Rays as well last night which was just the cherry on top. If you like to relive torture, head on over to Hatfield’s recap for a more in-depth review of the game.

Tonight, the Rays send Erik Bedard to the mound to face Hiroki Kuroda of the Yankees for game two of the four game series. Should be a fun one to watch!

Links:

-Over at Dock of the Rays, Jason Hanselman is rethinking park factors.

-The Hardball Times featured an article examining park features in play and if a homefield advantage does exist.

-David Schoenfield of ESPN’s Sweetspot blog seems to think that managers keep making bad lineups.

-Rob Neyer takes a look at why pitching is rigged for younger pitchers.

-Somehow a fan brought in fireworks to AT&T Park and managed to light and throw it into a crowded pedestrian concourse, injuring at least five people.

-Matthew Kory of Sports on Earth shows how pitchers are regressing at the plate.

-Mariners prospect Ji-Man Choi has been suspended 50 games for use of the PED methandienone.

-In other AL East news, the Toronto bullpen melted down yesterday against the Twins.

-Munenori Kawasaki is back with the Blue Jays and is still providing fantastic interviews.


Baby Bomber 4/17/14: Aaron Judge cranks first professional homer; Dante Bichette Jr. stays hot

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Recapping the Yankees' minor league affiliates' results from April 17th.

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:W 2-1, W 7-2 vs. Buffalo Bisons

Game 1:

RF Ramon Flores 0-2, 3 BB
2B Jose Pirela 1-3, RBI - batting .220 this season
LF Zoilo Almonte 0-3, BB, K
3B Adonis Garcia 1-4
1B Corban Joseph 0-4, K
DH Ronnier Mustelier 0-3, BB, K
C Austin Romine 1-3 - batting .235/.278/.294
CF Antoan Richardson 0-3, BB, 2 K, SB
SS Carmen Angelini 1-2, RBI, BB, SB, E6 - throwing error, second of the season

Brian Gordon 5.2 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 4 BB, 2 K - 53 of 91 pitches for strikes
Matt Daley 1.1 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 0 BB, 3 K, WP
Danny Burawa 1.2 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 4 BB, 3 K, WP
Mark Montgomery 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, K

Game 2:

RF Ramon Flores 2-4, 2 K
2B Jose Pirela 2-4, double, HR, 2 RBI - first homer of the season
LF Zoilo Almonte 2-4, 2 HR, 2 RBI, K - second and third homers of the season
DH Adonis Garcia 1-4, double
1B Corban Joseph 2-3, HR, 2 RBI, BB - first homer of the season
C Francisco Arcia 2-4
CF Antoan Richardson 1-4, RBI, 3 K - batting .318 this season
SS Carmen Angelini 1-3, E6 - throwing error, third error of the season
3B Jose Toussen 0-3

Chase Whitley 5 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 5 K - 39 of 64 pitches for strikes
David Herndon 2 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, WP

Double-A Trenton Thunder:W 5-3 vs. Erie SeaWolves

DH Mason Williams 0-4, 2 K
CF Ben Gamel 1-4
C Gary Sanchez 0-4, K, passed ball (1st)
1B Kyle Roller 2-4, HR, 2 RBI
2B Rob Refsnyder 2-3, HBP, SB - first stolen base of the season
LF Taylor Dugas 1-3, triple, 2 RBI, K
RF Yeral Sanchez 0-3, 2 K
3B Dan Fiorito 1-3, double, RBI, K
SS Ali Castillo 0-3, 2 K

Joel De La Cruz 5.2 IP, 6 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 3 K, WP - 54 of 90 pitches for strikes
Aaron Dott 0.2 IP, 0 H, 3 ER, 3 BB, K
Jairo Heredia 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 0 BB
Branden Pinder 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, K
Diego Moreno 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K - third save of the season

High-A Tampa Yankees:W 6-5 vs. Daytona Cubs

CF Jake Cave 3-6, double, 2 triples, RBI, 2 K - batting .270 this season
SS Cito Culver 2-5, double, RBI
DH Eric Jagielo 0-4, K
3B Dante Bichette Jr. 3-4, double, BB - batting .364 this season
C Peter O'Brien 1-4, double, RBI, BB, K, 3 passed balls - batting .340 this season
2B Angelo Gumbs 1-5, K - batting .321 this season
RF Zach Wilson 3-5, RBI
1B Reymond Nunez 1-5, E3 - throwing error, sixth of the season
LF Cody Grice 1-5, RBI, 2 K

Dan Camarena 5.1 IP, 4 H, 4 R/2 ER, 4 BB, 3 K
Evan Rutckyj 1.2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, K
Phil Wetherell 1 IP, 2 H, 1 R/0 ER, 0 BB
Kyle Haynes 2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, BB, K

Low-A Charleston RiverDogs:W 8-7 vs. Rome Braves

SS Abiatal Avelino 2-4, BB, K, SB - batting .306 this season
2B Tyler Wade 2-4, RBI, BB, CS
RF Aaron Judge 1-3, HR, 2 RBI, 2 BB, K - first homer of the season
3B Miguel Andujar 0-3, BB, K
LF Michael O'Neill 1-4, triple, 3 RBI, 3 K, E7 - fielding error, batting .196 this season
CF Brandon Thomas 0-4, E8 - fielding error, second of the season
1B John Murphy 1-4
DH Gosuke Katoh 0-3, K, HBP, SB
C Eduardo de Oleo 1-3, BB, K, E2 - throwing error, first of the season

Brady Lail 5.1 IP, 7 H, 6 R/4 ER, 2 BB, 4 K, WP - 52 of 83 pitches for strikes
Cesar Vargas 1.2 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, WP
Stefan Lopez 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, K
Nick Rumbelow 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, BB, 2 K - second save of the season

Poll
Who was the Best Baby Bomber for April 17?

