fbpx

Blogs

BlogsYankeesYankees Thoughts

Yankees Thoughts: Have They Given Up?

The Yankees followed up their eight-run loss to the Braves by getting one-hit and shut out.

The Yankees followed up their eight-run loss to the Braves by getting one-hit and shut out.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. Aaron Boone and his coaching staff showed up in full uniform to Tuesday night’s game against the Braves. Maybe it was the last possibility on their list of superstitions to turn the season around. I have to think it was Boone knowing he has less than seven weeks to wear a Yankees uniform. Whatever his reason, it didn’t work. The Yankees were one-hit and shut out in a 5-0 loss.

“It’s not fun getting beat up, especially when you wear this uniform,” Boone said after the loss.

Boone showed off the number 17 on his back that the Yankees hope Shohei Ohtani is wearing in 2024, but that would entail persuading Ohtani to give up playing on the West Coast and somehow getting him to choose the Yankees over a contender, or even a team with a hint of promise in their future. The Yankees don’t boast any of those things. Instead, they boast a .500 record this late in the season for the first time in 28 years.

2. It didn’t matter that Luis Severino was allowed to start against the best offense baseball. Not just because the Yankees are playing meaningless games at this point, even if they are trying to lead you to believe they aren’t meaningless, but because the offense provided nothing. One hit and no runs in nine innings. The game could still be going on at this moment and the Yankees still wouldn’t have scored.

“Not good enough,” Boone said about the offense he has spent the last three calendar years saying would “get it rolling.”

But Severino did start, and he wasn’t good. Sure, he struck out five in four innings and was finally getting swings and misses. He also allowed put eight runners on base in those four innings, gave up five runs and two home runs.

“I thought he threw the ball well,” Boone said. “Again, a lot of swing-and-miss. It was as good of stuff as I’ve seen.”

3. When it looked like Severino might pitch a scoreless first inning, he allowed a three-run home run. When it looked look like he might finish strong with a string of scoreless innings after the three-run first, he gave up a two-run home run in the fourth.

“He had stuff tonight,” Boone said. “You could tell he was having his way a lot of the night which was good to see.”

Let’s ask Marcell Ozuna and Ronald Acuna about Severino “having his way” with the Braves lineup.

“I think that was a much better Sevy than we’ve seen,” Boone said, saying “we” should be happy with five runs in four innings, which translate to a 7.20 ERA.

Again, it didn’t matter. Severino could have given up one run or the five he gave up or 55. DJ LeMahieu’s one-out single second was the only hit. The Yankees went 1-for-24 with five walks. They had one runner get past first base. After allowing 10 runs in his last two starts and 9 1/3 innings, Braves starter Bryce Elder pitched seven scoreless innings.

3. On top of the Yankees’ latest putrid offensive performance, they hit into four double plays. The Yankees have now hit into a league-leading 58 double plays since June 1, which is the most in the majors. If you recall, on June 4, 2021 after a loss to the Red Sox, Boone said, “Typically, the better teams are going to hit into double plays.” If that’s true, the Yankees are just ones of the “better” teams since June 1 of this season, they are the best team! (They are actually 26-36 since June 1. I can’t believe leading the league in double plays for two-and-a-half months hasn’t translated to more wins.)

Gleyber Torres hit into two double plays on Tuesday and has hit into six in his last six games, which is the most double plays grounded into in a six-game span in Yankees history. (Congratulations on making history, Gleyber!) Harrison Bader hit into one, and like a well-written script, Aaron Judge banged into one to end the sad night.

4. I think “sad” is a perfect way to describe the Yankees at this point. It’s not like they’re being embarrassed because they have suffered many losses like the ones on Tuesday, or Monday, or Sunday. It’s the norm for this team, so it’s hard to say they are being embarrassed or humiliated anymore. No one says the A’s or Royals or Rockies or White Sox get embarrassed or humiliated when they lose. Those teams all suck, and losing is what they do. Well, the Yankees also suck, and losing is what they do as well.

5. The Yankees are 1-9-3 in their last 13 series dating back to June. (That one series win came over the Royals.) They are 8-1 against the A’s and Royals and 52-59 against everyone else. They are 104-108 in their last 212 games. They are 20-26 since Hal Steinbrenner said he was confused why fans are upset this season. They are 11-18 since they fired their hitting coach. Anyway you break it down, they are a bad baseball team on their way to a last-place finish and ending the organization’s 30-year winning streak. Yes, they suck, and are a sad collection of overpaid, underachieving losers managed by the biggest loser of all.

