Showing posts with label Spencer Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spencer Jones. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2026

It's Showtime for the 2026 New York Yankees...

   

Aaron Judge (Photo Credit: Jeff Chiu/AP)

World Series or bust, otherwise known as the Road through Chavez Ravine…

The new MLB season is upon us.

Regardless of what the Yankees did or did not do in the offseason, I am excited about the 2026 New York Yankees.

The Yankees’ attention to upgrading the quality of minor league pitching in recent years is proving fruitful. Much like fine wine, it takes years to reach perfection. The Yankees had a plan, and they executed it. A plan not designed for immediate gratification, but one to strengthen the organization for years to come. I thought Cam Schlittler would be a decent major league pitcher after the years of glowing praise when he was in the minor league system (I thought a solid number three starter), but I did not imagine he would be an upper-rotation guy with the potential of being a team’s ace.  Schlittler makes up for GM Brian Cashman’s inability to acquire a strong starting pitcher in the offseason. If Will Warren takes the next step, it is just icing on the cake. For as much blame as he gets (from me included), Cashman deserves some credit for the elite focus on drafting and signing some of the game’s future pitching stars.

With Luis Gil heading to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre to start the season since the Yankees do not need a fifth starter during the early weeks of the season, here are your 2026 New York Yankees:

Starting Lineup:

Catcher: Austin Wells

First Base: Ben Rice

Second Base: Jazz Chisholm, Jr.

Shortstop: Jose Caballero

Third Base: Ryan McMahon

Left Field: Cody Bellinger

Center Field: Trent Grisham

Right Field: Aaron Judge

Designated Hitter: Giancarlo Stanton

Bench/Utility:

Outfield/Utility: Randal Grichuk, Amed Rosario

Catcher: J.C. Escarra

First Base: Paul Goldschmidt

Starting Rotation:

Max Fried, LHP

Cam Schlittler, RHP

Will Warren, RHP

Ryan Weathers, LHP

Bullpen:

Closer: David Bednar

Setup/Middle Relief: Camilo Doval, Fernando Cruz, Tim Hill, Paul Blackburn, Ryan Yarbrough, Jake Bird, Brent Headrick, Cade Winquest

Injured List:

Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodón, Clarke Schmidt, Anthony Volpe

I am honestly relieved that Volpe is on the injured list. I do not wish injuries or surgeries upon anyone, but I love the opportunity for Jose Caballero to be the everyday shortstop. It is not going to last. Volpe will be back in May, but I hope Caballero makes it very hard for Manager Aaron Boone to choose between the two. The bloom is off Volpe. I do not feel that he should be the starting shortstop for the most storied franchise in Major League history. A replacement for Jazz Chisholm, Jr. at second base when the Yankees make the financial decision to let Jazz walk? That’s a better long-term plan if Volpe can improve his game. Caballero may not be the long-term answer for shortstop, but he is better than Volpe. 


Jose Cabellero

Another player I would replace is DH Giancarlo Stanton. I love Stanton when he is healthy, and nobody can crush a baseball with ease as he does, but he is getting older, and he WILL spend time on the injured list. Trying to believe this will be an injury-free year for him is foolish after the years he has proven wrong. Jasson Dominguez, and his major league-ready bat, are sitting in Triple-A. I would trade or, despite the financial cost, cut Stanton to make Dominguez the everyday DH.  Jasson’s fielding is not sufficient for Yankee Stadium standards, so he needs to be a bat-only type if he is going to play for the Yankees. His only roadblock is Stanton.

I thought Trent Grisham was great last year, but I am skeptical he can match it. It felt like his Brady Anderson year. One season of epic proportions followed by a return to mediocrity.  If Spencer Jones takes Grisham’s place in center field before the season’s end, I am okay with it. Grisham is not coming back next year unless he proves last year was not a fluke. Play the best player regardless of the size of the contract.

This is why I do not want the Yankees to trade either Dominguez or Jones. I feel both can play vital roles for the Yankees when and if they get their chances.

While I am glad Cade Winquest made the Opening Day Roster, he has much to prove to deserve a roster spot for the entirety of the season. The first test will come when the Yankees need a fifth starter and call up Luis Gil. As an extra reliever, Winquest holds the weakest position on the roster.  He may be back in the St Louis Cardinals organization before the end of April. I hope he improves and can secure his roster spot to continue his Yankees career. I am just not optimistic that it can happen.

