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Yankees’ 2022 Season Set Up as Prodigious Parlay

The Yankees’ 2022 season is one enormous gamble. It didn’t have to be this way. The Yankees could have put together as sure of a thing possible from an on-paper roster standpoint.

The Yankees’ 2022 season is one enormous gamble. It didn’t have to be this way. The Yankees could have put together as sure of a thing possible from an on-paper roster standpoint. They could have used their financial might and the fact they generate more revenue than any of the other 29 teams in the majors and play in the biggest market in the country to their advantage. They could have finally put together the best possible roster to end their going-on-13-year championship drought. If it didn’t work out on the field, at least they would have done everything in their power to attempt to win.

Instead, the Yankees purposely created one prodigious parlay for the 2022 season. Rather than spend the way their revenue streams allow and needing only health to be on their side to be the favorite to win the American League pennant, overall health is now just one of a lengthy list of things the Yankees need to hit on to win with the roster they have constructed.

At the Yankees’ 2021 end-of-the-season press conference on Oct. 19, Brian Cashman openly admitted the 2021 team was “unwatchable.” The Yankees had been the odds-on favorite to win the AL, and they instead finished fifth in the AL and third in their own division. In lieu of making wholesale changes to a declining roster and culture that had only gone backward in each season since 2017, Cashman’s first move for 2022 was to extend Aaron Boone. Boone had been handed the keys to a team that came within one win of the World Series, and crashed it before leaving the driveway. Under him, the Yankees suffered the worst home postseason loss in franchise history while falling to the Red Sox in four games in the 2018; lost four of the final five games of the 2019 ALCS; were embarrassed by the 28th-highest payroll Rays in the 2020 ALDS and were eliminated by the Red Sox for a second time in his tenure in the 2021 wild-card game before’s the game’s second commercial break. Cashman and the Yankees hired the inexperienced, in-over-his-head Boone, watched him fail miserably for four years and then decided to double down on their disastrous hire by giving him a new three-year deal with a fourth-year option. Boone, who never won anything as a player, has now done the same as manager. His Yankees have produced one division title and an 11-11 postseason record with no World Series appearances in four seasons.

When the Boone extension was announced, I desperately tried to talk myself into Boone with better players in 2022. If the Yankees could go out and dominate the free-agent market or make a blockbuster trade then maybe the team could outperform their own manager. At least that’s what I told myself. A complete roster and improved rotation would prevent Boone’s frequent illogical lineups and horrifying bullpen decisions. His in-game decisions wouldn’t have as much of an impact on the team’s success, and the Yankees could win in spite of his presence. I thought this was a real possibility because of Cashman’s comments at that press conference.

“I’m going to be looking to upgrade,” Cashman said that day. “There are some areas of weakness that have popped up in a lot of categories.

“Here’s the biggest key. Go to the marketplace, whether it’s the free-agent marketplace, or go to the trade market and see how we can solve that with what’s available in the marketplace. And obviously there will be some legitimate choices to reconfigure in certain categories.”

Cashman’s admission of needing to upgrade the roster either through the “free-agent marketplace” or the “trade market” had me thinking about some combination of Corey Seager, Carlos Correa, Freddie Freeman, Max Scherzer and Matt Olson in pinstripes. The 2021 season had been a colossal failure, Cashman had recognized and admitted it, and he was going to make sure it didn’t happen again. He said as much. Or so I thought.

Not a single one of those five names is now a Yankee. The Yankees sat out on the pre-lockout signing frenzy and remained on the sidelines for the post-lockout signings. They chose not to participate in the A’s firesale, which has included losing their manager (who I would have loved to be the Yankees’ manager) to the Padres, trading Olson to the Braves, Chris Bassitt to the Mets, Matt Chapman to the Blue Jays, and most recently Sean Manaea to the Padres. All four of those players (and the manager) would have improved the Yankees.

With a boat that has been taking on water since the 2017 ALCS, rather than get a new boat, the Yankees decided to once again patch the latest holes, hoping it can get them to where they want to go. It’s a strategy that hasn’t worked over the last four offseasons, but they used it for a fifth straight offseason. Four-plus years ago the Yankees had a young, inexpensive core on the rise. Now what’s left of that core is older, expensive, oft-injured and mostly in decline, and they have never gotten as close to winning it all as they were when they went to Houston needing to win one of two games.

Cashman admitted the Yankees would need to find a shortstop, so they chose the 20-year-old unproven Anthony Volpe and the 21-year-old unproven Oswald Peraza over the 27-year-old proven Seager and the 27-year-old proven Correa. Over the last four offseasons, Hal Steinbrenner has proven he would rather produce his own Seager or Correa or Manny Machado or Bryce Harper than pay the actual Seager, Correa, Machado or Harper. And that’s nice in theory, but those four are superstars and there’s a very slim chance either Volpe or Peraza turn into any of them. The Yankees passed on Machado because they had Gleyber Torres. They passed on Harper because they would eventually have to pay Aaron Judge (who they still haven’t paid), Giancarlo Stanton (who they don’t let play the outfield), Aaron Hicks (who has barely played baseball over the last four years) and Clint Frazier (who the Yankees released for nothing in return this offseason). I pray multiple times each day that both Volpe and Peraza into Seager or Correa. I also know how math and statistics work and understand how low the odds are of even one of them becoming an above-average, everyday major leaguer, let alone a star or superstar.