“It sucks,” Boone said about falling to .500. “We’re simply just not playing well enough. It starts with me and on down. It’s a broken record, right?”

It’s hard to argue the Yankees haven’t given up. Their play certainly suggests they have. (Has anyone checked in on Bader since his August 6 comment of “No concern” about the Yankees’ place in the standings?)

6. The only player on the Yankees’ roster who has ever won anything is Anthony Rizzo, which is likely why he can be seen on camera nightly cracking up in the dugout as if he’s watching a Sebastian Maniscalco comedy special on one of the scouting iPads. Rizzo could care less that the Yankees have become a laughingstock and that the fan base is rightfully angry and distraught. He ended the Cubs’ curse. He’s a Chicago hero. He has a ring. He doesn’t need one with the Yankees, and he doesn’t need to do anything with the Yankees other than collect a paycheck.

Rizzo’s carefree attitude seems to be contagious. Throughout the season, he has been seen having the time of his life during losses with different players. On Monday, he had Judge and Giancarlo Stanton all but slapping their knees on the top step with the Yankees trailing by eight runs. Earlier this summer, he nearly had Anthony Volpe in tears while the Yankees were enduring one of their countless series losses. In the dugout, the Yankees are having the kind of fun you have during the last hour of a wedding reception, while on the field, they are a disgrace.

7. “There’s a lot of season left,” Boone said on a night the Blue Jays, Red Sox, Rangers, Astros and Mariners all won and the Yankees’ playoff odds fell to 2.9 percent. “There’s a quarter of the season left and we gotta do better than this.”

A QUARTER OF THE SEASON?! How are Yankees fans supposed to be subjected to this type of play 42 more times?!

“Forget October,” Boone said. “Forget September.”

I wish I could forget September when the Yankees are playing mathematically eliminated games. I wish I didn’t have to sit through October with 12 teams not named the Yankees playing for a championship. Unfortunately, I can’t just forget about two months on the calendar.

8. “Like that’s not the focus,” Boone said of September and October. “And it never is, frankly, when you’re in the driver’s seat.”

First, the Yankees were “championship-caliber.” Then, they were “going to get it rolling.” Then the season was still “in front of them.” Now, they’re just forgetting about September and October. What’s next? Forgetting about July and August? Creating a new calendar that only includes months and days chosen by the Yankees?

9. “We’re scuffling our asses off,” Boone said. “We need to do better and we need to take some personal pride.”

If the Yankees are truly “scuffling their asses off” which was said following a one-hit, no-run performance, well that’s a serious problem. I really hope they just gave up and aren’t actually trying their hardest. As for pride, well, I think that concept was lost on these players and in the clubhouse a long time ago. Long before this season.

10. “So the message continues to be, ‘Make sure we’re competing our asses off,’” Boone said, “and I believe that is happening.”

It’s time for a new message. It’s been time for a new message for a long time. Next season, there will be a new message from a new manager. (And again, if there isn’t, my time as a Yankees fan will come to an end, and I can spend the thousands of hours in 2024 dedicated to this team doing anything else.)

With each sloppy, depressingly played game the Yankees are one day closer to ending this miserable season. A season that looks like it was pulled from the Stump Merrill years. At least Merrill had the excuse of managing a roster that was never going to win and was never expected to win.

Maybe on Wednesday night, Boone and his coaching staff will add wearing high socks to their full-uniform attire. I’m sure that will jumpstart the season.


Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast.


My book The Next Yankees Era: My Transition from the Core Four to the Baby Bombers
is available as an ebook!

Read More

Blogs

Yankees Thoughts: Ass-Kicking in Atlanta

The Yankees played the best team in baseball and never had a chance. The Braves gave the Yankees their straight loss with an 11-3 in Atlanta.

The Yankees played the best team in baseball and never had a chance. The Braves gave the Yankees their third straight loss with an 11-3 in Atlanta.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. On Monday, coming off the worst loss of the season, with the Yankees’ postseason odds down to 6.1 percent and a three-game series on tap against the best team in baseball, I wrote:

    It would be in Yankees fans’ best interest for the team they root for to get humiliated between now and Sunday. Root for them to get their asses kicked in Atlanta over the next three nights (which shouldn’t be hard) and then have the Red Sox come into their building and embarrass them over the weekend (which happens so often it should be expected).

