Quantcast
Channel: SB Nation - New York Yankees
Viewing all 4714 articles
Browse latest View live

1999: Mets hop on the express

$
0
0

On this 4th of July, let's look back at the Shea half of the Subway Series in 1999 and remember a great American: Matt Franco

After a damaging series hosting the Braves—two ugly losses and an injury to John Franco that would put him on the shelf for at least two months— the Mets welcomed the hapless Expos to Shea Stadium for four games beginning on July 5. With the mercury pushing past 100 and sporadic blackouts striking sections of the city, New York sweated out victories in the first two games. First, a 2-1 win in which Armando Benitez earned his second save since "officially" taking over the closer's role. Then, a 10-0 shellacking behind the ageless arm of Orel Hershiser, who volunteered to take the mound on only one day's rest, thus enabling Bobby Valentine to shuffle his rotation for the upcoming Subway Series.

That Subway Series was partially blamed when the Mets sleepwalked through the last two games against the Expos. A fine outing by Octavio Dotel went to waste when a late, costly error by backup infielder Luis Lopez led to the go-ahead runs scoring in a 3-1 defeat, while another strong performance by Masato Yoshii in the finale was tossed aside by an imploding bullpen, turning a 3-1 lead into a 4-3 loss. The media assumed the team was still brooding over the defeats at the hands of the Braves, or too focused on the impending arrival of the Yankees to pay measly Montreal much mind.

1999 was the first year the Mets and Yankees played two separate series, three games in the Bronx and three games in Queens. There was still some debate as to whether the Subway Series expansion was a good thing. At least there was a debate among fans and pundits. The players had mostly decided they weren't too thrilled with it, and the Yankees were especially displeased. Under immense pressure from the media and their blustery owner to equal the dominance of 1998, the Yankees had no patience for the Subway Series' artificial hype and regarded the whole affair as beneath them.

When asked about his plans for the All Star Break, Paul O'Neill rolled his eyes and said, "First we have to get through the World Series this weekend." George Steinbrenner said he didn't like two series but snorted, "We'll help them get a few sellouts." Joe Torre sounded especially aggrieved and assumed Bobby Valentine and his team were equally sick of the whole thing (which they largely were, although for different reasons). Even the uber-diplomatic Derek Jeter registered a complaint: "It does get a little old."

Perhaps Jeter was bored because the first game at Shea on the evening of July 9 featured the same pitching matchup as the last game in the Bronx, Al Leiter vs. Roger Clemens. Since the two had last faced off, Leiter put the mediocre start to his season in the rear view, while Clemens floundered. By struggling, The Rocket invited critics to make him the scapegoat of a Yankees team that was judged to be lacking a certain something the 1998 team had. A team that had won 125 games was a nearly impossible standard to live up, but fans and press expected them to do so nonetheless.

Clemens appeared powerfully uncomfortable on the mound in the Subway Series opener, as if he could hear the Yankees' announcers wonder aloud when they would see the real Roger Clemens. The Mets drew first blood with an RBI single by Rey Ordoñez in the bottom of the second. The Yankees retaliated with a Chuck Knoblauch run-scoring hit in the top of the third, but in the bottom half, Clemens hung an 0-2 splitter that John Olerud drilled to the big scoreboard in right. All was quiet until the top of the sixth, when a Paul O'Neill RBI double tied the game at 2. O'Neill's hit looked like it might set the stage for a big inning for the Yanks until he ran his team out of a rally with an ill-advised attempt to steal third base.

The Mets struck again in the bottom half, beginning with an Edgardo Alfonzo leadoff bloop double. Olerud batted next, and Clemens was wary of pitching to the first baseman who'd already taken him deep. A walk of Olerud would have made sense if that walk hadn't brought up Mike Piazza, who killed Clemens in their last meeting at Yankee Stadium. Piazza got ahead in the count, 2-1, then turned on a slider and lasered it into the left field bleachers for a three-run blast.

The next two batters received brushback pitches, if only because it was impossible for Clemens to fire brushback pitches at himself. Energized by Piazza's homer, Leiter pitched the seventh and eighth innings with little trouble. Armando Benitez did his best John Franco imitation by allowing two baserunners in the ninth to bring the tying run to the plate, but he struck out pinch hitter Chili Davis for the final out of the Mets' 5-2 victory.

It was as thrilling a game as the Mets had played all season, but less than 24 hours later they played another game that left this one in the dust.

The tilt on the afternoon of July 10 featured Rick Reed against Andy Pettitte, but neither pitcher would figure in the decision, as each team's bats tried to pound the other's into submission. The Yankees grabbed the early lead with a first inning two-run homer off the bat of Paul O'Neill. The Mets responded with a Mike Piazza RBI double in their half of the first and a Rey Ordoñez sac fly in the second to tie things up, then took a 4-2 lead in the fourth on a Robin Ventura RBI double and another Ordoñez sac fly. The fourth run was scored by Ventura—slow under normal circumstances and dealing with a foot injury to boot—when Posada failed to block the plate on a play at home.

The Yanks responded to this response by starting the fifth with back-to-back solo shots from Ricky Ledee and Jorge Posada. Reed exited the game after that frame, but the Bronx Bombers kept right on bombing, with O'Neill going deep again in the sixth against Greg McMichael and Chuck Knoblauch doing the same in seventh off of Rigo Beltran.

With a 6-4 lead under their belt going into the bottom of the seventh, the Yankees removed Pettitte in favor of Ramiro Mendoza. Rickey Henderson greeted him rudely with a bloop hit he hustled into a double. Mendoza then made the same mistake as Clemens did the night before, pitching too carefully to John Olerud and walking him to bring up Piazza. The catcher destroyed a Mendoza fastball, launching it over the picnic tent beyond the visiting bullpen in left field, his second three-run go-ahead shot in as many games, and hit long enough for two homers.

Piazza's moonshot gave the Mets' a 7-6 advantage, but it wouldn't last long. Dennis Cook allowed the Yanks to regain the lead by giving up a two-run blast to Posada in the top of the eighth. When the Mets failed to score in the bottom of half, it assured they would have to mount a comeback against Mariano Rivera in the ninth. This would be a tough hill to climb, since the Yankees' closer had already saved two games against the Mets this season, and was also Mariano Rivera.

After recording the first out easily, Rivera put himself into hot water by walking Henderson. It looked like the free pass might have been harmless when Rivera induced an easy fly ball off the bat of Alfonzo, but Bernie Williams lost the ball somehow. It was not ruled an error, though it probably should have been, as Williams failed to catch an easily catchable ball. Whatever the scoring, the fly ball put Henderson on third and Alfonzo on second as the tying and winning runs. All the Mets needed to tie the game was another fly ball, but Olerud could only manage a hard hit grounder to first. The runners had to hold as Tino Martinez stepped on the bag for out number two.

Piazza came up next with no chance of swinging the bat. After he was intentionally walked, Bobby Valentine sent up Matt Franco, his go-to lefty pinch hitter, but Franco barely had time to think before he fell into an 0-2 hole. Rivera's third pitch came in close to Franco's knees and was deemed a ball by home plate umpire Jeff Kellogg, prompting great weeping and gnashing of teeth from the Yankees' dugout. Given a stay of execution, Franco lined Rivera's next pitch into shallow right field.