  134 votes |Results

Interview with Peoria pitching coach Jason Simontacchi

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Thank you, Jason.

First and foremost, I want to thank Nathan Baliva for providing me with the privilege of interviewing Jason Simontacchi, former Cardinals pitcher and current pitching coach of the Peoria Chiefs. Twenty-five or so minutes later, I am 100% convinced that Jason is one of the coolest guys in the entire organization.

Viva El Birdos: What was the main reason you started wearing the socks the way you did?

Jason Simontacchi: I started wearing the socks because Pete Rose wore them that way. I liked the way Pete Rose played the game and went about his business. Obviously, he’s before my time a little bit. Then, when I got called up to the Cardinals, they had those stripes, and it started out in the minor leagues that we had to wear them that way (back in 2002). When I got to the big leagues, and I was like, "Well, I wanted to wear them that way anyway, so it didn’t really bother me." I remember before my first start, Tino Martinez was like, "Hey Jason, you know you don’t have to wear your pants up like that anymore," and Jim Edmonds was like, "Well, how have you been pitching down there?" I said I’ve been fine, and Edmonds told me to leave them up then.

VEB: Do family and friends refer to you as Simo or is that just a Cardinals/Mike Shannon thing?

JS: Yeah, Shannon brought up the ole Simo Man. I guess that’s what some people call me. I mostly get Simo. People that know me call me Simo. Obviously, my wife and kids don’t call me Simo. Just friends mainly. With baseball and stuff like that, people call me Simo.

VEB: What are some examples of Matheny's leadership in handling the pitching staff back in your rookie season, with everything that went on such as Darryl Kile’s death and things like that?

JS: I think what happens is, you know, we are trained to play the game. Just like you, I’m going to school. This is my last semester. I’ve got a kid that’s due here May 2nd. We’ve got a new house. We’ve got two kids and three dogs. We’ve got a lot of stuff going on. I tell my manager this, "You know, these six hours or seven hours that we get at the ballpark are almost like a relief from life. We get to come here and enjoy this game." So, we’re kind of trained as we go through our career. When we get to the ballpark, we just take care of business and really try to focus on what we have to do.

With Matheny, there’s no doubt about it. We could sit here and talk for hours, and I can give you tons of examples. He’s just exemplified the Cardinal Way in a sense. He’s a hard worker. He’s smart. But the way it was is he knew every pitcher—from the bullpen to the starters. What pitches they throw, what they can trust. What’s not working for them in certain innings. Their personalities. How to get through to them. If he needs to pump them up, if he needs to be serious. He has the same demeanor as the manager right now. Just really business-like.

When we lost DK, you can’t describe that. It was hectic. It was turmoil. I don’t know how to say it. When DK left us, it was I don’t know. I remember Tony just telling us you know that DK lost his dad when he was forty something years old. His dad told DK, "You need to separate business and personal stuff." DK never missed a start, so that was one of the reasons why we played. He was supposed to start that day. So we did.

I don’t want to put [Matheny] so much on a pedestal; everybody already does that enough. He works hard at it. That’s the type of guy he is—very detail oriented. And that’s how he was with us. He was another coach on the field. There’s no question about that.

You know what. I am not going to take anything away from Matheny, but I think, if there is any credit whatsoever, the majority of the credit would go to Tony, with how he handled that [situation]. For me, I knew DK for about a month. So, I didn’t have that attachment that those two men had. I knew who he was, but I didn’t have that relationship with him like Morris, Matheny, or anyone on that team. The type of people, now not the athletes, we had on that team got us through. Obviously, the leadership of Tony helped us and guided us. We became a family, there’s no question about that. Looking back on it, it was my rookie year, and that whole season was a blur. I forgot half the stuff that happened, and then I hear people talk about it, and I’m like, "Oh yeah, I remember that."

VEB: Where's your favorite place to eat in Peoria?

JS: I would probably have to say this Chinese buffet right across the river that’s about eight bucks. They actually have a guy that makes sushi right in front of you. If you get a water, it’s about $8.50; if you get a drink, it’s just under ten bucks. But it’s all you can eat, so it’s pretty good stuff.

VEB: Do you call the pitches or do you leave it up to the catchers and pitchers?

JS: Nah. No. I let them. Actually, I haven’t called a pitch all year. They need to learn from failing, you know? So when they fail, they throw a pitch they shouldn’t throw, I’ll ask them. I will be inquisitive about it. I would rather have a guy be 100% convinced on the "wrong pitch" than 80% on the "right pitch."