Volpe will turn 21 this month and has never played above High-A. Peraza is 21 and has played 87 games above High-A. When Seager was 21, he was batting third in the postseason for the Dodgers. When Correa was 21, he was batting third and winning Rookie of the Year for the Astros and eliminating the Yankees from the postseason. When Machado was 21, he was in his third year in the majors, had hit 51 doubles in a season and had an All-Star Game and Gold Glove to his name. When Harper was 21, he had played three seasons and 357 games, hit 65 home runs and been a two-time All-Star and Rookie of the Year.

In choosing Volpe and Peraza over Seager and Correa, Cashman traded with the Twins to acquire the light-hitting, all-glove Isiah Kiner-Falefa. The Rangers had traded Kiner-Falefa to the Twins after the lockout because before the lockout they had signed Seager to a $325 million deal. The Rangers, yes, the 106-loss, last-place Rangers didn’t want to build around Kiner-Falefa, so they signed Seager. They also didn’t want the inexpensive defense-first Kiner-Falefa playing second for them, so they also signed Marcus Semien for $175 million. The Rangers chose to give Seager and Semien a combined half-billion dollars rather than roster and play Kiner-Falefa.

These are the same Rangers who happily paid Rougned Odor to not play baseball for them in 2021 despite owing him $27 million and knowing they would be a last-place team. And these are the same Yankees who happily traded (yes, traded an actual person) for Odor in the first week of the 2021 season and then rostered and played him for the entire season, even giving him two at-bats in the one-game playoff against the Red Sox.

In the trade for Kiner-Falefa, the Yankees also acquired 36-year-old former superstar Josh Donaldson and the $48 million owed to him, along with 23-year-old catcher Ben Rortvedt who is all defense and no bat (and I mean no bat). In exchange for the three players, the Yankees gave up Gary Sanchez and Gio Urshela.

Rather than keep Sanchez and have a left side of the infield of Seager and Urshela or Correa and Urshela, they chose to move on from the second-best power-hitting catcher in baseball and create a left side of Kiner-Falefa and Donaldson, and in turn have arguably the worst catching tandem in the majors. At best, the trade was an even swap of productivity. At worst, it prevented the Yankees from signing an in-their-prime shortstop and forced them to take on $48 million for a player who has missed 32 percent of the last four seasons. The Yankees have shied away from paying in-their-prime stars because they didn’t want to pay for their late-‘30s seasons. But here they are paying for Donaldson’s late-‘30s seasons without also getting his prime seasons. The Blue Jays got those prime years from Donaldson and they used them to beat up on the Yankees.

The Yankees’ need for a shortstop came from the team giving up on Torres at the position after completely misevaluating him as a shortstop over 2020 and 2021. I keep reading and hearing about how the Yankees can methodically find at-bats for DJ LeMahieu. I have a solution: make LeMahieu an everyday player.

It’s inexplicable that Torres could play over LeMahieu. This isn’t the beginning of 2019 when Torres was coming off an unbelievable rookie season and LeMahieu was signed as a super utility player and wasn’t in the 2019 Opening Day lineup. This is the beginning of 2022, and Torres has been barely a playable option since the start of the shortened 2020 season.

Yes, LeMahieu is coming off a disastrous 2021 season in which he hit .268/.349/.362 with 10 home runs and 24 doubles. He also played through a hernia that required surgery and forced him to miss the one-game playoff and would have kept him out of the rest of the postseason if the Yankees’ postseason had lasted longer than nine innings. For as bad as LeMahieu was last year, Torres was worse: .259/.331/.366 with nine home runs and 22 RBIs. And Torres has no injury excuse or offseason surgery to fall back on. He just sucked and has sucked since he showed up to Spring Training 2.0 out of shape in July 2020, sending his career into a tailspin.

The Yankees are in this position because they watched Torres play shortstop like an overweight slob seven beers deep each night for two months in 2020 (the overweight part was true) and chalked it up to a shortened season and small sample size. Believing Torres was still the shortstop of the future despite never showing he was capable of being that, the Yankees gave LeMahieu a six-year, $90 million contract after 2020 to be their second baseman of the future. Then after 143 games in 2021, the Yankees decided enough was enough after Torres’ fielding single-handedly carried the Yankees to the most humiliating loss of the season on Sunday Night Baseball against the Mets. With 19 games left in the season and on the outside looking in on the postseason, the Yankees finally moved Gio Urshela to short, a move they claimed all season they would never make.

Now because the Yankees still trusted Torres after 2020 and paid LeMahieu, only to give up on Torres the following season, the Yankees have to choose between LeMahieu or Torres, and it seems like the Yankees are choosing Torres, who was last good two-and-a-half years ago, over the better, more reliable LeMahieu, who still has five years left on his current contract and is owed $75 million. The Yankees are picking Torres over LeMahieu after already picking Boone over Sanchez and Volpe and Peraza over Seager and Correa. They also picked a reunion with Anthony Rizzo over Freeman and Olson.

Rizzo is a good player. He’s also coming off the worst season of his career since his rookie year nine years ago. The general perception is that his two months as a Yankee were great, when in reality, they weren’t. Rizzo homered in his first two games with the Yankees in Miami and then homered twice over the next six weeks. 

In the outfield, knowing Hicks can’t stay healthy (he’s missed 62 percent of the last three seasons), and knowing that in the last 28 months he’s had his elbow and wrist surgically repaired, and knowing that he’s now 32 years old, the Yankees created center-field depth by … doing nothing. That’s right, the Yankees are counting on Hicks to play a full season for the first time in his 10-year major-league career. They are also counting on “full” seasons from Judge and Stanton for the second straight year. (Judge played 148 games in 2021 and Stanton 139.) But if any of them should get hurt, the Yankees did give a major-league deal to Tim Locastro, who is coming off a torn ACL suffered eight-and-a-half months ago.