Henderson scored, with Alfonzo hot on his heels. O'Neill's throw to the plate was just a hair too late, which meant the Mets had themselves a thrilling, insane 9-8 victory. As the Mets jumped jubilantly and dogpiled like Little Leaguers, NYPD stormed the field, afraid a deliriously happy Shea crowd might tear the place apart.

Police officers were called on again in the Subway Series finale the following afternoon, this time to confiscate brooms from overjoyed Mets fans dreaming of a sweep. It's just as well, as the home team fell just short of executing the first three-game sweep in the Subway Series' brief history. The Mets scored twice in the bottom of the third inning against Hideki Irabu, the much-maligned Japanese pitcher who Steinbrenner once called a "fat pussy toad" for the crime of failing to cover first during a spring training game. Irabu's countryman, Masato Yoshii, couldn't hold the lead as he gave up a three-run homer to Ricky Ledee in the top of the fourth.

In the bottom of the fourth, the Mets tied the score at 3 on a Rey Ordoñez RBI double and put runners on the corners with nobody out, but failed to grab the lead. Having weathered this threat, Irabu stifled the Mets through the seventh inning, while his teammates scored three runs off of Yoshii in the top of the fifth and hung on the rest of the way.

Mariano Rivera shook off his blown save and set the Mets down in order to end the 6-3 Yankees win and draw the curtain on Subway Series action for another year. Upon its conclusion, the dual series format claimed at least one convert in George Steinbrenner, as he conceded, "it's great for the fans of New York. I'll admit that. They've sold me on the greatness of the series." But he was also careful to note that the Subway Series being great for fans didn't mean it was "important" to his ball club. "We didn't put the focus on it," he hastened to add, "the other fellas did."

The Other Fellas headed into the All Star Break with a record of 50-39. The Mets had improved considerably since the first Subway Series, when an eight-game slide nearly killed their season altogether, but they still trailed the Braves by 5 full games in the NL East standings. To have any chance of catching Atlanta, the Mets would have to play out of their minds for entire summer. After the All Star Break, that's exactly what they'd do.


Daily Yankees Predictions 7/4/14: Today We Celebrate Our Independence Day

$
0
0

Chase Whitley gets the start for the Yankees this afternoon as they try for two wins in a row. Happy Fourth of July and Happy Birthday George Steinbrenner.

Masahiro Tanaka had an off day, giving up four runs over seven innings and only striking out three batters. Thankfully, the offense heard our pleas and backed him up with some timely hits and a couple of dingers. To be fair though, happy as I am that Phil Hughes has seemingly found himself on the Twins, he owed us a couple meatballs.

7/3/14 Daily Prediction Answers

1.How many innings does the Yankees starter pitch?7
2.How many hits do the Yankees relievers give up?0
3.Combined number of strikeouts from both starting pitchers9
4.Total number of hits from the Yankees 1, 2, & 3 batters only1
5.Total number of walks from the Yankees 4, 5, & 6 batters only0
6.Total number of RBIs from the Yankees 7, 8, & 9 batters only2
7.Name one Yankee you think will hit a home run tonight.Beltran/Wheeler
8.Best overall Yankee of the night?Tanaka/Wheeler

Ahhhh Tanaka Time. The time when pretty much everyone scores at least 1,000 points. Two people,  ASR and selftitled85 scored 3,000 points. However, our winner is Q-TDSK who managed to score 4,000 points. Congrats to all and good luck today!

7/4/14 Daily Predictions & Fun Questions

1.How many innings does the Yankees starter pitch?
2.How many hits do the Yankees relievers give up?
3.Combined number of strikeouts from both starting pitchers
4.Total number of hits from the Yankees 1, 2, & 3 batters only
5.Total number of walks from the Yankees 4, 5, & 6 batters only
6.Total number of RBIs from the Yankees 7, 8, & 9 batters only
7.Name one Yankee you think will hit a home run tonight.
8.Best overall Yankee of the night?

How will you be celebrating America's Independence today? (For those of you who do celebrate it, I mean)

Happy Birthday Boss: Do you have a favorite George Steinbrenner moment? If so, please share.

Happy Birthday John Sterling: Tell us you favorite AND least favorite Sterling HR call?

Least favorite condiment?

Chase Whitley gets the start for the Yankees today. And should we win the day, the Fourth of July will no longer be known as an American holiday, but as the day when the Yankees and their fans declared in one voice: We will not go quietly into the night! We will not vanish without a fight! We're going to live on! We're going to survive! Today, we celebrate our Independence Day!

Or, you know, Let's Go Yankees.

(I love that speech from ID4)

In honor of the 75th anniversary of Lou Gehrig's speech: "Luckiest Man" giveaway

$
0
0

Do you want to win a free bestselling book about Lou Gehrig? See how you can!

Seventy-five years ago today, perhaps the most historic moment in New York Yankees history occurred at Yankee Stadium on an emotional Independence Day on July 4, 1939:

Gehrig was an unbelievably terrific first baseman throughout his time in pinstripes. He was arguably the greatest of all time, and certainly the best in Yankees history. A .340/.447/.632 hitter who slugged 534 doubles and 493 homers, Gehrig posted a ridiculous 112.0 rWAR in 14 seasons from 1925-38, excluding abbreviated stints in '23, '24, and '39. The Yankees won eight World Series titles and nine American League pennants with Gehrig on the team, and he served as the Yankees' captain from 1935 onward.

Then, there was of course his famous consecutive games played streak, which came to define his career. From June 1, 1925 onward, he never missed a game for the Yankees, appearing a then-record 2,130 straight games, a mark that stood for 56 years. Through numerous aches, pains, beanings, and supposedly even breaking all of his fingers at one point or another during the streak, he stayed in the lineup and was remarkably productive, too. He was the "Iron Horse," and that's what made his sudden decline in '39 so stunning.

Gehrig was only two months shy of his 36th birthday and though his performance slipped somewhat in '38, he still hit .295/.410/.523 with 32 doubles, 29 homers, and a 132 OPS+. However, he looked terrible in spring training of '39 and went a dismal 4-for-28 to start the season. He told manager Joe McCarthy to take him out of the lineup on May 2nd in Detroit. He tragically never played in another major league game; a trip to the Mayo Clinic later confirmed that he was diagnosed with a very rare disease: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS. Not many people knew about it at the time, but it was a horribly cruel disease that let people live for a few years while slowly destroying their quality of life. Gehrig's body would slowly cease to function while his mind stayed intact until eventually he lost the ability to breathe.

Although the extent to Gehrig's illness was not known to everyone at the time, the Yankees honored Gehrig on July 4th of that year by making him the first baseball player to ever have his number retired, and they held a reunion of the legendary "Murderers' Row" team of 1927, the year that Gehrig broke out and became a star. Teammates new and old, including Babe Ruth, lauded Gehrig, and his manager McCarthy fought back tears as he spoke of Gehrig's importance to the team, even after his playing career ended. Gehrig was called upon to speak, and he delivered the "Luckiest Man" speech linked in the video above. Just two years later, Gehrig was gone.

