Showing posts with label Philadelphia Phillies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philadelphia Phillies. Show all posts

Friday, July 3, 2020

The Yankees and the 2020 MLB Schedule

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Graphic incorrectly says "NL West" It should say NL East*
The 2020 season for Major League Baseball is happening, at least where we stand here today at the end of June. What a year it's been, but the return of baseball (at least to me) means so much more than just a return to normalcy. To me, it's a return to everything.

While the entire 2020 schedule has not been released as of yet, we do know that the Yankees will be inside Nationals Park facing off against Max Scherzer and the defending MLB World Series Champions on July 23rd. Once the MLB odds are released, we will be able to see what the point-spread is. The presumed starting pitching matchup on that night will be Gerrit Cole, who will finally be making his Yankees debut after signing a 9-year deal worth $324 million, against Scherzer. 

What we do know thus far is that the Yankees will play 10 games each against each of their AL East rivals, as well as a total of 20 games against National League East teams as well. In some capacity, the Yankees will play 10 games each against the Toronto Blue Jays, Boston Red Sox, Baltimore Orioles and the Tampa Bay Rays. New York will also play three games each with the Atlanta Braves and the Philadelphia Phillies, while playing four games against the Washington Nationals and the Miami Marlins. In a bit of a twist, MLB has decided to allow teams to play their "rivals" from their opposing division an extra two times, so the New York Yankees and New York Mets will play a total of six times head-to-head in 2020. 

 Check back in a few days after the full schedule is out.

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

The World Series is Back On in New York!



Welcome back to the blog!

As I am sure most everyone has heard, baseball is back for the 2020 season. Despite the concerns surrounding the country right now, including COVID-19, Major League Baseball and the Players Union have agreed to a 60-game season here in 2020. The 2020 season will be unlike any other that any of have seen during our lifetime, and not just because the number of games being played is significantly less than the usual 162-game marathon. The universal DH will be making its way to the league, giving the National League their first real taste of the designated hitter. Also, there will be a schedule change that will include 40 games within your own division and 20 games against teams in the NL that share your divisional alignment (The AL East plays the NL East, the AL Central plays the NL Central, the AL West plays the NL West). The Yankees will play 10 games each against the Baltimore Orioles, the Boston Red Sox, the Toronto Blue Jays and the Tampa Bay Rays while they will also play 4 games each against the Atlanta Braves, the New York Mets, the Miami Marlins, the Philadelphia Phillies, and the defending World Series Champion Washington Nationals.

There will be no expanded playoffs, and whether anyone likes it or not... the World Series WILL count for 2020. It's in the record books, deal with it. No asterisk. Wouldn't be an asterisk if the Red Sox, Astros, or Mets won it, so there won't be one when the Yankees win it. Deal with it and save your tears.

I am so excited to be back, ladies and gents. The game needed this, in some opinions the country needed this, and I really, REALLY needed this.

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

Predicting the 2019 Season: The Standings



The 2018 saw three teams in the American League win at least 100 games, but on the flip side of that coin we also watched as teams like the Kansas City Royals, Baltimore Orioles, and others struggled mightily to win games all season long. To have just one team win 100 games is not the most common thing in the league in recent memory, so to have three is downright special. Will we see a repeat of that here in 2019? Only time will tell, but I will do my best to predict whether they will, or they won’t, as well as what teams will make the postseason and win their respective divisions as well. Bookmark this. I have a feeling by the end of the season I will be eating a whole lot of crow with these predictions, as usual.



American League East

New York Yankees: 96-66
Boston Red Sox: 92-70
Tampa Bay Rays: 87-75
Toronto Blue Jays: 66-96
Baltimore Orioles: 59-103

I know, most will call me a homer for picking the New York Yankees to win the division. Guess what? I don’t care. Maybe I am a homer, or maybe I can just see better than most that the team has done a lot to improve themselves here in 2019, especially on the pitching side of things. Boston will undoubtedly take a step back with that bullpen and the loss of Craig Kimbrel while you cannot expect Ian Snell to repeat what he did in 2018. Not to say that the Red Sox or Rays are necessarily worse teams in 2019, but an awful lot has to go right for a team to win 90 games, 100 games, or even 108 games. There’s a certain luck factor there and that historically just doesn’t translate from year-to-year.



American League Central

Cleveland Indians: 88-76
Minnesota Twins: 82-80
Chicago White Sox: 74-88
Detroit Tigers: 72-90
Kansas City Royals: 70-92

I don’t think there are any real surprises here other than maybe the win total of the Minnesota Twins. I know the Twins lost one of their better and more consistent starters, when healthy, in Ervin Santana, but I really like the young core of guys that the Twins have. Extending a couple of their guys allows them to focus solely on the game, and that generally translates into production on the field. I think they will at least be in the conversation for the second Wild Card this season, assuming the health of their key contributors.



American League West

Oakland Athletics: 91-71
Houston Astros: 90-72
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim: 81-81
Texas Rangers: 73-89
Seattle Mariners: 70-92

Kill me if you want to, but the Houston Astros lost a whole lot of pitching this offseason, Justin Verlander has to age eventually, and the Oakland Athletics are just a damn good team. I could end up with egg on my face by the end of the season, but these are my predictions regardless. Also, I love how Seattle “reinvented their roster” rather than rebuild the team. Same difference, at least according to the above.



Wild Card #1 – Boston Red Sox
Wild Card #2 – Houston Astros







National League East

Atlanta Braves: 93-69
Washington Nationals: 91-71
Philadelphia Phillies: 88-74
New York Mets: 80-82
Miami Marlins: 60-102

I truly believe that the Atlanta Braves are a much better team than they were in 2018, and here’s why. Josh Donaldson, if healthy and we all presume he will be, is a monster on a one-year deal and will provide a legitimate bat in the middle of that lineup. I also think that Brian McCann, even a shell of his former self, will help more than can be expressed or quantified with the Braves pitching staff. I expect Washington to be in the thick of things again and better than they were last year, maybe even in spite of Bryce Harper, while the Phillies “stupid money” offseason plan will fall just short.




National League Central

Milwaukee Brewers: 91-71
St. Louis Cardinals: 87-75
Chicago Cubs: 85-77
Cincinnati Reds: 81-81
Pittsburgh Pirates: 80-82

I think the NL Central will be the most competitive division in all of Major League Baseball in 2019. The Brewers should be the cream of the crop, but the Cardinals and Cubs should be right on their tails for much of the season. The Reds added a ton of pitching to go with their young group of players while the Pirates, while still rebuilding, still have great pitching with Chris Archer and others.