    The plan is off to a good start as the Yankees were thoroughly humiliated in Atlanta with an 11-3 ass-kicking from the Braves. The Yankees jumped out to a 1-0 lead in the top of the first, gave that run right back in the bottom of the first, took the lead back with a run in the top of the second, and then gave it away for good in the bottom of the second. The Braves scored three in the second, four in the third, one in the sixth and two more in the eighth. The Yankees added a meaningless run in the ninth.

    2. Clarke Schmidt produced the worst start of his career in a return to his home. Schmidt has been the Yankees’ second-best starter for months, but on Monday, he pitched like Luis Severino: 2.1 IP, 9 H, 8 R, 8 ER, 2 BB, 3 K, 1 HR. Schmidt couldn’t get through three innings before being relieved by Ian Hamilton (who pitched 2 2/3 scoreless innings) before Albert Abreu came in to let the Braves pad their league-leading offensive stats a little more, as the always awful Abreu put seven baserunners on in three innings and allowed three runs.

    3. It was the bottom of the Braves’ order that degraded the Yankees. Eddie Rosario went 3-for-5 with four RBIs and Nicky Lopez went 3-for-4 with three RBIs. The Braves stunned everyone when they traded for Lopez at the deadline. Acquiring a career .250/.312/.321 (.653 OPS) with a career 74 OPS+ was puzzling, but in three games with the Braves, Lopez has a 2.000 OPS, five RBIs and hit a home run after hitting five in his previous 563 career plate appearances.

    Everything the Braves touch turns to gold. Two years ago at the deadline, they traded for Rosario, Jorge Soler and Joc Pederson, and that trio helped lead them to a championship. On top of their Midas touch, they are also incredibly smart. Their entire core is locked up long term. They gave Ronald Acuna, Matt Olson and Michael Harris eight-year deals. Ozzie Albies got seven years. Six years for Sean Murphy and Spencer Strider and 10 years for Austin Riley. All seven of those players are under 30 years old, and Harris, Acuna, Albies, Riley and Strider are all under 27. Not only is their core locked up, but their core plays. The Braves have played 118 games in 2023. Acuna, Albies, Olson and Riley have played in 117 of them.

    4. As a Yankees fan, I’m jealous of the Braves and their fans. They are what the Yankees were once upon a time. A perfect mix of homegrown talent, acquired talent and free-agent talent. The Yankees could have had Olson or Murphy, like the Braves have. They opted for Anthony Rizzo and the combination of Jose Trevino and Kyle Higashioka. The Yankees could have locked up Aaron Judge or Gleyber Torres before they ever hit free agency, but instead they now have to pay Judge until he’s 40 and are likely to trade Torres before next season or lose him for nothing after next season.

    5. Watching the Braves treat the Yankees the way the Yankees treat the A’s or Royals had me thinking about Aaron Boone’s quote following the Yankees’ 2021 wild-card loss when he famously said, “The league has closed the gap on the Yankees.” The Yankees never had a gap on the league in Boone’s tenure as manager and once he’s relieved of his duties in seven weeks, he will leave the Yankees with the team separated by a Grand Canyon-like gap from the Braves.

    6. “They have a lineup that’s really, really rugged and balanced,” Boone said after game in what seemed like a direct shot as his general manager. “A little peek into what you’re trying to get to.”

    Like the Astros, the Braves are awesome. Two teams that seem to push every right button, extend their young talent, smartly acquire the right talent and then go to what Brian Cashman calls the marketplace to fill any holes still left. They are the anti-Yankees, who develop one to two position players each decade, acquire busts and bums through trades and overpay in free agency to make up for their development and front office shortcomings. Cashman goes to the marketplace trying to build an entire roster, a strategy that isn’t possible in today’s game.

    7. The Braves are managed by a 67-year-old who has been part of the Braves organization since 1980 and started out as a coach and minor-league manager. The Astros are managed by a 74-year-old who started out as a base coach and is the only manager in the history of the game to lead five different teams to the postseason. The Yankees are managed by a moron who never worked one day as a coach at any level, and is responsible for overseeing a laundry list of negative Yankees records, and could be responsible for a few more before this season ends.

    8. With their losing streak now at three straight and their postseason odds down to 5.3 percent, the Yankees will send Severino back to the mound against the best team in the majors with the best offense in the majors. Severino couldn’t navigate the horrid White Sox offense and now he’s supposed to take his flat, uncommandable fastball and get outs against the Braves? I’m sure it will go well.