VEB: How much of your job is about pitchers’ mechanics or are you there more for the mental approach to the game?

JS: Yeah, I think there is, but a lot of these guys I’m seeing for the first time. I need to also observe them and find out who they are. At the lower levels, I think it is important to develop them mechanically. We’re not trying to "cookie-cut" them by any means. Everybody is individual, everyone is unique. We usually just go with what they have. We try to make their mechanics more repeatable. But mechanically, not much. Some more than others, of course. When guys have been throwing anywhere from 19 like Alex Reyes to 23 or 24, they’ve been throwing for a long time with the same mechanics. Sometimes, you have to be careful about changing a guy’s mechanics because their body may not adjust to that too well.

On the mental part, too, that’s the big part. It’s easy to go out there and pitch and have a great game, but do you know how you got there? Do you know what you did? I want these guys to feel themselves and feel their mechanics when they do something wrong, when they hang a curveball, or yank a fastball. In their delivery, they knew exactly what they did, so they can be their own coach and make their own adjustments.

VEB: How often are young pitchers encouraged to learn new pitches or stop throwing certain pitches?

JS: It depends on what their pitch is doing. Obviously, if it’s not getting guys out and it’s not being effective for them. Sometimes, a guy goes from a split to a changeup, depending on his arm action or his arm slot. One could be better than the other. Sometimes, I don’t necessarily suggest it to the pitcher, but I suggest it to the pitching coordinator and let him know what my observations are. He’ll then come in or he’ll see video. He has a history with these guys as well, so we’ll converse about that. A lot of these guys, this is their first year in the long season, a full season of baseball. You have to let them get out there and get their feet wet. We want them to learn who they are as a pitcher.

VEB: What are your first impressions of Alex Reyes and Carson Kelly and his conversion to catcher?

JS: Let’s see. Alex Reyes. I mean, obviously, I like his fastball. He’s a young, nice kid. He’s learning. When you talk to him, it’s not like he’s looking right through you. He’s trying to absorb as much as he can. He has a power curveball. Obviously a power fastball at 95, sitting at 94-95. His stuff could pitch in the big leagues, let’s put it that way, even his changeup. There’s obviously a gap between A-ball and the big leagues, but I’m excited, and I’m think everyone in the organization is excited as well. He’s another power arm, like a [Trevor] Rosenthal. He’s one of those guys where we know he’s got the ability. It’s already here. It’s just now we need to fine-tune it.

With Kelly, I think he’s hit the ground running. When they asked him about [the switch to catcher] during instruction ball, he thought it over which was a good decision. I think he talked to his agent and his dad and decided that it was probably the best [option for him]. I think he spent some time with Matheny during the offseason, up in St. Louis. Obviously, he was in big league camp with him. I think it was great for him to go there and see how guys handle themselves, especially when he’s got one of the best catchers in the game [to learn from]. He’s one of those guys that you can tell has the passion, there’s no question about it. His work ethic is good. There’s been a couple times where he’s been coming in early, even after a night game and coming in early before a day game blocking balls in the dirt. He’s still learning his pitchers and how to pitch hitters. He’s got a good release. He’s right at about two [seconds], from home to second. He’s obviously got a strong arm. Assuming he learns this stuff, he’ll be moving [up through the system] I would imagine.

VEB: What was it like starting against the Yankees in Yankee Stadium on the night Roger Clemens got his 300th career win?(This question came from Bernie Miklasz)

JS: Well, I knew I was going to start against him five days after my last start. I had looked at the schedule and was like "oh my gosh." As a kid, I had his pictures and posters all over my room. So, it was almost like my first day in the big leagues. I knew what I needed to do. I needed to stay focused and not get caught up in the moment.

What I remember about that game is this. Warming up in the bullpen, it was kind of misty, kind of rainy. They had that little net over the top of us so fans don’t throw stuff on you and stuff like that. Then I remember walking out to the mound in the first inning and toeing the rubber, remembering that Roger Clemens just pitched off this mound—just now pitched off this mound. It was nothing about the 300th win. I would’ve loved to have made him wait five more days, but that’s it. I don’t remember much else. I never looked up into the stands. I don’t even remember walking on and off the field. I don’t remember pitches or how the guys hit. I just know we got the loss.

The next thing I remember is sitting in Tony’s office after the game. He was like, "You know, I just want to commend you on a great game. You gave us an opportunity to get the win. You made some tough pitches." I think he understood the moment too. It was one of those things that Tony does well. Tony had never really talked to me before that, sitting down or anything like that.

Other than that, it was cool because I had my dad up in the stands—it was father’s day weekend. A couple of my friends had made the trip up to New York, so we had a good weekend. The best thing was on Sunday. Even though I got the loss, I mean what the heck, I mean, it was his 300th win.

The best thing was on Sunday when he went out to go pitch his bullpen. I was out in right field, and he came running by. I was like, "Hey Rocket!" He looked over, and I ran over to him and said, "Hey, listen, I’ve got a jersey, and I was just wondering if you would sign it along with some baseballs," and he looked at me and said, "Bring anything over, and I’ll knock it out. I’ll sign whatever you want." So, I have his jersey hanging up in my house right now, so that’s pretty cool.

