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Derek Jeter and Xander Bogaerts: A Tale of Two Shortstops

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Consider, friend, as you pass by: As you are now, so once was I. As I am now, you too shall be. Prepare, therefore, to follow me.

It's the dead of February, and a storm of (at this writing) unknown quantity is bearing down on Boston. Baseball, though our boys have arrived in Fort Myers, seems very far away. And yet baseball's the big story all of a sudden, because one of its greats has announced his intention to leave the sport behind. Derek Jeter will be retiring at the end of the year, putting an end date on one of the more impressive careers in recent baseball history. From a pure baseball perspective, this brings up a few big questions.

Is he the greatest shortstop ever? Nope. Honus Wagner existed, as did Cal Ripken. Also that steroid-tainted dude who Jeter wouldn't move off short for, despite him being better in every conceivable way other than "gift baskets per week."

Will he be a unanimous Hall of Famer? Nope. Because no one ever will. Beyond the "he played in the Steroid Era" numbskulls, there will always be that one guy who decides, all on his own, that Babe Ruth wasn't unanimous, and therefore no one will be. He'll fly in, and that's all that matters.

Is he the greatest Yankee ever? Nope. See above, re: Ruth. Also Gehrig, Mantle, Berra, and arguably DiMaggio. He's in the conversation, which alone is ridiculous.

But those questions are all going to be asked by relatively neutral observers. Writers who legitimately have no personal opinion on Jeter, or have so thoroughly bathed in the Kool-Aid of objective journalism that they'd never say a controversial word about the guy. I am not neutral on the subject of Derek Jeter, and I daresay neither are most of the readers of this blog. Jeter came into the league when I was 11 years old, and I've spent a decent amount of the intervening two decades hating the guy. But as one of the greatest Bostonians once said, who judges best of a man, his enemies or himself? (Franklin probably meant this as an "ignore the haters" line, because that's how Ben rolled. I'm gonna twist it, because that line is ambiguous, which Ben would've known if he had a better editor.)

175353984Photo credit: Jim McIsaac

It would take the most ridiculous caricature of a Boston homer to deny that Jeter's among the all-time greats at his position and for his franchise. A career slash line of .312/.381/.446 is impressive anyway, to do it while playing greatgood adequate defense at short is damn impressive. To do it for 19 years on a team that won five rings is easy Hall of Fame territory. So I won't indulge my hatred too much. I'll not point out that Nomar Garciaparra had a better peak, or that Jeter's 838 career postseason OPS is only five points better than A-Rod's 833. And over a hundred points worse than David Ortiz's 962. I certainly won't point out that he went 6 for 30 and missed the tag on Dave Roberts in the 2004 ALCS. That would be petty.

Also petty? Including this picture of a bobblehead. My friend meant it as a troll, since I'm a Red Sox fan and it's a Derek Jeter bobblehead. But he's missing his bat, which I found utterly hilarious given how Jetes hit last year.

Photo__2__medium

Anyway. Let's get to the real point here, since if one thing's become clear over two years writing here, it's that I basically only write about players when I can turn them into a larger metaphor. It's dehumanizing and condescending, I know, but my greatest hope is that in 75 years someone will name an ESPN vanity project after me.

Derek Jeter is the Yankees, and has been for the better part of two decades. I don't think anyone would argue that. He's the ideal player for the franchise. Classy, handsome, devoted to winning, clean-shaven, and expensive. And, of course, very, very good at baseball. He's been the focus not only for his own team and fans, but for everyone else in baseball. Love the Yankees or hate them, Jeter's what you picture first. Come September, he'll be gone, and I'm not sure anyone can say who'll replace him.

The obvious successor to Jeter was Robinson Cano. He had everything you'd want. Immense talent, great charisma, clear love of the game. The sort of guy that other teams could resent for his success, but never truly despise out of sheer respect. But Seattle decided that the vague appearance of contention was worth a quarter-billion dollars, and so Robbie went off into the West. Now the Yankees, the great franchise that dominated a century of pro baseball, sits without an obvious centerpiece. They've lost their captain, having just last year lost their moral center. It's not that they won't contend. It's that I'm not sure what the Yankees are doing. Sure, they signed Jacoby Ellsbury to patrol center, and Masahiro Tanaka to hopefully pitch well, and Brian McCann to make sure no opposing players enjoy their job. But where is that team going?

2014 is going to be, I think, a significant year in defining the American League East for the foreseeable future, and it's entirely because of the shortstops of the signature franchises of the division. In New York, Derek Jeter, who's been the standard at the position for two decades, will be saying his farewell to the league. In Boston, Xander Bogaerts will be making his presence known to every pitcher with a lazy fastball or a misplaced curve. And it's a beautiful display of where these two classic clubs find themselves as the 2014 season approaches.

For the better part of the last century, the Yankees were baseball. They contended every year, they made the playoffs many of those years, and they won literally a quarter of all the championships. For most of that time, the Red Sox were built for second place. Too slow, too iron-gloved, too bat-heavy, and often just too racist to truly contend. The Boston American League club has made the playoffs 21 times and won eight titles, and seven of those playoffs and three titles have come in the last decade. They are the most successful team of the admittedly young 21st century.

More importantly, they seem set up to stay that way. Xander Bogaerts represents only the first and most talented arrival of a wave of young talent in the Boston farm system. Perhaps even more importantly, he and the guys behind him have that most valuable of all things in a prospect: a high floor. Every analyst looking at the top tier of Red Sox minor league talent sees at worst a collection of major-league regulars. A team of Xander Bogaerts, Dustin Pedroia, Jon Lester, and a bunch of major-league regulars can win you a lot of games. Especially when you have $120 million to spend on filling out the roster (Thanks again, Dodgers!)

20131213_ajl_bm3_001Photo credit: Noah K. Murray-USA TODAY Sports

Meanwhile, a few hours down I-95, the Yankees spent damn near a half-billion dollars this offseason, and they still only have three reliable starters and a deep outfield. Their infield is a collection of has-beens and never-weres. And their farm system is barren enough that they felt the need to spend that immense sum rather than try to let the kids play. They're building for 2014, because they have no idea what 2015 will look like.

To put it more simply, the Yankees are about to spend 2014 bidding farewell to Derek Jeter, the man who's defined their last two decades. The Red Sox are going to spend 2014 nurturing Xander Bogaerts, the man who will, if things play out, define their next two decades.

But because I'm a Boston fan, and an Irishman, I must admit the truth of the epitaph I chose as the epigraph of this column. Someday, in the distant future, when Portland and Montreal have baseball teams, when replay is mandatory for any close call in the playoffs, when kids wonder what "student loans" were, Xander Bogaerts, too, will come to the end of his career. He'll announce that after seven rings, 2,500 hits, 450 home runs, and a third-place finish in the mayor's race, that the time has come to end his career. We'll cry, and wail, and buy our commemorative jerseys, and some other team's bloggers will talk about how it's their turn.

And if indeed this is a just and good universe, it won't be the Rays.

Read more Red Sox:


The statistical marks that are still within Jeter's reach

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Now that we know it's his last season, what historical achievements are still within The Captain's reach? Lets have fun with counting stats!

I know this might be a controversial statement on this pro-Yankees website, but that Derek Jeter guy has had a pretty amazing career. Aside from being able to retire as one of the greatest Yankees to ever play the game, he also will be retiring with some pretty phenomenal numbers. While it can get tiresome when being brought up on broadcasts, I still enjoy watching the true greats pass other amazing players while climbing up the MLB statistical leaderboards. With there now being a definitive timetable for Jeter's departure from The National Pastime, we can get a pretty good idea where he will end up on those leaderboards. And most importantly, we can see all the greats he can pass on those rankings. Let's look at what's in reach for The Captain in his final year.

Hits: 3,316(currently 10th all-time)

This is the big one, and while I'm pretty sure we had retired any thoughts of Jeter reaching 4,000 a while ago, 3,500 would still be an impressive plateau to reach (and require a lot of good health). Jeter's only three hits away from Paul Molitor and only 103 from Carl Yastrzemski, so passing the all-time Red Sox hits leader is an absolute must. It's just the way things should be. Jeter can also pass Honus Wagner in career hits by a shortstop with 115 to pass Wagner's total of 3,430.