Now, seventy-five years to the day that Gehrig spoke to the Yankee Stadium crowd, Major League Baseball is honoring his memory by wearing a memorial patch today to show solidarity with the fight against ALS and first basemen around the game participated in reciting his speech:

The Yankees did it, too:

Thanks to Simon & Schuster, Pinstripe Alley is able to participate in our own way by giving away a few free copies of Jonathan Eig's brilliant 2005 biography of Gehrig, Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig. Here's how you can win one:

1) In commemoration of Gehrig's #4, be the 444th person to comment in our Yankees vs. Twins Game Thread today. If the thread does not reach 444 comments (which is certainly possible since it's a holiday and all that), then we will give it away to the 74th person to comment. (If it's one of the people on the writing staff, then we'll figure something else out.)

2) At 4:44 PM EST today, I will ask a Gehrig trivia question on the Pinstripe Alley Twitter account. The first person to come up with the answer wins a book. Be sure you're following us so that you have a chance to win a copy!

3) At 4:44 PM EST today, I will also ask a Gehrig trivia question on the Pinstripe Alley Facebook account. Again, the first person to come up with the answer wins a book. Like us on Facebook to participate!

4) To accommodate for those of you who are understandably busy today and might not be around the computer to participate in the other three, we will also have a FanPost contest that will run through the end of next week! Simply create a FanPost and tell us about your favorite Yankees experience. This is admittedly a broad topic, but it gives you the creative flexibility to write about whatever you want. We're more interested in your personal story regarding something regarding the Yankees, not necessarily describing the moment itself. It can be an experience you had at Yankee Stadium, an experience you had with family and friends regarding the Yankees, or whatever. You decide! The editors will convene to determine the winner. Don't be shy! Write it by 11:59 PM EST next Thursday and you can win!

Please comment if you have any questions. Hope you have a wonderful holiday!

Is Derek Jeter's "hot streak" just a mirage?

$
0
0

Jeter has hit near league average over his last 100 PA, but this could just be an illusion.

We all know that offense was Derek Jeter's bread and butter during the height of his career. Unfortunately, that's the biggest thing that this team is lacking, and Jeter is part of that shortcoming. Jeter is currently batting .271/.325/.329 (82 wRC+) with just nine doubles, one triple, and two home runs. That level of performance pegs him at 17th among 25 qualified shortstops in wRC+ and 20th in fWAR (0.6).

But, he may have turned it around. Since June 7th (his last 98 plate appearances), he's hit .300/.340/.378 (99 wRC+) with one home run and four doubles. The power doesn't look like it's ever coming back, but everything else? Possibly. Let's take a look at what sticks out in this stretch. Firstly, this streak is not being helped by his batting average on balls in play. His BABIP during this period has been .325, a mark that is 22 points under his 2012. Now, I'm sure part of that has to do with the diminished gap power Jeter possesses, but we can tell with the eye test that the BABIP isn't handing him these base hits. They, for the most part, aren't cheap shots.

However, I wouldn't go too far with that narrative. While they aren't cheap shots in the sense that they aren't bloop hits, that doesn't mean that they're scorchers either. While just about everything in this stretch is stable and normal based on his history (walk rate, strikeout rate), his isolated power is not. Jeter has a career ISO of .132 and sat at .113 as recently as 2012, but this year he has an ISO of only .058, and only .078 during these last 98 PA. Jeter hit 15 home runs and 32 doubles in 2012; he has only two home runs and nine doubles so far this season. According to Steamer projections, that is not supposed to regress in a positive direction. He is projected to hit three more home runs and ten more doubles for the rest of the season, putting him at an ISO of .070.

It's not like we should be expecting the moon from Jeter. He is in his last season and came off a year of major injury; it's no surprise that his bat speed and power have been sapped. If his hitting does flourish a bit more as we have seen lately, he could look to propel himself among the upper-half of shortstops in MLB. This will be difficult without the power, but it's certainly possible. He would have to maintain his high batting average and on-base percentage and make his game about constant singles and walks. For someone who was projected to do nothing, that would not be too bad.

I have two mindsets--follow the projections, and have faith in Jeter. I lean somewhere in the middle. While I know that Jeter has and could turn it all around (look at 2011), the projections are not pretty. Then again, this is an area that can be hairy for projection systems. When dealing with players on either end of the aging curve, there just aren't enough comps to provide a high-correlation prediction. Sometimes there are players like Bartolo Colon that just break your projection system for an older age. I don't think that Jeter is like Colon in that respect, but I think that he has it in him to prove the projections wrong, somewhat. If he could propel himself to near-league average, it would be a boon that the Yankees would certainly enjoy.

CC Sabathia could miss the rest of the 2014 season

$
0
0

After just two rehab starts, CC Sabathia was recently shutdown with swelling in his knee. It was believed he would be out of action for at least some time as they conducted tests to make sure what exactly was going on. While the MRI didn't show anything specific, CC will be going back to Dr. Andrews so they can figure out what's wrong. It is believed that microfracture surgery is still on the table.

Asked whether all this meant that Sabathia was effectively done for the season, Yankees manager Joe Girardi only said that's "fair to say," which seems to show that even the organization has lost faith that the team's former ace can make it back this season.

While CC hasn't exactly offered much help this year, he could be an upgrade over Vidal Nano and a regressing Chase Whitley. He will be heading to the doctor on July 14 so we, and the Yankee front office have some time to wonder about the 2014 rotation and whether or not CC will even pitch again.

CC Sabathia possibly out for year with knee injury

$
0
0

CC Sabathia won't have his knee checked out by Dr. James Andrews for another 10 days, but manager Joe Girardi conceded that he might be gone.

It sounds as if left-hander CC Sabathia, whose recovery from knee issues offered the Yankees some faint hope of bolstering their rotation behind ace Masahiro Tanaka, won't be back this year. Sabathia was shelled during a rehab start at Double-A Trenton on Wednesday, then woke up on Thursday with fluid and swelling in his knee. An MRI revealed inflammation, but a follow-up trip to see Dr. James Andrews was scheduled. This morning, ESPN's Buster Olney reported that microfracture surgery on the knee was a possibility, and this afternoon, Yankees manager Joe Girardi seemed to agree, saying, "I think that's fair to say," when asked if he assumed Sabathia was done for the season.

Sabathia is not scheduled to see Andrews until July 14, so his status will remain unknown until then at earliest.

Should the 2007 Cy Young Award winner not return to pitch this season, the question of how much he has left in the tank will remain in abeyance until next spring. In 2013, the pitcher's velocity and strikeout rate dropped to an average of 91.3 mph, and a further drop, to an average of 89.6 mph, was seen in his eight starts this spring. In a league in which the average pitcher is allowing about one home run per nine innings pitched, Sabathia had allowed 10 in 46 innings, or an even 2.0. The ratio would lead the league by a wide margin were Sabathia to qualify -- Wei-Yin Chen of Baltimore and Jake Peavy of Boston are currently tied for the worst rate on the circuit at 1.5 home runs per nine.