National League West

Los Angeles Dodgers: 97-65
Colorado Rockies: 89-73
San Diego Padres: 80-82
San Francisco Giants: 75-87
Arizona Diamondbacks: 73-89

No, I am not jumping on the Manny Machado bandwagon and donning him the reason the Padres improve by 16 games in 2019. He will help, sure, but the Padres have a great young team that is absolutely stacked with talent. That, alongside Machado, will be the reason the Padres make a real stride this season. I expect Eric Hosmer to be better as well, compared to what he produced in Kansas City to what he did in San Diego he almost has to improve you would think, which should help the Padres win more games in what should be a weaker division overall in 2019.


Wild Card #1 - Washington Nationals
Wild Card #2 - Colorado Rockies

What will happen in the postseason? You have to tune in tomorrow to find out!



Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Meet the 2019 Yankees: JA Happ



The New York Yankees got everything they could have asked for, well… almost everything, from JA Happ last season after acquiring him from the Toronto Blue Jays for a package made up of Brandon Drury and others. New York liked him so much, in fact, that on December 17, 2018 the team decided to bring him back on a two-year deal worth $34 million with an option for a third season. Yankees fans are already pretty familiar with Happ after his 7-0 record with the team in 2018, and his subsequent “let down” for lack of a better word in the postseason against the Boston Red Sox, but for those who aren’t, let’s meet him. Your 2019 New York Yankees, here is lefty JA Happ.

JA Happ, 36-years old, is a left-handed starting pitcher that handles himself well on the mound with his 6’5” and 205 lb. frame. Happ possesses a 93 MPH four-seam fastball, a 91 MPH sinker, an 86 MPH slider, an 86 MPH changeup, and a curveball that he rarely throws at 76 MPH.

James Anthony Happ was born on October 19, 1982 in Peru, Illinois with two older sisters. Happ attended High School at St. Bede Academy, where the lefty was a four-year letter winner in both basketball and baseball. Happ graduated from St. Bede in 2001 and continued his amateur baseball career at Northwestern University where he majored in history. Happ also played for the Northwestern Wildcats where he was named All-Big Ten Conference First Team in his freshman, sophomore, and junior years while attending the university. After his junior season the Philadelphia Phillies drafted the lefty in the third round, 92nd overall, of the 2004 MLB First Year Players Draft. Happ signed immediately and was assigned to the Phillies minor league system.


Happ toiled in the Phillies minor league system and the Arizona Fall League through the 2007 season until Philadelphia called up the lefty to make his major league debut on June 30, 2007. Happ made one start against the New York Mets before being sent back to Triple-A for the remainder of the 2007 season. Happ started the 2008 season back in Triple-A as well, but he was back in the majors again starting against the Mets again on July 4th. Happ was up and down between Triple-A and the majors for the remainder of the 2008 season until he became a mainstay in the Phillies rotation in 2009. Happ, with a World Series ring after the Phillies won the World Series in 2008, entered the rotation in 2009 and led Philadelphia back to the World Series in 2009, this time against the New York Yankees. The Yankees would win the series in six games, sending Happ and the Phillies home with a bitter taste in their mouths.

Happ was back in the Phillies rotation in 2010 until the team traded him to the Houston Astros on July 29th along with Anthony Gose and Jonathan Villar in exchange for Roy Oswalt. Happ remained in Houston until the 2012 season when he was traded again, this time to the Toronto Blue Jays along with Brandon Lyon and David Carpenter for Francisco Cordero, Ben Francisco, Asher Wojciechowski, David Rollins, Joe Musgrove, Carlos Perez, and Kevin Comer. Happ pitched primarily out of the bullpen with the Blue Jays through the 2014 season before he was once again traded, this time to the Seattle Mariners for Michael Saunders. Happ was used primarily as a starter for the Mariners in 2015 before being shipped to the Pittsburgh Pirates on July 31, 2015, Happ hit free agency after the 2015 season and could finally decide his own landing spot after being traded so many times before, and the lefty decided that Toronto was where he wanted to pitch after signing a three-year deal worth $36 million with the Blue Jays keeping him in Toronto through the 2018 season.


Happ lasted in Toronto until July 26, 2018 when the Blue Jays shipped him to the New York Yankees for outfielder Billy McKinney and third baseman Brandon Drury. Happ remained with the Yankees for the remainder of the 2018 season posting a 7-0 record, helping propel New York to the postseason as a Wild Card winner for the second consecutive season. The Yankees finished the season with 100 victories, but their season ended prematurely at the hand of the eventual World Series champion Boston Red Sox in the American League Division Series. Happ returned to the Yankees on a free agent deal after the 2018 season, this time for two-years and $34 million including an option for a third season.

Not that I have to again, but welcome back to the team, welcome back to the organization, and welcome back to the family JA.


Monday, December 24, 2018

George Steinbrenner and the Ghost of Yankees Past: Part V - The End of Austerity




Set the scene. Hal Steinbrenner, CC Sabathia, Carlos Beltran, Brian Cashman, and many other Yankees players, executives, and personnel are walking across the frozen Yankee Stadium turf with one of the offseason’s top free agents behind them, Manny Machado. Machado’s picture is up on the huge Yankee Stadium screen that is out in center field with him wearing a Yankees uniform and hat while a certain someone is standing behind the Yankee Stadium façade just watching. His name is George Steinbrenner, or as we have come to know him as the Ghost of Yankees Past, and he is looking down on the beautiful billion-dollar stadium that he built with the biggest smile on his face. The Ghost of Yankees Past is out early this year and he’s ready to pounce.

As the Yankees brass walked the highly-touted free agent around Yankee Stadium, George watched down with a sense of pride. Austerity had become a “thing” in the Bronx over the past five seasons, prompting his return to the Earth every Christmas Eve, and with the team finally under the luxury tax threshold last season the purse strings looked as loose as ever. Or did they? George felt a twinge in his stomach as just 90-minutes later he watched as Machado filed into his car and off into the sunset. Was this a good sign for the Yankees and their pursuit of Machado, or was it a sign of what was to come?


Flash forward five days to Christmas Eve. Parents everywhere are wrapping and placing James Paxton and JA Happ shirts, Yankees hats, Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton uniforms, and other assorted Bronx Bomber memorabilia under their Christmas trees after placing their young children and families to bed. Parents everywhere retire to their slumbers awaiting the excitement that will come with the next day, but as usual Daniel Burch, the owner of The Greedy Pinstripes, is sitting at his desk as he has for the past five Christmas eve’s working away, impatiently waiting for his annual visit from the Ghost of Yankees Past. Dan is sitting at his desk in the living room that he shares with his beautiful fiancée, Kari, when Mr. Steinbrenner swoops in and stands behind Mr. Burch as he works. Dan is on the phone and George begins to listen.