I try to avoid the articles about Paul Skenes and the Yankees’ attempts to acquire him at last year’s trade deadline. When Paul Skenes reaches free agency, the odds he will be a Los Angeles Dodger or a New York Met are far greater than his chances of pulling on the pinstripes. It is what it is. Love the guy, and I think he would be a great Yankee, but it seems incredibly unlikely to me, given the vast financial resources of the Dodgers and the Mets, and Hal Steinbrenner’s financial conservatism. I feel we are going to go through years of speculation for Skenes to the Yankees, only to see him go to one of the MLB’s wealthiest teams. There was a time when the Yankees were the wealthiest, but times changed. This is why I wish the Steinbrenner Family would cash in their chips and let a big financial boy (or gal) take over. Teams create cash flow, and the Yankees are among the best, but the intangibles are the owner's wealth and income streams beyond baseball. Hal Steinbrenner is dependent on the Yankees, so he does not add anything in terms of financial might beyond what the Yankees generate. As such, the Dodgers and Mets ownership groups will be able to run circles around the Yankees in the fight for the game’s best players.  Will the Mets make the right decisions? That’s debatable, but the Yankees are at a disadvantage with the current ownership regime. 

As an out-of-market Yankees fan, I am excited to attend a game at Yankee Stadium this season. I will be there in July when the Yankees host the World Champions, the Los Angeles Dodgers. Looking forward to Shohei Ohtani versus Aaron Judge. I no longer live in the Los Angeles area, having moved to New Mexico nearly a year ago. Baseball in Albuquerque is limited to the Triple-A club for a bottom-feed MLB team (the Colorado Rockies). I am looking forward to some legit baseball in July. On a side note, the Triple-A facility in Albuquerque for the Isotopes is a good venue, but it is not Major League Baseball. So far, I have only attended when the Dodgers’ Oklahoma City squad has paid a visit.

After years of no concerts, I decided that 2026 would be different. So far this year, I have seen KC & the Sunshine Band perform at Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee, and John Waite, accompanied by John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band, at Buffalo Thunder Casino in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Harry Wayne Casey, better known as KC, is a master entertainer, even at 75. He was all over the stage despite his age and weight gain, and the audience was literally on their feet for most of the concert. He still delivers his songs as strongly as he did in the seventies. John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band are best known as the voices for Michael Pare and his band in his lead role in the movie Eddie and the Cruisers, but they were terrific. They sang a new song called "Day in the Sun," which was fantastic. Cafferty said the State of New Mexico was interested in the song for their marketing campaign (we have something like 320 sunny days per year)…not unlike Denver, but the sun is prevalent in New Mexico. I hope the state makes the deal with Cafferty. I was thinking John Waite, former lead singer of the Babys and Modern English, would have a tough job to top Cafferty, but he did. Waite’s Missing You has always been one of my favorite songs. He threw multiple guitar picks that were snatched by those around me. I was a bit disappointed until he threw a second batch, and I nabbed a pick before the guy next to me could get one. It now hangs on my wall. Waite, at 73 years old, delivered his songs as strongly as he did in his younger days.


John Waite

Later this year, I have concerts to see Midland (for the fifth time), Loverboy, Lionel Richie, Earth, Wind & Fire, and Barry Manilow. Outside of Midland, a current country group, every performance is a trip down memory lane. I hope the upcoming concerts can match the intensity of the first two.

Despite the concerts, the Yankees in July remain the marquee attraction for me. I had an opportunity to see a game in 2009, but it rained out. Four hours in Yankee Stadium with no game. I went to the old Yankee Stadium multiple times, but life has kept me away from New York since the new stadium opened. I am excited but obviously hope for good weather. Another rainout would suck. I am envious of those who get to experience Yankee Stadium as often as they would like. When you do not live in the greater New York metropolitan area, it is not as easy. It does not mean that we love the Yankees any less.

As always, Go Yankees!

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Yankees' Spring Off to a Tremendous Start...

  

Cam Schlittler (Credit: New York Post)

Winning is a distraction…

After a disappointing offseason for most Yankees fans, the team came to Spring Training ready to play. In the grand scheme of things, it does not matter if the Yankees win all the Spring games or lose every one of them. After losing the first game of the Spring schedule (2-0 loss to the Baltimore Orioles), the Yankees are 8-2, while displaying excellent young starting pitching and powerful punches in the lineup, regardless of who plays. It has effectively stopped fans from moaning about the team’s lack of big offseason moves.