Runs scored: 1,876 (currently 13th)

Jeter has scored over 100 runs 13 times and will likely be right back at the top of the order this year, but reaching 2,000 would require an incredible effort. And a great season from the Yankees lineup. Getting into the top ten would only require 44 runs, which would also temporarily unseat the universally beloved Alex Rodriguez. Stan Musial would be next up the ladder.

Singles: 2,470(currently 6th)

When I close my eyes and picture a Derek Jeter at bat, I see either a line-drive the other way or him inside-outing a pitch in on his hands for a hard single. So it's not a shock that Jeter is the most prolific singles hitter not named Rose born after 1890. Willie Keeler resides in fifth, 43 hits away. The four others are probably too many one-baggers away. I am unsure if that is an actual baseball term.

Defensive games as a SS: 2,544 (currently 3rd)

For better or worse, Jeter has stuck at the same position he was brought up to play some twenty years ago. There's been talk of him moving positions for years now, but he's certainly not going to do it in his last year, so passing Luis Aparicio at 2,581 should be simple enough. Only Omar Vizquel will have lasted more games as a shortstop in baseball's history. It's quite an accomplishment to manage to stay at one of baseball's most difficult positions for twenty seasons.

When a player is able to make it this high up the statistical ranks, it's a testament to both their longevity and sustained excellence. There are more nuanced ways of looking at just how impressive Derek Jeter's career has been, but sometimes it's just fun to see where a departing legend ranks among the very best to ever play. It's just one of roughly a billion different ways we'll be looking back at Jeter's accomplishments as we enjoy his ride into the sunset.

MORE FROM PINSTRIPE ALLEY

More Blue Jays Spring Games on Sportsnet

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Good news, Sportsnet will carry all the Blue Jaysspring games on radio and on audio at sportsnet.ca (no word on who replaces Jack Morris as Jerry Howarth's partner in the booth) (I see on sportsnet.ca's broadcaster page they only list Howarth and Mike Wilner as radio announcers, but they still show Dirk Hayhurst) and they will have 11 games on TV. The full schedule is here:

February

Wednesday, Feb. 26, Toronto @ Philadelphia, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Thursday, Feb. 27, Philadelphia @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet ONE and Sportsnet.ca)

Friday, Feb. 28, Pittsburgh @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet East, Ontario, West, Pacific and Sportsnet.ca)

March

Saturday, March 1, Toronto @ Baltimore, 12:30 p.m. ET (Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

Sunday, March 2, N.Y. Yankees @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet East, Ontario, West and Pacific, Sportsnet 590 The FAN and Sportsnet 960 The FAN)

Monday, March 3, Toronto @ Minnesota, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Tuesday, March 4, Toronto @ Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Wednesday, March 5, Pittsburgh @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Thursday, March 6, Toronto @ Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Friday, March 7, Tampa Bay @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet East, Ontario, West, Pacific and Sportsnet.ca)

Saturday, March 8, Minnesota @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet East, Ontario, West, Pacific and Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

Sunday, March 9, Toronto @ Houston, 12:30 p.m. ET/10:30 a.m. MT (Sportsnet 590 The FAN and Sportsnet 960 The FAN)

Tuesday, March 11, Toronto @ Detroit, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

Wednesday, March 12, Tampa Bay @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

Thursday, March 13, Houston @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

Friday, March 14, Boston @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

Saturday, March 15, Toronto @ Tampa Bay, 12:30 p.m. ET (Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

Sunday, March 16, Baltimore @ Toronto, 12:30 p.m. ET/10:30 a.m. MT (Sportsnet.ca and Sportsnet 960 The FAN)

Tuesday, March 18, Toronto @ Detroit, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Wednesday, March 19, Philadelphia @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet ONE and Sportsnet.ca)

Thursday, March 20, Toronto @ Philadelphia, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Friday, March 21, Toronto @ Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Saturday, March 22, Detroit @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet Ontario, West, Pacific and Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

Sunday, March 23, Toronto @ N.Y. Yankees, 12:30 p.m. ET/10:30 a.m. MT (Sportsnet 590 The FAN and Sportsnet 960 The FAN)

Monday, March 24, Philadelphia @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet East, Ontario, West, Pacific and Sportsnet.ca)

Tuesday, March 25, Toronto @ Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Wednesday, March 26, N.Y. Yankees @ Toronto, 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet East, Ontario, West, Pacific and Sportsnet.ca)

Thursday, March 27, Toronto @ Philadelphia, 1 p.m. ET (Sportsnet.ca)

Friday, March 28, N.Y. Mets @ Toronto (in Montreal), 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT (Sportsnet 360, Pacific and Sportsnet.ca)

Saturday, March 29, N.Y. Mets @ Toronto (in Montreal), 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT (Sportsnet East, Ontario, West, Pacific Sportsnet 590 The FAN)

For those of you that get MLB.tv all those games will be available on that and, if we are lucky, some of the games will be broadcast by the other team's TV crew, giving us more chances to watch the Jays.

It is about time that Sportsnet covered all the spring games. Now we have to push them to have them all on TV. Maybe next year.

And, in case you were wondering, we'll have Game Threads up for all spring games.

Derek Jeter Odds: Yankee favored to pass Honus Wagner career hits for shortstops

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Derek Jeter announced he will retire after 2014, prompting plenty of speculation (and betting odds) about his production this season.

Derek Jeter has one final season to pass Honus Wagner as the all-time hits leader among shortstops and odds say the Yankee veteran will do it.

Jeter said this week that the 2014 season will be his last, an announcement that got baseball stats junkies debating his place in history. It was only a matter of time before someone posted odds on how Derek Jeter will perform in his final season.

With 115 hits, he would surpass Wagner, the Pittsburgh Pirates Hall of Famer who has been untouchable atop the list of shortstops. Jeter has 3,316 career hits and Bovada made him a -250 favorite to surpass 3,430.

Wagner, who played his last game in 1917, not only remains the standard for excellence at shortstop, but has stayed in the public consciousness over the years because of a rare and valuable baseball card (an American Tobacco Company card from 1909). Very few Wagner cards were printed after he objected to his image being used, making it one of the most valuable in the hobby.

While Jeter is projected to catch and pass Wagner's mark, Bovada's Jeter lines suggest they believe his batting average in 2014 will be significantly lower than his career average. They posted a .290 over-under. His career average is .312.

There is also a 120.5 over-under on the number of games he will play this season, after he played in just 17 games in 2013 due to a variety of ailments and injuries.

If you think Jeter will change his mind and come back in 2015, you are in the minority and would earn a solid longshot payout if it happens. It's a 20/1 payout if he comes back for another season.

"Who knows for sure, because the Yankees are only 10/1 to win the World Series, so maybe he has a great season and comes back," said Dave Harrison of BaseballOdds.ca.

Derek Jeter Batting Average in the 2014 Regular Season

Over/Under        .290

Derek Jeter Total games played in the 2014 Regular Season

Over/Under        120½

Will Derek Jeter break Honus Wagner's record of most career hits by a short stop of 3,430?

Yes                  -250

No                    +170

Will Derek Jeter play in a game in the 2015 Regular Season?

Yes                  20/1

No                    1/50

Yeah, This Is News: 2/13/14

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We review the news we missed from the last week. Our top story: big controversial disaster apocalypse in Monument Park.

Sometimes there are news stories we miss out on. The news waits for no one, often trundling past in the night like a truck full of packaged goods, but not just one truck; rather, three trucks stacked high in the air like a giant truck column, a column of news escaping loudly across the border. But that escape stops today. For the Pinstripe Alley news bed—why write from a news desk when being splayed out across a bed and typing on one’s laptop is, in fact, much more comfortable—has purchased a giant butterfly net for the express purpose of catching news. Come here, news.

It’s raining outside. But it’s not raining rain—it’s raining news.