Sabathia's strikeout rate remained high, a good sign, but the decreased velocity and the regularity with which batters were making hard contact was troubling. He had an ERA of 7.47 in three starts at home, and, as Bill James once wrote, it's never a good thing to have the ERA of a jumbo jet. His ERA away from home run-loving Yankee Stadium was a livable 4.15 (about league average for starting pitchers this year), but he had still allowed seven round-trippers in just 30 innings; the ERA was probably fated to rise.

Ironically, Sabathia was less of a jumbo jet himself this season, having shed a great deal of weight, but the breakdown came anyway. With 2,775innings entering the season, he had pitched more innings by age 32 than any hurler of the last 40 years except Greg Maddux, and was roughly 40 innings ahead of the next left-hander, Frank Tanana, and 200 ahead of Frank Viola.

With 205 career wins coming into the season, tying him with Tim Hudson for the lead among active pitchers to that point, Sabathia seemed like the most likely candidate to be the game's next 300-game winner, assuming he could make a successful adjustment to his declining stuff. That all seems doubtful now, as does his ability to fulfill the remaining two or three years of his contract (the latter depending on a vesting option) at a high level. Regardless, the Yankees are on the hook for $23 million this year and either $53 million or $73 million through 2017.

Yankees 6, Twins 5: Brian Roberts can hit?

$
0
0

The Yankees take their second game in a row behind some terrific hitting from...Brian Roberts and Francisco Cervelli?

Chase Whitley took the hill for the Yankees today, facing off against Kyle Gibson and the Twins for the Fourth of July.  After scoring seven runs against Twins' ace Phil Hughes and snapping a five-game losing streak last night, the Yankees offense picked up right where it left off: Brett Gardner led the game off with a triple, and Brian Roberts immediately knocked him home with a double (the first of three on the afternoon).  After Jacoby Ellsbury grounded out, Mark Teixeira hit a double of his own to score Roberts, and Tex himself would find his way home after a sacrifice fly from Carlos Beltran.  After the dust had settled, the Yankees found themselves up 3-0, and Whitley had a lead to work with before he ever took the mound.

Whitley unfortunately wasted no time giving some ground back: Brian Dozier hit a leadoff home run to start the game for the Twins.  While Whitley did get out of the inning without surrendering any further damage (although two more runners would reach base), a rough first inning was just the beginning of Whitley's troubles.

The Yankees got to Gibson again in the second.  After Francisco Cervelli doubled to open the inning, he moved to third on Kelly Johnson's groundout and then scored on Brendan Ryan's sac fly to center.  But the Bronx Bombers weren't done yet - Gardner worked a walk, Roberts hit another double, and both scored on Ellsbury's lazy liner to shallow right, giving the Yankees a 6-1 lead.

After another three-run inning from the Yankees, the Twins responded with yet another leadoff solo shot, this one off the bat of Chris Colabello.  Whitley limited the damage after that and managed to get out of the second having just allowed two runs total, but the Twins would tack on two more in the third.  Oswaldo Arcia tripled with two outs in the inning, scoring Kendrys Morales from first.  Arcia himself crossed the plate when Trevor Plouffe spanked a single up the middle, and while Whitley got the third out after that, the Twins had cut the lead down to two, and Whitley had seen his last bit of action for the afternoon.

Both bullpens performed terrifically after the two starters were knocked out early (Gibson after two innings and Whitley after three).  Samuel Deduno, who replaced Gibson, pitched four and two thirds scoreless innings for the Twins, and David Huff threw three scoreless innings of his own.  The bats came back to life once more against Dellin Betances, of all people, who gave up a run in the eighth.  But he kept the Yankees ahead before handing the ball of to David Robertson, who shut the door on the Twins (although not before giving up a two-out double which made things more interesting than they needed to be).

The Yankees play tomorrow at two.  David Phelps will take the hill for New York, while righty Yohan Pino will go for the Twins.

Around the Empire: New York Yankees News - 7/5/14

$
0
0

SB Nation | Craig Goldstein: The Yankees are spending their way through the international signing period this year.

New York Post | George A. King III: CC Sabathia's career could be in jeopardy with micro-fracture surgery a very real possibility.

ESPN New York | Mark Simon: Brian Roberts has been hitting the ball hard, but he hasn't necessarily been benefitting from it.

SABR | James Lincoln Ray: Read about Lou Gehrig's path through his playing days.

ESPN New York | Wallace Matthews: What does the loss of CC Sabathia mean for the Yankees this year?

The National Pastime Museum | Marty Appel: Remembering Lou Gehrig, 75 years after the original Lou Gehrig Appreciation Day.

Pinstriped Pundits | Chris Mitchell: How reliable are a prospect's number in A-Ball?

NJ.com | Brendan Kuty: The Yankees might be forced into the market for a top pitcher with CC Sabathia likely out for the season.


Baby Bomber Recap 7/4/14: Rob Refsnyder clubs three-run walk-off homer; Greg Bird homer puts Tampa on top

$
0
0

Recapping the Yankees' minor league affiliates' results from July 4th.

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:W 7-6 vs. Buffalo Bisons

1B Jose Pirela 0-4, K, HBP
2B Rob Refsnyder 2-5, HR, 3 RBI, SB - fourth Triple-A homer (walk-off)
LF Zoilo Almonte 1-4, 2 K
RF Adonis Garcia 1-4, 3 K
DH Kyle Roller 2-3, 2 doubles, RBI, BB - batting .287 w/ SWB
3B Scott Sizemore 3-4, 2 doubles, 2 RBI
C John Ryan Murphy 1-4, double, RBI, 2 K
CF Antoan Richardson 0-4, 2 K
SS Carmen Angelini 1-4, triple, K

Joel De La Cruz 4 IP, 7 H, 5 ER, 1 BB, K, 2 WP, hit batsman - 50 of 72 pitches for strikes
Pat Venditte 2 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K
Danny Burawa 2 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 6 K - 3.66 ERA this season
Jose Ramirez 1 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 3 BB, K, WP

Double-A Trenton Thunder: Postponed

High-A Tampa Yankees:W 1-0 vs. Lakeland Flying Tigers (12 innings)

CF Jake Cave 0-5, K
SS Cito Culver 0-4, BB, K - batting .216 this season
DH Greg Bird 2-5, HR, RBI - fourth homer of the season
3B Dante Bichette Jr. 1-5, 3 K
RF Aaron Judge 0-3, 2 BB, 3 K
1B Matt Snyder 0-5, K
2B Angelo Gumbs 1-4, K
LF Yeicok Calderon 0-3, 2 K - batting .275 this season
C Trent Garrison 1-4, K

Miguel Sulbaran 5 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 5 K - 5 GO/4 AO
Jaron Long 2 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 3 K
Ramon Benjamin 1 IP,  0 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, K, WP
Nick Rumbelow 2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, K - 2.42 ERA this season
Brett Gerritse 2 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K

Low-A Charleston RiverDogs:L 1-6 vs. Rome Braves

RF Michael O'Neill 0-4, 2 K
SS Tyler Wade 0-4, E6 - fielding error, 14th of the season
CF Dustin Fowler 1-4
DH Miguel Andujar 2-4, double - batting .406/.513/.656 over his last 10 games
1B Mike Ford 1-4, RBI
C Eduardo de Oleo 0-3, BB
2B Gosuke Katoh 1-4, 2 K
LF Brandon Thomas 1-4, K
3B John Murphy 2-4