    9. The gap the Yankees have to close on teams in their own division is growing each day, let alone the gap they will likely never close on the Astros until Jose Altuve, Yordan Alvarez, Kyle Tucker, Alex Bregman, Justin Verlander, Framber Valdez, Christian Javier and others are no longer Astros. And then there’s the gap with the Braves that even if the Yankees were able to ever return to the World Series, it’s ridiculous to envision how they could win four of seven from the Braves.

    10. Monday was a wake-up call for any Yankees fan who believes Hal Steinbrenner, Cashman or Boone when they call the Yankees “championship-caliber.” The game served as an infomercial for what actual “championship-caliber” teams look like. The Yankees used to be one. They haven’t been one for a while, and I’m not sure when they will be one again.


    Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast.


    My book The Next Yankees Era: My Transition from the Core Four to the Baby Bombers
    is available as an ebook!

    Read More

    BlogsYankeesYankees Thoughts

    Yankees Thoughts: Seven Weeks of Suffering Left

    The Yankees played a series against a team from somewhere other than Oakland or Kansas City, so they lost another series.

    The Yankees played a series against a team from somewhere other than Oakland or Kansas City, so they lost another series.

    Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

    1. Seven weeks from today it will all be over. The pain that is the 2023 Yankees season will have ended.

    Seven weeks from today will be the the off-day between the end of the regular season the start of the postseason. For the Yankees, it will be the first day of the offseason.

    2. In a format in which 40 percent of the league reaches the playoffs, the Yankees will be part of the other 60 percent. Nearly $300 million of payroll spent on the highest-paid team in the American League won’t get them even one extra inning past Game 162. The combination of a poorly constructed roster, in-over-his-head manager, arrogant front office and bewildered ownership proved to be too much for the team to reach the expanded postseason.

    3. The next point of humiliation will be finishing in last place, and coinciding with that will be the end of the consecutive-season winning streak dating back to 1993. If you’re a Yankees fan, at this point, your main rooting interest should be for that last place finish and for that winning season streak to end. Only then can real, meaningful change begin to take place within the organization that is the only one of the five teams in the AL East headed in a dark direction.

    4. The Yankees are now 20-25 since Hal Steinbrenner publicly said he was confused why Yankees fans are upset this season. They are 8-1 against the A’s and Royals and 52-57 against all other teams. They haven’t won a series against any team other than the A’s or Royals since June 23-25. They are 104-106 since July 2 of last year. They aren’t even an average team over a now-210-game sample size. They are a below-average team, and unless they completely bottom out (which they are on track to do), they would be not only comfortable, but confident in running it back with the same roster, dugout and front office in 2024 as they did in 2023 and 2022 and 2021 and 2020.

    Sunday’s loss wasn’t just agonizing and excruciating, it was disturbing. For the Yankees to hold a five-run lead with five outs to go over an offense even weaker than their own with no threat of the long ball hurting them was completely inexcusable. Sunday was it for me. It was the official end to the Yankees’ season.

    5. It would be in Yankees fans’ best interest for the team they root for to get humiliated between now and Sunday. Root for them to get their asses kicked in Atlanta over the next three nights (which shouldn’t be hard) and then have the Red Sox come into their building and embarrass them over the weekend (which happens so often it should be expected). The faster the Yankees’ 6.1 percent chance of reaching the playoffs gets to 0, the better off Yankees fans will be. Though, it might as well be 0 now. The Yankees are five games back of the third and final wild-card spot. They have to jump the Red Sox then the Mariners and then finally overtake the Blue Jays to claim that spot.

    6. “We’ve gotta move on,” Aaron Boone said after the horrific loss. “We have to.”

    Boone talked about how he wasn’t going to load the bases in the ninth because he didn’t want to bring the “walk into play” while disregarding the fact it would bring a forceout at any base into play. But it didn’t matter because Tommy Kahnle had another outing in which he only threw changeups, negating the entire idea of a “changeup,” and couldn’t find the strike zone let alone get a ground ball.

    7. As for Clay Holmes, I will never forgive him or trust him following Sunday’s outing. Not because it ruined the Yankees’ season since it was already ruined, but because no real closer should be capable of that kind of outing. Five runs allowed while getting one out? Not even Albert Abreu nor Nick Ramirez would have allowed that kind of damage in the ninth. They might have given up a pair of runs, but they would have held the lead. Holmes has had many games like Sunday’s. He can’t be trusted. Ever. Someone who just grips the baseball with a sinker grip and then throws the ball as hard as they can without knowing where it’s going shouldn’t be “closing” games for a major-league team.

