Thursday, March 22, 2012

JoVa growing tired of Triple-A

By  at River Avenue Blues




Life as a 30-year-old Triple-A slugger can be tough, especially when you’re with the Yankees and there’s no clear path to the big leagues. That’s the life of Jorge Vazquez, who hit .262/.314/.516 with 32 homers in Triple-A last year but has received close to zero consideration for the DH spot or even a bench job in the Bronx. Unsurprisingly, he’s getting kinda fed up and looking for a change.
“If they don’t give him an opportunity this year, he wants them to trade him, or to go to [play] baseball in the East,” said the president of JoVa’s former Mexican League team recently (via MLBTR). “He doesn’t want to continue on in Triple-A anymore, not just with the Yankees, but with any other organization as well.”
We’ve heard rumors of Vazquez pursuing opportunities in Japan before, and yet he’s in camp with the Yankees right now. The guy has serious power but he’s a total hacker, striking out 314 times (28.6%) and unintentionally walking just 47 times (4.3%) since signing with New York midway through the 2009 season. He gets himself out too much and that power won’t show up consistently against big league hurlers because of it. I understand being frustrated, but if he wants to go, the Yankees shouldn’t stand in his way.

At long last, Rafael DePaula gets his visa

Via RAB


Update (6:16pm): Here’s is Ben Badler’s report. He says recent reports still have DePaula running his fastball up into the high-90s. The physical should be a non-issue — he’s been working out at the team’s Dominican complex for the last 14 months or so — and I assume the Yankees will hold him back in Extended Spring Training for a bit before bumping him to Low-A Charleston. DePaula figures to be on a faster track than most international free agent pitchers.
2:33pm: Via Ben-Nicholson Smith, Dominican right-hander Rafael DePaula has finally landed a visa. The soon-to-be 21-year-old was having trouble getting to States because of a suspension stemming from age and identity fraud several years ago. The Yankees agreed to sign him for $500k back in November 2010, though the deal was contingent on him securing a visa. With that taken care of, now all he has to do is pass his physical. DePaula is a significant prospect, arguably top ten in the system, but he lost a big chunk of development time this last year or so. Here’s some video.

Spring Training 3/22/12

Yankees At Red Sox tonight. Here are the lineups via Lohud


Spring training Game 20: Yankees at Red Sox

YANKEES (10-9)
Brett Gardner LF
Curtis Granderson CF
Andruw Jones RF
Eric Chavez 3B
Raul Ibanez DH
Brandon Laird 1B
Jose Gil C
Ramiro Pena 2B
Doug Bernier SS
RHP Adam Warren (0-0, 3.38)
Warren’s minor league career
RED SOX (9-7)
Jacoby Ellsbury CF
Dustin Pedroia 2B
Kevin Youkilis 3B
Adrian Gonzalez 1B
David Ortiz DH
Cody Ross LF
Ryan Sweeney RF
Kelly Shoppach C
Mike Aviles SS
RHP Aaron Cook (0-0, 0.00)
Cook vs. Yankees
TIME/TV: 7:05 p.m., YES Network
WEATHER: Cloudy with a slight chance of rain. Temperatures in the 70s. Wind blowing right to left.
UMPIRES: HP Mark Lollo, 1B Tim Tschida, 2B Tim Timmons, 3B Manny Gonzalez
SOX PEN: Two former Yankees, Ross Ohlendorf and Mark Melancon, are both scheduled to pitch for the Red Sox tonight. LHP Jesse Carlson and RHP Scott Atchison are also scheduled to pitch.
SOUNDS FAMILIAR: While CC Sabathia was pitching in a minor league game in Tampa, Josh Beckett spent his afternoon pitchingin a minor league game in Fort Myers. Beckett also threw six innings. Team’s usually don’t like to have their starting pitchers face division teams late in spring training.
NEW PARK: The Red Sox new spring complex is actually called Fenway South. It has the same diminisions as Fenway Park in Boston and holds roughly 9,900 fans.