Omar Luis 4 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, hit batsman - 32 of 52 pitches for strikes
Giovanny Gallegos 3 IP, 6 H, 5 R/3 ER, 1 BB, 4 K, hit batsman
Chad Taylor 2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

Short Season-A Staten Island Yankees:L 1-4 vs. Hudson Valley Renegades

CF Devyn Bolasky 1-4, K
SS Thairo Estrada 1-2
LF Chris Breen 1-4, double, RBI, 2 K, OF assist - batting .290
2B Ty McFarland 0-3, BB
DH Luis Torrens 1-4, 2 K - batting .263
1B Connor Spencer 1-4, E3 - missed catch, first error of the season
RF Nathan Mikolas 0-4, K
C Isaias Tejeda 1-2, double, BB
3B Renzo Martini 0-3, K

Justin Kamplain 2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, E1, hit batsman - 1 GO/3 AO
Dillon McNamara 4 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K
Ethan Carnes 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, K
Andury Acevedo 1 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 0 BB
Jose Pena 0.2 IP, 0 H, 3 ER, 2 BB, K, hit batsman
Matt Wotherspoon 0.1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 0 BB

Gulf Coast Yankees 1:W 1-0 vs. GCL Tigers

DH Jorge Mateo 0-4, K
1B Drew Bridges 0-3, BB, 2 K
3B Eric Jagielo 1-2, E5 - fielding error
CF Leonardo Molina 0-3, 2 K, OF assist
SS Bryan Cuevas 1-3, triple
LF Kendall Coleman 0-3, RBI, 2 K
C Alvaro Noriega 0-3, K
2B Ryan Lindemuth 1-3, K, E4 - fielding error, first of the season
RF Miguel Mojica 0-1, 2 BB, K

Gabriel Encinas 3 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 2 BB, 3 K - 2 GO/2 AO
Juan Jimenez 4 IP, 2 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 4 K
Christopher Cabrera 2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K

Gulf Coast Yankees 2:L 10-11 vs. GCL Phillies

2B Junior Valera 1-3, 2 BB - batting .362
LF Frank Frias 0-4, BB
SS Angel Aguilar 1-3, 2 BB, SB
1B Jake Hernandez 1-5, HR, 3 RBI, E3(3rd)- first homer of the season
3B Allen Valerio 3-4, double, triple, 2 RBI, BB, 2 SB, E5 - fourth error of the season
C Jesus Aparicio 1-3, RBI, 2 K
RF Adam Kirsch 3-5, 2 doubles, HR, 2 RBI - second homer of the season
DH Jose Augusto Figueroa 1-5, triple, RBI
CF Jordan Barnes 0-3, BB

Melvin Morla 2.2 IP, 8 H, 9 R/6 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, WP, 2 hit batsmen - 5 GO/2 AO
Elvin Perez 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, hit batsman
Alex Polanco 2 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 2 WP
Abel Mora 2 IP, 0 H, 1 R/0 ER, 2 BB, K, hit batsman
Felix Santiago 1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

Poll
Who was the best Baby Bomber for July 4th?

  290 votes |Results

Daily Yankees Predictions 7/5/14: Phelps Me

$
0
0

The Yankees have won two games in a row against the Twins. If they win this afternoon, they would be on a so-called winning streak. David Phelps takes the mound. Hopefully the offense continues to offense.

Chase Whitley is beginning to remind us that he is just an emergency "we don't have anyone else" call up for our injury plagued pitching staff. With CC Sabathia most likely out for the season, it'd be nice if he could be good again or if the Yankees could replace him with someone better. We're in danger of seeing David Huff start games for us again.

/violently shudders

7/4/14 Daily Prediction Answers

1.How many innings does the Yankees starter pitch?3
2.How many hits do the Yankees relievers give up?3
3.Combined number of strikeouts from both starting pitchers4
4.Total number of hits from the Yankees 1, 2, & 3 batters only6
5.Total number of walks from the Yankees 4, 5, & 6 batters only0
6.Total number of RBIs from the Yankees 7, 8, & 9 batters only1
7.Name one Yankee you think will hit a home run tonight.No One
8.Best overall Yankee of the night?Roberts

Today was a classic example of that age old phrase "You can't predict baseball, Susan." The Yankees are winners, but no one won the Daily Predictions due to said unpredictability. What a game.

7/5/14 Daily Predictions & Fun Questions

1.How many innings does the Yankees starter pitch?
2.How many hits do the Yankees relievers give up?
3.Combined number of strikeouts from both starting pitchers
4.Total number of hits from the Yankees 1, 2, & 3 batters only
5.Total number of walks from the Yankees 4, 5, & 6 batters only
6.Total number of RBIs from the Yankees 7, 8, & 9 batters only
7.Name one Yankee you think will hit a home run tonight.
8.Best overall Yankee of the night?

Are you not ticklish, ticklish, or extremely ticklish?

Do you have a favorite Dr. Seuss story/book?

Have you ever owed a Nerf Gun or a Super Soaker? If so, which one?

Recommend another restaurant for your fellow PSAers

David Phelps takes the mound for the Yankees, as they try to take the series from the Twins. Let's hope the offense continues to provide offensive support for the pitching. Also, let's hope Phelps can give us at least 6 innings, as our bullpen could use a rest.

Go Yankees Go Baseball

Yankees lineup vs. Twins: NYY spoke to Cubs about Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel

$
0
0

The Yankees face the Twins again today and after what they did yesterday, hopefully Minnesota continues to be the solution to the team's offensive woes.

With Brett Gardner out for the day, Jacoby Ellsbury is batting leadoff. Derek Jeter, Brian McCann, and Mark Teixeira follow suit, with Carlos Beltran as the designated hitter. Brian Roberts is at second base with Ichiro Suzuki in right and Alfonso Soriano in left. Zelous Wheeler is back in the lineup at third base, as well.

UPDATE: Brian McCann has been scratched with a sore foot, so here is the new, very different lineup:

There was a rumor going around last night that the Yankees were involved in a three-way trade with the Cubs and Athletics before they ultimately fell out of talks and the deal went through anyway. It turns out, the Yankees did actually discuss both Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel, however the A's were able to outbid what they had to offer – likely Gary Sanchez and Luis Severino – with Addison Russell, a top 10 prospect. So there was no three-way trade. Brian Cashman wasn't necessarily close to a deal, but at least they stayed in the mix.

Mark Teixeira's and McCann's BABIP troubles

$
0
0

Constant shifting seems to be putting both these pull hitters' averages in the toilet.

Mark Teixeira's success at the plate has been one of the few nice surprises for the Yankees in 2014. It seemed that the team putting their faith in the veteran first baseman with the creaky wrist was a big gamble, but thus far Tex has posted a 124 wRC+ which is downright respectable for a first baseman. Brian McCann, as we all know by now, has fared much worse in his first season in New York. His 80 wRC+ is among the worst for all starting catchers. While their hitting fortunes seem opposite in nature there is common ground between the two. They both are among the bottom ten in all qualifying hitters in batting average on balls in play.