I was one of many people who complained about the Yankees’ offseason inactivity aside from re-signing outfielder Cody Bellinger (a necessary move) and acquiring a starting pitcher with a lesser name from the Miami Marlins. Trent Grisham was not so much a Yankees’ move, but rather a roll of the dice by placing a qualifying offer on him, which, to the surprise of many and probably the Yankees too, he accepted. I like Grisham and appreciate what he accomplished in 2025. I am reluctant to think he can do it again. I hope he does. For all the talk of trading Spencer Jones and Jasson Dominguez, the Yankees should hold onto them since Grisham will be gone in 2027, and Giancarlo Stanton is most likely in his last couple of years with the team. Jones has a chance to be an important part of the 2027 Yankees. The goal this season, in my opinion, is better plate discipline and fewer strikeouts, although strikeouts will always be a part of his game. I wish there were a spot on this year’s active roster, but sadly, on Opening Day, he will find himself in Eastern Pennsylvania. Injuries will bring him to the big-league club at various times this year, so I hope he continues to view those as valuable learning experiences to prepare himself for the eventual ascension to a starting role if the Yankees do not trade him.


Spencer Jones (Credit: Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images)

I am old enough to remember when people said Aaron Judge strikes out too much or that he will never be the player Mike Trout is. I think people have forgiven Judge for his strikeouts, and the people who said he would never be Mike Trout were right…Judge is better. I am not saying that Spencer Jones will ever be the player Aaron Judge is. Judge is a once-in-a-lifetime player and an eventual resident of Cooperstown, alongside many great, legendary Yankees who preceded him. But Jones can be an admirable player for the Yankees, a trusted bat, a confident glove, and a leader who helps make others better. The type of player who helps lead teams to championships.

I am sure it is tough to tell both Jones and Jasson Dominguez to be patient, but hopefully the stars align so both men can shine in the Bronx.

The outfield became more crowded when the Yankees signed Yankees killer Randal Grichuk to a minor league contract with an invitation to Spring Training. The deal was made official today, so he should begin appearing in Spring games soon. He has much to prove after last season, but maybe he can be this year’s Matt Carpenter. I would love to see him bring sadness to the hearts of his formerly loving Blue Jays fans. A few David Ortiz-like homers against the Red Sox would be cool, too. I am hopeful Grichuk makes the team, assuming he still has it. He is not being asked to play a crucial role, so hopefully, he excels as a complementary piece. He is a needed right-handed bat and helps give Manager Aaron Boone options.


Randal Grichuk

A couple of weeks of Spring Training, and George Lombard, Jr. has easily proven his defense is major-league ready. He seems like such an easy choice to replace Anthony Volpe as the Yankees’ starting shortstop. I doubt the team would do it, but there is no question Lombard, Jr. will be part of the 2027 squad. Move Volpe to second base after the season if Jazz Chisholm, Jr. departs through free agency. Unless, of course, super prospect Dax Kilby starts knocking on the door. It is nice to see these types of problems.

The young starting pitching was as good as advertised. Elmer Rodriguez, Carlos Lagrange, and Ben Hess have bright futures. Everybody laughed at the Yankees last year when former Yankees prospect Carlos Narvaez became the starting catcher for the Boston Red Sox and had a few key hits against his old club. Rodriguez has a chance to rewrite the script and give the Yankees the advantage. I am excited about Lagrange. There was such a long drought of elite young starting pitchers for the Yankees, but the focus in recent years started to blossom last year with Cam Schlittler, and it is flourishing with the arms behind him. I would certainly rather have young, extremely talented arms over journeyman veteran starters. When the best pitching prospect in the Yankees organization was Chance Adams, the team had to go outside to find help. Better days are here with much stronger arms on the farm.

Going back to the offseason, I understand the Yankees’ strong belief in the players in the organization. I thought adding to a good thing would be better, but the Yankees did not share that belief. To their credit, they are much smarter than me. This season will prove whether a little more would have been helpful or unnecessary. I will take the latter and hope for a World Series championship.

I am not going to try to read too much into Cody Bellinger’s current back discomfort. The Yankees are always conservative with injuries, and I accept that this is minor. Rest, Cody, as much as you would like. I want a happy and healthy Cody Bellinger ready to play on Opening Day. If not, it is an opportunity for Spencer Jones or Jasson Dominguez to prove they belong.