As I stated earlier, I am extremely grateful for the time Jason devoted to completing this interview. Despite the fact that it was a game day for the Chiefs, he gave me 25 minutes of his time. The Cardinals are lucky to have a guy like him in the organization.

Yankees hot streak has been perfectly timed

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There are ups and downs to any season, and the Yankees have picked a perfect stretch to be on an upswing.

The Yankees find themselves on quite a roll these days. They have won six of their last seven with four of those victories coming at the expense of American League East rivals the Boston Red Sox and Tampa Bay Rays. Wins are wins, obviously, and you can't choose who you beat. It's just sheer good luck that the Yankees stretch of quality baseball has come at the perfect time. They have three more games against the Rays in Tampa followed by three in Fenway Park against the Red Sox. It's a chance to put some space between themselves and their biggest rivals in the division, which could prove advantageous as the season moves along.

The value of momentum in baseball has always been near impossible to quantify. It almost certainly has a positive effect on the mindset on the fans and the players who are winning, but how that translates to success from one game to the next is an unknown. After all, even a 10-2 drubbing against David Price would all but be wiped away if Hiroki Kuroda came out today and gave up five home runs. One terrible performance can erase the positives gleaned from ten games before it.

All that being said, the Yankees are stringing together great performances at just the right time. The Yankees had two similarly excellent stretches in April of 2013, winning six of seven games on one occasion and seven of eight games on another. Amazingly all just in that one month, which seems absurd, considering what a mess 2013 turned out to be. Those stretches, however, were all against non-divisional opponents. There's obviously more value to a win versus a team you might need to best in a divisional tiebreaker against than the Minnesota Twins.

There is one other thing that could potentially come from putting together a good run in these next six games: panic. The Red Sox and Rays are two teams that have front offices that believe in the process. They will not easily be scared if the Yankees run roughshod over them in the next six games. But the Rays have already lost Matt Moore, are concerned about the contract status of David Price and have a small payroll. Putting them in a hole in the division over the next three games could make their decisions that much more difficult as the season goes on. As for the Red Sox, the media and fans will run around as if on fire if the Yankees can put a good thumping on them in the upcoming series. And that sort of distraction is never completely useless.

It's still incredibly early in the season. The Yankees can't win the division or crush the wills of their rivals now. But they can go a long way in helping their fortunes, especially since they won't see either of these teams for another two months. The Yankees seem to be firing on all cylinders, so here's hoping that lasts at least for another six games. Who knows just how much they might matter in the long wrong.

Umpire ‘with a personality’ gets the call to the big leagues

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Tom Woodring has experience in several leagues, including the Pacific Coast, Gulf Coast, California, Eastern and Arizona Fall League.

From Omaha, Neb. to Yankee Stadium in 24 hours - that's what happened to former Pacific Coast League umpire Tom Woodring this week.

Woodring was scheduled to work the Omaha-Round Rock series in Omaha, but after his plane landed he got the call to the big leagues. He umpired his first game in Yankee Stadium in the Yankees-Cubs game on April 16.

Not a bad way to make your debut.

According to CloseCallSports.com, Woodring began his MiLB umpiring career in the Gulf Coast League and worked the California and Eastern Leagues before his promotion to Triple-A. The site says he also worked the 2012 All-Star Futures Game and 2012 Arizona Fall League.

When I tweeted the news about Woodring's promotion - Ryan Verdugo, a pitcher in the Royals farm system - responded.

"Good for him," Verdugo said. "He's a good guy. I had him back in the CAL league also ... he's actually an ump with a personality."

That's not to say other umpires lack personality, but Verdugo was saying Woodring shows his on the field. So I asked him what that looks like.

"He actually jokes with players and you can ask him stuff without him getting mad or defensive," Verdugo said.

A Brief Bit of Nostalgia: 2008 Dustin McGowan

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He was good and then got hurt an now he's not really that good.

Two rough starts and one nice start in to the season, the most reassuring thing we've seen so far from Dustin McGowan is the fact that he is actually back, and healthy, so far.

For a Blue Jays team that has been plagued by all sorts of ridiculous injuries over the past year plus, McGowan being able to return and earn his first win since 2008 gives some semblance of hope that maybe this team can actually...be okay?

McGowan's injury history is long, exhausting, and makes you appreciate his battling back to the majors even more:

  • July 2008: Pulled from a games with shoulder soreness, placed on 15-day DL, year end shoulder surgery
  • Early 2009: While rehabbing that same shoulder, McGowan underwent surgery on his knee to repair cartilage. He did not pitch professionally in 2009.
  • 2010: More issues and discomfort in the shoulder - and another surgery. Six months lost. Like 2009, no professional pitching in 2010.
  • In 2011: McGowan was actually able to pitch in the minors, and made it to the Blue Jays in September to pitch in four games.
  • 2012: Shoulder problems! Did not pitch in a game all year and underwent arthroscopic shoulder surgery in August.

(h/t Jays Journal)

That's five years of shoulder and knee problems. Five years! That's an incredible amount of time.

McGowan finally made it back to the Jays in 2013 and pitched out of the bullpen, doing very well - 2.45 ERA, 170 ERA+, and a 2.17 SO/BB ratio (9.1 SO/9!).