Generally speaking, two players known for their power and almost astonishing lack of speed having a low BABIP is not terribly noteworthy. This season, though, both players are struggling in that department even by their career norms. Teixeira is sitting at .247 (7th lowest in the league/.289 career) while McCann is at .232 (3rd lowest in the league/.285 career). Both hitters are maintaining line drive and strikeout percentages near their career norms, so it would seem that the common issue they are both having is hitting into the shift. Most teams are employing a dramatic shift to pull for both batters and they seem to be suffering for it. It's fine when the two are powering balls over the fence, but if they fail to do that they're having hits taken away. Considering how popular shifting has become, it's likely that these issues are to be the norm for these two moving forward.

Fortunately for Teixeira he's maintained a walk percentage in double digits and been slugging at a good clip, hence the favorable wRC+. McCann, however, is walking less than he has in years and has a slugging percentage 90 points below last season. So he's been a dead pull hitter and adding zero value as a baserunner like a typical power hitter, but hasn't been getting on base or actually been hitting for much power aside from the occasional dinger. Teixeira seems to be fine keeping things as is despite protests that he should go to the opposite field more. McCann might have to start making adjustments, though, if he's going to salvage his season.

If the trend towards more dramatic and frequent shifting maintains (who knows, these things sometimes come and go in baseball) it could have a dramatic effect on both of these players moving forward. Teixeira famously rebuffed any changes to his batting approach before the season, so it's fortunate he seems to be the least effected of the two. It will be interesting to see if as the first year of his contract winds down McCann makes changes to his approach. It's easy to say "walk more and take some pitches the opposite way", but McCann might need to do just that if he's going to return to being one of the better catchers in baseball. I've always assumed that McCann would revert to his prior levels of success just based on statistics and projections, but the shifting is an interesting variable thrown into the mix. Maybe this is what we can expect until a change is made.

Pirates claim Dean Anna off waivers from Yankees

$
0
0

The versatile infielder heads to Pittsburgh after being designated for assignment.

The Pirates have claimed infielder Dean Anna off waivers from the Yankees, according to a baseball source. Anna, who was recently designated for assignment, will report to Triple-A Indianapolis.

Anna confirmed the news on his personal twitter account:

Anna, 27, broke into the majors for the first time this season, notching three hits (including a homer) in 22 at-bats with the Yankees. He played shortstop, second base and even pitched during twelve major league games with the team, and hit .192 in 36 games at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes Barre.

Anna will provide infield depth for the Pirates at Triple-A, and will be valued primarily for his defensive versatility. In parts of seven minor league seasons in the Padres and Yankees' organizations, he is a lifetime .280 hitter with 41 HR and 262 RBI while making only 82 errors.

Jeff Samardzija Trade: Yankees finished second, Russell nearly went to Tampa Bay

$
0
0

The Yankees almost acquired Samardzija, but couldn't quite match Oakland's offer. The Rays also barely missed out, though in a different sense.

Friday's blockbuster trade could have turned out a whole lot differently.

According to a report by CBS Sports' Jon Heyman, the Yankees made a push for Jeff Samardzija but came up short, finishing second in the sweepstakes for the former Cubs right-hander. As Heyman noted, left-hander CC Sabathia is out for the year and the Yanks were looking for someone to replace the man who was expected to lead their rotation this season.

The swing-and-a-miss by the Yankees is understandable in this case because they simply didn't have a prospect of the same caliber as Addison Russell, who went to the Cubs in the Samardzija deal. The former A's shortstop prospect is MLB.com's 11th-ranked prospect overall, and he could form one of the best middle infield combos in the majors along with Javier Baez in a few years.

Even with their failed ploy, however, the Yankees aren't completely out of luck. Top left-handers Cliff Lee and Cole Hamels are still on the market, and though it seems like the Yanks have been linked with Lee each July for the past decade, this could be the year during which they actually make that move. Given his major play for Samardzija, it's clear that general manager Brian Cashman wants to drastically improve his rotation, and with money to burn, Lee could be his next target in line.

Interestingly, Russell also nearly found himself with the Tampa Bay Rays, but the deal "never materialized," according to Yahoo! Sports' Jeff Passan. According to Passan's report, the A's knew "anyone was in play" once they decided on their willingness to deal Russell, and they talked with the Rays about a potential swap involving Russell and left-hander David Price.

Either way, if it wasn't apparent beforehand, the Cubs now undoubtedly have the best hitting farm system in baseball. Aside from Russell and Baez (MLB.com's sixth-ranked prospect), the Cubs have eighth-ranked prospect Kris Bryant, a third baseman who went second overall in the 2013 draft and has an eye-popping 1.222 OBP at Triple-A this year, fifteenth-ranked Albert Almora, and Jorge Soler, who is hitting .362 in 47 MiLB at-bats this year. That's in addition to big league standouts Anthony Rizzo and Starlin Castro, who will likely still be around when that talented crop of hitters makes it to the majors—assuming Castro doesn't get dealt.

The A's might be the odds-on favorites to win the World Series this year in light of Friday's deal, but the Cubs are set up to have a scary offense in the coming seasons.

Yankees 1, Twins 2: Yankees lose on walk-off error

$
0
0

Oh, Francisco. No.

Francisco Cervelli give and Francisco Cervelli taketh away. In the fifth inning, Cervelli drove in the Yankees' only run. Without that hit, the game would have been over a lot earlier. David Phelps pitched really well, but couldn't quite shut out the Twins, meaning the game went to extra innings. And that's where bad Cervelli happened. In the bottom of the 11th with the bases loaded, Cervelli airmailed a throw to first on a potential inning-ending double play. That allowed the game-winning run to score as the Twins won 2-1. Oops.

Early in the game, neither team could get anything substantial going on offense. Through four innings, the Yankees had just one hit. The Twins had a couple more, but Phelps was doing a pretty good job of stranding the couple runners that did get on.

In the top of the fifth, the Yankees finally picked up the game's first run. Carlos Beltran led off the inning with a walk. Ichiro Suzuki then came up next. Ichiro grounded into a force out at second, but his speed allowed him to make it to first without a throw. Alfonso Soriano then struck out, bringing Cervelli to the plate. During Cervelli's at bat, Ichiro stole second. Despite it appearing that Ichiro was out on the play, the Twins didn't review. Ichiro was then able to move to third on a wild pitch. Cervelli then punched a single to left, scoring Ichiro to make it 1-0.

Following a couple early hits, Phelps cruised for the next few innings. After walking Kurt Suzuki in the third, Phelps would retire the next 11 hitters he faced. Until the bottom of the seventh.

The first hitter Phelps faced in the seventh inning would be Josh Willingham. Phelps allowed a solo home run to Willingham, tying the score at one. Phelps got out of the seventh inning without allowing another run, but that would be it for him. He went seven innings, allowing just one run on three hits and two walks. Pretty good performance from him.