The Yankees went in the 2021 season with a rotation of Gerrit Cole and Jordan Montgomery and reclamation projects in Corey Kluber, Jameson Taillon and Scumbag Domingo German. In early February 2021, Cashman said he believed in that rotation “in theory.” Kluber had spent the previous two years not pitching for health reasons and made only 16 starts as a Yankee, averaging five innings per start. Taillon made the most starts (29) he had made in three years, but still injured his ankle and needed offseason surgery. German was awful and then got injured. The patchwork Opening Day rotation Cashman built was mostly bad and mostly injured and in the 13th game of the season, the Yankees didn’t have a starter to face the Rays and instead used Nick Nelson as an opener. Eleven pitches into that eventual loss, the Yankees trailed 2-0 with a runner on second and still no outs. If you think a game on April 16 is meaningless, the Yankees didn’t clinch a postseason berth until the final pitch of their regular season in Game 162, and because of losses like that April 16 one had to play the one-game playoff at Fenway Park.

If not for the breakout season from Nestor Cortes, the Yankees’ rotation would have been in shambles. Cortes entered 2021 having pitched to a career 6.72 ERA and 6.69 FIP. He pitched in 22 games for the 2021, starting 14, with a 2.90 ERA and 1.075 WHIP. The Yankees are going into 2022 thinking the 93 innings innings from Cortes in 2021 are the real Cortes and not everything in his career prior to 2021.

They have Cole and Montgomery they can count on for health and production. Between those two in the rotation plans is Luis Severino, who has pitched 23 2/3 innings since the end of 2018 and last started a game in the 2019 ALCS. After Severino, there’s Taillon, coming off ankle surgery, and Cortes, coming off his one good season in the majors.

It would be unrealistic to think the Yankees could navigate an entire season with five starters (then again, unrealistic thinking is their thing), so they will undoubtedly need to rely on starting pitching depth to get them through 2021. Last season, including openers, they used 15 “starting” pitchers, including the legendary Andrew Heaney and Asher Wojciechowski. The Yankees’ current starting pitching depth consists of Clarke Schmidt, Luis Gil and Deivi Garcia.

The oft-injured Schmidt who was the Yankees’ first-round pick in 2017 is now 26 years old and has thrown 12 2/3 career major-league innings. In those 12 2/3 innings, he has allowed 13 earned runs and 31 baserunners.

Gil made six starts for the 2021 Yankees and was impressive at times. He also walked 5.8 batters per nine innings, which is even higher than his 5.3 walks per nine in his minor-league career.

Garcia showed flashes of brilliance with the Yankees in 2020. They also chose to use him as an opener instead of a starter in the pivotal Game 2 of the 2020 ALDS, and he spent nearly all of 2021 in Triple-A, pitching to a 6.85 ERA and putting 177 baserunners on in 90 2/3 innings.

The Yankees added to their starting pitching depth this offseason by signing … no one. OK, I shouldn’t say no one. They did sign Shelby Miller to a minor-league contract last week. Since 2016, Miller has made 36 starts and 61 appearances, pitching to a 7.04 ERA, 5.38 FIP and 1.773 WHIP. I have recorded a video to play in my absence in the event he ever throws a pitch for the New York Yankees. It starts with “If you’re watching this video then you already know I’m no longer a baseball fan …”

The bullpen will be good because the Yankees’ bullpen is always good. The problem is how Boone uses his bullpen and how early into the season he will burn out his elite options. Everyone remembers Chad Green giving up go-ahead home runs in seemingly every appearance in the second half of last season. No one remembers Boone using Green for multiple innings on April 1, April 3, April 7, April 11, and April 18. Through 15 games, Boone used Green for more than an inning five times!

So the bullpen can be counted on for 2022 (as long as Boone doesn’t destroy it. Cole can be counted on (well, except against the Red Sox, Blue Jays and Rays). Montgomery can be counted on to give you a good No. 3-type season. After that? The Yankees will get to where they think they can go if …

Judge stays healthy, which he has done once (2021) since 2017 …

Stanton stays healthy, which he has done once (2021) since 2018 …

Joey Gallo hits closer to his .821 career OPS and not the .707 OPS he posted in 58 games as a Yankee last season …

Hicks somehow stays healthy (this is the least likely thing to happen of all the things listed here) …

LeMahieu rebounds from his awful 2021 and hernia surgery …

Torres rebounds from his last 676 plate appearances …

Rizzo slows his obvious decline …

Donaldson stays healthy all year, which he has done one-and-a-half times since 2016 …

Kiner-Falefa isn’t an automatic out at the plate …

Higashioka, Rortvedt and Jose Trevino aren’t the worst offensive catching tandem in the majors …

Severino stays healthy for the first time since 2018 …

Taillon avoids yet another injury …

Cortes proves 2021 wasn’t an anomaly and that that’s who he truly is …

Some combination of Schmidt, Gil and Garcia provide adequate production when called upon …

The Yankees don’t need to hit on all of those things to win the division, the pennant and a championship, which is what ownership, the front office, the manager and now also Donaldson have all said is possible with this roster. But they do need to hit on a lot of those things to do so. It didn’t have to be this way. The Yankees’ 2022 season didn’t have to be one longshot parlay. Unfortunately, it is.


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Brian Cashman Has Lowest Moment as Yankees General Manager

For four-and-a-half-years I have thought the Yankees came within one win of reaching the 2017 World Series. Apparently, I have been wrong. Brian Cashman says the Yankees won the 2017 World Series.