    8. The idea there are 44 games left in this miserable season is almost unbelievable. Many of them will be played without any meaning, and you could argue those games have already started taking place. But once the math says they truly have no meaning, maybe then Yankees fans will be able to watch players who may have a future with the team play, like we saw seven years ago.

    9. Seven years ago, the Yankees had a plan: trade all possible assets at the deadline for future pieces and give playing time to top prospects. This year, they have no plan. They stood pat at the trade deadline. They have have let top prospects rake in the minors rather than get their feet wet in the majors. They continue to let owed money dictate their decision making instead of actual production. They continue to operate like the joke they have become in recent years, rather than the winningest franchise in major sports history, which they still like to sell their product as.

    10. “We don’t have a lot of time,” Boone admitted after the season-ending defeat. It was the first time he ever hinted at the idea he does understand how the calendar and Major League Baseball schedule work and that there is a finite end date to the season, and the Yankees don’t just get to keep playing baseball until they hold a playoff berth.

    “It’s early” turned into “We’ll get it rolling” and that turned into “It’s all in front of us” and now we’re at “We don’t have a lot of time.” You know what’s next. It’s the letter next to the Yankees’ name in the standings denoting they have been eliminated from the postseason. The sooner it gets here the better.


    Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast.


    My book The Next Yankees Era: My Transition from the Core Four to the Baby Bombers
    is available as an ebook!

    Read More

    BlogsYankeesYankees Thoughts

    Yankees Thoughts: Less Than Eight Weeks Left in Aaron Boone Era?

    The Yankees went to Chicago to play the White Sox, who traded away everyday players and parts of their rotation at the deadline, are dealing with reports and confirmations of those reports of clubhouse turmoil

    The Yankees went to Chicago to play the White Sox, who traded away everyday players and parts of their rotation at the deadline, are dealing with reports and confirmations of those reports of clubhouse turmoil and have the fourth-worst record in the majors, and the Yankees lost two of three.

    Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

    1. If you hadn’t given up on the Yankees’ season prior to the three-game series in Chicago and you stuck around to watch the three games in Chicago, I feel sorry for you. I watched the three games in Chicago and I feel sorry for myself. The Yankees lost yet another series, lost both series this season to the White Sox (who have the fourth-worst record in baseball) and continue to run in place in the standings as games come off the schedule.

    The Yankees are four games out of the loss column to the third wild-card Blue Jays with 47 games left to play. If they had done what they were supposed to do in Chicago and swept the nothing-to-play-for White Sox then they would only be two out in the loss column on the Blue Jays. It was the latest missed opportunity in what has been a season full of missed opportunities.

    2. The Yankees decided not starting Luis Severino would give them the best chance to win on Wednesday night against the White Sox, so they chose to use Ian Hamilton to “open” the game before turning the ball over to Severino. Hamilton pitched a scoreless first inning on just 10 pitches. After being so effective against the top of the White Sox’ order and throwing so few pitches, why didn’t he go back out for the second inning?

    “I wanted to keep Hamilton potentially in play for the first game in Miami,” Aaron Boone said. “So the plan was we were going to go one inning no matter what with him.”

    It’s mid-August, the Yankees are holding on to single-digit odds of reaching the playoffs and Boone is still managing for tomorrow. How that is possible I don’t know, but it seems as though Boone will manage for the next game up until there are no games left. As of today, there is a 90.8 percent chance there won’t be any more games after Game 162 of the regular season.

    3. Boone had a plan before the game and he wasn’t going to go stray from it no matter what. Even if Hamilton had thrown three pitches in the first inning, he was going to come out, so throwing only 10 had no bearing on the decision. When Boone concocts a pregame plan in his head, he’s going to follow through on it no matter what takes place in the actual game. That’s how you get CC Sabathia facing the entire Red Sox’ lineup a second time in Game 4 of the 2018 ALDS because Boone liked the matchup of Sabathia against the Red Sox’ 9-hitter Jackie Bradley. It’s how you get JA Happ coming out of the bullpen in relief of Deivi Garcia in Game 2 of the 2020 ALDS.