“Yes, we are getting married on the 2nd of January. We are going to do the whole courthouse thing, and then we will have a ceremony later on in the year. It’s just going to work best this way with the timing and financial aspect of everything, and neither of us want to wait any longer than we have to. Alright, I’ll let you go to bed. Merry Christmas and I will talk to you tomorrow. Okay, good night.” Dan put his phone down and turned his attention back to his computer screen, a word document open with the post entitled “Yankees Fans Are the Worst – Volume II.”

“Congratulations on the engagement, and now the impending nuptials!” George startled Dan as he spoke from behind him in his dark and empty living room. “Thanks, George. I was wondering when you were going to be stopping by. I have a lot to say to you.” Dan began to speak, but George stopped him, speaking first in an overpowering voice. “Let me stop you there because I know what you are going to say. Austerity is gone, and we should be back to spending very soon. I mean, look at what Cash has done already. James Paxton is here, JA Happ is back, and did you see him courting Manny Machado in the Bronx just the other day? It reminded me of the time when no one said I could sign Jason Giambi away from the Oakland Athletics, and yet I did. It reminded me of the time when they said that Mike Mussina would never leave Baltimore for their division rivals, yet here we are. It reminded me of a time when you, Mr. Daniel Burch, told me to ‘Get Greedy, Get Manny’ when Manny Ramirez was a free agent, despite the fact that we had already acquired CC Sabathia, AJ Burnett, Mark Teixeira and Nick Swisher. It reminded me of a better time, and it made me feel great about the future ahead.” George thought to himself that he had gotten the best of Dan this time as he looked down upon him with that grin that only Mr. Steinbrenner could possess. Dan let that sink in his mind and allowed the information to get digested into his soul before he began to speak.


“Mr. Steinbrenner, with all due respect… bullshit. Austerity is here and is as prevalent as it has ever been. If not in terms of dollars, in terms of years’ worth of commitments. If austerity were gone, Patrick Corbin would be wearing a Yankees uniform right now!” George’s jaw began to drop as Dan spoke, but before he could interject Dan continued on with his rant. “Now, while I don’t agree that Corbin should have received $140 million, the Yankees ‘informal’ offer of 5-years and $100 million is a slap in the face. Corbin all but said he wanted to pitch here, and it was a foregone conclusion that he would, yet we won’t commit a sixth year to a 29-year old left-handed starter and the best starter on the market? Yet we were able to work out a way to get Happ back in pinstripes at 36-years old and possibly get him the 3rd year that he coveted? In what world does that make sense? And while you’re here, in what world do the Yankees have six outfielders, hence meaning there is no room for Bryce Harper? It’s Bryce freaking Harper, George! When would having a player like Jacoby Ellsbury, a young piece like Clint Frazier, and a player who could easily ride the bench like Brett Gardner ever kept the Yankees from bringing in a one-in-a-generation type talent in Harper? He bats left-handed, he plays the outfield, he makes the team better, he makes your freaking son a boatload of money, and it makes the fans happy. In what Yankees universe is not signing Bryce Harper okay? And let’s be honest, we did the whole dog and pony show with Corbin as well, so just because Machado walked around Yankee Stadium and then went out to dinner with the club the same night doesn’t mean a thing. That and $15 will get you a beer at Yankee Stadium, if you’re lucky. Justify that $15 beer, go get a big name that makes me want to spend the astronomical money on the ticket, the transportation down there, the parking when I get there, the beer, the hot dogs, the pretzels, the merchandise, etc. And when I can’t be there in person make it worth my while to purchase the YES Network subscription or the MLB TV subscription. I love what the team has done during the rebuild, but the rebuild is over. The core is here. The time is now. Fill in the blanks, cross the T’s and dot the I’s, and stamp the Steinbrenner name on some of these checks you guys have lying around. If one of these checks goes to Manny Machado, awesome. If another goes to Bryce, even better. I’ve lived through the dynasty years, the down years that followed, missing the playoffs in 2008 and again in the 2010’s, I’ve lived through austerity, and I’ve lived through the promises that 2019 was ‘the’ year. It’s 2019, and you guys are officially on the clock. Do something.” Dan did not wait for a response to George, nor did he search his face for an answer, and merely turned around and went back to furiously typing on his keyboard.

As Dan continued to type his latest essay, George flew off into the crisp night sky en route to his next stop on his annual trip. The home of his son, Hal Steinbrenner. In a flash, George was standing outside the home of his son, Hal, and was glaring in through the window of his dimly lit living room. Everyone was asleep in the house, but Hal could be seen on the couch with a laptop on his lap. Hal’s eyes were searching for sleep and on the brink of closing for the night when the ghost of his late father appeared, startling him to attention.


“Dad, you have got to stop doing that. Just come in like a normal… yeah… never mind. What’s up?” Hal looked at George hoping for a response, but the Ghost of Yankees Past knew if he looked at his son long enough that he would begin answering all of his own questions for him. George continued to glare, “Yes, dad. I know what you’re going to say, but it isn’t my fault.” Hal began to stammer while his late father continued to look at him deeply, trying not to crack a smile. “We never made a formal offer to Corbin, but that doesn’t mean we weren’t involved. We wined and dined the guy and his wife, we told him where we were willing to go, and he just wasn’t on the same page as us. He chased the money.” Hal knew that his previous statement reeked of irony, especially to the man that probably coined the term “chasing the money” after all, but he did not deter in his defense as George continued to stare blankly at him. “Five-years and $100 million I think is fair. We were even willing to go up to $125 million, but he just balked at that sixth year. It doesn’t matter, we got Paxton and Happ and we are going hard for Machado as well. Just like you wanted.” George could no longer fight back the grin as he let that smile slip just a bit as Hal continued. “We are just as good as the Red Sox right now!” And just like that, the smile was wiped from George’s face, and in its place was a look of anger. George never wanted to be just as good as the Red Sox, or any team for that matter, he wanted to be better than everyone else. No, George demanded that his teams be better than everyone else, or else. Hal could tell that he angered his father, something he knew better than to do growing up, and tried to immediately backtrack. “But that doesn’t mean we don’t have room to improve. We are just as good as the Red Sox NOW, but they are trying to trade Rick Porcello and maybe Xander Bogaerts from their major league roster, while we are still looking to add pieces to ours. I think we can get Manny Machado, and Bryce Harper is still out there. We can do better. No, we will do better!”