Pineda, Velocity, and AAA

I want to make it clear that the following is not from either Burch nor I. Joe Pawlikowski at River Ave Blues wrote it, and it was a great read in my opinion. Therefore I wanted to share it here at The Greedy Pinstripes.
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Last year, when he was competing for a spot in the Mariners rotation, Michael Pineda did not face intense scrutiny. People watched and dissected his performances, as they do for every pitcher. But given the Seattle media market combined with the Mariners current place in the baseball world, the attention paid him was relatively mild. One year later, you can’t click on three Yankees-related links without seeing a Pineda mention. And most of it isn’t exactly glowing.

The level of scrutiny that Pineda faces is new to him, though it’s not to us. We’ve seen it happen dozens of times before. In Penda’s case it makes all the sense in the world. He’s a young pitcher with high expectations, due to his 2011 performance, his former top prospect status, and the trade that brought him to New York. Yet it seems that attention paid him has gone from intense to overkill. Let’s quickly review the timeline of Pineda’s brief Yankees tenure.

1. When the Yankees acquired Pineda, Brian Cashman himself said that Pineda adding a changeup to his arsenal was the key to his success. Many analysts and scouts agreed.

2. Pineda comes into camp overweight, a cause for instant criticism.

3. Pineda receives early praise for his changeup, and throws it often in his early spring outings.

4. Now lacking a point of criticism, the media turns to his missing velocity as a point of major concern.

5. He builds velocity over a few starts, going from 89-91 in his first start to hitting 94 in his most recent one. But that’s not 96-97, so the criticism continues.

It’s all a bit absurd, and it grows even more so. At least one beat writer has led the charge in calling for Pineda to start the season in AAA, criticizing him at every opportunity (and even when there is no clear opportunity). Thankfully, the Yankees don’t operate to satiate the media and their desire for clicks and page views. They operate in a manner that will benefit them on the field, both now and in the future.

Are there solid, logical arguments for Pineda to start the season in AAA? There is the issue of his service clock, which the Yankees could delay by starting him in the minors. That would afford them another year of control, making Pineda a free agent after the 2017 season rather than 2016. Held back long enough, they could even delay his arbitration clock, setting his first hearing for 2015 rather than 2014. That seems like a decent incentive, especially knowing the front office’s desire — nay, mandate, as Hal Steinbrenner tells it — to get under the $189 million luxury tax threshold for the 2014 season.

Today at FanGraphs Dave Cameron offered an additional argument. He points to Giants left-hander Madison Bumgarner, who, like Pineda, experienced a drop in velocity when he came into camp before the 2010 season. Cameron admits that the situations don’t line up, but I think he undersells the degree of difference between Pineda and Bumgarner. Bumgarner had experienced his velocity dip during the 2009 season. When it persisted in 2010 spring training, the Giants decided to keep him in the minors. This is quite different from Pineda, who not only spent all of 2011 in the majors, but also retained his velocity throughout (discounting his final start, which came on 11 days’ rest).

What both the service time and the Bumgarner arguments miss is the effect a minor league assignment would have on Pineda. Instead of looking at the situation from your armchair, look at it from Pineda’s point of view. He pitched successfully for a full major league season. He has pitched reasonably well all spring — better, certainly, than at least Ivan Nova, if not others. And now the Yankees are going to send you to the minors to work on your velocity, with the added benefit of them gaining more of your services for a cheaper price. Oh, and by the way, the Triple-A team is on a perpetual road trip because of stadium renovations. How would you feel if you were in his shoes? It’s an important consideration — as Joe Torre liked to say, there’s a heartbeat to the game.

If the Yankees feel that they can get the most out of Pineda by sending him to the minors, and if they think his confidence won’t go into the crapper, then it’s something to consider. But by all indications, this is a guy who has given it his all this spring. He might have shown up a bit overweight, but are we going to blame a 23-year-old for taking it easy the off-season after experiencing his most intense workload ever? Even so, Cashman says he’s already dropped 12 pounds and has worked as hard as anyone this spring. Is that someone you want to send away? Or is it someone you want to put in your rotation? He is, after all, one of the five most talented pitchers in camp. It seems like he should be treated as such.

Prepare To Be Disappointed

Last night Chad Jennings at the LoHud Yankees Blog posted about Justin Maxwell, and the fantastic spring he's having. Justin's line this spring is .435/.519/.652, and he's within the top 3 Yankees in hits, doubles, runs, RBI, and stolen bases. Everybody should know that spring stats mean very little, especially when talking about a guy that has a line of .201/.319/.379 in 260 MLB plate appearances (all with the Nationals in 2007, 2009, and 2010), but Justin has made people take notice and ask "should the Yankees find a roster spot for him?"