This year, he has had three starts - the first was the home opener against the Yankees, and McGowan did not do well. The second, against the Orioles, was much better, and the third, against the Twins, was closer to the first than the second.

Here's something Andrew Stoeten of Drunk Jays Fans tweeted out - a bit of discouraging news about McGowan, just before his start against the Twins.

As it stands right now, in three starts McGowan has pitched 13 innings to a 4.86 ERA and 4.66 FIP.

Pre-Hurt

Going back to before the injuries, McGowan always showed signs of promise - a powerful fastball, huge curve, slider and sinker with a ton of movement, and a nice looking changeup. Unfortunately the ERA never really reflected the great pitches - his best was 4.08 in 2007.

The entire pitching rotation in 2008 was insanely good. Halladay (2.78 ERA, 152 ERA+), Burnett (4.07, 104), Jesse Litsch (3.58, 118), Shaun Marcum (3.39, 125), and McGowan (4.37, 97) combined for 66 wins and were one of the better rotations in baseball.

Just for comparison's sake, last year's rotation had zero pitchers with an ERA+ above 100, the best were RA Dickey's 98 and Mark Buehrle's 99. So, the Blue Jays' top four guys in the rotation in 2008 were better than any Blue Jays starter last year.

GIFs!

Anyway, back to McGowan, and the entire point of this post -

Here, courtesy of the wonderful Brooks Baseball, is the data on McGowan's pitches:

Screen_shot_2014-04-15_at_5

I was able to go back and find video of some of McGowan's starts in 2008, and wanted to show some of his pitches just to appreciate how dominant he could have been.

Fastball:

Averaged 95 mph, threw the pitch 34.42% of the time

Fastball_medium

Sinker:

Averaged 95 mph, 23.74% frequency

Splitter1_medium

Change:

Avg 87 mph, 11.62% freq

I couldn't find this pitch so here is another splitter. Hnngggg

Splitter_2_medium

Slider:

Avg 88 mph, 20.13% freq

Slider_medium

Curve:

Avg 81 mph, 10.10% freq

Curve_medium

We're never going to get the McGowan back who could start games and touch 98 with his fastball. Being injured for five years in a row will do that. Let's just hope that he can be a solid fifth starter and not get hurt. Again.

In defense of Mark Teixeira

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As the Yankees' first baseman begins his latest comeback attempt, it's time to separate Mark Teixiera the player from Mark Teixeira the contract.

Over the past year, seeing Mark Teixeira on a baseball field has become a lot like the total lunar eclipse blood moon phenomenon that was visible across the US early Tuesday morning - it doesn't happen very often. And also like the blood moon for most of the east coast thanks to thick cloud cover, Teixeira's comeback attempts over the past year or so have amounted to pretty much nothing. It's a situation that's left Yankee fans frustrated, to say the least, wondering whether their team will get any return whatsoever on the $67.5 million they still owe their first baseman through 2016.

2014 wasn't supposed to begin like this for Teixeira. He was supposed to be back, fully recovered from the torn ECU sheath that cost him virtually all of 2013, ready to bring his much-missed power bat to the center of the Yankee lineup. But then spring training happened. The month of March saw Teixeira go 3 for 35 in exhibition games with no home runs and just one extra-base hit. Teixeira drew heat for complaining - honestly, but repeatedly, about the lack of strength he felt in his surgically repaired wrist, which he said was stopping him from fully letting loose on his swing. And then the season began. In four games, Tex was a sort-of better 3 for 13 (all singles) before reaching for a ball in foul territory, pulling a hamstring, and landing on the DL once again.

This year's early returns are just more piled on to a massive landfill of disappointment that's buried Teixeira for the past year and to a degree, over his Yankee career as a whole. From the offensive drop-off that began in 2010, a few years before anyone expected, to the strained calf that kept him out for most of September in 2012, to the above-mentioned wrist injury suffered while training for the World Baseball Classic with Team USA last March, to the epic fail of a return attempt in May that ceded first base to retreads for virtually all of 2013, it's been a rough go, and fan opinion has gotten less and less forgiving.

Injuries usually aren't a player's fault, and most people know that, but knowing and accepting aren't always the same, especially when said player earns upwards of $22 million per season. Teixeira's also managed to rub some fans the wrong way with some of the comments he's made to the media. His public self-doubt regarding his wrist hasn't done him any favors, and his steadfast defiance when anyone dares mention the possibility of hitting away from the shift that opposing managers deploy against his left-handed self isn't so popular either. There's a lot of fervent and often irrational fan angst floating aimlessly around the Yankee Universe - with Alex Rodriguez off polishing his mariachi skills somewhere - and it seems to have found a new target of choice in Teixeira. But is all that ire even remotely fair?

Let's tackle the least credible criticisms of Teixiera first. When he went down with the hamstring pull in the first week of the season we heard a lot of talk that it was a sign he "didn't care anymore" or "wasn't in shape." We've also heard the idea put out there that Teixeira's interests outside of baseball, like his infamous gross-looking juice business, were "distracting" him somehow. None of that's true. Throughout his career, Teixeira's never been described as anything but a ridiculously hard worker and there's hasn't been anything leaked to suggest that he skimped on his rehab during his time off last year. If Teixeira can't make it fully back, it won't be because he doesn't want it badly enough.