If you could pick one word to describe what the news was like this week, what would it be? Never mind; I know your response: "eventful." And right you are. Teams and players avoided arbitration, dodging out of the way, all doing that lean-back thing from that Matrix movie. Elsewhere, a player coughed after swallowing water the wrong way. Oh, Nunez! The water goes down the esophagus, not the windpipe! That incident has sidelined the infielder for two months.

But while everyone was digging for their microphones in an attempt to get comments from players about things, other news was floating by like a cloud on speed. Urgent emails were emailed between the Pinstripe Alley staff. "Track down that news!" came shouts. And so we have, reaching out to agencies around the world. Our SABCBCTVIMIBC correspondent filed this fact-laden report.

* * *

A-Rod plaque erected in place of Nelson Mandela in Monument Park mix-up

—Monogahaganan Jay, South Africa Broadcasting Corporation Broadcasting Corporation TV, Image, Movie, Internet, and Book Corporation

It was supposed to be a ceremony honoring a great man. It was supposed to be a ceremony showing the world how much one man could mean to the world. Instead it ended in confusion.

The ceremony held at Monument Park in Yankee Stadium would have enshrined South African President Nelson Mandela, leader of the movement against apartheid and a symbol for the unity of peoples across the world, into the New York Yankees Hall of Fame. He would take his place alongside other all-time great humans, like Roger Maris and Bill Dickey. Yet it took only seconds for the ceremony to go wronger than a debacle on concrete.

It was team President Randy Levine who arguably committed the crime. Even if he wasn’t the one responsible, he was the one who was there. When the miniature pinstriped tarpaulin covering Mandela’s supposed plaque was yanked off by Levine, it wasn’t Nelson Mandela’s face under there at all. Instead it was the eyes, nose, ears, stubble, neck, chin, and general face shape of embattled third baseman Alex Rodriguez.

The mood immediately turned to that of a very moist shock. To call the events upsetting would be to issue you a tremendous understatement. It was as if a giant God in the sky had grabbed a mixing bowl from his cupboard, whisked awkward silence and appalled feelings together using his little finger, and poured the gelatinous blend out all over the gallery.

In the press box, one could make out a quiet ripple of foot shuffling and collar adjusting and, indeed, general squirming once it was clear that it was not the face of Nelson Mandela embossed on the metal. Instead, Mr. Rodriguez had hijacked that small plate, his grin a statement not only to the observers gathered there, but to the entire world: "I can ruin this too," he was saying.

Adding to the surreal quality of this half-baked occasion was the blurb on the plaque. It belonged to Mr. Mandela, describing his accomplishments and his upstanding character, just as one would expect. Only the face did not match.

The Yankees brass immediately issued a statement denying the mistake was intentional. Hordes of Mandela supporters on Twitter, calling themselves ‘The Horde,’ disagreed. "Really when you’re dealing with the legacy of an individual like Mandela everything becomes intentional" wrote @lizzzzzy4everz. Flurries of fury have already been spotted on the streets of New York and other major American cities. Demonstrations are also being planned in some of the world’s many non-American territories.

Mr. Rodriguez’s camp made it clear that the star baseballer would not be made available for comment. Instead his lead attorney Joe Tacopina appeared before the press hours after the disaster occurred. "I believe the accomplishments of Alex more or less match those of Mandela," Tacopina said, the words coming out of his face. He continued: "For that reason no alternations should be made to the memorial." Anxious to pursue Mr. Tacopina on the minutiae of these statements, the press gallery leaned forward expectantly, but at that moment Mr. Tacopina received a call on his cellular phone, his ringtone a polyphonic reimagining of 'Two Princes' by the Spin Doctors. He left to take the call and never returned.

And so the day ended with the sounds of the hyper-repetitive 90s modern rock hit ricocheting off the walls, floor and ceiling of the Yankee Stadium shopping mall. The press repaired to their laptops, tapping their feet to the beat while typing up reports similar to this one. Other agencies would just pull a story from the wires. The SABCBCTVIMIBC holds itself to a higher standard.

Regardless, it is safe to say that on this day, Mr. Rodriguez certainly did make off with a princely racket.

* * *

Pinstripe Alley also appealed to Australian correspondent Brett Grass for comment. He emailed us this response:

Grass: Yeah, hey Matt. Well, the feelings in Australia are strong. I think like the rest of the world the people here are shocked and scandalized that things can go wrong; that mistakes can be made. I went out onto the street and asked some people what they thought. One girl seemed to be concerned that Alex Rodriguez was trying to moonwalk his way into the role of Jesus; another man simply lay down prone on the sidewalk and did the worm, slowly shuffling away from me and on down the street. So it is very much a traumatic time here for us all.

Pinstripe Alley: And any word from the Australian parliament on this affair?

Grass: Well, Matt, in a word, no.

PSA: How is Nicole Kidman taking it?

Grass: Matt, I think she’s been hit quite hard.

PSA: And could you summarize the entirety of your ten page editorial on the matter in one sentence or shorter?

Grass: I think I’d say that while our keyboards haven’t been poisoned yet, the sky is very much charcoal green.

Many thanks to Australian correspondent Brett Grass.

* * *

Just enough space left in this bulletin for some other headlines from the week’s news:

  • "I sneezed and scratched my cornea": Ellsbury spills all on terrifying night in apartment;
  • Accidental tragedy: Greg Bird eaten by bench coach’s tabby; and
  • Man staunches wound with Phil Hughes jersey, quipping "Finally, Hughes had a use"

Yeah, we'll be back with more news next week.

Pinstripe Alley Podcast Episode 36: Jeets out

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Derek Jeter announced his retirement following the 2014 season on Wednesday afternoon. It led to a very strange episode of the Pinstripe Alley Podcast.

What is life without Derek Jeter? We find out.

[0:00] Sexy Pinstripe Alley Podcast after dark...
[1:21] Thoughts on Jeter's last year, featuring seat-splat Expos captain Eduardo Nunez
[3:31] Replacement options for Jeter: James Jerry Hardy, Hanley Ramirez, WWE A-Rod, and ADDISON MARUSZAK
[7:47] We are concerned about CC Sabathia. Someone send emergency sirloin.

[13:48] On Jeter keeping his retirement plans secret from the front office until now
[15:18] Comparing Jeter's retirement announcement to Mariano Rivera's, and individual thoughts on Jeter
[20:18] Speculation on gifts (or GIFs?) and A-Rod's attempts to join the retirement tour for his own gifts
[27:20] How would A-Rod actually retire?
[29:03] A few thoughts on A.J. Burnett somehow wrangling $16 million from the Phillies
[30:09] Favorite Jeter moments
[37:03] Reminiscing on the idiocy of "Derek Eater"
[40:50] What if Ichiro joined Jeter in announcing his retirement? Can he go back to the Mariners then?
[42:30] Introducing special Jeter dating correspondent Matthew Floratos
[49:43] Yankee/Mitre of the Week

Podcast link (Length: 1:00:42)

iTunes link

RSS feed

Derek Jeter to retire: Pondering some scenarios for The Captain's final season

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Best case, realistic, and worst case scenarios for Jeter's final season.

Now that we know that 2014 is going to be Derek Jeter's final season, let's consider some scenarios as to how his final season could play out, and what that means regarding the position of shortstop.

*Please note: this is intended to be a lighthearted post, since Jeter's retirement announcement is somewhat surprising, pretty sad and everyone's reminiscing is bringing me down. Please refrain from getting offended, because I would absolutely hate for the buzzkill scenario to happen.


Best Case Scenario:

Jeter returns from a season riddled with injuries and DL stints and is 100% healthy. Time moves backwards, Jeter's range increases, and he hits like it's 2012. He starts 150+ games, not because he insists on being put into the lineup, but because he's producing. When Jeter's not starting, Brendan Ryan plays shortstop (and his bat is better than expected!). Nunez makes it into zero games. CC finds his stuff again. Tanaka pitches like an ace. No one ends up on the disabled list because the team has been awarded 9,000,000 good karma points after the DL nightmare that was last season. In Jeter's final at-bat, he hits a walk-off home run to win a sixth World Series. I encourage you to stay a moment in dream world and enjoy this.