Congratulations to CC Sabathia on the news that the Yankees will retire No. 52 on September 26, 2026, in a game versus the Baltimore Orioles. Congratulations to CC for his enshrinement in Baseball’s Hall of Fame and his placement of immortality in Yankee Stadium’s Monument Park. While I am one who thinks too many numbers get retired, Sabathia earned the right, and he wears a Yankees cap in Cooperstown despite starting his career with Cleveland, formerly known as the Indians. I do not understand the New York Post’s attempt to question the number’s retirement. CC Sabathia was a TALENTED player in his prime, and an elite leader in his final years. He made the adjustments to survive in the game and continued to help those around him improve. He is a great ambassador for New York despite his Northern California roots. The Yankees were better because of CC. I am concerned about the lack of numbers, but insufficient numbers between 0 and 99 are not something any of us will experience in our lifetimes. Maybe they should go with letters for the coaches. I would gladly give an F to Aaron Boone. Or go with no numbers. They all wear warm-up jackets anyway.

I am excited about some of the names I have seen for the 2027 international free signings, but I will contain the excitement until the players sign on the dotted line. This year was unusual with the firing of longtime international scouting director Donny Rowland. Key signings have reneged on their Yankees acceptance and signed elsewhere. Based on experience, their futures are probably not as bright as they once seemed. Even if they do become elite players in the Major Leagues, the Yankees need to overhaul this area. The Los Angeles Dodgers have prospered thanks to their elite farm system. The Yankees needed to catch up. I hope the decision to promote from within (Matt Garza) was the right move, but he has a strength in Latin America and should help. For Asia, the Yankees hired Matt Slater for the newly created role of global player acquisitions supervisor. He has 18 years of experience with the St. Louis Cardinals in a similar role, and, per Garza, “He’s very connected in Asia.” The Yankees also added Nao Masamoto, formerly of the Chicago Cubs, to their international staff. Given his success with bringing Japanese players to Chicago, I am hopeful he can restore the Yankees as an elite destination for Japanese players. It is hard to believe the Yankees have not been able to reign in a top Japanese talent since Masahiro Tanaka. I am truly hoping that Nao changes the landscape and brings great Asian players to the Big Apple. I get it, I love California too, but New York will always be the City.

As always, Go Yankees!

Sunday, November 23, 2025

The Offseason of Uncertainty...

 

Will the Yankees make the moves that make the difference in 2026?...

This is a weird offseason. I legitimately do not know if the New York Yankees will move to fill holes without completing the puzzle to ensure more regular season success and a roll of the dice for the October Crapshoot, or if the Yankees recognize the ownership groups in Los Angeles (Chavez Ravine, not Anaheim) and Queens have set a new World Order, forcing the team to go “all in”. Granted, the Mets flunked the season, but it will not stop Uncle Steve from throwing more of his money into the problem. Sunday’s trade of outfielder Brandon Nimmo to the Texas Rangers for second baseman Marcus Semien puts them in the outfield arena for guys like Kyle Tucker and Cody Bellinger. 

The Yankees do not seem to be on the same playing field with the game’s best, even if they historically have been Major League Baseball’s most fantastic franchise. You have owners who play to win, and you have owners who play to profit. While you could argue that a World Series Championship pays the most significant dividends, it involves too much gambling, particularly for a conservative, professionally trained bean counter like Hal Steinbrenner.


Hal Steinbrenner (Photo Credit: Dustin Satloff/Getty Images)

I blame George Steinbrenner for not training a son to hold his same passion. That was what he was trying to do with a former son-in-law, although divorce tanked the plan. Hank Steinbrenner’s son, George IV, holds the magic name. I have no idea whether he keeps his grandfather’s (or his father’s) passion. Yet, I am ready for the next generation of Steinbrenners to ascend to the throne. Hal was not interested in the Yankees when he was young, and I pray he is working on an escape plan. I am surprised that selling the team does not appeal to Hal. I know, he holds his father’s legacy in his hands, but a sale would bring multi-generational money to the Steinbrenner family. Every year, I hope Hal decides to go “all in” like he did in 2009. Maybe this is the year, maybe not. Realistically, the latter seems like the most probable outcome…and I come away from the offseasons with a sense of disappointment.

Sadly, we move forward with Hal’s leadership, for better or for worse. A transition to a younger owner is years away. So, we are married to him and can only hope that the Steinbrenner blood works into some future decisions. 

As for the team, the offseason is well underway. A few moves have already been made. Trent Grisham, surprisingly, accepted the Yankees’ qualifying offer. He must have felt the compensation that interested teams would pay to sign him as a potential market suppressor. If he can replicate his productive 2025 in 2026, he will enter the free agency period next offseason with no strings attached. Not sure if this is one of those ‘bet on yourself’ moments, or if Grisham was not ready to end his Yankees tenure. I suspect it is the former regardless of how Grisham feels about the Yankees.