Without saying a word, George flew away into the Christmas eve sky, leaving Hal standing there to wonder if what he said had been enough to win over the approval of his father.

Michael P.

The Ghost of Yankees Past had one more stop on his annual trip across the Yankees universe, a trip that would take him to the house of Michael Pawluk. Many people around the Yankees Universe know Pawluk, but the Ghost of Yankees Past only recently heard about the (in)famous Twitter icon within the Yankees community. Pawluk has always been the biggest basher of Yankees General Manager Brian Cashman, the GM hired by George Steinbrenner after Bob Watson could no longer perform the duties of the job before the 1998 season, and he was doing just that via his computer as the Ghost of Yankees Past swooped into his study inside his Sarasota Springs, New York home. “He’s a coffee boy, he is nothing more than a glorified intern for Hal Steinbrenner. I told you so. I told you ALL so. I’ve been saying that he is a POS for at least seven years now, and more and more people are telling me just how right I am.” Pawluk was ranting to himself as he furiously pounded on his keyboard to his thousands of Twitter followers. Pawluk continued muttering to himself as Mr. Steinbrenner spoke up from behind him, “So, I guess the man lives up to the legend.” Pawluk slowly turned around, halfway like he recognized the voice that was speaking to him and halfway in disbelief. “… Mr…. Boss…. George?” Pawluk was stuttering now in complete shock that the Ghost of Yankees Past was standing behind him in his study. “Pawluk, you talk a lot. For once, listen. You hate Brian Cashman, you know what? A lot of people do. The hate is misplaced, whether you want to believe it or not. Sure, I ran the show from the day I hired him in 1997 until the day I ‘relinquished control’ to him in December of 2008, but he has done a lot of great things for this team since. Cashman won the World Series in 2009, not me. Not because of Hal. Cashman did. It was shortly after the 2009 season that Hal and Hank felt comfortable enough with the game, with the league, and with the team to start taking back that control. Are they the tyrants that I was? Hell no, but Hal controls the money and Hank, well Hank just smokes cigarettes all day these days. Cashman can only do so much and has done more with less, more than he should have. No farm system, shoddy starting pitching, over-priced veterans that the team held onto because of what they did in the past and not what they did in the present, etc. Cashman is cheap, but because Hal makes him cheap. Cashman has only won a couple World Series championships during his tenure, but because I was writing checks and trading prospects at an alarming rate. Cashman hasn’t missed the postseason a couple times in the last ten seasons and only won one World Series because he is a terrible GM, it is because he was stuck with an untradeable Mark Teixeira, an aging Derek Jeter, and fiscal restraints that I would have never put on him over the past five seasons or so. Cashman doesn’t suck, the people making the decisions above his pay grade suck. My son included. So, before you go blaming Brian Cashman for every single error, every single loss, every single run given up, and every single season that passes without a World Series Championship… maybe think about blaming me. I am the reason for the luxury tax and I alone am the reason for the penalties that come along with going over said luxury tax. I am the reason for parity in baseball and I alone am the reason that every team now wants their own television network. I am the reason that every Cuban player wants to come to America, see Jose Contreras, and I am the reason that pitchers strive to not be the next Hideki Irabu from Japan. I single-handedly changed baseball, and yet I never officially stepped foot on the field. Cashman and his crew are just trying to adapt to the world that I alone created, so blame me... not them.” Pawluk began to clear his throat in preparation for another anti-Cashman rant, but before he could start speaking the Ghost of Yankees Past was gone from the room and back into the Christmas eve sky.


Before George, the Ghost of Yankees Past, flew back to the heavens for another long year looking down on the world he made the decision to stop by the home of the Philadelphia Phillies, Citizens Bank Park, to see what all the fuss was about. As George walked up to the front door of the stadium another ghost, the Ghost of Santa Claus, walked up, his cell phone in his hand, and met George at the front door. “Doors locked, old man. I guess they weren’t expecting you. Or maybe they were, either way you’re not getting in this way. Want to go have a beer?” George looked confused as the Ghost of Santa Claus introduced himself to the Ghost of Yankees Past.  “You don’t know who I am. That’s fine. Remember back on December 15th of 1968 when the Philadelphia Eagles squared off with the Minnesota Vikings in the final game of their season?” George was a baseball guy and likely looked as puzzled as he was at the question. “No? Well, it had been snowing for weeks back then and the field was nothing but mud and muck by the time the team had he come out on my sleigh for the halftime show. That show went about as well as the Eagles season that year. My sleigh got stuck in the mud and I wasn’t even supposed to be there that day anyway. The other Santa was MIA. He got stuck in some weather or had too much to drink or something, it depends on who you ask what story you will get. Anyway, by the time I got into the south end zone the booing was so loud that it scared me. A snowball was thrown from the upper levels, then another, and then hundreds of them came flying at me all at once. These guys are assholes, but you know what? They got theirs in the end. The Buffalo Bills finished a half-game worse than the Eagles and got the first pick in the NFL/AFL Draft. They drafted O.J. Simpson, while the Eagles went third and got Leroy Keyes from Purdue.” George looked as confused as ever as he had never heard of Leroy Keyes, or anything that this Ghost of Santa Claus was telling him. “My name is Frank Olivo, nice to meet you.” Frank then turned around to no one in particular, presumably in a drunken rage, and yelled out into the cold Philadelphia sky, “Stay classy, Philadelphia!!!”

George turned around, still not speaking a word, and flew off into the Christmas night just as the sun began to rise in the East. The Ghost of Santa Claus could be seen with a look of bewilderment on his face as he stood in front of Citizens Bank Park as the Ghost of Yankees Past flew off into the sunset, ready for spring training, ready for October, and ready for next Christmas when he could return to Earth once again as the ghost of George Steinbrenner.


Merry Christmas to all that celebrate, and Happy Holidays to everyone who doesn’t. I hope you enjoyed my story tonight, and I wish you all safe travels, lots of family time, lots of love, tons of fun, and everything that your heart desires over the next couple of weeks and into the new year. Much love to you all, Daniel Burch out.