More Realistic Scenario:

Jeter splits time between shortstop and DH. He maintains decent health by sitting out a game or two a week. After a year-long break, "past a diving Jeter" becomes a thing again. Brendan Ryan hits .221/.285/.305 (his 2014 projections according to Steamer), but we don't totally hate him because he puts up a positive UZR at shortstop. Girardi sees Nunez and is overcome by the urge to give Nunie a chance to play, and he makes anywhere from 10-30 errors. Jeter catches the final out, a pop up to short, as the Yankees win the World Series.

Buzzkill Scenario:

Jeter only makes it into about 70 games because he can't stay healthy. Brendan Ryan becomes the everyday shortstop and an actual black hole in the lineup. His defense doesn't even begin to make up for it. Girardi has Nunez split time with Ryan, because he is easily lured in by the fact that Nunez has the better bat. The Yankees don't make any moves at all to improve shortstop. No one knows that Jeter's final game is his final game, 'cause he ends the season on the DL. Yankees fall to the Red Sox in the ALCS.

On a More Serious Note:

Stephen Drew is still on the market. If Jeter does get injured, is Brendan Ryan really the best option for everyday shortstop? His bat says no. I think that Yankee fans everywhere stand in collective agreement that Nunez has no business being the everyday shortstop. Drew has the better bat between the three of them, and his defense is decent (5.3 UZR with the Red Sox last season).

Do you think the Yankees should sign Drew to back up Jeter or just stick with Ryan and Nunez and hope for the best? What would you add to my Best Case scenario?

Yankees Injury Updates: Banuelos, Pineda, Romine, Sizemore, Nuno, Cervelli

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The injured prepare for spring training and a new year of chances

Here are a few injury updates that I was able to compile through a scan of the internet:

Manny Banuelos

Banuelos is preparing to make his long awaited return to the mound this spring. After undergoing Tommy John surgery before the 2013 season, ManBan has only pitched 24 innings over the last two seasons, but he says his elbow "feels normal, just like before surgery...I feel ready to go."

There is some small belief that he has a shot to make the team out of the bullpen, though I would rather he spend the beginning of 2014 building up his arm strength in Triple-A. "I want to show Brian Cashman and [Hal] Steinbrenner and all the people what they have now. I want to show them I can do it in the big leagues, this year. I want to make it. I can't wait to pitch again." He's still just 23, so he has plenty of time to make it work.

Francisco Cervelli

After the disaster that was Cervelli's 2013 season, the catcher is hoping to put everything behind him as he starts his early spring workouts. He suffered a broken hand back in April, but aggravated an old injury in his throwing elbow before being suspended for his connection to Biogenesis. "Last year was a disaster, and we just take the positives out of everything for being a better person and a better player," Cervelli said. Given his lack of minor league options, he is considered the likely favorite for the backup catcher job.

Vidal Nuno

A long shot for the rotation, but a viable option for the bullpen, Vidal Nuno is said to be fully healed from the groin injury that kept him out of action for an extensive amount of time in 2013. The lefty played in the Arizona Fall League and was likely the most impressive of the Yankees there after he compiled a 3.20 ERA and 2.49 FIP in 19.2 innings. I really hope he can make the team because I think he has a lot to offer the Yankees.

Michael Pineda

Pineda believes that he is healthy and ready to go for spring training this year. "I'm feeling 100 percent right now, and my body is in perfect shape...everything is in the past. I'm ready to go." Pineda has reportedly slimmed down to around 260 pounds this year and will have a chance to make the Yankees rotation.

Brian Cashman has high hopes for the 25-year-old. "He's gonna compete for the last spot and hopefully he wins it." While the competition includes David Phelps, Vidal Nuno, and Adam Warren, among others, Cashman might be playing favorites, or maybe he just wants the trade he made to work out for the Yankees in some way. Honestly, I have no shame about playing favorites: I want Pineda to be in the rotation.

Austin Romine

It is believed that Austin Romine has fully recovered from the concussion he suffered in September. "A week after the season was over, it was still kind of hanging around, but after that I was good to go and started working out...they made me see a doctor before I came out just to touch all the bases. I'm good to go."

It's become a baseball cliche, but he is officially in the best shape of his life after the young catcher stated "I feel like I'm in the best shape I've been in in a while...I'm just looking for some time to show them I can still do it. It's going to be a fight." Romine plans to latch onto Brian McCann and learn all he can starting when pitchers and catchers report this Friday.

Scott Sizemore

Sizemore is returning from his second ACL tear in his left knee in as many years. So far, he says he hasn't had any more issues since he had surgery in the beginning of the 2013 season and he is now working out on the field in Tampa. "Throughout the rehab process, I kind of knew what to expect the second time around, so I really pushed myself even harder, being that I figured this was my last go-round...I feel like I've had really good results so far." He's been working out on the same field as Derek Jeter.


Michael Pineda earning high praise early on in Yankees spring training

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It's been a long wait for Michael Pineda to return to the mound. The early indications have been positive.

Michael Pineda was supposed to be the young pitcher with an ace ceiling when the Yankees traded their best prospect in Jesus Montero for him before the 2012 season. That promise was nearly lost completely when Pineda tore his labrum in a spring training game that would require surgery that has thrown more than one pitcher's career completely off the tracks. It's been a long road back for Pineda, but he's finally healthy and ready to compete for the fifth starter spot in spring training. He'll need to find a way to show that his two year absence was only a blip on the radar of what everyone hopes to be a productive career for the 25-year-old.

Since pitchers and catchers have reported to camp in Tampa, reports have seemingly trickled out daily that the coaching staff has been impressed with what they've seen out of Pineda so far. ESPN's Buster Olney cites improved velocity as a reason why the Yankees are "quietly encouraged and excited" about where Pineda is currently at. Velocity, of course, was the cause of much hand-wringing when Pineda showed up to camp in 2012 with a fastball that seemed to struggle to hit 93 mph. Pineda says he doesn't know how hard he's been throwing so far this spring, and right now that doesn't matter, but Joe Girardi says that reports had Pineda at 93-94 mph during his rehab last season. It's not the 98 mph that will light up the radar gun, but it's something Pineda can live with. Even a couple ticks higher would go a long way, and Pineda says he feels powerful. Girardi says the ball is coming out of Pineda's hand with ease. These are all positives for a pitcher that underwent surgery that could have easily had him up their tossing 85 mph.

Hearing that Pineda feels 100% and that the coaching staff has liked what they see out of him is as encouraging as news can get. Acquiring Masahiro Tanaka took some pressure off the group of pitchers battling it out for the final spot in the rotation, but it's reasonable to assume that the Yankees would prefer that spot to be Pineda's. It may not happen in April, but it would be really disappointing for Pineda to be a non-factor for the big league club again in 2014. A strong showing in spring training would likely give Pineda the necessary bump to beat out the likes of David Phelps or Vidal Nuno for the final spot, even considering the fact that he will almost certainly be on some sort of innings limit until his body adjusts back to throwing 100 pitches every five days.

The Montero/Pineda trade has been nothing short of disaster for both teams so far. Montero was sent to Triple-A, suspended for steroid use, and showed up to camp needing to go on a diet immediately. Pineda was hit with a DUI, hasn't thrown a pitch as a Yankee, and may never be able to recapture the brilliance that made him an All-Star and Rookie of the Year candidate in his first season with Seattle. The good news is that all the news about Pineda coming out of Tampa is positive. Seeing how he performs in Grapefruit League games will be the next step toward hopefully getting Pineda on a mound in the Bronx for the first time. Things are looking up on this side of the trade, and that's about as good of news as anyone could hope for right now.

Brian Roberts to be Yankees' starting second baseman

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With Robinson Cano gone, the Yankees will turn to a veteran, injury-prone second baseman to help fill the void.

Brian Roberts, who hasn't appeared in more than 77 games in a season since 2009, will be the Yankees' starting second baseman.