I have mixed feelings about Grisham. If he can replicate his performance next season, a one-year deal is not a terrible thing. The money that goes to Grisham could have been used to attract an elite free agent like Kyle Tucker. The Yankees can afford both, but recent history says the team will choose a cheaper route. I would love to have Cody Bellinger back in Pinstripes, but Tucker is better. I would hate to see the Yankees try to chase Tucker, fail, and lose Bellinger while they were grasping for Tucker. Admittedly, I would go with the surer thing and try to bring back Bellinger. I have seen many fans say the contract will age poorly, but at this point, I am concerned about 2026. We are not making moves for 2027 or 2028.

Somehow, Boston always seems to get out from under bad contracts, but the Yankees bite the bullet and eat the money.

Grisham’s return spells the end for Jasson Dominguez unless the Yankees pass on both Tucker and Dominguez and need a left fielder (again). A trade of either Dominguez or Spencer Jones this offseason seems likely. I would hate to see Jones leave. I remember when people were complaining about a young Aaron Judge striking out too much. He has had a nice Major League career, one that has guaranteed a trip to Cooperstown, New York, someday.

The Yankees also re-signed Clarke Schmidt to a $4.5 million deal for the 2026 season. Schmidt had Tommy John surgery in July, and I feared a potential non-tender, like how they have moved on from other Tommy John rehabilitators like Nathan Eovaldi. I can hear GM Brian Cashman now, “He’s like a trade deadline acquisition” when Schmidt returns mid-season. I am glad to see Schmidt returning, and I am sure his return will coincide with a rotation need.

Oswaldo Cabrera, who missed most of last season, also re-signed for $1.2 million. While I like Cabrera, his role could be upgraded. The Yankees need a shortstop to start the year, and if they acquire a legitimate frontline shortstop, keeping Jose Caballero in reserve, it would be hard to find a place for Cabrera on the Major League roster. Shortstop is a sore subject. I know the Yankees love Anthony Volpe, but the team can do better.

The Yankees re-signed LHP Ryan Yarbrough, a dude who knows his role and does it well. With the starting pitchers who will be late arrivals in the 2026 season, it's all-hands-on-deck for the Yankees' rotation. Yarbrough is not the answer, but he helps. 

There were a few surprises with the non-tenders. I got the decision to cut bait with Michael Arias, Scott Effross, and Ian Hamilton. The two that surprised me were Mark Leiter, Jr., even if he did fade in the second half, and Jake Cousins. Cousins underwent Tommy John surgery in June, so like Clarke Schmidt, he is out until the second half of 2026. Holding two positions for guys who cannot help when the season begins must have been too much for Brian Cashman and his cast of nerds. I wish it worked out for Leiter, Jr., or Cousins, but I know protecting roster spots over the Winter is challenging when other moves are anticipated. Bullpen will undoubtedly be an area of focus this offseason as the Yankees try to build a strong pen after last season’s struggles.

The Yankees tendered contracts to eight arbitration-eligible players. Second baseman Jazz Chisholm, Jr., closer David Bednar, set up reliever Camilo Doval, shortstop Anthony Volpe, utility infielder Jose Caballero, starter Luis Gil, setup reliever Fernando Cruz, and deadline-disappointment right-hander Jake Bird.

The Yankees also selected the contracts of outfielder Spencer Jones and pitchers Chase Hampton and Elmer Rodriguez in advance of next month’s Rule 5 Draft.  After watching catcher Carlos Narvaez thrive with the Boston Red Sox this season, there is consolation in the fact that the Red Sox gave us a pitcher who can ascend to the top of the pitching prospects in the organization. Rodriguez is currently the third-ranked prospect in the Yankees organization behind Jones and RHP Carlos Lagrange, according to MLB.com. I thought they would protect a couple of other prospects, but I trust they had their reasons.  I hope none of the non-selected players come back to haunt the Yankees. They are RHP relievers Harrison Cohen and Eric Reyzelman; LHP Henry Lalane (once highly regarded), LHP Brock Selvidge, and LHP Allen Facundo (not on MLB.com’s prospect list, but a talent that has drawn strong reviews); first baseman T.J. Rumfield; outfielder Jace Avina; and catcher Manuel Palencia. It seems like a few of these guys will be poached in the Rule 5 Draft. Whether they stick with their new teams remains to be seen, but they will be playing for an opportunity that the Yankees either could not or did not afford.  No doubt the Boston Red Sox will be rummaging through the Yankees’ trash looking for another ex-Yankee difference maker.