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Comparing Patrick Corbin to Cliff Lee



When it was reported yesterday that top free agent starter Patrick Corbin was meeting with the Philadelphia Phillies, I admittedly didn’t think much of it at first. The Phillies are expected to spend a ton of money, even if it means spending it foolishly, this winter and it just makes sense to potentially spend some of that money on pitching. Corbin is the top pitcher available, so the match is there. When I saw that the Phillies had a photoshopped picture of Corbin on their big screen inside Citizens Bank Park with the lefty wearing a Phillies hat and uniform, I admittedly panicked. Had the Phillies signed Corbin right under the Yankees noses? Were the Yankees about to get spurned by the Phillies for yet another left-handed starting pitcher? I went to bed last night hoping to not wake up this morning to the news of Corbin signing with Philadelphia.

Luckily for me, Corbin is still a free agent and the New York Yankees still have a shot at his services, but I just cannot shake the feeling that the Phillies are either going to make this really expensive for Brian Cashman and company, or they are going to make Corbin an offer he simply cannot refuse. I began my morning routing this morning checking Twitter when I saw a tweet that sent that feeling deep down in the pit of my stomach again. It was a tweet that was comparing the stats of Patrick Corbin to the last left-handed pitcher that chose the Philadelphia Phillies over the New York Yankees, even though everyone and their mother thought that he was coming to the Bronx. Cliff Lee. Is this de ja vu all over again?


Her tweet got cut off, but Cliff Lee's ERA+ is 105.Shout out to @LttleGel on Twitter. She is a great follow on Twitter and a huge Yankees fan, so go give her a follow. You won’t regret it.


I love this tweet because I have seen many Yankees fans wondering how Corbin would translate from the NL West to the AL East Division. I have also seen many others question why the Yankees would want him after just “one good year.” The stats don’t lie, Corbin has been underrated over the last six-to-seven years.  

Corbin broke into the league in 2012 with the Arizona Diamondbacks and pitched in 22 games, 17 of them starts, posting 107 innings pitched and a 0.5 WAR. Corbin has been durable aside from his Tommy John surgery that stopped his 2014 season and shortened his 2015 campaign, but he pitched 36 games in 2016 (24 starts), 33 games in 2017 (32 starts) and 33 starts in 2018. From 2002 – 2008 Cliff Lee was one of the best pitchers in the American League with the Cleveland Indians. Lee won the 2008 American League Cy Young Award with a 22-3 season while he also finished 4th in the AL Cy Young vote in 2005 with an 18-5 record. Lee was well on his way to another great individual season in 2009 before the Indians ultimately traded him (along with outfielder Ben Francisco) to the Cleveland Indians for Carlos Carrasco, Jason Donald, Lou Marson and Jason Knapp.


Lee, like Corbin, was just entering his prime and beginning to find himself at the time of the trade. Lee pitched the Phillies to the World Series in 2009, a loss to the New York Yankees, before returning to the American League for the 2010 season. This is a great comparison of two similar players in two similar scenarios, and I believe this may give us a general idea of what we can truly expect from Corbin going forward if he were to sign with New York.

Six more years of Cliff Lee and the opportunity to right a wrong by signing Corbin for just money? Yes, please. Every day of the damn week.

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

BREAKING: Patrick Corbin May Have Signed w/ Phillies


Nothing is confirmed but this is an actual photo of Patrick Corbin in a Phillies hat and uniform on the big screen at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia. Has the left-hander signed with the Phillies? Stay tuned.

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Predicting the 2018 Trade Deadline: Manny Machado



The Baltimore Orioles are not going anywhere here in 2018 and the team will undoubtedly be sellers before the July 31st trade deadline. The team will move veteran and expensive pieces as well as expiring contracts like the contracts of Zach Britton and Manny Machado. While we will undoubtedly talk about Britton before the end of the trade deadline, today is not his day. Today we will take advantage of the Yankees off-day and talk about the destination that Manny Machado is destined to visit before the deadline. Here’s a hint, the Yankees just beat up on them inside Citizens Bank Park this week.

The Philadelphia Phillies owner John S. Middleton has been very aggressive over the last calendar year and has vowed to continue being aggressive if the team is ready to compete here in 2018. The Phillies have plenty of money to spend, a young core to build around, and a good farm system to go out and get the players they feel they need to in order to bridge the gap. Middleton has been very open about the possibility of acquiring Machado for the pennant chase not only here this season but has also shown a huge willingness to keep Machado beyond the 2018 campaign as well. This seems like the perfect fit for the Orioles and the Phillies to make a deal.

It is the perfect storm for both sides as Baltimore kickstarts their rebuild while adding some top notch prospects to the farm system while the Phillies add one of the best shortstops in the game to a young team in the middle of a pennant chase. Machado will undoubtedly test the free agent market after the season, but you would have to think that the Phillies would have the leg up on other teams after Machado got to know the stadium, the fans, the players in Philadelphia, and the atmosphere surrounding it all.

The Phillies owner is dedicated to this rebuild and to building the team back up to the glory where it was back in the mid-to-late 2000’s. Machado is a huge piece to that puzzle potentially and I truly think at the end of the day the current Orioles shortstop will be manning the position in Philadelphia by season’s end.

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Game Thread: New York Yankees @ Philadelphia Phillies 6/27



And just like that it is game time here inside Citizens Bank Park as the New York Yankees and the Philadelphia Phillies finish off their three-game set. In the finale of their interleague series this week the Yankees will send Luis Cessa to the mound to face off with Zach Eflin for the Phillies. The game will be played at 7:05 pm ET inside Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia and can be seen on the YES Network. You can also follow along with the game on MLB TV, with the MLB At-Bat app and by tuning into the Yankees radio broadcast on WFAN with John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman.


Follow us on Twitter, @GreedyStripes, and “Like” us on Facebook, The Greedy Pinstripes, to keep up with us and the team all season long. Enjoy the game, adios city of brotherly love and hello Boston, and go Yankees!!

Game Preview: New York Yankees @ Philadelphia Phillies 6/27



Good morning Yankees family. Today the New York Yankees and the Philadelphia Phillies finish off their three-game set this week inside Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia with another great pitching matchup. As much as I would just like it to be a pitching matchup we have to remember that the two men toeing the rubber in the finale of this set also have to take their hacks at the plate as well. Donned with that task for the Yankees is Luis Cessa while the Phillies will counter with Zach Eflin. Let’s get to it here in Philadelphia.

Cessa will make his first start of the season for New York tonight after making four relief appearances for the club thus far this season. Cessa missed time on the disabled list this season and has been limited to just six innings pitched at the Major League level.


Eflin will be making his first start against the New York Yankees of his career tonight and heads into the start on a roll. During the month of June, Eflin has pitched to a 4-0 record with a 2.28 ERA including a strong start against the Washington Nationals in his last start.