Shawn Kelley came in to pitch the eighth. The first man up in the eighth was Brian Dozier and that at bat turned into a Soriano derp show. Early in the at bat, Dozier popped one up near the foul line in left. Soriano and Derek Jeter both converged on the ball before Soriano called for it. Jeter veered off and Soriano proceeded to not catch the ball. Luckily for him, it landed in foul territory. However, a few pitches later, Dozier hit another fly ball towards Soriano. Soriano again managed to get to the ball in time, but this time, the ball hit off his glove and dropped in, allowing Dozier to get on base. After that, Suzuki also singled, putting two on with nobody out. Jacoby Ellsbury then showed Soriano how to catch a baseball, when he made a sliding catch for the first out, preventing a run from scoring. Kelley would strike out the next two hitters to get out of the jam and keep the score tied at one.

After the Yankees couldn't score in the top of the ninth, Kelley pitched a scoreless bottom half to send the game to extra innings.

In the top of the tenth, the Yankees again couldn't score a run. Matt Thornton was brought in to begin the bottom of the tenth. Sam Fuld led off the inning with a single that went off Thornton's glove. Despite the lead-off single, Thornton got out of it, thanks in part to him picking off Fuld. Onto the 11th we went.

In the top of the 11th, surprise, surprise, the Yankees failed to score. Thornton came back out to start the eleventh and gave up a double to pinch-hitter Chris Colabello. Kendrys Morales then grounded out, but it was enough to move Colabello to third. They then opted to intentionally walk Willingham. Which was followed by Oswaldo Arcia getting hit with a pitch to load the bases. Thornton then got just what he needed when Trevor Plouffe hit a soft grounder in front of the pitcher's mound. Thornton flipped it to home for the first out. Cervelli then tried to go to first for the double play. He completely airmailed the throw, allowing Willingham to score the game-winning run. The Twins came away with a weird 2-1 win. It was a loss for the Yankees, but at least it was a new and interesting way to lose. So there's that.

The Yankees and Twins will finish up their series tomorrow at 2 eastern. Hiroki Kuroda and Ricky Nolasco will be the starting pitchers.

Box score.


Twins walk off Yankees on throw from Cervelli, 2-1

$
0
0

No team wanted to win. So the Yankees gave up.

Minnesota and New York both had their chances today. David Phelps and Yohan Pino did their jobs as well as could reasonably be expected, combining for thirteen innings of work and allowing just two runs combined. Each pitcher gave up three hits and two walks.

The Yankees scored first. Ichiro reached on a fielder's choice, stole second (he was out but the play wasn't challenged), moved up to third on a wild pitch from Pino, and then scored on a Francisco Cervelli single. Unfortunately for Cervelli, that's not the play that Yankee fans will remember.

Josh Willingham led off the seventh with a solo homer off the facing of the second deck to tie the game at 1-1. The Twins then wasted back-to-back singles to lead off the eighth, but that was the best chance for either team to score until the bottom of the eleventh.

In the interim, the Twins bullpen performed very well. Matt Guerrier worked around two base runners to put up a zero. Casey Fien put down a perfect eighth. Glen Perkins came on in a non-save situation and did the same, striking out Ichiro and Alfonso Soriano. Jared Burton gave up a two-out single to Derek Jeter but nothing more. Brian Duensing dropped another goose egg in the eleventh.

Chris Colabello picked up a start on Friday night for the first time since his call up and he came up with a home run. In the bottom of the eleventh he came in to pinch hit for Chris Parmelee and led off the frame with a double. Kendrys Morales' weak chopper to third moved Colabello up, and with one out Matt Thornton intentionally walked Willingham to get to Oswaldo Arcia and set up the double play. Instead, Thornton nailed Arcia with a fastball in the small of the back to load the bases.

The win came but it wasn't entirely earned. Trevor Plouffe chopped it weakly to Thorton who went home for the force out, and Cervelli turned and threw to get Plouffe at first for the double play. Except he airmailed it into foul territory behind first base. Hammer scored, Twins win.

Notes

  • Gardy was ejected early for arguing that David Phelps should have been called with a balk. Phelps attempted to pick off Sam Fuld in the bottom of the third, and right away microphones picked up calls for the balk. When Phelps tried to get Fuld again, Gardy became more vocal and Marty Foster couldn't handle it. The fact was that Phelps was balking, but Foster had a thin skin. You can watch the video here to judge for yourself. You can hear a good deal of the conversation, especially between Gardenhire and Marsh. You almost wish Dick and Bert would be quiet so we could listen.
  • Arcia was hit for the third time in the series today. I don't buy into the retaliation nonsense, but it wouldn't surprise me to see a Yankee or two get hit tomorrow.
  • Glen Perkins made Alfonso Soriano look ancient in the top of the ninth. Perk dropped in a slider for strike one looking, and then went after Soriano with a trio of high fastballs. Soriano went after all three, quite predictably. There's no doubt that he's a shadow of the hitter he used to be, but the old man got schooled.
  • Chris Parmelee made a fantastic play diving to his right at first in the sixth.
  • Parmelee's hot streak has come to a definitive end, having gone 0-for-9 in his last two games.
  • Guerrier's ERA is lower than Perkins.

Win Expectancy Graph


Source: FanGraphs

Studs

Yohan Pino
Matt Guerrier
Casey Fien
Glen Perkins
Jared Burton
Brian Duensing
Josh Willingham
Chris Colabello

Duds

Giving Derek Jeter second base from the final game played in the Metrodome - the bar was set high with the chair made out of broken bats for Mariano Rivera last year and this just seems lazy

Sunday Rockpile: Trade Tulo to New York and hire Orel Hershiser because the sky is falling!

$
0
0

Had enough with all the losing? Would seeing Troy Tulowitzki in Yankee Pinstripes make you feel better?

A team that nobody but me expected to compete isn't playing well with 132 players on the DL, so it's time to blow it all up right?

Patrick Saunders reminds us that Troy Tulowitzki has as much trade value as he ever has. He says:

Do I think Tulo is going to be dealt? Not this summer, I don't, but it wouldn't shock me to see him traded over the winter. I would hate to see him go, because I love watching him play. But a fresh start would do Tulo good.

Grumble grumble.

Of course, Mark Kiszla thinks he would be best in pinstripes, because what better thing to do than to trade the rarest commodity in baseball right before reinforcements arrive while the team is at it's lowest possible point in terms of healthy contributors? Doing all that and getting a middling return from a below average farm system as a special gift to a team that never can seem to catch a break in those poor-luck New York Yankees.

Woody Paige at least suggest something constructive that doesn't involve starting another rebuilding process right before the one they are working on now starts to see any kind of fruition. He suggests that the Rockies hire Orel Hershiser in a significant front office role.

I don't think anyone around the Rockies, even those like me who have defended the front office, would deny that this team has been missing something ever since the tragic passing of Keli McGregor. Whoever the Rockies hire, and I don't know much about Hershiser as a baseball mind, but the team needs a new president. Paige says:

It is known, though, that Hershiser definitely would consider a proposition to become the Rockies' executive vice president of baseball operations - with the same authority former superstar players John Elway and Joe Sakic have with the Broncos and the Avalanche, respectively.

Not so sure that this team is the dumpster fire so badly in need of being put out that so many seem to think? Well, then read Nicke Groke's piece aboutCorey Dickerson's sweet swing, why he is so awesome, and what his future with the Rockies looks like.