Tough decisions. I recognize that we cannot judge today’s decisions until we see the moves the team makes between now and Opening Day. The chances for success in 2026 hinge on the collective improvements made to the roster, not a few surprising individual moves in November.

Congratulations to Aaron Judge for winning the 2025 American League Most Valuable Player Award. My fear was that the voters would be unduly influenced by the historic season of Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh. He certainly went where no catcher has ever gone before, but Aaron Judge was the better overall hitter and deserved the award. The only thing that Raleigh did better than Judge, aside from the homers, was taking his team to the American League Championship. I still laugh when I remember people saying that Aaron Judge will never be Mike Trout. In retrospect, I am glad he is not Mike Trout, an injury-riddled 30-something former elite player. In Trout’s defense, I would love to see him rebound with one of his best seasons next year (so long as it is not at the Yankees’ expense). I have no idea what it must be like for him to watch his friend Shohei Ohtani win a World Series Championship every year since his departure from the Los Angeles Angels of "an hour away" Anaheim. I genuinely wish Trout could have been given better opportunities to win during his career.

As for moves to be made this offseason, I would love splashy moves, but those days are over. I quietly hope for Kyle Tucker, but I hope for at least the return of Cody Bellinger. I would like to see the Yankees bring in another Japanese player to re-establish the intense connection they once had with Japan. The Yankees have not had a Japanese player since Masahiro Tanaka departed (Kenta Maeda’s brief stint in the minors last season does not count). I would like to see the Yankees sign Tatsuya Imai. I recognize the 27-year-old righthander is not elite, but I want to think he can be as valuable as Hiroki Kuroda once was. I have cooled on Munetaka Murakami, a first baseman who can also play third base, so that I would take Imai as the preferred Japanese player over Murakami. Murakami was recently photographed having dinner with Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto, leading to speculation the Dodgers will continue to add to their elite Japanese connection. This is the magic the Yankees once held when Hideki Matsui was on the roster. The Yankees need to re-engage the Japanese community and make New York as attractive as the West Coast.


Tatsuya Imai (Photo Credit: Sports Nippon/Getty Images)

Usually, I am anxious and excited for the Baseball Winter Meetings. It has always been my favorite time of year. This year is different. I am unsure what to expect from Yankees leadership. Will they try to run it back with the majority of the 2025 roster, or will they legitimately make the moves to close the gap with the game’s elite teams? I have no idea or trust in the Yankees’ leadership to do what it takes.

Hopefully, a month from now, we will have a better idea of the team’s direction and plans to compete in 2026. If late December is just as foggy, it sadly does not bode well for 2026. So, either MUCH happens between now and then, or there are crickets with the Yankees hierarchy. Hal, please make us believe in the Yankees again. This is your birthright.

As always, Go Yankees! 

Monday, February 12, 2024

Yankees Pitchers & Catchers, You're Up! ...

   

Steinbrenner Field, Tampa, Florida

Steinbrenner Field is ready for the start of Spring Training…

The NFL season has ended. Time for the return of America’s Favorite Pastime.

After a few months of no baseball and a nice but not-as-great-as-it-could-have-been offseason for the New York Yankees, pitchers and catchers report on Wednesday, February 15. The forecast for Tampa, Florida on Thursday, February 16, for the first workout, will be a high of 78 with partly cloudy skies. In other words, fantastic weather for baseball. The first full-squad workout will be on Tuesday, February 20.

There are reports the Yankees could still acquire the additional starting pitching they have been seeking during Spring Training. I guess the Dylan Cease rumors will be never-ending until the Chicago White Sox finally pull the trigger, if/when that ever happens. If the Yankees have resisted Chicago's efforts to include outfielder Spencer Jones in a potential trade, I cannot fault the Yankees. I know prospects are suspects until proven otherwise and ‘flags fly forever.’ However, the Yankees have traded away multiple prospects in recent years. For the most part, they have not been hurt by any of the trades. Yet, it is a depletion of the farm system. The best way to combat high payroll is through young, cost-controlled players who can play better than the league average on the field. In other words, you need to maintain a good mix of young and veteran players to keep the salary level from skyrocketing.