    Let’s say Boone did deviate from his plan and Hamilton went out and threw a second scoreless inning needing not many pitches to do so. What would have happened then? Boone would have gone to Severino. He was going to Severino no matter what transpired in the opening inning or innings in the game.

    “No,” Boone said when asked if there was consideration to give Hamilton a second inning. “Because we were going with Sevy today. I’m still going to Sevy whether it’s (the second )or third inning.”

    If (though more like when at this point) the Yankees don’t make the playoffs in a season in which they have the highest payroll in the American League in a format in which 40 percent of the league makes the playoffs, Boone has to be let go. He should have been let go after 2021, but instead he was extended. He should have been let go after last season as a result of the last three months and October play from his team and his use of 2004 ALCS highlights as a motivational tactic, but he wasn’t. Maybe on Friday before the weekend series opener against the Marlins, he can set up a team viewing party of Games 4, 5 and 6 of the 2003 World Series.

    4. This season and the mess the Yankees find themselves in roster-wise for not just 2023 but beyond isn’t on Boone. It’s on Brian Cashman. But Cashman has a lifetime contract, and isn’t going anywhere. Someone has to pay for this season and it will be Boone, as Bob Klapisch reported earlier this week and went on The Michael Kay Show to discuss what his Yankees source told him. Klapisch has been around a long time, so that source is likely part of ownership (if not Cashman himself).

    “It’s not survivable for any Yankees manager to finish last,” Klapisch told Kay. “I think that he will be gone if the Yankees finish last or next to last.”

    Boone isn’t the problem, but he’s part of it. He’s certainly not part of the solution.

    “You have to be able to exert pressure on your players and say this is not good enough and in that respect Boone is lacking,” Klapisch said. “He has not been the right kind of manager for this particular team in this particular season. The Yankees need more from him and he hasn’t provided it.”

    Boone has never been the right manager for any Yankees team. In past seasons, his regular-season “success” and seemingly great regular-season record is a product of the time he managed in.

    In 2018, there were five 90-loss teams and three 100-loss teams in the American League, including the 115-loss Orioles, who the Yankees played 19 times.

    In 2019, there were five 90-loss teams and three 100-loss teams in the AL, including the 108-loss Orioles the Yankees played 19 times.

    In 2021, there were two 100-loss teams in AL, including the 110-loss Orioles the Yankees played 19 times.

    In 2022, there were four 90-loss teams and one 100-loss team in the AL.

    This season, with balanced scheduling, less divisional games, the Orioles and Blue Jays going from 100-plus-loss teams in Boone’s first season to now being better than the Yankees, and just three teams on pace for 90 losses, the Yankees are no longer able to pad their win total and Boone’s resume with a top-heavy league.

    5. “You go into that clubhouse and you just don’t get the sense that winning or losing on a day-by-day basis has the same emotional impact (as it used to) on the players,” Klapisch said. “I don’t sense the great urgency that ‘Man we have to do something now.’ I haven’t gotten that sense from the Yankees this year.”

    There hasn’t been a loss all season in which the Yankees sounded upset with their play or worried by their place in the standings. Anthony Rizzo recently talked about how the Yankees would be OK. Carlos Rodon used Boone’s line “It’s all in front of us.” Harrison Bader simply responded, “No,” when asked if he was concerned about the Yankees being as far out a playoff spot as they are. Gerrit Cole spoke metaphorically about how “All mountains are different sizes” when asked about the Yankees’ tall task of erasing such a large deficit with less than one-third of the season remaining.

    “He wants everyone to feel OK,” Klapisch said of Boone. “‘Look let’s put it behind us and we’ll come back tomorrow.’ Eventually you run out of tomorrows.”

    The Yankees are running out of tomorrows. They are fortunate the Blue Jays lost while they were off on Thursday. But with the offense as bad as it is, and the rotation being a series of unknowns after Cole, it seems improbable for the Yankees to stack wins together and go on the type of winning streak or run needed to erase their standings deficit. They are running out of time, just like they are running out of answers on how to get their veterans players to start hitting and what to do with Severino.

    Boone and the Yankees thought using an opener would trick Severino’s fastball into having better command the same way they thought letting Anthony Rizzo play through “fogginess” symptoms would cure his post-concussion syndrome. For some reason letting Severino pitch a few minutes later than normally scheduled didn’t magically fix his fastball command. I don’t know how that didn’t work.