The game will be played at 7:05 pm ET inside Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia and can be seen on the YES Network. You can also follow along with the game on MLB TV, with the MLB At-Bat app and by tuning into the Yankees radio broadcast on WFAN with John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman.


Enjoy the game, get out intact, and go Yankees!!

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

…But is Cole Hamels REALLY an Option in July?



Earlier this week, albeit sarcastically, I declared it “trade season” in Major League Baseball and for the New York Yankees. While I believe it is still a little too early to start making concrete plans for the trading deadline before the calendar even strikes June, I think it may be safe to remove one player particularly from the Yankees wish list. His name is Cole Hamels and he was the starting pitcher for the Texas Rangers last night against the Yankees.

Cole Hamels is intriguing. Hamels is a veteran pitcher now pitching at 34-years old, and a pitcher with a ton of postseason experience including the 2008 World Series where Hamels won the MVP award. Hamels can still be an elite pitcher, not every fifth night but from time-to-time and is still throwing in the low 90 MPH with a devastating changeup. The Yankees would presumably love to add Hamels to their postseason push and to the mix, but Hal Steinbrenner is not likely to sign off on any acquisition for the Rangers left-hander. Why? Money.

Steinbrenner has stated the Yankees will keep payroll under the $197 million luxury tax threshold this season no matter what. Hamels is due to make $23 million in 2018 and would come with a $20 million club option or $6 million buyout for the 2019 season. Sure, with a trade the Yankees would only be on the hook for around $13.7 million of that, a prorated $7.7 million if the trade were to happen on July 31 plus the $6 million buyout, but that leaves New York a lot closer to the threshold cusp than they would like to be. The Yankees would have to pay more if they were to acquire him before July 31, that’s the way prorating works, and there will be plenty of competition for him making him equally as expensive in terms of prospects.

This is all before you remember that Hamels can veto ANY deal to 20 teams this July, including the New York Yankees. Hamels may make the financial decision a moot point, who is to say that Hamels even wants to come to New York? Hamels has his World Series ring, so he may or may not be chasing a ring, or another shot in the postseason. Hamels may be content just pitching the rest of the season in Texas for all we know. Hamels may want to return to Philadelphia. We just don’t know!

Thankfully NJ.com did an interview with Hamels this week while the team was in Texas and there were a few nuggets that came out of the Q&A. Here are a few questions and answers, for the entire list head over to NJ.com and read their amazing write up on Hamels and his potential trip to the Bronx.

Q: Are you aware that a lot of Yankee fans are bringing your name up quite a bit thinking that you're going to the final piece to their next championship?

Hamels: “Shoot, I helped them get a World Series in ‘09, so I’m sure they like me! … No, no. I understand it. It’s kind of the nature of what happens, and I think anytime you get traded once, you understand that the possibilities are there. And as you get older if you’re able to play well and keep of what I know I’m capable of doing, then it’s each year you could be on a different team hunting down a postseason. So, it’s kind of the nature of where I think I am in my career and in the contract and in the situation. (The Yankees) have a tremendous team. So really looking at them, it’s some of the best baseball is now being able to watch the Yankees and Boston and I think that’s just exciting for baseball fans in general and the game and the scope of it now creates with that drama that they’ve always had in their history. It’s been good to see.”

Q: You've always been super competitive. How important is it for you to be in a playoff race as opposed to just pitching?

Hamels: "I think you always look at it as you want to win every game that you go out and play. And then there’s a lot of games that I don’t get to play in, and you want to be able to see the sort of winning environment, that sort of atmosphere, the excitement from everybody. I think that’s kind of the energy that now has being created over in the AL East with those guys."

Q: Cliff Lee chose the Phillies over the Yankees when he was a free agent after the 2010 season. (Lee brought up his wife being harassed at Yankee Stadium in his signing presser with the Phillies). How do you feel about New York?

Hamels: “Actually, that’s not really the truth. I think it was between the Phillies and Texas truthfully. I don’t think the Yankees really had that sort of opportunity (to sign Lee in 2010). Knowing Cliff, it was Phillies and Texas. For me, it’s to play baseball. This is where I wanted to be. I’m fortunate enough to be here, and we made pretty good runs in ‘15 and ‘16. Last year was kind of tough. This year we’re working through some things. But for me, it’s just to go out there and play. This is the team I enjoy the most to be a part of. But I think you just have to look at it and it is what it is. I don’t really necessarily make the decisions or point the direction of what we’re trying to do or what ownership and management is trying to do. I’m just one piece that’s trying to help win ballgames. It’s a matter of being here and doing what I can until there’s a different situation or the time has come. So, I don’t really get to affect it as much as I think people think.”


Q: Why did you pick the Yankees as a team that you could block from trading for you?

Hamels: “It’s just a list. Really, it’s just kind of like heads up. So, I think what it really comes down to is it’s something that’s there. It just kind of provides a little bit more information, a little bit more bargaining power. That’s kind of really what that entails. But at the end of the day, situations kind of come up and I think everybody understands what can transpire. It’s just kind of a formality. I don’t think it’s anything that kind of needs to be looked into too deeply. I love it here (in Texas) and I’d love to be able to win here. But if management changes the direction, (getting traded) is just an opportunity to win and get to October. I think that’s the real baseball. That’s kind of where you test your skills the most.”

Q: Did you get to know Yankees manager Aaron Boone from his days at ESPN? Have you been interested to see how he's doing with no manager experience?

Hamels: “I think knowing his personality, and I know with him being around baseball so long, I don’t think you have to look at it as inexperienced. I think he was born and bred into baseball, so I think he would know better than anybody you don’t need a college degree to move around lineups and know momentum and who’s better matching up. The initiative of just being who he is has been pretty good. And he’s got a pretty good team to be able to manage too, so I think that helps."

Q: What's it going to be like facing the Yankees with Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Judge?

Hamels: “I didn’t get to face them last year. I think I was on the DL during the two times we played the Yankees. It was unfortunate because it’s always fun to pitch against the Yankees and especially in that sort of (atmosphere). But they do have a lot of power, so you just have to limit the damage. Solo home runs are probably the key. If you’re going to give up 500-foot home runs, try to make sure they’re solo and they’re not bunched together in fours and fives. Like anybody, there’s holes (in their lineup) and you just have to exploit it and you have to be able to locate. I think really what it comes down to, it’s a chess match and you try to study up as possible. But really at the end of the day you have to execute, and whoever executes the best and the most often comes away with the win.”


Q: You joked about blowing the 2009 World Series. Does your (five-run, 4 1/3-inning) performance in Game 3 still bug you?