When the Yankees lost Game 7 of the 2017 ALCS, I was exhausted. The Yankees had consumed every waking hour of my life for the 23 consecutive days, and with late start times, long games and crowded train rides home, nearly every hour of those 23 days was a waking hour.

The Yankees had an opportunity to win one of two games in Houston to advance to the World Series, and they didn’t. Four seasons and four-and-a-half calendar year later, that’s the closest these Yankees have gotten to getting the franchise back to the World Series, let alone winning the World Series. Or so I have thought. Brian Cashman tells me and all Yankees fans that the Yankees didn’t actually lose to the Astros in the 2017 ALCS, and the organization’s World Series drought isn’t going on 13 years in 2022.

“The only thing that stopped [us] was something that was so illegal and horrific,” Cashman told The Athletic. “So I get offended when I start hearing we haven’t been to the World Series since ’09. Because I’m like, ‘Well, I think we actually did it the right way.’ Pulled it down, brought it back up. Drafted well, traded well, developed well, signed well. The only thing that derailed us was a cheating circumstance that threw us off.”

Spoken like a true loser. When Cashman inherited the general manager position, the Yankees won a record 114 regular-season games and then went 11-2 in the postseason to win their second championship in three seasons and what would eventually amount to four championships in five seasons. Since the 2000 World Series win over the Mets, the Yankees have won once in 21 years.

Yes, the Astros cheated by illegally stealing signs during the 2017 season. I don’t know how that explains the Yankees scoring one run in Game 1, one run in Game 2, one run in Game 6 and no runs in Game 7. I don’t know how winning the American League means the Yankees would have beaten the Dodgers.

“It does bother me when people say we haven’t been to the World Series since ’09,” Cashman said. “We did it all right, by building it to a certain level that could have gotten us to a World Series — if not for something else. But hey! We’re back at it. Every year, we’re still back at it. We’ve been qualifying for the postseason, and we’re going to take this team as far as we can get it, and hopefully we can push through.”

How dare anyone criticize the Yankees’ lack of championships since 2000! They have qualified for the postseason! They’re taking this team as a far it can go (which is a humiliating ALDS loss to the Red Sox, another ALCS loss to the Astros, an ALDS loss to the 28th-highest payroll Rays and a degrading wild-card game loss to the Red Sox)!

“People are like ‘Oh, we haven’t been to a World Series … and I’m like, ‘Yeah, I don’t think that’s as true a statement as it could be,'” Cashman said. “We had a World Series team. And either you get it done or you don’t. People don’t want to hear that. I get it. But that’s real to me. I think it’s real to all of us.”

If “having a World Series team” is good enough for Cashman and not actually needing to win the World Series then it explains the team’s decisions post-2017. Since losing Games 6 and 7 in Houston and coming within one win of the World Series with a young, inexpensive core, the Yankees moved on from Joe Girardi for the inexperienced and idiotic Aaron Boone, cut payroll by more than $30 million for the following season, and for the last four offseasons have passed on every single star position player available on the free-agent market. All while boasting the same payroll in 2021 they had in 2005 despite exponential growth in revenues during that 17-year period.

“The fans, they’re fanatics for a reason,” Cashman said. “They don’t really care about how it all adds up. They just want to be the last team standing. As do we. But my job, and our front office’s job, is to find a way within the current restrictions that we have, and the options that are available: ‘OK, what can we come up with that solves these problems, as fast as possible?'”

There should be no “restrictions” when it comes to the Yankees. They’re the Yankees! Back in October, Cashman spoke about how the 2021 Yankees were “unwatchable” and needed “upgrades” and how there were many “legitimate options” to add to the roster. He signed zero free agents, traded for an all-glove shortstop and a 36-year-old former superstar, constructed the worst starting catching situation in the league and re-signed a first baseman whose stock is coming off the worst year of his career since his rookie season nine years prior. Problems solved!

“We believe if we get there, we’re good enough to run the table,” Cashman said. “The Braves showed it last year. All due respect. They’re world champs. But were they the odds-on favorite? Or the second? Or the third? Or whatever, entering that process. And the answer was ‘No.'”

Last season, the Yankees were the odds-on favorite to win the AL and finally get back to the World Series. As the odds-on favorite, they finished fifth in the AL and third in their own division, and their postseason only lasted nine innings. (It really only last lasted four batters into the bottom of the first of those nine innings.) The Yankees’ financial position allows them to be able to to put together the best possible roster to win a championship each season. They shouldn’t have to settle for “getting hot” in October or having a miraculous month like the Braves did.

“I’m past it now,” Cashman said. “But it does bother me when it comes up. We built something that — I can’t tell you we would have won. I can’t tell you we would have beat the Dodgers. But I do feel pretty confident that that team [the Astros] wasn’t stopping us, if it wasn’t for those advantages. That’s all.”

‘I’m past it now, but I’m going to reference it over and over in an on-the-record conversation with a prominent media outlet. But I’m totally over it. Really, I am. And I can’t tell you we would have won, but we definitely would have won. In fact, we did win. So no, there’s no World Series ‘droughtfor the New York Yankees.

That’s how that last answer from Cashman read. What an embarrassing interview to give, especially for someone who has experienced real success in the league, even if the majority of that success came more than 20 years ago.

I’m embarrassed for Cashman. These statements were the lowest point of his tenure as general manager of the Yankees, and he once traded Ted Lilly for Jeff Weaver, traded Tyler Clippard for Jonathan Albaladejo, signed Kei Igawa, chose Nick Johnson over Hideki Matsui, traded for Javier Vazquez twice, let his belief in Eduardo Nunez prevent him from acquiring Cliff Lee, gave Jacoby Ellsbury $153 million, hired Aaron Boone and extended Aaron Boone.