According to manager Joe Girardi, Roberts will be the everyday starter and Kelly Johnson will serve as the backup. Johnson will likely split his time at second and third base, as well as the outfield. If (or when) Roberts gets hurt, look for Johnson to become the starter.

When healthy, Roberts has been a productive player throughout his career. He owns a career .278/.349/.412 line and has always been solid defensively; it's just going to be a matter of the veteran second baseman avoiding the disabled list in 2014.

Fortunately for the Yankees, they have suitable backup options on the bench. Johnson is a career .253/.335/.427 hitter and has upwards of 16 homer runs in each of the last four seasons. Eduardo Nunez could also see an increased role at second or third should injuries arise.

More from SB Nation MLB:

Craig Kimbrel's extension a win-win signing for Braves

Dan Haren, Matt Cain likely to improve

Is baseball a dangerous game?

Derek Jeter, the last captain of New York

Remembering former All-Star and manager Jim Fregosi

How does Jacoby Ellsbury improve the Yankees' outfield defense?

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The signing of Jacoby Ellsbury excited a fanbase that desperately needed something to be excited about and might just be the reason that the Yankees return to the playoffs.

Last season was a weird one for the Yankees. They missed the playoffs for just the second time since 1993, but even stranger, their offense was among the worst in Major League Baseball for the first time in over 20 years. They were not your father's Yankees. However, they were still able to hover around .500 because of a solid pitching staff backed by a cast of aging characters that could still field well enough to counteract their weak bats.

The outfield was more or less stocked solely with players that fit this description. In right field, Ichiro Suzuki fielded brilliantly when he wasn't being an out machine offensively. Vernon Wells did a good job patrolling left field before his bat became too much of a burden. At mid-season, he was replaced by Alfonso Soriano, who performed just as well in the field but provided some much needed pop in the lineup. Brett Gardner was the Yankees' second-best offensive player, but that was by default and not because of anything special he did. Although his work in center field was sub-par for him, it was still better than most everyday center fielders. Curtis Granderson and a long list of marginal players filled in when healthy and needed, but that was pretty much how the outfield shaped up because that experiment in which Lyle Overbay played right field never happened, right?

A look at some advanced defensive metrics shows that this group did the Yankee Stadium outfield grass justice last year. Each of the three metrics below measures the approximate number of runs saved over the course of the year by Yankee outfielders. Data courtesy of FanGraphs and Baseball-Reference.

PositionDRSUZRTZ
Right Field-19.211
Center Field92.5-19
Left Field810.7-1
Total1622.4-9

These metrics were independently developed and calculated so there can be quite a bit of variation between them, but that doesn't mean we should ignore them altogether (that noise you just heard was Joe Morgan slapping my face). Ultimate Zone Rating (UZR) was bullish, Total Zone (TZ) was bearish, especially when it comes to Gardner, and Defensive Runs Saved (DRS) was somewhere in between. If one treats Total Zone's harsh assessment of Gardner as an outlier, these numbers say that the Yankees' outfield saved somewhere between 10 and 20 runs last year. Not too shabby.

Heading into 2014. the Yankees have made a concerted effort to improve by going on a spending spree. Sure they've added a bunch of offense in Brian McCann, Jacoby Ellsbury, and Carlos Beltran, but they also lost one of the most valuable offensive assets in the game in Robinson Cano. Their improvement offensively is likely to be minimal at best. The area where they could improve the most, however, might be in those outfield gloves that performed so admirably last year.

How can that be? Let's make a few assumptions first, namely that Gardner, Ellsbury, and Beltran will be healthy all year and play left, center, and right field, respectively. For each of these guys we can look at the most recent three years of defensive data (2011 through 2013 except for Gardner, who played left field from 2010 through 2012) and calculate the rate at which they saved runs in the field per 1,400 innings played (roughly a full season). Crunch the numbers for each, and there you have a reasonable estimate for how the 2014 version of the outfield will perform:

PositionDRSUZRTZ
Beltran - RF-0.8-8.2-6.5
Ellsbury - CF10.212.98.4
Gardner - LF32.634.133.2
Total41.938.835.1

Holy Rizzuto! That's an improvement of almost 26 runs according to DRS, about 16 runs according to UZR, and more than 44 runs according to TZ. The key here is Ellsbury's presence as one of the best center fielders in the game and its ripple effect in putting Gardner in left field. All systems agree that Gardner might be the best fielder at any position in Major League Baseball when he plays left field. If these two can remain healthy (a very risky assumption), they will be extremely valuable despite their lack of power offensively.

Another thing to take from the numbers above is that Beltran is pretty much done as a useful fielder. Overall, he will probably still provide decent value because of his strong bat, so what if the Yankees took advantage of that? They've proven to have an inexplicable love for Ichiro, so they could easily platoon him with Beltran in right field, then platoon Beltran with Soriano at DH. This way Beltran is still an everyday player, he's less of an injury risk, and Randy Levine still gets to watch Ichiro flash the leather every now and again. Here's how the outfield would look with that configuration:

PositionDRSUZRTZ
Ichiro/Beltran - RF2.70.0-3.9
Ellsbury - CF10.212.98.4
Gardner - LF32.634.133.2
Total45.446.937.8

Depending on the metric, in this scenario the Yankees would improve by at least 25 runs but as many as 47. To put that in perspective, an improvement of 47 runs is roughly the equivalent of adding an All-Star caliber player to the roster. The Ellsbury effect is looking better and better.

Another outside-the-box and unfortunately unrealistic scenario would be if the Yankees decide to make Beltran the full-time DH and instead platoon Soriano with the apple of their eye in right field. After losing his battle with second base as a youngster, Soriano has turned himself into a capable outfielder, even at this late stage in his career. The trick is he has never played right field before, but we can use his data as a left fielder to get an estimate of how he would do there. Here is the 2014 outfield with Soriano instead of Beltran:

PositionDRSUZRTZ
Ichiro/Soriano - RF0.48.72.5
Ellsbury - CF10.212.98.4
Gardner - LF32.634.133.2
Total43.155.744.1

Amazingly, the improvement in the outfield could be as many as 53 runs in this alignment. So there you have it. If the Yankees return to the playoffs this year it might just be due to a vast improvement in their outfield gloves as a result of the Jacoby Ellsbury signing.

Around the Empire: New York Yankees News - 2/18/14

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Last Time on Pinstripe Alley

Yankees News

Yankees Spring Training: There's only one open roster spot for position players

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There's no one in camp that can fill all their needs.

The Yankees have a total of 66 players in spring training this year, 40 from the roster and another 26 brought in as Non-Roster Invitees. From these players, we will find out who is going to make the 2014 Opening Day roster. There are certainly a few spots on the roster that are up for grabs, however, there is really only one free spot left to be awarded and there's no easy answer as to who will fill it.

Generally, teams go with 12 pitchers and 13 position players on their 25-man roster, so if we assume that they will have five starting pitchers and seven relievers, we can move onto the position players. The Yankees will obviously have Derek Jeter, Mark Teixeira, Jacoby Ellsbury, Brian McCann, Brett Gardner, and Carlos Beltran on the team. Alfonso Soriano will serve as a DH and backup outfielder, Brendan Ryan will be the backup shortstop, Kelly Johnson will play third, and Brian Roberts was already awarded the starting second base job. It doesn't matter who ends up as the backup catcher, because we know they'll have two catchers on the roster. Unless the Yankees decide to go with one backup outfielder (Johnson could play the corners), Ichiro Suzuki will also be on the team. That's 12 position players, leaving them room for one more.

The problem is that the Yankees still have more needs than their options can fill. They need someone to platoon at third base with Johnson, probably someone to platoon at second base with Roberts, and a backup first baseman would be nice as well. I'm thinking the Yankees like Scott Sizemore, and if he shows he's healthy, he could be the favorite to make the team as a potential third baseman and second baseman. When it comes to first base, the only player in camp who can pass as a first baseman is Russ Canzler (who can also play third). Only one can really make the team, so which will they value more?