Hamels: “The opportunity that I was given … I was a lot of runs early and to not be able to hold that (3-0) lead. The series was even. To not be able to hold that lead, I think it as kind of a pivotal moment and that kind of changes the tide in a series, especially when you’re home. So, I think that kind of always leaves a bitter taste in your mouth, especially against the Yankees. You always want to go to the postseason and beat the Yankees. I think that was kind of how I grew up (in San Diego). I got to watch all those (1990s and 2000) Yankees teams win as a kid, especially when they took down the hometown Padres (in 1998). You always want to try to get one on ‘em, but they got me (in 2009). I wasn’t able to solidify the job and then I didn’t have an opportunity for a Game 7 (because the Yankees won in six games). Who knows what would have happened if I had even been there (in Game 7). It wasn’t a very good postseason for me. It definitely taught me a lot. If that didn’t happen, I wouldn’t have the type of pitches that I have (now) and the repertoire and obviously that toughness.”



So, will Hamels end up in the Bronx? Maybe. Stay tuned.

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

USA Today’s Weekly MLB Power Rankings



To be the best, you have to beat the best. Not many teams want to be the best lately because not many teams have beaten the Yankees lately. To be fair the team hardly played last week due to scheduled days off, slumber parties inside of airports, and Mother Nature, but the team has picked back up where they left off during last week’s rankings. On top and winning.

The New York Yankees are in the top spot this week followed by the Boston Red Sox, Houston Astros, the Atlanta Braves (not a typo!), and the Milwaukee Brewers (also not a typo!). Wow, what a Top 5. Who had that Top 5 before the season? Nobody. Not even me, and I go way out there with my predictions sometimes.

The Philadelphia Phillies rose an impressive eight spots to the #7 position while the Washington Nationals are in danger of falling out of the Top 10 after falling five spots this week to tenth. The Cleveland Indians (16th, down three spots) are behind the New York Mets (14th, up three spots) in the rankings this week while the Oakland Athletics continue to defy the odds and climb the rankings. And then we have the Arizona Diamondbacks who fell eight spots to the #12 position, ouch.

The American League East looks weak right now aside from the Bronx Bombers and the Boston Red Sox with the Toronto Blue Jays ranked 20th, the Tampa Bay Rays ranked 21st and the Baltimore Orioles ranked 29th overall.


Friday, April 6, 2018

Meet a Prospect: Cody Asche



The New York Yankees felt like they needed a little more insurance and depth in the middle infield after the injury bug has hit the team hard thus far here in 2018, and with that mindset Yankees GM Brian Cashman gave the Kansas City Royals a call. The Royals agreed to trade infielder Cody Asche to the New York Yankees for a player to be named later or cash considerations. The Yankees promptly assigned Asche to their Triple-A affiliate, the Scranton/Wilkes Barre RailRiders so let’s meet the latest member of the Yankees organization. This is Meet a Prospect: The Cody Asche Edition.

Cody James Asche was born on June 30, 1990 in St. Charles, Missouri to Todd and Julie Asche. Cody also has a brother, Tyler, who he can remember playing baseball with in his backyard as early as the age of five. Cody also played football as a child but quit playing during his freshman year of high school at Fort Zumwalt West High School in O’Fallon, Missouri. Asche did play baseball for his high school team though which earned him a scholarship to play for the University of Nebraska. Asche had a breakout year while with the Cornhuskers in 2011 hitting .327 with 12 home runs and 56 RBI as a junior. Asche was named a second-team All-American all while maintaining a 3.407 GPA and a spot on the Honor Roll while at Nebraska. Asche’s brains and ability to handle himself with the bat caught the attention of the Philadelphia Phillies who selected Asche in the fourth round, 151st overall, in the 2011 MLB First Year Players Draft.

The Phillies moved Asche to second base for his professional debut with the Class-A Williamsport Crosscutters, but he struggled there and was ultimately moved back to third base for the 2012 season. Asche excelled in 2012 back at the hot corner which earned him many honors within the Phillies organization that season including a trip to the All-Star Game and a trip to the Arizona Fall League with the Peoria Javelinas. After the 2012 season Asche was named the Phillies seventh-best prospect according to Baseball America. Asche made his debut at Triple-A in 2013 and made a return trip to the All-Star Game after batting .295 with 15 home runs and 68 RBI. Asche was promoted to the Major Leagues on July 30, 2013 amidst some controversy as many wondered why the team didn’t call up a bigger power option at third base in Maikel Franco.

Asche was the Phillies Opening Day starter at third base in 2014 and Philadelphia fans thought they had their third baseman of the future in the former Cornhuskers star. Asche struggled out of the gate in 2014 before being placed on the disabled list on May 25 due to a strained left hamstring. Asche continued to struggle after his return from the DL finishing with a disappointing 2014 campaign overall. Asche was back at third base on Opening Day in 2015 but the team had plans of working him in as an outfielder to make room for Franco at third base, a plan that came to fruition in 2016. Asche struggled for much of the 2016 season, some of which was due to the fact that he fought through an oblique injury that sidelined him until June of 2016, , and found himself back in the minor leagues until rosters expanded as a part of September call ups.

After the 2016 season Asche hit the free agent market for the first time in his career. Asche struggled to find a major league deal before the 2017 season and ultimately settled for a minor league pact with the Chicago White Sox. Asche spent the 2017 season in Triple-A with the White Sox before signing another minor league offer with the Kansas City Royals before the 2018 season. Now Asche finds himself a member of the most well-known and historical organizations in all of Major League Baseball, the New York Yankees.

Welcome to the organization Cody, and more importantly welcome to the family.

Saturday, March 24, 2018

TGP 2018 Predictions: 2018 Cy Young Award Winners



Cue the music, it is time for the big awards to be predicted and subsequently handed out as just two major awards remain here in Predictions Season. The AL and NL MVP Awards, which we will cover at a later date, and the hardware we will be handing out today for the American League and National League Cy Young Awards. The AL and NL Cy Young Awards go out to the best pitcher in each respective league and, again I am not saying this to incite a riot or really spark a debate, for that reason it is these awards that should, but don’t, disqualify a pitcher from winning either the AL or NL MVP Award. If a hitter could win the Cy Young Award, then sure. If not, then it just shouldn’t be allowed. My opinion only, just like these predictions are my opinion only as well. Leave your thoughts, comments, debate, banter and opinions in the comments section below or shoot us a line on Twitter by tweeting @GreedyStripes. Thanks in advance!