On to the more serious stuff. There are two pretty commonly held misnomers about Teixeira and the struggles that began for him in 2010, his second year as a Yankee. The first is that the short porch in right field at Yankee Stadium has turned him into a one-dimensional pull hitter from the left side, who only swings for the fences. It's the opposite, really - a huge part of the reason the Yankees decided to commit eight years and $180 million to Teixeira was that his left-handed swing was already a near-perfect fit for their ballpark. Teixeira's always been a pull hitter as a lefty, especially when it comes to balls hit on the ground. In 2008, when Teixeira played for the Braves and Angels in arguably the best offensive season of his career - a year that saw him hit .311/.405/.588 with a wRC+ of 157 from the left side, his spray chart was almost identical to what it was in 2012, when he hit just .239/.341/.448 left-handed. Teixeira's lefty struggles as a Yankee are due to a natural loss of bat speed that's turned fly balls and line drives into grounders and pop-ups when pitchers jam him inside, not a desperate need to hit home runs in Yankee Stadium.

The second major misconception is that Teixeira's problems since 2010 can be blamed entirely or at least in large part on defensive shifts. This is where Tex has gotten himself in trouble with fans prickly about the fact that he won't start bunting or slapping the ball to defeat an infield stacked with three or four guys on the right side. The thing about the shift, though, is that the only hits it takes away are singles. Sure it's funny when a lefty power guy hits a tapper toward third and it's an easy hit, with someone needing to run clear across the infield to grab it. I'm not suggesting that a well-timed bunt down two runs with no one on base wouldn't be a good idea. But for the most part, that's not who Teixeira is or what he's here to do. Scorched liners and deep flies don't get scooped up by repositioned infielders. The Yankees need the kind of hitter Tex used to be - even if it's a severely watered down edition- a lot more than they need a slow version of Ichiro Suzuki.

Besides, beating the shift by going the other way isn't as easy as some would like to think. To match their fielders' positioning, pitchers generally work from the middle of the plate in on left-handed Teixeira. A power hitter for his entire life, he doesn't have a Derek Jeter inside-out special in his repertoire to combat that approach, and trying to develop one would result in a lot of flimsy at bats that don't produce that much even when they're successful.

Teixeira played three innings in an extended spring training game yesterday with the goal of rejoining the Yankees as early as Sunday. It's time to accept that his eight-year deal isn't going to go down as one of the great successes in Yankee history. It's also time to separate Mark Teixeira the contract from Mark Teixeira the player. The first baseman the Yankees are getting back, when healthy, has never actually had a bad season. In 2012, at his worst, he was an above average hitter (.251/.332/.475 116 wRC+) with still excellent power (.224 ISO) playing stellar defense (12.9 UZR/150). He also mashed from the right side to the tune of a .263 ISO, a .364 wOBA and a wRC+ of 129, which would be a welcome addition to a fairly lefty-heavy lineup. That kind of production doesn't win MVP's or Silver Sluggers, but it's a kind the Yankees could seriously benefit from somewhere in the middle of their order.

Yankees lineup vs. Rays - Injury updates for Teixeira, Robertson, Ryan

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The Yankees will try to build off of last night's awesome game in the second game of this four-game series against the Rays. I don't know how they can top a triple play, destroying David Price, and Yangervis Solarte's first career home run, but maybe Erik Bedard can help them out.

The lineup seems pretty familiar: Brett Gardner, Derek Jeter, and Jacoby Ellsbury at the top of the lineup. Alfonso Soriano and Brian McCann follow in the heart of the lineup. Yangervis Solarte stays at second base with Kelly Johnson returning to first base, allowing Scott Sizemore to move over to third, where he's probably much more comfortable playing. Ichiro Suzuki is in tonight's game, which makes me worry about Carlos Beltran, who underwent precautionary tests after last night's game when he tumbled head-over-heels over the short outfield wall. He stayed in the game, so he's probably not hurt, but I'll be he's pretty sore so they probably want to take it easy on him.

As for actually injured players, David Robertson was seen taking part in pitcher fielding practice at Tropicana Field, so he's with the team and seems ready to return on Tuesday. Mark Teixeira went 1-for-5 in an extended spring training game, but more importantly, he felt comfortable with his swing and didn't feel like he was protecting his wrist like he was at the beginning of the season. He should be ready to return on Sunday.

Brendan Ryan, on the other hand, might be out for at least the rest of the month. He took part in a simulated game and will see an increased workload as the week progresses. He's making his way back from a troubling nerve injury in his back, so the Yankees are going to take it easy on him. Ryan says he will need around 35 at-bats, since he never really had a spring training, but we'll have to wait and see when he'll actually be ready.


Yankees 5, Rays 11: The Yankees' bullpen lets one get away

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It looked like it would be an easy Yankee win, until the Rays blew that idea to smithereens. Seriously. The game blew up.