    6. Severino got beat up for four runs in two innings and then Boone let Kenyan Middleton go two innings against his former team and give up a run. Trailing by four runs, Boone then had an epiphany that the game was in fact important and turned to ‘A’ reliever Wandy Peralta. Remember all the games throughout the season the Yankees lost leads in because Boone wouldn’t go to Peralta or other ‘A’ relievers on the team? It turns out those games were in fact important. Who could have known that all 162 games in the season hold equal value, and games in April and May are as meaningful as games in August and September? Because of Boone’s inability to treat games with equal value, he now finds himself needing to use Peralta with a four-run deficit because the Yankees can’t afford any more losses.

    Peralta gave the Yankees 1 2/3 scoreless innings, and in that time, the Yankees turned a four-run deficit into a three-run deficit. They only had six outs left to play with to erase a three-run deficit, and while unlikely, there was a chance it could be done against a shitty White Sox bullpen. Boone made sure it couldn’t be done.

    7. After determining the game was important enough to use Peralta with a four-run deficit, it wasn’t important enough to use Tommy Kahnle or Clay Holmes with a three-run deficit. Instead of going to either of those two he went to the dynamic duo of Albert Abreu and Nick Ramirez. Abreu loaded the bases with no outs in the eighth and Ramirez made sure they were cleared with a double from barely-still-in-the-league Elvis Andrus to improve his barely-over-.600 OPS.

    Ramirez has been given the Oswaldo Cabrera treatment this season. He’s not any good, and yet, when he gets sent down, he immediately gets called back up because of an injury despite not deserving it. As for Abreu, he has managed to be on the team all season since Opening Day. Another notch on the belt of Cashman and his spectacular roster management in 2023.

    8. The Yankees’ offense is a disgrace and their rotation is littered with injuries, ineffectiveness and a scumbag. Their bullpen is their one actual strength, and they would rather keep it in the garage to show off and talk about rather than use. The Yankees need to optimize every little detail of each game they can to have a chance to win and Boone is incapable of it after six years as manager. The Yankees need all aspects of their roster to be at their best at all times, and considering the “best” they can hope for offensively each game is three runs, they need their manager to put all players in the best possible position to succeed. That means using ‘A’ relieves in non-traditional settings at this point in the season. That means using Anthony Volpe as a pinch hitter for Oswaldo Cabrera or Kyle Higashioka with the bases loaded and not with the bases empty.

    9. If you remember when the Yankees took two of three from the Rangers in the Bronx from June 23-25 then you remember the last time the Yankees won a series against a team not named the A’s or Royals. Today marks the seven-week anniversary of the start of that series. Seven weeks without winning a series against a team other than the historically awful A’s or Royals. That should tell you all you need to know about the 2023 Yankees. Happy Anniversary!

    10. The Yankees will now play a season-defining nine-game stretch against the Marlins, Braves and Red Sox. If they aren’t buried by the Marlins’ pitching staff, humiliated by the Braves’ offense or embarrassed again by the Red Sox then they may still have a chance to turn their season around with what will be 38 games left once this stretch ends.

    I have no expectation they will be doing anything other than playing out September as a mere formality, but if they really believe the lies their manager tells that the season is still “in front of them,” well, this it. Survive these nine games and they will have a chance. Otherwise, their season will be over and they will have a new manager next season. (And if they miss the playoffs and don’t have a new manager, I will no longer be a fan.)


    Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast.


    My book The Next Yankees Era: My Transition from the Core Four to the Baby Bombers
    is available as an ebook!

    Read More

    BlogsYankeesYankees Thoughts

    Yankees Thoughts: A Win Over White Sox?

    The Yankees’ 7-1 win over the White Sox on Tuesday coupled with a Blue Jays loss brought the Yankees back to win 4 1/2 games of the final postseason spot.

    The Yankees’ 7-1 win over the White Sox on Tuesday coupled with a Blue Jays loss brought the Yankees back to win 4 1/2 games of the final postseason spot. The Yankees’ win over the White Sox was just their second in five games this season.

    Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

    1. After stranding 57 baserunners over their previous two games, the Yankees finally drove in runners in scoring position on Tuesday in a 7-1 win over the White Sox. It was the kind of offensive performance you should be able to expect from a Yankees lineup that has the names and payroll it has, but it’s the kind of offensive performance they provide once every few weeks.

    2. When Touki Toussaint recorded his first five outs of the game on strikeouts, I had a feeling the game was going to play out the way many games have played out for the Yankees over the last year-plus, in which their starter gives them a winnable effort, but the offense no-shows. Like the game they lost the night before.