As great as the Yankees were at going out and getting big name players, they did an incredibly awful job at filling the roster with useful pieces. They brought in all these players for spring training, but none of them can really give them what they need as a reliable option. If Jeter or Teixeira or Roberts go down, what are they going to do? They still don't have much Triple-A depth and the depth they do have probably can't produce at even a replacement player-level

The Yankees constructed a roster built to succeed in the event that absolutely everything goes exactly right. You would think after a season like 2013, they could figure out a way to both improve and become more stable. Maybe I'm worrying too much, but after nearly $500 million spent, it would be nice to have more confidence in this team.

Joe Girardi names Brian Roberts Yankees starting second baseman

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Shocked? Not shocked.

Joe Girardi met with the press on Monday at Steinbrenner Field in Tampa and acknowledged that Brian Roberts will be the Yankees' starting second baseman. This isn't exactly breaking news after the Yankees gave him $2 million after Robinson Cano left for Seattle, but assigning an every day player tag to a guy that hasn't played more than 77 games since 2009 doesn't inspire a lot of confidence.

The fact that Roberts is an older player who has a history of long term injuries was not lost on Girardi, but the Yankee manager says he still feels comfortable putting the 36-year-old out there every day. Roberts took the bold route of declaring that he wouldn't try to be Cano and that he hoped that would be enough. Considering the lack of infield depth the Yankees have, it might have to be enough. With Roberts' injury history, it seems like the team would feel pretty good if he made it to the All-Star break without a lengthy DL stint.

Having Roberts slot in as the every day second baseman leaves Kelly Johnson as the likely favorite for the starting third base job. Eduardo Nunez, Yangervis Solarte, Dean Anna, and Russ Canzler, among other options, will also be vying for infield jobs as bench players. Brian Cashman called the third base gig "Kelly Johnson and a cast of characters", but Roberts' history of lingering health problems could easily turn second base into the same situation if the Yankees are intending to play him every day.

Robinson Cano, Yasiel Puig, and hustling down the line

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Would you rather have a loafer down the line, or a crazy player who will eventually run through a wall?

People are still annoyed at Robinson Cano'stouch-and-go relationship with the first-base line. It's a tired topic that shouldn't still be around, but it keeps jogging up the storyline, never reaching the end.

"If somebody told me I was a dog,’’ (Yankees hitting coach Kevin) Long said here Sunday, "I’d have to fix that. When you choose not to, you leave yourself open to taking heat, and that’s your fault. For whatever reason, Robbie chose not to.’’

That was before Long explained how hard Cano worked in other parts of his game, but you know which quotes got the headlines. So I apologize, but Anecdote Theater is the best way for me to explain why people still get so mad about Cano's loafing.

When I played Little League, I was an arrogant twit. I was an All-Star until I was about 10 because of my natural talent. No one taught me how to be that good. So when coaches told me to get my back elbow up or close my front leg, I'd respond with a pfffft. You can't argue with results, baby.

I stopped playing Little League at 15 because I was awful. I never progressed, and I wasn't going to sit on the bench, where I belonged, so I quit. And in the 20 years since then, I've had a lot of time to think. Maybe I should have taken the coach's advice. Maybe I should have taken baseball seriously. I could have been good enough to play all the way until … like, Little League, but the one for slightly older kids.

Man, if I played now, I could take State. How much do you want to bet I could throw this baseball over those mountains?

The odds are fair that you have a similar story. Maybe not the part about being a twit, but the part about not taking the game as seriously as you would today. Admit it, you've had those thoughts. You would study the game more, realize the importance of sound mechanics, work the counts better … and, sure, you could throw that baseball over those mountains. I believe you.

The point: There's a reason fans take hustling seriously. It's the one thing we know we could have done. I did not have natural talent or athletic ability, but I could have hustled. I could have studied. I could have tried harder. I could have busted it up the first-base line. And if you did all of those things, but still didn't progress far in your baseball career, you have special animosity toward the players who don't hustle. Why should they get all the talent? Seems unfair.

People get grumpy when players like Cano (or Barry Bonds before him) jimblejog up the line as if they're stuck in the gravitational pull of the dugout. It offends sensibilities.


Cano practices running down the first-base line. Photo: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports


On the same day the Cano story came out, this was a headline:

Dodgers' Yasiel Puig plans to dial it down, at least a little, in 2014

The article did not include quotes like this:

"I play as if demon hounds are chasing me, gnashing their teeth, ready to feast on my mortal soul, only to have me born anew, where they will be waiting again," Puig said. "There is no rest, no peace. There is only the chase, an eternal chase, and I will not let them catch me. And if that means running through the occasional stop sign at third …"

But it could have. Puig plays like a freak. The Dodgers want him to slow it down, for a lot of reasons. He's doing things like overthrowing cutoff men at silly times, for one. But the Dodgers are also concerned he's going to go through a wall like Michael Madsen in The Natural, except Puig will be running down the first-base line at the time.

I'll tell you as a fan which one I'd rather watch. Puig plays like he's a mongoose wrestling with a plugged-in hair dryer that fell in the bathtub. It's fascinating. It's compelling. It's entertainment. When I plunk down the clams for a ticket, it's what I want to see.


Yasiel Puig lays down a sacrifice bunt. Photo: Jeff Gross/Getty Images

I'll tell you as a GM or owner which one I'd rather watch. In the first week of the season, someone will clutch the back of his leg as he runs down the line, and he'll go on the disabled list. It's possible a loafing player will cost his team a base during that time. The former will cost his team a couple of weeks, minimum. The latter will cost exactly one base, by definition. Maybe a run. Maaaaaaybe a win if the circumstances are perfect.

Give me the loafer as a GM, every danged time. When it comes to winning baseball games, unless you actually believe that grit and fire directly correlate with wins, there's more to lose with reckless abandon than there is by not running out routine grounders.

This is a false dichotomy, sure. The correct answer is somewhere in the middle. It's not a binary thing. Just dial it back, Puig. Be a standard freak instead of a generational freak. And pick it up, Cano. Fake the caring just enough that you aren't putting your hamstrings at risk, and shut the old people up. These two players represent different ends of the spectrum, though, and I know which one I'd rather watch. And I know which one I'd rather see from the players on my team.

To recap:

  1. Jogging to first isn't a big deal
  2. But that's why jogging to first seems like a big deal
  3. Yasiel Puig is a freak

This will come up again. It won't necessarily be Cano, and it might not be Puig, but there will always be people waiting for a loafing superstar, and those people will be holding a hot take in one hand and a -gate suffix in the other. But as someone who watched Barry Bonds loaf down the line for several healthy-hamstrung years, I'm convinced lack of grounder-based hustle isn't a big deal when it comes to wins and losses. The only harm is that it makes baseball a little less interesting and aesthetically pleasing.

Depending on what you're watching the game for, though, that might be enough to keep yelling.

More from SB Nation MLB:

Craig Kimbrel's extension a win-win signing for Braves

Daily inspirational texts from the Astros’ skipper

Arbitration: A necessary evil

Derek Jeter, the last captain of New York

Remembering former All-Star and manager Jim Fregosi


Kevin Long, the new loud mouth of the Yankees?

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The Yankees hitting coach opens his mouth again

Throughout Yankees history there have been many loud mouths in the clubhouse who say stupid things in front of the wrong people. Last year, Joba Chamberlain held the title. In spring training he told the media he could still start, then he proceeded to shush Mariano Rivera. Now that he's gone, has Yankees hitting coach Kevin Long taken over?

If you remember, once Mark Teixeira went down for the season and needed wrist surgery, Yankees Long came out and said that he believed the first baseman was "never right" even before he returned for his 15 games in 2013. This comment threw many Yankee officials for a loop, including Brian Cashman, who was never made aware of Long's opinion:

"It's alarming in the fact that K-Long would say that to the group of the reporters, but he never said that prior to that," Cashman said. "This is a lot of times how things work out when things go bad, things get said. If K-Long felt that way he should have been saying that from Day 1, but we never heard that from K-Long...Am I mad at Kevin Long because of that? No," said Cashman. "But do I think that commentary jibes with Kevin Long's comments internally in that clubhouse regarding this player prior to him going down? Absolutely not...If K-Long said that, he's a monk because he kept his mouth shut the whole time...Some people are better with the microphone than others," he added. "Let's put it that way."