Also, y'know if these guys will even still be on the team in the future, it was kinda cool to see Carlos Gonzalez and Eddie Butler rehabbing together. Again via Nick Groke:

"I fouled off a couple balls, and that was my biggest fear - because you're not going to barrel the ball every time," Gonzalez said. "And that's when it used to hurt really bad. But this was really good. No pain. I just have to get my timing back. And I'm sure that will only take a couple at-bats."

Had enough with all the losing? Would seeing Troy Tulowitzki in Yankee Pinstripes make you feel better?

Poll
Time to blow it all up?

  262 votes |Results

Yankees designate Alfonso Soriano for assignment

$
0
0

Thanks for the memories, Sori.

The deed is finally done. Alfonso Soriano, the long-time Yankee second baseman and recent trade target last season, has been designated for assignment. The roster move has been confirmed by the Yankees:

Given the way that Soriano has performed in recent months, it's no surprise to anybody that this has happened. After going on a tear during his second-half stint last season (130 wRC+, 17 home runs in 58 games), he's suddenly turned into a pumpkin this year. In 67 games, he's slashed .221/.244/.367 (61 wRC+) with just six home runs and has accumulated an abysmal -1.0 fWAR. It's been particularly bad as of late; in the last calendar month, he hit .200/.200/.250 (15 wRC+) with no home runs. The question wasn't if this would happen, it was a matter of when. If anything, it was done too late.

Regardless, Soriano will be missed. He was a member of the Yankees as a second baseman from 1999 to 2003 and took over the place of Chuck Knoblauch quite admirably in 2001, 2002, and 2003. He was most famously the key piece in the Alex Rodriguez trade in the 2003 offseason, and made his return just last season as the Yankees picked him up from the Cubs in which they traded Corey Black and took on some salary. If it wasn't for his offense, it's fair to say that the Yankees would have been eliminated much earlier than they were last year. He provided a much-needed spark to a starved offense.

This roster move clears the way for the Yankees to select the contract of Bruce Billings, another arm that can aid a bullpen that is being stretched thinner and thinner. And even though he has been pretty bad this year, it's likely a team will take a pass on him to see what's left in the tank. Even Raul Ibanez got another shot.

Well, thanks for everything, Sori. You may have struck out a ton, and we'll certainly miss our "swing-and-miss" jokes, but you gave us enough dingers to keep us satisfied. It's been a blast.

Yankees Prospects: New York won't crack the Baseball Prospectus top 50, but they're still heading in the right direction

$
0
0

Don't panic, it'll be ok

It's no secret that the Yankees haven't had a highly regarded farm system in years. The last time they had everything going for them was back in 2010, and then everything promptly fell apart. Now in 2014, the organization might be finally having a positive year, despite several disappointing performances mixed in. Despite what they have going for them, it appears that none of their prospects are going to get much attention:

Gary Sanchez was once a top 50 prospect, but he's dropped in rank every year since 2011. This year is likely to be no different as he's sure to fall from the No. 85 prospect he was before the season. Manny Banuelos ranked No. 29 overall before the 2012 season, but injury has completely wiped him out of consideration. John Ryan Murphy still has value, but he might not be considered a prospect anymore. Mason Williams and Tyler Austin already fell out of the top 100 before the season and Slade Heathcott has long run out of any kind of value.

Despite the lack of top 50 representation, the Yankees still have players to be happy about. It would have been nice to see Rob Refsnyder in the top 50, but I imagine his age and defense take him out of the equation. Luis Severino has been impressive, but Parks has already made it clear that he thinks of him as a future reliever. Aaron Judge should be in the latter half of the top 100 and if he continues to hit like he has, it's only a matter of time before he moves up. Eric Jagielo, Ian Clarkin, and Greg Bird could also be in play for a spot on the back of the list.

After them, you also have Peter O`Brien, who might be able to offer some value in a trade or as a power bat off the bench. Ramon Flores had been very solid before going down with an ankle injury, while Shane Greene is turning things around in Triple-A. Tyler Webb and Jacob Lindgren could probably get big league hitters out right now and Abiatal Avelino and Miguel Andujar have shown glimpses of promise. If you want to get extremely optimistic, the Yankees have a kid in rookie ball, Jorge Mateo, who is getting a lot of attention and the organization just signed most of the top international prospects. The Yankees might not have anyone in the top 50 now, but they certainly have prospects and maybe next year will be different. Things are turning around, even if no one is recognizing it just yet.

Yankees trade for Brandon McCarthy, Vidal Nuno to Diamondbacks

$
0
0

The Yankees managed to somehow get something for Vidal Nuno!

Well, here's a way to wake up on a Sunday morning: the Diamondbacks traded Brandon McCarthy to the Yankees for Vidal Nuno. Not only that, but the Diamondbacks are eating some of McCarthy's salary.

Here's what doesn't make sense: why in the world would the Diamondbacks do that? Unless their goal was to get ripped off, there's no way this trade can possibly be to better the team. I mean, after all, this is the team that demoted Trevor Cahill to High-A Visalia.

PlayerK/9BB/9HR/9BABIPGB%HR/FB%K/BBERAFIPxFIPERA-FIP-RE24RA9RAR
Brandon McCarthy7.631.641.23.34555.3%20.0%4.655.013.792.8913298-14.545.33-5
Vidal Nuno6.923.001.73.30137.9%14.0%2.315.425.154.41134128-13.446.00-3

Looking at the numbers, McCarthy certainly has an edge as he's outperforming his ERA. However, remember that McCarthy is 30 and has an injury history but can be pretty decent when healthy. Nuno is 26 and just ... not seemingly good at throwing a baseball across home plate. A healthy McCarthy can actually be worth a couple of wins whereas a daily Nuno is, well, not so much worth that.

The only thing that the Yankees should be worried about is that HR/FB% in Yankee Stadium with the short porch. That doesn't mean that McCarthy has less value for the Yankees, though -- he would still be a viable back of the rotation starter because he is still an upgrade over Nuno. Granted, almost anyone could've been an upgrade over Nuno.

But, literally, Diamondbacks, what does this trade even do for you?

The rotation becomes Wade Miley, Vidal Nuno, Josh Collmenter, Chase Anderson, and Mike Bolsinger before Bronson Arroyo comes off the DL. And when you've got a team with a rotation where it's a "pray for rain" day practically every single day, you wouldn't have that much confidence in the team getting to even 70 wins this season. Not like praying for rain would even work with Chase Field having a roof.

One could make the argument that the Diamondbacks are trying to rebuild, but Nuno isn't a prospect. This trade could've made sense if who they got in return was a mid-level prospect of some sort, one that would help bolster the farm system. But Nuno isn't that guy. There's very little value in the return. For crying out loud, Arizona is eating part of McCarthy's contract to trade him to New York. I just can't see any sensible GM making a move like that, so understanding why Kevin Towers did this is beyond me.

Try all you might to justify this trade on the Diamondbacks' end of things, but it might become an impossible task.

. . .

All statistics and information courtesy of FanGraphs and Baseball Reference.

Jen Mac Ramos is a contributor for Beyond the Box Score and The Hardball Times. You can follow her on twitter at @jnmcrms.

Viewing all 4714 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images