I’m embarrassed for Hal Steinbrenner because if Cashman believes what he told The Athletic then he has undoubtedly sold that steaming pile of crap to Steinbrenner, who can’t be sold on signing 26-year-old superstars, but can be sold on extending Boone and can be easily persuaded to believe the team is better than they are, like he was last year.

The Yankees’ lack of creating new franchise memories for the last two decades has forced the team to give just about everyone from the ’90s dynasty a plaque in Monument Park. It has now even led to Paul O’Neill getting his No. 21 retired. (I love O’Neill as much as anyone, but he shouldn’t be getting his number retired. He was a good, even great Yankee. He wasn’t a legendary, iconic Yankee, which should be the measuring stick for such an honor.) The Yankees couldn’t have been happier when Derek Jeter recently left his position with the Marlins, as earlier this week the team already began promoting a night at the Stadium to honor Jeter’s Hall of Fame induction (he was elected two years ago and inducted nearly a year ago) with No. 2 throwing out the first pitch. I can hear Paul Olden’s voice on a promo between innings this season:

Fans, come out to the Stadium on Sept. 9 and remember when the Yankees actually won championships and didn’t have to make them up as the team honors Derek Jeter as the Yankees celebrate his Hall of Fame induction with the Captain throwing out the ceremonial first pitch.

When will it end? Will No. 24 come out of circulation for a Tino Martinez number retirement ceremony in 2023? If you’re retiring 21 for O’Neill, how can you not retire 36 for David Cone? Does Scott Brosius get a plaque behind the center-field wall? Does David Wells? When does A.J. Burnett get his day?

Now that the Yankees have pushed the limit on Monument Park additions and because they have failed to successfully field a championship team (and not just a championship-caliber team) since 2009, winning just once in 21 years, they have resorted to making up championship seasons, like Cashman did for 2017. I look forward to when they start having promotional nights to honor the 2017 “championship” team. For these Yankees, it might be the closest they ever get to actually winning.


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Anthony Rizzo Is Not Freddie Freeman

The Yankees have taken a roster that wasn’t good enough to reach the postseason until the final at-bat of the regular season and wasn’t good enough to win a postseason game and they have made it worse.

On Monday, after making a puzzling trade to acquire Josh Donaldson, Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Ben Rortvedt for Gary Sanchez and Gio Urshela, Brian Cashman spoke about the odd deal.

“We appreciate what Gio has done,” Cashman said to Meredith Marakovits. “But he’s not Josh Donaldson.”

Despite choosing to trade for Kiner-Falefa rather than sign Corey Seager, Carlos Correa or Trevor Story, and despite not adding a single starting pitcher, and despite not trading for Matt Olson or participating in the Athletics’ firesale in any capacity, the Yankees still had a chance to semi-save their disastrous offseason by bringing Freddie Freeman to the Bronx. Instead, they chose to sign Anthony Rizzo to a two-year deal.

I appreciate what Anthony Rizzo has done, but he’s not Freddie Freeman. He’s not close to being Freeman.

In terms of age, Freeman is 13 months younger. In terms of career, Freeman has posted a 43.1 WAR to Rizzo’s 36.8. In terms of postseason performance, Freeman has hit .290/.393/.523 in 42 games and Rizzo has hit .207/.283/.387 in 40 games. In terms of recent production, Freeman is coming off a 4.7 WAR season and Rizzo a 1.7.

In 2021, Freeman hit .300/.393/.503 with 31 home runs, led the league in runs scored (120), won his third straight Silver Slugger, was an All-Star for the third straight time, and finished in the Top 9 in NL MVP voting for the fourth time in four years (a year after winning the award). Rizzo posted his worst full-season OPS (.783) since his first full season in the majors (2013). He hit a career-low 21 home runs, drove in a career-worst 61 runs and had the second-worst on-base and slugging percentages of his career. As a Yankee, Rizzo hit .249/.340/.428, homered in his first two games on July 30 and July 31 and then hit two home runs over the next six weeks.

The Yankees reset their luxury tax penalty prior to this offseason and there was the hope they would use the reset to their advantage. They could go to the “marketplace” (Cashman’s favorite word) with their financial might and all it would cost them to make impressive roster upgrades would be money. Money. That’s it. The resource they make more of than the league’s other 29 teams.

Instead of using their financial power to bring in the “legitimate options” (a phrase Cashman used at his mid-October, end-of-the-season press conference), the Yankees have traded for a light-hitting stopgap shortstop, acquired a 36-year-old former superstar third baseman who has played 135 games in just two of the last five years and is owed $48 million, created the worst starting catching tandem in the majors and now signed a 32-year-old first baseman who’s coming off his worst full season since his first full season nine years ago. In each of these moves, the Yankees had the option to use the free-agent marketplace to their advantage and plug holes created by their past poor roster construction. In each move, they failed to do so.

The Yankees could have signed Seager, Correa or Story to be their everyday shortstop. Signing any of the three would have instantly made the Yankees better and would have pleased a fanbase that has watched the team half-ass its way to building rosters, resulting in early-postseason exits in three of the last four years. By signing one of the star shortstops in the best shortstop free-agent class of all time, the Yankees then would have been able to keep both Urshela and Sanchez and used the $48 million they now owe to Donaldson toward paying their new shortstop. A Seager-Urshela, Correa-Urshela or Story-Urshela left side of the infield and Sanchez at catcher is a much better situation than Kiner-Falefa and Donaldson at short and third and Kyle Higashioka and Rortvedt behind the plate. The Yankees instead chose to make the deal with the Twins, a deal that makes them worse, and you would have to lie to yourself in a way that Aaron Boone lies daily to Yankees fans to think the Yankees got better after Sunday night’s trade.