Long opened his mouth again, and this time he pointed it at ex-Yankee Robinson Cano, choosing to focus back on the second baseman's reputation for jogging to first base:

"If somebody told me I was a dog I'd have to fix that. When you choose not to, you leave yourself open to taking heat, and that's your fault. For whatever reason, Robbie chose not to...We all talked to him, I'm pretty sure Jeter talked to him a number of times. Even if you run at 80%, no one's going to say anything. But when you jog down the line, even if it doesn't come into play 98% of the time, it creates a perception.

He just wouldn't make that choice to run hard all the time. The reasons aren't going to make sense. He might say his legs didn't feel good, or he was playing every day and needed to save his energy. To me there was no acceptable answer.''

"I was probably closer to Robbie than any player I've worked with, so on a personal level it stings a little.

After new Mariners manager Lloyd McClendon voiced his annoyance about the comments, Long clarified:

Sure, he meant no harm, but you can't talk ill of someone and then play it off like it wasn't bad. That's like adding "Just Saying" to the end of an insult. And saying he's not a spokesman? That might be the worst offense of all. It's not like he said these things at a bar. They were said to the media at the Yankees camp while in full uniform. You might not be THE spokesman, but you are A spokesman.

Cashman again had to clean up the mess, saying he was surprised and never had a problem with Cano's running. Asked if he was going to talk to Long about his comments, the GM replied "too late." That's not the sound of a happy boss, and while Long is well liked for his reputation with helping players, how long will it be before he says something that can't be easily ignored?

Yu Darvish: Yankees paid 'too much' for Masahiro Tanaka

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Yu Darvish thinks countryman Masahiro Tanaka was rewarded with a bit too much money from the Yankees.

Rangers right-hander Yu Darvish told Anthony Andro of Fox Sports Southwest on Tuesday afternoon, "I don't know too much about the new posting system but I think the Yankees gave him too much."

Following his comments, Darvish released a statement later on Tuesday insisting that he was joking in regards to Tanaka's contract.

"I am sorry if anyone took my comment seriously about Masahiro Tanaka at the press conference today," Darvish said. "I assumed by the reaction in the room that everyone knew I was joking."

Tanaka's deal with the Yankees has been a divisive topic, with some questioning how a team could pay $155 million to a player who has never thrown a pitch in the majors. Others have countered with the argument that Tanaka is just 25 years old, and therefore, a rare commodity in today's free agent landscape, which is often made up of players in their late 20s or early 30s.

Back in 2012, Darvish signed a six-year, $56 million deal with the Rangers, which will pay him $10 million per year over the next three seasons before rising to $11 million in 2017, the final year of the deal. But Texas also had to fork up $51.7 million as a posting fee just to earn the rights to negotiate with Darvish.

The Yankees, of course, didn't have to make such a commitment to negotiate with Tanaka, as changes in the posting system between MLB and NPB, Japan's top professional baseball league, capped any potential posting fees at $20 million. These changes allowed the Yankees to invest more money in Tanaka's contract, which will see him earn nearly $100 million more than Darvish.

Darvish also told MLB.com's TR Sullivan on Tuesday that the recent success of other Japanese pitchers such as Hiroki Kuroda, Hisashi Iwakuma and Darvish himself have certainly helped how scouts and MLB teams now view a player like Tanaka.

Whether Tanaka becomes a great signing for the Yankees or a bust is yet to be determined. Darvish has no doubt adjusted well to life in the majors after finishing with a 2.83 ERA and over three times as many strikeouts as walks in his second big league campaign.

Given his large contract and all the media attention devoted to Tanaka this offseason, there is little doubt that the 25-year-old right-hander will be under a lot of scrutiny once the season begins.

More from SB Nation MLB:

Craig Kimbrel's extension a win-win signing for Braves

Daily inspirational texts from the Astros’ skipper

Arbitration: A necessary evil

Derek Jeter, the last captain of New York

Remembering former All-Star and manager Jim Fregosi

David Robertson and the catch-22 of the "proven closer" title

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"You need more experience." "But how do I get more experience if no one will give me experience?"

Wanted: Capable young closer to replace a baseball legend. Must be willing to endure endless comparisons to the greatest person to ever perform the job and deal with questions about the organization's decision not to pursue any closers with more experience.

Interested? Mo bless you.

All off-season long and even before, it seemed like the Yankees were comfortable entering the 2014 season with longtime setup man David Robertson in tackle the unenviable task of replacing the incomparable Mariano Rivera at the end of Yankees games. Many people like the scribes here at Pinstripe Alley felt it was a promotion that was well-deserved, given D-Rob's previous four excellent years of relief pitching, a period in which the biggest problem in his game (his control) simply improved to become better than ever (2.4 BB/9 in 2013).

Others, however, are uninterested in giving Robertson a chance simply because he doesn't have much previous closing experience. They tend to point to the two games in which he entered following Rivera's 2012 injury and served as the closer. He saved one game, blew the other, then went down with an oblique injury for about a month (the only time the otherwise-quite-healthy reliever has ever spent on the DL in six MLB seasons). By the time he returned, Rafael Soriano had taken the closer's job, so manager Joe Girardi understandably decided to stick with the hot hand and Robertson returned to his setup role for the remainder of the season.

It should go without saying that two games is hardly a big enough sample size to completely disqualify an excellent reliever from future closing opportunities. It is a ridiculously unfair citation since every single reliever in the history of existence will go through a bad game at times. Robertson saved one game and failed to finish off the other. Big deal. When Rivera first got the closer's job in 1997, he blew three of his first six opportunities, including a mammoth Mark McGwire homer into the old black seats in center that led to a loss in the home opener. Robertson needs more of a stretch than two games before fans even have a remote reason to distrust him.

Robertson also has just eight career saves in limited opportunities, and his critics will point to the fact that he has 10 blown saves on his record. However, as Harlan Spence has pointed out in the comments on occasion, that statistic is incredibly misleading. On the rare occasion that he's entered a game in a save situation while setting up for Rivera or Soriano and lost the lead, it has counted as a blown save. When Robertson successfully converts and passes it on to the closer with the lead, he doesn't get a save for that. Instead, he gets a hold, a relatively new statistic. Per Baseball-Reference, Robertson has notched a remarkable 116 holds during his career and averaged 32 per year over the past three years. Much more often than not, Robertson gets the job done; the blown save stat lumps in his atypical failures as a setup man.

Hell, go back and actually look at the game logs for those 10 blown saves. His two in 2010 occurred in the sixth inning. All three of his 2011 blown saves occurred before the ninth inning while setting up for Rivera. Two in 2012 came as a closer, but the third was not. Both of his 2013 blown saves came in a setup role. So for all the talk about the 10 blown saves, only two were actually as a closer. So if you're really married to the idea of judging Robertson on his minimal closing experience, his actual record is eight saves in ten opportunities. That is fine and mostly irrelevant anyway.

It's honestly been difficult to comprehend why some people have such a problem with giving the closer's job to Robertson simply because he hasn't been a full-time closer before. As Greg Kirkland has noted on the podcast, it's the classic catch-22 of applying for jobs right out of college. The recent graduate likely doesn't have much work experience on his record, but many of the listed jobs demand experience. Many résumés are thrown out without much of a look simply because the former student doesn't have much experience. How the hell is he or she supposed to get the experience if no one offers a chance? It's the same case here, except on a higher level with more public exposure. How can Robertson get the closing experience if he's not given a chance? If the Yankees passed on it and let him leave in free agency after the season, some team would give him a chance, he would likely succeed, and the Yankees would probably rue their faulty judgment. Guess what? Every single successful closer in history had no experience at one point or another.