My answer is "no". Not because I don't believe Maxwell could do something for the team, but because I like the roster the Yankees will most likely bring to the regular season. And there's just not room for Justin. Outside of the 8 position players, as well as Raul Ibanez and Andruw Jones (who will platoon as the regular DH), there are only 3 bench spots. Eduardo Nunez is almost certainly going to be the utility IF, Eric Chavez is more than likely going to be ARod's regular back-up, and Francisco Cervelli is needed to be the back-up catcher (note: Ibanez or Jones, whoever doesn't DH, will be the OF on the bench).

Even if the Yankees were to go down to 11 pitchers, there's a good chance that the final hitting spot on the roster would go to Chris Dickerson. Dickerson didn't blow anybody away with a batting line of .241/.341/.325 in AAA last season, not to mention the line of .260/.296/.360 he put up with the Yanks in 55 plate appearances last season. But while Chris spent some time in MLB last season, Justin missed 87 games with major throwing shoulder problems last year. Perhaps the missed time and rehab is what Maxwell needed to figure things out. Who knows? But when it comes to the bench I believe the Yankees will go with the safer option.

The problem with Justin Maxwell isn't a matter of wanting to keep him or not. There's no doubt I'd love to see what he could do this season if healthy. But the fact of the matter is he's out of options, and can't be sent to AAA without clearing waivers. And I'd bet everything I have (not that it's much) that some team would pick him up as a 4th OF. So the only thing the Yankees can do with him to get something is through trade. But that's not a great option either, because they aren't going to get much of anything for him. While he'll peak somebody's interest due to his great spring thus far, no team is going to give up much of anything for a guy that had big-time throwing shoulder issues last year, has done little with his 260 MLB plate appearances, and turned 28 this past November.

So as a warning to Yankees fans... don't get all up in arms when Maxwell is traded for a "nobody". The Yankees are in a no-win situation here, so getting anything for Justin will have to do.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Spring Training 3/21/12

Phil Hughes may have cemented what we all expected him to have, the 5th spot in the starting rotation, today with a very solid 5 innings against the Tampa Bay Rays. He gave up two runs on a Matt "Babe Ruth Of The Grapefruit League 2012" Joyce in the campaign along with three hits and one walk in route to a Yankees 5-2 victory.  Hughes threw 73 pitches with 50 of them being strikes and you do not want to put much stock into spring training games but Hughes was pounding the strike zone all day long with numbers like that.

The game was tied at two runs a piece heading into the ninth inning when Cole Gardner lead off with a ground rule double to right center field. Jorge Vazquez proceeded to move the runner along on a routine sacrifice fly out and finally Justin Maxwell knocked him in with a bloop double to right field. Gustavo Molina came in and hit a two run home run to open the flood gates and the Yankees win by that final score of 5-2.

Up next for the Yanks, with the regular season drawing closer and closer, is the rival Boston Red Sox. David Phelps will get the nod down in Jet Blue Park down in Fort Myers FL and will face Aaron Cook. The game is scheduled for 7:05 ET and will be on MLB TV.

The Yankees Can't Lose

Future ace?

For a while people have been saying that you can't grade the trade of Jesus Montero & Hector Noesi for Michael Pineda & Jose Campos for many years, and I have been agreeing with that assessment. Until we see what each player has to offer MLB, then there's no way to know one way or another that the trade was good or bad. But maybe that's not true.

I've been having a discussion/argument with Greg from Evil Empire Prospects and Bronx Baseball Daily about the trade. He believes that if Montero turns into the perennial all-star that many believe he will be, and Noesi turns into an ace, that the Yankees lost the deal. It won't matter if both Pineda and Campos are aces for the Yankees, because the Bombers would have lost something that they really don't have in the minor leagues right now... an incredible hitting prospect, that could lead the middle of their order for many, many, years. His point is that the Yanks already have CC as the ace of the staff, an excellent pitching prospect in Manny Banuelos, and many more B+ pitching prospects in guys like Dellin Betances, Adam Warren, DJ Mitchell, and David Phelps. And the team simply doesn't need that many aces to succeed (look at the Cardinals' pitching rotation versus the Phillies' pitching rotation).