The Yankees came into this game with a five-game winning streak and an excellent early-season record of 10-6. And from very early on in this one, it looked like business as usual. Hiroki Kuroda took the ball for the Yankees, coming into the game with a 3.86 ERA in 18 innings, par for the course for Kuroda. He got off to his usual start, working efficiently through the first two innings and inducing a heck of a lot of weak contact. In the second inning, the Yankees looked like they would make this one a blow out. Brian McCann started the inning with a base hit and Yangervis Solarte followed (aside: Solarte's hitting 193 wRC+ so far this season) with another one. Kelly Johnson then hit into an odd fielder's choice where James Loney tried to get the double play and only hit Solarte on the back, deeming everybody safe as the ball was dead. The unimposing Scott Sizemore then followed with a huge bases-clearing double. And with an Ichiro infield single (that was a reversed call) and an RBI ground out for Gardner, the Yankees had a quick 4-0 lead.

Kuroda looked like he was going to cruise going into the fourth, until the Rays threatened for the first time. Loney hit a 2-RBI double and one batter later, the tying runs were on base. Kuroda worked out of it and got Logan Forsythe to ground out. But, it would be a harbinger for things to come. The Yankees' offense was held at bay by Brad Boxberger who pitched an excellent two innings of no-hit ball as he relieved the ineffective Erik Bedard. In the bottom of the 6th, things started to get ugly. With runners on first and second, Kuroda allowed an RBI single to Wil Myers who narrowed the gap to 4-3. It was clear by that point that Kuroda had no gas left, and he was pulled immediately afterward. David Phelps came in to get a fly out and for the moment, things were under control. In the top of the 7th, the Yankees even tacked on a key insurance run on an Alfonso Soriano RBI single, and that looked like it could seal the deal. That would have been great.

In the bottom of the inning, Phelps was removed after he was hit by a line drive off the bat of Ryan Hanigan, but he seemed alright; it was probably for precautionary reasons. Matt Thornton came in and allowed a single to Ben Zobrist to load the bases. Then Adam Warren came into the game. Warren has been scaring us game and after game as he's teetered on the edge of implosion, but he decided he was going to make our fears become a reality. Desmond Jennings promptly hit an RBI single to net a run; Warren then walked Evan Longoria and allowed a 2-RBI single to Loney that gave the Rays the lead, 6-5. After that, it just looked like the Yankees gave up.

In the top of the 8th, the Yankees went down in order. And in the bottom of the 8th, we entered the nether region of weird baseball. Warren got two quick outs, getting Forsythe to fly out and got Escobar to ground out to third. Then, he allowed a double to Hanigan and a no-doubt home run to Sean Rodriguez, giving the Rays a three-run lead at 8-5. Warren completely melted down in this one, shown by his Win Probability Added of -.664. Yikes. Maybe Joe Girardi should think twice before putting him in to one of the highest leverage situations in baseball. That would have been enough, but the agony continued. Cesar Cabral came in for relief and decided: "Hey, I'm going to forget how to pitch!". I don't even have words for what happened. He allowed a single to Brandon Guyer to score another run, and Myers hit an RBI single to left field to bring in yet another two runs. But in the process, Cabral managed to throw a wild pitch to let a runner advance to second, and hit three (!!!!!!!!) batters in the inning. That ties the major league record for hit-by-pitches in an inning. He was so out of control that home plate umpire Joe West threw Cabral out of the game for a lack of control, which brought in Shawn Kelley to end the inning. I've watched a lot of baseball, but I've never seen that happen. Thankfully, Brandon Gomes killed this game and retired the Yankees in order in the 9th.

I'm not going to lie--this game was ugly. I would have preferred if the Yankees had allowed eleven runs early in the game and put it to rest half way through; those are easy to brush off. That happened against the Orioles and the team quickly moved on. This one was so demoralizing because they had a Win Expectancy at around 90%; it was basically in their clutches. It's only one game, but in such a tight AL East race, it's painful to cough up a game like that to a divisional opponent.

The Yankees will square off once again against the Rays for the third game of a four-game set; they hope to secure at least a split as Ivan Nova will face Chris Archer. You can catch the game on YES, MLB.tv, or WFAN radio at 7:10 PM EST.

Box ScoreGame Graph

Week Four Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire and Sleepers

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AN contributer Phil Naessens answers a question from a listener of his daily show about Albert Callaspo and gives some waiver wire and sleeper suggestions for week number four of the Fantasy Baseball season.

It's week four of the Fantasy Baseball season and I know I should be talking about replacing Matt Moore but I thought better of it (at least here) and would rather answer a listeners question about Alberto Callaspo instead.

Dear Phil,

How can it be possible that an everyday player with the line of .340/.404/.553/.957 like Alberto Callaspo be only owned in 6% of ESPN Leagues? Is there any special reason as to why this is?

Thanks for writing. I think it's because he's from Venezuela. You know how funny their accents are, right?

I'm only kidding here.

The real reason is because he's a utility player. He doesn't have a regular job other than filling in for others and he does it admirably. In a must win ballgame, at least for now, he'll probably be on the bench and that's a killer for Fantasy rosters. What you want to do with Callaspo is watch for any injury to Josh Donaldson or Eric Sogard and if God forbid that should happen then you will want to grab him in a standard 10-12 team league. In deeper leagues and AL only leagues is most likely where he's owned as he is a very good reserve option because he does seem to play everyday.