After watching the Braves trade for Olson, the Yankees were left with signing either Freeman or Rizzo to play first (since they have tried to trade Luke Voit for a full calendar year). Once again, rather than using their financial strength as a strength, they passed up the top-shelf choice for a good, but not great option. Rather than reinvigorate the fanbase and show that while the front office is committed to either Oswald Peraza or Anthony Volpe as their future shortstop, they still mean business when it comes to other positions. Now the Yankees are out on Freeman. Just like they are out on Seager, Correa and Story (just like they were out on other free-agent stars in their prime like Bryce Harper and Manny Machado). Just like they have been out on the starting pitching market as a whole this offseason.

Rizzo isn’t an upgrade and doesn’t bring change to the Yankees’ roster that was the preseason favorite to win the American League and ended up finishing fifth in the AL and third in their own division and played nine innings of postseason baseball. He was part of that roster. A Yankees team that failed miserably to meet expectations in 2021 has exchanged Sanchez and Urshela for Kiner-Falefa, Donaldson and Rortvedt for 2022.

The Yankees didn’t use their luxury-tax reset to build the best possible roster. They haven’t upgraded the roster with the “legitimate options” Cashman referred to in October. They have taken a roster that wasn’t good enough to reach the postseason until the final at-bat of the regular season and wasn’t good enough to win a postseason game and they have made it worse.


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Yankees’ Puzzling Trade Leaves Roster Worse Than It Was

“Neil, are you awake? Neil? Are you awake?“ “I am now,” I responded to my wife. “The Yankees traded Gary Sanchez.” “Yeah, right.” “No, really. To the Twins.” That’s how my Monday began, shortly after

“Neil, are you awake? Neil? Are you awake?

“I am now,” I responded to my wife.

“The Yankees traded Gary Sanchez.”

“Yeah, right.”

“No, really. To the Twins.”

That’s how my Monday began, shortly after 2 a.m.


Beginning at 7 p.m. on Friday night I began updating every possible news outlet by the minute. That was the official start time to the 2022 MLB season and that was when the supposed madness would take place, especially for the Yankees, who would be in search of a shortstop, first baseman, starting pitcher and possible outfielder. I spent the weekend attached to social media in between Mickey Mouse Clubhouse and Cocomelon episodes only to be disappointed when the Yankees’ lone move was bringing back Tim Locastro on a major-league deal to give them outfield depth.

I passed out shortly before 10 p.m. on Sunday night in the middle of scouring social media for any inkling of positive Yankees news or potential acquisitions. The moment I fell asleep, Brian Cashman and Co. swooped in as if they were waiting for me to let my guard down, sending Gary Sanchez and Gio Urshela to the Twins.

My Sanchez fandom is well known. As one of the few surviving members of the Gary Sanchez Fan Club, of course I’m disappointed he’s no longer a Yankee. When right, he presented the biggest position advantage the Yankees had over any opponent. The problem is he hadn’t been right often over the last few years and I spent an inordinate amount of time defending him to Kyle Higashioka believers, who have nonsensically looked past the 32-year-old backup’s career .183/.234/.385 batting line and bottom-of-the-barrel arm, while at the same time being fed up with Sanchez, who in a down year in 2021 hit three more home runs than Higashioka has hit in his career. In the end, Aaron Boone and Higashioka Fan Club won out and now the Yankees boast the worst catching tandem in Major League Baseball. Congratulations!

As for Urshela, I wrote at the end of last season that he was the easiest piece of the roster to move to give the appearance of a new-look roster, and so the Yankees moved him. He was a good Yankee. A product of the 2019 super baseball, but a good Yankee nonetheless.

The Yankees moving on from Sanchez and Urshela isn’t surprising. The return for Sanchez and Urshela is what kept me up from 2 a.m. until 5 a.m. this morning, tossing and turning, trying to go back to sleep, but wondering, ‘Why this trade?’


Prior to the 2019 season, the Yankees had the chance to sign Bryce Harper and/or Manny Machado. They courted Machado enough to sell it to the fanbase that they “tried” to sign the 26-year-old left-side-of-the-infield superstar. They didn’t even meet with Harper, the 26-year-old, left-handed-hitting outfielder with already one MVP to his name.

Why weren’t they even remotely interested in the generational talent Harper? Because they already had Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Hicks, and had Clint Frazier waiting for an everyday role. Since not signing Harper, the Yankees haven’t extended Judge, they don’t let Stanton play the outfield, Hicks has missed 239 of a possible 384 regular-season games (62 percent) and Frazier was released this offseason for nothing. Harper has gone on to hit .281/.402/.556 for the Phillies, averaging 38 home runs and 105 RBIs per 162 games, while winning the 2021 NL MVP and playing in 356 of a possible 384 regular-season games.

All Harper would have cost the Yankees money. Their greatest resource and the thing they make more of than every other team. He ended up getting an average annual salary of $25.3 million, which would cover his age 26-38 seasons.

In Sunday night’s trade, the Yankees acquired Josh Donaldson … and the $48 million owed to him. An average annual salary of $24 million for a 36-year-old third baseman who has played two “full” seasons in the last five years and in one of those “full” seasons (last year), he missed 27 games.

Once upon a time, acquiring Donaldson and paying him that much money would have made sense. That time was five years ago. And while it’s not my money, the idea the Yankees are willing to pay essentially the same average annual salary for the age 36 and 37 seasons of an oft-injured former superstar, while choosing on multiple occasions to not pay for the age 36 and 37 seasons of other current superstars when they would also be getting their prime years is beyond puzzling. The Yankees are choosing that same path at shortstop.