Goose Gossage had three career saves in 95 games before the White Sox gave him a shot in 1975. One Hall of Fame career spent most with the Yankees later, it turned out pretty well. Trevor Hoffman only had five saves in a season split between the expansion Marlins and the Padres before the Padres let him have a try in 1994. A crazy 596 saves later, one would say they made the right decision, no? Most damning of all is the beginnings of the man Robertson is succeeding as closer himself, Mariano Rivera.

Just like Robertson, Rivera was a mere setup man in 1996 and just like Robertson, a damn good setup man at that. Yet the Yankees chose to let incumbent closer and World Series MVP John Wetteland walk during free agency since they were confident enough that Rivera could do the job. Sure enough, when Rivera had those aforementioned April struggles, they were many a #HotTake about how the Yankees might have made a bad decision to go with someone who had not closed before and how it was questionable to let the reliable Wetteland go. It's a good thing that the Yankees didn't take that advice to heart during the previous off-season because otherwise, Rivera's career might never have exploded the way it did while the Yankees won three straight championships.

Robertson has put in his time as a setup man and has been an excellent reliever for years now. Letting him have a shot at the most challenging relief job in baseball is well within his capabilities. It's wonderful that it seems like the Yankees are giving him a chance. To Robertson's doubters, I only ask that you offer him the same chance as well.

I mean, come on.

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Lloyd McClendon 'surprised' by Kevin Long's criticisms of Robinson Cano

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The Mariners manager is surprised and angry with the criticisms that Yankees hitting coach Kevin Long directed towards Robinson Cano on Sunday.

New Mariners manager Lloyd McClendon expressed his surprise on Tuesday at Yankees hitting coach Kevin Long's criticism of Robinson Canoper a report from ESPN's Jerry Crasnick.

On Sunday, Long lamented the fact he could never get Cano to hustle down the first base line on every play.

"If somebody told me I was a dog, I'd have to fix that," Long stated. "When you choose not to, you leave yourself open to taking heat, and that's your fault. For whatever reason, Robbie chose not to."

Long went on to say that Cano would often come up with excuses for not running hard to first, but in Long's eyes, "There was no acceptable answer."

Asked about Long's comments on Tuesday, McClendon said Long should keep his opinions to himself, believing that the Yankees hitting coach had overstepped his bounds in criticizing Cano:

Last time I checked, I didn't know that Kevin Long was the spokesman for the New York Yankees. That was a little surprising. I was a little pissed off, and I'm sure Joe [Girardi] feels the same way. He's concerned with his team and what they're doing, not what the Seattle Mariners are doing.

In response, Long told ESPN New York's Andrew Marchand that there was no malicious meaning in his comments about Cano and he is not the spokesman for the Yankees.

Cano played nine seasons with the Yankees before signing a 10-year, $240 million contract with the Mariners this offseason. The second baseman debuted in 2005, finishing second in the AL Rookie of the Year voting, and made five All-Star teams as a member of the Yankees. He batted .314/.383/.516 with 27 home runs and 107 RBI in 2013.

The 2014 season will be Long's eighth as the Yankees' hitting coach, with the team's offense generally among the league's best during his tenure with the club.

Following McClendon's comments and Long's subsequent apology, the issue appears to have blown over for the time being. The two teams will first meet during the 2014 season on April 29 when the Mariners travel to New York in what will be Cano's first trip back to Yankee Stadium since signing with the Mariners.

More from SB Nation MLB:

Steven Goldman: Derek Jeter vs. History

Brisbee: Robinson Cano, Yasiel Puig and hustling down the line

Yu Darvish: Yankees paid too much for Masahiro Tanaka

Video: You shouldn't use bats like this | #Lookit

Arbitration: A necessary evil

On the first day of full Spring Training, Lloyd McClendon kicked down the door

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On the day the Mariners held their first full-squad workout, Lloyd McClendon sent a message about what type of manager he's going to be.

Maybe Lloyd McClendon learned more from Jim Leyland than how to smoke cigarettes in your underwear. Then again, the way he speaks and the way he acts, maybe managing a baseball team is something that comes more naturally to him than his time with the Pirates led on.

But today, we're talking about the Seattle Mariners. That's something McClendon made very clear. The initial volley in what's now bordering on a feud after repeated responses by McClendon came from New York Yankees hitting coach Kevin Long, as his once-leaked perspective on Robinson Cano's supposed lack of hustle went public to New Jersey Star Ledger.

McClendon's first response on the matter was strong, as he fired back at Long via ESPN's Jerry Crasnick:

"Last time I checked, I didn't know that Kevin Long was the spokesman for the New York Yankees," McClendon told ESPN.com. "That was a little surprising. I was a little pissed off, and I'm sure Joe [Girardi] feels the same way. He's concerned with his team and what they're doing, not what the Seattle Mariners players are doing.

"I'm a little surprised that Kevin Long is the spokesman for the New York Yankees. I wonder if he had any problems with Robbie when he wrote that book ["Cage Rat"] proclaiming himself as the guru of hitting."

Those comments, presumably, came from this morning. They only got better when McClendon spoke to the media following the Mariners' first full-squad workout. Here they are, courtesy of Shannon Drayer:

...Like I said earlier, I didn't know he was the spokesman for the New York Yankees, but it is what it is. My concern is Robinson Cano in a Seattle Mariners uniform and what he is moving forward. I don't give a damn what he did for the Yankees. I have no concern whatsoever." [...]

"One of the messages that I am trying to send to my players is we don't have to take a back seat to anybody. That includes the New York Yankees or anybody else," he said. "My concern is my players and the family atmosphere we build here. Any time anyone attacks one of my players then I am going to defend them. If you don't like it, tough [shit]."

As McClendon alludes to in the latter part of that, this is much bigger than Lloyd McClendon v. Kevin Long—it's about a philosophy built around family. McClendon is going to back his players in any situation, and he's going to do so fervently. You will, undoubtedly, see him get up in the grill of an umpire who wronged one of his guys, probably throw a tantrum from time to time. And if the situation dictates such an outcome, McClendon may even call for a fastball to someone's ribs. Thus far, that's the type of guy he seems to be.

Where Eric Wedge felt to me like an actor trying to play a baseball manager in a movie, what Lloyd McClendon said today was better than anything you'd find in a screenplay.

But while McClendon will stand by his players, he isn't going to baby them. Creating a family atmosphere doesn't mean everyone's going to be happy.

"This is a results-oriented business," said McClendon on Saturday. "This is not about development at this level, it's about winning games. If you want to be developed then we'll send you back to the minor leagues and you can do all the developing you want to do."

Of course, quotes are just quotes. Talk is just talk. While everything we've seen and heard thus far is positive, we don't know how McClendon will construct a lineup, utilize a bullpen or make adjustments through the course of the game. And while those are important, so too is the ability to lead a club and earn that oh-so-crucial "buy in," as unquantifiable as that is.

What McClendon did here is a big step in that direction. When Robinson Cano spoke at his introductory press conference about the Mariners feeling more like a family, everyone laughed and said "Sure, $240 million would make anyone feel like family." But maybe it wasn't all nonsense. Or, if it was then, maybe it isn't now.

At the very first opportunity, before Robinson Cano even stepped on the field to represent the Mariners, Lloyd McClendon had his back and spoke out with passion. If Cano already respected McClendon before, what does he think now? And if you're not Robinson Cano, but Justin Smoak or Dustin Ackley or—hell—Jesus Montero, maybe you're more likely to give the skipper the trust and respect the he deserves, and needs, if your team's best position player is doing so.

Maybe, probably, it was just an old-school baseball manager doing the type of thing old-school baseball managers do. But, either incidentally or intentionally, it was an example of keen leadership tactics.

Is this going to win the Mariners games? I don't know. But I said it when McClendon was first hired, and I'll continue to say it, there's nothing to dislike so far.

But if this serious side doesn't work, maybe Lloyd McClendon's other side, his more light-hearted side, will do the trick.

Because if you ask Fernando Rodney, Lloyd McClendon can motivate through dancing:

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