Spencer Jones (Photo Credit: New York Yankees)

I get the Yankees have gotten smarter and their system is one of the higher-ranked systems in MLB. I did not want to see pitching prospect Drew Thorpe traded, but it was the necessary cost to acquire Juan Soto. I would have loved it if the Yankees had acquired Milwaukee’s Corbin Burnes before the Baltimore Orioles did, but I cannot say that including Jones in a potential trade would have been worth it even if Thorpe for Soto was. As it stands, the Yankees lost Thorpe and others for a potential one-year rental of Soto. Losing other top-ranked prospects for Burnes, who, like Soto, can also walk after the season, is too much unless the Yankees genuinely believed that he was the difference-maker for winning the World Series. The Yankees are not the odds-on favorite to win it all, and Burnes would not have cinched it for them. Sure, the Yankees can win the World Series this year, but they are not the prohibitive favorites and Burnes would not have changed it.

I know the Yankees have held onto certain prospects too long (past their peak values), yet I support the Yankees if they believe Jones can be a special player. I have seen some people say that Jones will never be as good as Aaron Judge. Funny because people once said that Judge would never be as good as Mike Trout. Jones does not have to be Judge to be a valuable player for the Yankees. The Yankees know their players better than we do. I will give them the benefit of the doubt for players they believe they should hold versus those they are willing to package in the right deals. So, I am certainly not going to try and crucify them for losing out on Burnes because of an unwillingness to part with Jones. Again, I would have loved to see the Yankees acquire Burnes, but it needed to be at the right price that made the most long-term sense for the organization.

If the Yankees end up with Cease, I know that he is not on the same level as Burnes. As such, the cost should not be as high as the package the Orioles put together for Burnes. It should not cost the absolute best prospects in the organization, a group headed by Jones and Jasson Dominguez.

Maybe the Yankees will do nothing, and head into the season with a starting rotation consisting of Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodón, Marcus Stroman, Nestor Cortes, Jr, and Clarke Schmidt. It is not like the Yankees are trying to do patchwork with unproven starters. All five guys have proven they can win Major League games. Health concerns aside, it is a formidable group. No doubt we will see starting performances by Cody Poteet, Clayton Beeter, Luis Gil, and others. The question becomes whether this group can get the Yankees to the trade deadline when a potential deal for another starting pitcher brings the needed reinforcement. Barring a Spring Training trade (or signing), this seems to be the current path.

For most of the winter, I had some hope the Yankees would turn to Jordan Montgomery as a potential rotation solution. You keep hearing that he wants to return to Texas, but with the calendar having turned to February and Montgomery still accepting offers, there is always a chance. The Yankees must have decided it was not an option for them as they finally gave away Montgomery’s number 47. If they harbored any hopes of signing Montgomery, they would have withheld the number. According to the Yankees’ website, the number has been assigned to one of the relievers acquired from the Los Angeles Dodgers, Victor González. Thanks for the memories, Monty…the Yankees should have never traded you.


Jordan Montgomery

Speaking of numbers, I was surprised the Yankees gave a low jersey number (29) to non-roster catcher Luis Torrens. If the Yankees trade Ben Rortvedt, Torrens stands a good chance to be the emergency catcher in Triple-A (assuming Austin Wells joins Jose Trevino on the Major League roster as expected). I have low expectations that Torrens will make the Yankees; however, I am pulling for him.

Looking forward to the first sights of Spring Training. The pictures of players working out in Tampa were enjoyable, but it is not the same as organized team activities. The first surreal moment will be when Juan Soto arrives. The other new guys will seem like afterthoughts. Sorry Stro & Dugie, New York loves its stars.

Welcome back, Yankees!

Exhibition Games in Mexico

It was exciting to see the addition of two exhibition games in Mexico City on March 24 and 25.

The Yankees will play the Diablos Rojos del México at Alfredo Harp Helú Stadium. They will be split-squad games since the Yankees will also be in Bradenton, FL to play the Pittsburgh Pirates on March 24 and at Steinbrenner Field on March 25 against the New York Mets.


Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú

It will be interesting to see which players are chosen to make the trip to Mexico City. I am hopeful that Jose Trevino makes the trip for no other reason than how excited he is about it. Spring Training usually becomes a grind by late March so the infusion of excitement for the Mexico City games will be a bonus in advance of Opening Day.

The Yankees last played in Mexico City in 1968 which was Mickey Mantle’s final season. A couple of the new guys, Victor González, and Alex Verdugo, have roots in Mexico like Trevino. They should certainly be on the travel squad, but I would like to see some of the regulars make the trip.

Adding Another Dodgers Reliever

Victor González will certainly see a few familiar faces at Steinbrenner Field this week. Alex Verdugo was a prospect in the Dodgers organization a few years ago and spent some time with the big-league club before he was traded to Boston in the Mookie Betts deal. Last week, the Yankees acquired Dodgers reliever, Caleb Ferguson, a lefty, for the left-handed reliever the Yankees had claimed on waivers from the Houston Astros, Matt Gage, and a low-level prospect, RHP Christian Zazueta.