Prior to the lockout, the Yankees had their choice at shortstop: Corey Seager, Carlos Correa or Trevor Story. Seager signed with the Rangers, leaving them with the 27-year-old Correa or the 29-year-old Story. The Yankees chose instead to trade for Isiah Kiner-Falefa.

They chose to do this because their No. 1 and No. 3 prospects are both shortstops excelling in the minors. So in win-now mode with the majority of their “core” approaching or on the other side of 30, rather than commit their future on an already-proven major-league shortstop in their prime, the Yankees are choosing to commit to either a 20-year-old who has never played above High-A or a 21-year-old who has only played 87 games above High-A. Only one of them can be the shortstop of the future, and it’s likely the Yankees choose Volpe, meaning the New Jersey-born native will basically have to become the other New Jersey-born former Yankees shortstop. The Yankees are banking on Volpe being Derek Jeter 2.0. A very reasonable expectation. Kiner-Falefa is a decent player, but the Rangers also signed Seager and Marcus Semien rather than commit to Kiner-Falefa. The Rangers. The same team that released Rougned Odor, who the Yankees happily traded an actual person to acquire, rostered him all season and even let him get two at-bats in the one-game playoff against the Red Sox. Only one person can bat ninth and the Yankees now have multiple candidates for that spot.


There’s this idea the Yankees aren’t done yet, but I don’t know how anyone could truly believe that. That trade could very well be it. They could go into the season praying for a miracle that Hicks (who has missed 44 percent of regular-season games since 2018), Stanton (33 percent), Donaldson (27 percent) and Judge (23 percent) all stay healthy and productive for six-plus months. They could think an infield combination of Donaldson, Kiner-Falefa, DJ LeMahieu, Gleyber Torres and Luke Voit is good enough to get them back to the World Series for the first time in 13 years. They could very well think the duo of Higashioka and Ben Rorvedt isn’t the worst catching tandem in the league. (Sorry, it is.)

In mid-October, Cashman said:

“I’m going to be looking to upgrade. There are some areas of weakness that have popped up in a lot of categories.

“Here’s the biggest key: Go to the marketplace, whether it’s the free-agent marketplace, or go to the trade market and see how we can solve that with what’s available in the marketplace. And obviously there will be some legitimate choices to reconfigure in certain categories.”

The roster that needed upgrades still hasn’t gotten them. It still hasn’t added any one of the “legitimate choices” Cashman mentioned. If this is it for the Yankees’ offseason, it’s going to be a long 2022 season, and likely a wasted one at that. On Monday morning, the Yankees’ roster is worse than it was on Sunday afternoon, and it was pretty awful then.


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Aaron Boone Opens Spring Training with Latest Lie: ‘We Can Win Now with What We Have’

The odds I look back at the 99-day lockout with a smile on my face improve each day. The lockout prevented Yankees baseball from existing and being a part of my life, and those three-plus

The odds I look back at the 99-day lockout with a smile on my face improve each day. The lockout prevented Yankees baseball from existing and being a part of my life, and those three-plus months were care-free, stress-free and rather beautiful. The lockout hasn’t even been over for 72 hours and I already miss it.

On Sunday, Aaron Boone opened spring training and the 2022 Yankees season in the only way he knows how: by lying.

“We can win now with what we have,” Boone told the media.

“What they have” is a roster that has added zero pieces since they were embarrassed in the one-game playoff by the Red Sox. A roster that was the favorite to win the American League in 2021, and instead finished fifth in the AL and third in their own division. A roster core that wasn’t good enough in 2018, 2019, 2020 or 2021, failing to get back to the World Series in all four seasons under Boone, while progressively getting worse each year.

“What they have” is a rotation whose No. 2 starter hasn’t started a game in 29 months; a starting catcher they don’t actually let start in the season’s biggest games; a starting first baseman who was benched for the final six weeks of last season; a starting shortstop who they were so reluctant to play at short they waited until the 144th game of the season to do so; a starting third baseman who is a Gold Glove-winning second baseman and a starting center fielder who has had his elbow and wrist surgically repaired over the last two years. “What they have” is a roster that is nowhere near good enough to win their division, let alone a playoff series or the World Series.

What makes Boone’s season-opening lie more infuriating is that his own general manager (the one person in the world outside of his own family who believes in him as a major-league manager) said the exact opposite at the team’s end-of-the-season press conference in the middle of October. On the same day Cashman announced a ridiculous three-year extension with an option for a fourth year for Boone, he also spoke at length about the current roster.

“At times it looked unstoppable,” Cashman said, “But many other times unwatchable because of the streakiness and the lack of consistency.”

“I’m going to be looking to upgrade,” Cashman added. “There are some areas of weakness that have popped up in a lot of categories.”

“Here’s the biggest key,” Cashman explained, “Go to the marketplace, whether it’s the free-agent marketplace, or go to the trade market and see how we can solve that with what’s available in the marketplace. And obviously there will be some legitimate choices to reconfigure in certain categories.”

Since Cashman said that, the only moves the Yankees made at the major-league level have been to lose Clint Frazier (for nothing) and Tyler Wade (for essentially nothing), get rid of Rougned Odor (thankfully), watched Corey Kluber sign with the divisional-rival Rays and saw Anthony Rizzo become a free agent. They have added zero position players or pitchers, and yet, Boone feels a roster Cashman has publicly admitted wasn’t good enough and hasn’t changed at all is capable of winning a championship. Cashman has been browsing the marketplace five-and-a-half months, and his cart is still empty. Nearly all of the “legitimate choices” he spoke about in mid-October are no longer available.