    3. Through three innings, Toussaint allowed a walk and a single, and it wasn’t until there was one away in the fourth that the Yankees’ offense showed up. Giancarlo Stanton and Billy McKinney produced back-to-back singles, and Isiah Kiner-Falefa drove a two-run double to left-center field. Harrison Bader followed that double with an RBI single, and the Yankees had a 3-0 lead, and after back-to-back walks from Anthony Volpe and Ben Rortvedt, Jake Bauers lofted a sacrifice fly to make it 4-0.

    Those four runs were more than any Yankees fan expects on a given night, and they were more than enough for Clarke Schmidt, who was really good once again: 5.1 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 7 K, 1 HR.

    4. Schmidt pitched worse than Luis Severino in his first four starts this season (8.79 ERA), and like Domingo German in his next five (4.91). After getting beat up by the Rays on May 14, Schmidt had a 6.30 ERA and the Yankees had lost of six of his nine starts. Now over his last 14 starts (and one relief appearance right before the All-Star break), Schmidt has a 3.12 ERA and hasn’t allowed more than three runs in any of those 14 starts. The Yankees are only 8-6 over that time because in those six losses, the offense scored 1, 0, 2, 2, 2 and 2 runs.

    On a roster that has Severino, Carlos Rodon and Nestor Cortes, Schmidt is the Yankees’ second-best starter. In a season marred by disappointment, Schmidt is one of three truly bright spots (along with Cole and Aaron Judge).

    5. The Yankees improved to 48-13 when they score four-plus runs. That’s all they need to win: four runs. FOUR! And yet, it’s an arduous task for a lineup full of underachievers that has only scored more runs than the White Sox, Guardians, Tigers, Royals and A’s in the AL this season.

    Kyle Higashioka provided two runs of insurance with a two-run, pinch-hit bomb in the eighth, and two batters later, Judge ended his eight-game homer-less streak with a solo home run. Both home run came off the left-handed Tanner Banks, who was oddly allowed to pitch two innings against nearly all righties.

    6. Higashioka hits lefties (.728 OPS) way better than he hits righties (.630 OPS), but not to the level of a platoon split that Bader has. Bader has an absurd 1.224 OPS against left-handed pitching and an unplayable .584 OPS against right-handed pitching. He has 136 more plate appearances against righties (190) then lefties (54) because there’s a lot more right-handed pitchers than left-handed pitchers. Another reason why the Yankees should move on from him after the season and refrain from giving him a multi-year deal in free agency.

    7. The Yankees’ easy handling of the White Sox is how it should look when a supposed “championship-caliber team” plays the fourth-worst team in the majors. The Yankees blew an enormous opportunity to go into Chicago and sweep three games from a horrible team when they lost on Monday night, but at least they won on Tuesday to keep alive the chance of winning the three-game series, which they desperately needed to do.

    8. Taking two of three from the White Sox lies in the right arm of Severino who is setting every possible negative record imaginable in Yankees history with his season. In his last two starts, he has allowed 21 baserunners and 14 earned runs in 7 1/3 innings. Here are his 2023 numbers with his career numbers in parentheses.

    ERA: 7.74 (3.77)
    FIP: 6.56 (3.67)
    WHIP: 1.849 (1.185)
    H/9: 12.7 (8.0)
    HR/9: 2.5 (1.2)
    BB/9: 3.9 (2.7)
    K/9: 7.9 (9.8)
    K/BB: 2.00 (3.67)

    9. Unfortunately, for Severino, he’s having this disastrous season as impending free agent. Unfortunately, for the Yankees, he’s having this season when they have needed him to be the Severino he’s always been when Carlos Rodon and Nestor Cortes were hurt and Domingo German was his inconsistent self. Now they need him to be the Severino he has always been with Rodon hurt again and German in rehab for alcohol abuse.

    10. The Yankees can’t afford to have Severino be anything less than the best version of himself. They can’t afford for anyone on the roster to be that at 4 1/2 games out of a playoff spot with 48 games left to play. They certainly can’t afford to have him allow a crooked number in the first inning on Wednesday night and then ask an offense that can’t be trusted anymore than Severino can to climb out of four-, five, or six-run hole.

    The Yankees need Severino to be great again. Their season depends on it.


    Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast.


    My book The Next Yankees Era: My Transition from the Core Four to the Baby Bombers
    is available as an ebook!

    Read More