Caleb Ferguson (Photo Credit: Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

Gage may have had a chance to make the Opening Day Roster, but Ferguson is the better reliever. Not exactly Josh Hader, but the Yankees have proven an ability to put together an effective bullpen.

How long until Manager Aaron Boone starts calling the new lefty “Fergie”?

I like both González and Ferguson, but there is part of me that wonders why the Dodgers were so willing to part ways with them. I know they needed the roster space, but still. Oh well, it does not matter how they got here, and it does not mean that the two relievers cannot become part of Boone’s trusted inner circle in the bullpen.

Welcome to the Yankees Family, Caleb!

On an unrelated note, former Yankees reliever Lucas Luetge signed with the Boston Red Sox. Regardless of the player, I hate it when ex-Yankees join the Red Sox. At least the Yankees squeezed the best years out of Luetge.  

As always, Go Yankees!

Sunday, May 21, 2023

Movin' On from Aaron Hicks...

  

Aaron Hicks (Photo Credit: AP)

Long-time Yank is designated for assignment…

In an unexpected move, the New York Yankees designated outfielder Aaron Hicks for assignment on Saturday to make way for the re-acquisition of outfielder Greg Allen who had been toiling away in Worcester (WOO-stuh!), Mass for the top Red Sox affiliate.

Most Yankees fans have recognized that time had passed for Hicks with the Yankees. By placing Hicks on waivers (he almost certainly will not be claimed), the Yankees will be on the hook for the remainder of his salary except for minimum wage when another team signs him once he has been released. Just like the Yankees erred in tendering a contract to Gary Sanchez in December 2021, they made a mistake not trying to trade Hicks in the off-season when they could have gotten another team to absorb part of the contract.  I guess it becomes a question of how talented of a prospect(s) would it have taken to get a team like the Minnesota Twins to pay half of Hicks’ contract. We will never know. Teams can now try to sign Hicks for MLB’s minimum salary of $720,000 as soon as he clears waivers.

The Yankees owe Hicks the remainder of his 2023 contract, which was $10.5 million for the season, and in 2024 and 2025, they must cover his $9.5 million annual salary. There is a $1 million buyout attached to 2026. 

For his eight-year career with the Yankees, Hicks hit .230/.329/.384 (.713 OPS) with 81 home runs and 278 runs batted in.  He played in 651 games for New York. 

The Yankees acquired Hicks on November 11, 2015, from the Minnesota Twins for catcher John Ryan Murphy.

Unfortunately, Hicks lost his job just as he was starting to hit in recent days, but it was time. There was nothing Hicks could have done to recapture the trust of the fan base. He may be well-liked in the Yankees clubhouse, and I bet he is fantastic to play golf with, but if anybody needs a change of scenery, it is the 33-year-old Southern California native.  Hicks’ frustrations with part-time play are well documented, and the purge clears some negativity from “The Room”. 

I am not sure if Greg Allen is an upgrade, but the Yankees only need short-term outfield help. They seem to enjoy stopgaps. Allen knows his role, and like Matt Carpenter last year, will be ready regardless of the role he is asked to play. Maybe not this year, but Jasson Dominguez, Spencer Jones, and Everson Pereira will be knocking on the door soon. Three players who have an opportunity to be exceptional Major League talents. Jake Bauers has a short window to prove his worth, but left field seems it will garner attention at the trade deadline for GM Brian Cashman and his team of nerds. I had thought playing Giancarlo Stanton in the outfield was a good way to engage him in games, but the latest IL-stint reinforces the need to keep him at designated hitter.

Allen wore #22 during his prior Yankees tenure, but the number has since been taken by centerfielder Harrison Bader. For his latest number, Allen will be rocking in classic David Robertson (30). A great number, 31, goes back into circulation. For me, the number is forever David Mark Winfield. Admittedly, it would have been tacky if Allen had chosen 31 before Hicks’ corpse was cold.  But somebody in the future will be the beneficiary of a strong number choice.

I wish Hicks the best for his next opportunity.

For today’s series finale in Cincinnati, the Yankees have activated Luis Severino for the start. He replaces Jhony Brito, who was optioned to Triple-A after yesterday’s game. Sevy will be missing the big bats, hopefully for both teams, as Aaron Judge gets the day off.

As always, Go Yankees!