It's hard to disagree with that logic. However I've been pointing out that it's better to buy hitters than pitchers, and the Yankees have plenty to buy with. Combine that with an awesome young pitching staff and the team can be incredible successful for years. But today I hit upon something that I wanted to share...

The trade simply can not be called a bad trade. Bad trades, to me, are those that damage a team's ability to win. Look at the damage Omar Minaya did to the Expos/Nationals by dealing away Grady Sizemore, Brandon Phillips, and Cliff Lee for Bartolo Colon. That's a bad trade (if any Indians fans are reading this I apologize for making you cry over this again). But the Yankees will continue to have one of the best offenses in the game, and they will continue to be able to acquire top pitching. So even if Montero and Noesi are future HOFers, while Pineda and Campos are future journeymen in MLB, it won't make a lick of difference. The Yankees will still be winning, and will simply look back on this trade and think "damn, that sucked, but we don't have time to dwell on that because we're gearing up for the postseason again".

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

New YES Clubhouse Reporter Named

And boy is she a knock out... Kim Jones who? Being borrowed from Bronx Baseball Daily


I get the feeling that a lot of Yankees fans were similar to me. Not that we didn’t like Kim Jones, but it took a little while for her to grow on us and ultimately we were sad to see her leaving the YES Network this offseason.
The Yankees didn’t waste a lot of time finding another hot chick to replace her though as they have replaced her with Meredith Marakovits of SNY, according to Joel Sherman of the NY Post.
It seems like they are a prerequisite for a sports network these days (Where is the hot chick covering the Rangers games on MSG?). Aside from SNY she has also covered the Yankees for ESPNNewYork radio, has done work for WFAN, and she covered the Philadelphia 76ers. Hopefully she’s just as knowledgeable as Jones was and this isn’t just a gimmick. It seems like she will be solid as well as easy to look at.
Jones of course left the network over the winter. As far as I know she doesn’t have a full-time job yet to replace her YES Network gig, but she keeps busy. She does a lot of work for WFAN and the expectation is that she will hook up with the NFL Network.

Former Yankee Update : Arodys Vizcaino

Being borrowed from Bronx Baseball Daily who gives us an update on former Yankee stand out prospect Arodys Vizcaino


Javier Vazquez‘s 2010 return to the Bronx wasn’t just bad because his fastball lost all of its pop, it was also bad because the Yankees gave up a promising prospect in RHP Arodys Vizcaino to land him.
Vizcaino had a good fastball, a strong curve, and a very solid K/BB ratio (4.10 in four seasons in the minors). He ranked as high as No. 40 on Baseball America’s top prospect list. But now there is a bump in his developmental road as he will need to undergo Tommy John Surgery to repair his elbow and will miss at least a full year, according to Buster Olney of ESPN.
This is exactly the type of reason why teams are willing to risk dealing guys like him – they get hurt. Now TJS isn’t career threatening. He’ll be back next season and will probably be close to full strength by the All-Star break. But this is the nature of the way things work though. Pitching prospects, especially lowly level prospects like Vizcaino was when the Yankees dealt him, get hurt.
Now rather than the Braves getting six years of team control they will get just five and he’s almost certain to struggle with consistency next year as he gets over the surgery and deals with breaking into the big leagues. So the best the Braves can legitimately hope for is four solid years from him.
That doesn’t make the Yankees trade for Vazquez a good one, but it does at least slightly soften the blow.

Meet A Prospect : Tyler Austin -- Update

As many of you know I like to do a segment called Meet A Prospect here on The Greedy Pinstripes and one of my first was my personal man crush, Tyler Austin (seen here).

Today we received some news and updates on Mr. Austin that I thought would be fitting to be shared. Tyler Austin, along with Dante Bichette Jr and others, will be playing in Low A Yankees affiliate the Charleston Riverdogs. Austin was a major standout on a championship Staten Island (NYPL) team last season playing both of the hot corners, first and third base. This season , we learned, that Austin will be playing right field in Charleston. I do not know whether this has more to do with Bichette , also a third basemen, moving to Charleston with him or the teams lack of faith in his power bat coming along but either way the move is happening.