Will it finally be time for Luis Severino to shine? Will Masahiro Tanaka regain his dominance despite a lackluster spring? Is Sonny Gray finally going to get some run support here in the Bronx? Not likely. Not with the amazing bullpen that these young men have behind them and the undoubtedly short leash that they will all be on with new manager Aaron Boone presumably wanting to make a statement in his first season as an MLB manager. Boone will want as many wins as possible, and that in turn may mess with the win/loss records and peripherals of the Yankees starters much like it did under former manager Joe Girardi. With that said a New York Yankees pitcher will not win the 2018 American League Cy Young Award in 2018, but I truly believe that a member of the *pukes* Boston Red Sox will in Chris Sale. Sale had a down season in 2017 by many standards including a year where he did not record a victory against the New York Yankees. With the power of JD Martinez backing him in his starts and a few key bullpen pieces coming back from injuries and such for Boston I do not expect the Red Sox to go down quietly here this season, and I expect a much better campaign out of Sale. Unfortunately.


I wanted to go with Max Scherzer in the National League, I mean I do have his team heading to the World Series and all in these set of predictions, but I wanted to go a little outside of the box with my predictions. With that in mind I am going to go with a member of those Philadelphia Phillies I predicted to do so well this season. No, I am not going with Aaron Nola. I said I wanted to go outside of the box. Instead, I am going to go with Jake Arrieta. Arrieta’s velocity is down and his peripherals are not trending in the right direction, but a change of scenery and a change into a more pitcher-friendly ballpark should only help the right-hander. Plus, in a simple world anyway, Arrieta should draw some easier matchups on paper with Nola being the “ace” of the staff, but really this is just a gut feeling I am having. Go with your gut, win a prestigious award, and look like a wizard in the making.

Friday, March 23, 2018

TGP 2018 Predictions: Managers of the Year



So far, we have predicted the New York Yankees winning their division en route to a World Series victory while the Washington Nationals will come up just a little short in Bryce Harper’s last hurrah. We have predicted a couple movements in the power rankings with strong showings this season by the Seattle Mariners and the Philadelphia Phillies, and we even predicted who would win the prestigious Mariano Rivera and Trevor Hoffman Awards for the best relief pitcher in both of their respective leagues. None of that could be possible for any of these players or any of these teams though without a good manager, which is why the next award we will be predicting is the Manager of the Year Awards for the 2018 season.  

So, you would think since I specifically mentioned the Seattle Mariners and the Philadelphia Phillies not only in my previous paragraph but in my standings prediction as well that I would automatically go to that well again here for my managers prediction, right? Wrong! I like to shake things up a bit, and I don’t like to be predictable with my predictions, so keep reading.


Once again, in my opinion, the New York Yankees have everything working against them here with another major award. Sure, the team has a new manager in Aaron Boone and sure, the team has a young nucleus of players that could get younger with the call ups of Gleyber Torres and Miguel Andujar, but the team is almost too good for their own good if you know what I mean. If the Yankees don’t win the World Series in 2018 it will be a huge disappointment to many, but if they do I can see many fans, writers and voters coming out with a feeling that they almost expected it. Like the Yankees are once again supposed to win every game, you know? So, sorry Aaron. I can’t see you winning the AL Manager of the Year Award, even if you should. Instead, that award will go to the Kansas City Royals manager Ned Yost who will keep his team in the hunt for a playoff spot until the final week of the regular season, all without a major part of his core and his team that all left to free agency this winter.


In the National League I have to go with the manager of the San Francisco Giants, Bruce Bochy. Bochy is nearing the end of his managerial career in my opinion and this may be Boche’s last true shot at not only this award, but at a World Series championship as well. Last season the Giants were horrible finishing with a 64-98 record, which was good for dead last in the National League West Division. I don’t feel like with just the additions of Evan Longoria, Andrew McCutchen and Austin Jackson that the team will be strides better than they were in 2017, but I also don’t believe that the likes of Jeff Samardzija, Madison Bumgarner, Johnny Cueto and others can be as bad as they were in 2017 either. I think it will be a team effort and a collective effort that will not only bring the team back to the postseason, but it will also bring Boche an NL Manager of the Year Award as well.

Thursday, February 15, 2018

New York Yankees 2018 Grapefruit League Schedule






Friday, 2/23 – 1:05 pm ET
Detroit Tigers @ New York Yankees


Saturday, 2/24 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Pittsburgh Pirates


Sunday, 2/25 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Philadelphia Phillies


Monday, 2/26 – 6:35 pm ET
Philadelphia Phillies @ New York Yankees


Tuesday, 2/27 – 1:07 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Toronto Blue Jays


Wednesday, 2/28 – 1:05 pm ET
Detroit Tigers @ New York Yankees


Thursday, 3/1 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Philadelphia Phillies


Friday, 3/2 – 1:05 pm ET
Atlanta Braves @ New York Yankees


Saturday, 3/3 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Boston Red Sox


Sunday, 3/4 – 1:05 pm ET
Tampa Bay Rays @ New York Yankees


Tuesday, 3/6 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Detroit Tigers


Wednesday, 3/7 – 1:10 pm ET
New York Yankees @ New York Mets


Thursday, 3/8 – 1:05 pm ET
Philadelphia Phillies @ New York Yankees


Friday, 3/9 – 6:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Atlanta Braves


Saturday, 3/10 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Mets @ New York Yankees


Sunday, 3/11 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Miami Marlins


Monday, 3/12 – 6:35 pm ET
Minnesota Twins @ New York Yankees


Tuesday, 3/13 – 1:05 pm ET
Detroit Tigers @ New York Yankees


Wednesday, 3/14 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Baltimore Orioles


Thursday, 3/15 – 1:05 pm ET
Pittsburgh Pirates @ New York Yankees


Friday, 3/16 – 6:36 pm ET
Houston Astros @ New York Yankees


Saturday, 3/17 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Detroit Tigers


Sunday, 3/18 – 1:05 pm ET
Miami Marlins @ New York Yankees


Monday, 3/19 – 6:35 pm ET
Tampa Bay Rays @ New York Yankees


Tuesday, 3/20 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Detroit Tigers


Wednesday, 3/21 – 6:35 pm ET
Baltimore Orioles @ New York Yankees


Thursday, 3/22 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Minnesota Twins


Friday, 3/23 – 1:05 pm ET
Boston Red Sox @ New York Yankees


Saturday, 3/24 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees (SS) @ Atlanta Braves
Toronto Blue Jays @ New York Yankees (SS)


Sunday, 3/25 – 1:05 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Tampa Bay Rays


Monday, 3/26 – 7:35 pm ET
New York Yankees @ Atlanta Braves