Here's three players I'm looking at this week.

Josh Reddick OF Oakland: On Friday Reddick seemed to come out of his season long slump hitting a big first inning bomb and going 3-4 on the night. We all know how streaky he is and if he can remain hot this could be a very good thing for Fantasy Owners in either AL only or very deep leagues. (Stats)

Jason Vargas SP Royals: I've been recommending Vargas all season and if you want to grab him in any league you had better do it today otherwise he won't be around for very long. If ERA and Wins are what you are looking for Vargas is your man. (Stats)

Shawn Kelly RP New York Yankees: Kelly is currently the Yankees main closer until David Robertson comes back later on this week but grab him now for a couple of quick saves before he goes back to his normal set-up man role. (Stats)

On my weekly Fantasy Baseball show Fantasy Baseball Weekly I answer a question about daily streaming, give plenty of options for Matt Moore, a complete closer report and who's hot and who isn't plus much more Fantasy news. You can download the show here or listen below.

Good luck this week Fantasy Owners.

Around the Empire: New York Yankees News - 4/19/14

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Last Time on Pinstripe Alley

Yankees News

ESPN New York | Wallace Matthews:CC Sabathia says the Yankees have better chemistry than they have had in the last few years, but what does that mean?

It's About the Money | Michael Eder: Dante Bichette, Peter O'Brien, Angelo Gumbs, Manny Banuelos, and Rafael De Paula are all off to hot starts to start the season.

New York Post | George A. King III:Carlos Beltran feels lucky to be uninjured after falling over the wall during Thursday's game.

I R Fast | Clint Hulsey: Take a look at Masahiro Tanaka's last start through pitch f/x.

Baseball America | Josh Leventhal: The RailRiders are wearing some absolutely hideous forest-themed jerseys for "Outdoors Night."

New York Daily News | Mark Feinsand: Hear what everyone involved in the triple play had to say.

Baseball America | Ben Badler: Rafael De Paula makes the prospect hot sheet for the week.

New York Post | Ken Davidoff: The Yankees have been playing well, but they're also benefitting from the struggles of their AL East competitors.

LoHud | Chad Jennings: Yangervis Solarte, Joe Girardi, and CC Sabathia talk about his amazing start.

ESPN New York | Andrew Marchand: The Yankees and Rays have switched roles now that the Yankees have a young and successful pitching staff and the Rays are sending out the likes of Erik Bedard.

Ticket Exchanges: May 16-21 Homestand

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This homestand features a divisional rival and Derek Jeter's final trip to Wrigley.

Dates and times:

Brewers: May 16 (1:20), May 17 (1:20), May 18 (1:20)

Yankees: May 20 (7:05), May 21 (1:20)

As always, face value only for tickets. If comments to this post are closed, email me and I'll reopen them.

Baby Bomber Recap 4/18/14: Rob Refsnyder goes 3-3 in Thunder win

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Recapping the Yankees' minor league affiliates' results from April 18th.

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:L 5-2 (11 innings) vs. Lehigh Valley IronPigs

RF Ramon Flores 0-5, BB, K, OF assist
2B Jose Pirela 2-6, E4 - throwing error, first of the season
CF Zoilo Almonte 1-4, BB, K - batting .265 this season
1B Russ Canzler 1-4, RBI, K
DH Corban Joseph 0-5
3B Adonis Garcia 4-5
LF Ronnier Mustelier 2-5 - batting .167 since his return
C Austin Romine 0-3, 2 BB, 2 K
SS Carmen Angelini 0-5, K

Alfredo Aceves 5 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, BB, 5 K - 53 of 79 pitches for strikes
Shane Greene 1 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 0 BB, 2 K
Preston Claiborne 1 IP, 2 H, ER, 2 BB, K
Fred Lewis 2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, K
Mark Montgomery 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB
Yoshinori Tateyama 1 IP, 3 H, 3 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, 2 hit batsmen

Double-A Trenton Thunder:W 5-3 vs. Erie SeaWolves

CF Mason Williams 2-5, RBI, K - .273 OBP over his last 10 games
LF Ben Gamel 0-4, BB, E7 - throwing error, first of the season
RF Tyler Austin 1-4, BB, K - batting .211 this season
C Gary Sanchez 1-3, RBI, BB, K - batting .318 this season
1B Kyle Roller 0-4, 2 K
2B Rob Refsnyder 3-3, RBI, BB - batting .333/.421/.515 over his last 10 games
3B Dan Fiorito 3-4, 2 doubles, 2 RBI
DH Taylor Dugas 1-4, K, SB
SS Ali Castillo 1-4, E6 - fielding error, fourth of the season

Matt Tracy 5 IP, H, 2 R/1 ER, 5 BB, 6 K, E1, WP - 53 of 89 pitches for strikes
Pat Venditte 2 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 2 K - 1.29 ERA this season
Taylor Garrison 1 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, BB, WP
Manny Barreda 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, K

High-A Tampa Yankees: Postponed for rain

Low-A Charleston RiverDogs: Postponed for rain

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