Since the announcement of Boone’s new contract, I have tried to talk myself into believing in Boone with better players. All he needs is a better roster! Because that will prevent him from batting Brett Gardner third (once Gardner inevitably re-signs), using Brooks Kriske (or now someone like him) in extra innings in Fenway Park and choosing Albert Abreu over his entire bullpen with the season literally on the line in Game 161 of the regular season. Just give him better players! Unfortunately, with the way the offseason has played out, the idea of Boone with better players is turning from an idea into a dream.

There are two actual starting shortstop options remaining: Carlos Correa and Trevor Story. Correa is by far the better player, but he’s also a jerk who comes with a lot of baggage. Like CC Sabathia said on his podcast this offseason, Correa has set himself up to be Alex Rodriguez if he comes to the Yankees in terms of being a dividing figure in the clubhouse and being booed on the field following any plate appearance that doesn’t end with him reaching base. I don’t think that’s a 10-year commitment this Yankees front office wants to make, and I don’t see why Correa would want to make it either.

I really don’t know what type of commitments the Yankees want to make. One would think the Yankees would be all about big-money, short-term deals, like the one Max Scherzer signed with the Mets, but the Yankees were reportedly not even involved in talks for Scherzer. How is that even possible? How is it possible that the Yankees weren’t interested in the best available free-agent pitcher and arguably the best pitcher in the game who would only cost money, something they make more of than any other team? Oh, that’s right, the owner of the Yankees voted to lower the luxury-tax threshold, which would in turn damage his team’s ability to use the financial might and strength they used to use to their advantage.

Not only were the Yankees not in on Scherzer, but they let the reigning Cy Young winner in Robbie Ray sign with the Mariners on what I think is a favorable contract for the Mariners. They watched Kevin Gausman sign with the Blue Jays, and even Jon Gray (who the Yankees once drafted and have always been connected to) was signed by the Rangers. The Rangers also signed two of the available shortstops in Corey Seager (who was my No. 1 choice for the Yankees to sign) and Marcus Semien.

It keeps me up at night to think who will play shortstop for the 2022 Yankees. (I think they would be more inclined to sign Story since he will be cheaper and they were unsuccessfully tried to trade for him last July, essentially admitting midseason they didn’t have an everyday major-league shortstop on their roster, while continuing to play Gleyber Torres at the position for another six weeks) and then call it an offseason. This team isn’t a shortstop away from a championship. They are many, many pieces away from that.

If the old adage holds true that you want to build up the middle, then the Yankees’ current middle is Gary Sanchez (whose name made headlines this offseason just for being tendered a contract), Torres (who was removed from shortstop and is now being forced back to second base), no one at shortstop and Aaron Hicks (who has played 145 games in the last three years and in that time has suffered a back injury, a hamstring injury and has had his throwing elbow and left wrist both surgically repaired). That’s the Yankees’ middle: Sanchez, Torres, no one and Hicks. Yes, Boone, these Yankees can definitely win now with what they have!

Both Correa and Story make the Yankees much better simply because they’re breathing and the Yankees don’t currently have an actual shortstop on their roster. That sentence reads like a joke, but it’s far from a joke. However, they need a whole lot more than one of those two. Aside from LeMahieu, they essentially need an entire infield since I have given up on Torres, whose mere presence is screwing up the infield alignment, and they need someone who can be trusted to play a full season in the outfield whose name isn’t Brett Gardner.

On top of that, they need starting pitching. They have Gerrit Cole and Jordan Montgomery. Luis Severino has pitched 27 2/3 innings since the end of 2018 and hasn’t started a game in 29 months. Corey Kluber is now a Ray. Jameson Taillon is recovering from ankle surgery. Domingo German flat-out sucks. Clarke Schmidt is always hurt and has put 31 baserunners on in 12 2/3 innings in the majors. In six months, Deivi Garcia went from looking like the future of the rotation to having a future in an independent league. Michael King is a reliever.

Scherzer is a Met, Ray is a Mariner, Gausman is a Blue Jay and Gray is a Ranger. The Yankees didn’t want to go to a second year for Justin Verlander (just like they didn’t want to take on his salary in 2017), so he’s back with the Astros. Eduardo Rodriguez went to the Tigers, Steven Matz to the Cardinals, Noah Syndergaaard to the Angels, Alex Wood back to the Giants and Yusei Kikuchi to the Blue Jays. Even Alex Cobb (who signed with the Angels) or a reunion with James Paxton (who went to the Red Sox) would have been viable depth options. The Yankees signed none of them. I thought a trade with the A’s for Chris Bassitt would have made a lot of sense. The Mets made the trade for Bassitt.

I really hope there’s a multi-player return trade coming any minute now because that seems like the only way the Yankees improve their roster. The remaining free-agent pitchers all might as well be J.A. Happ (who happens to also be a free agent) because there’s no one left who will improve the rotation. And unless the Yankees are going to sign Correa and Freddie Freeman, there’s nothing left in free agency to get excited about.

Still wearing his uniform long after the wild-card loss to the Red Sox, Gardner said, “There’s a lot of uncertain, uncharted waters with this team heading into the offseason … Hopefully we’ll have a chance to run it back.”

Well, a scenario that seemed impossible to fathom after that embarrassing “postseason” loss is very close to coming to fruition, and Gardner may just get his wish. The same roster that has never been good enough to win in the postseason and is now not even good enough to get into the actual postseason and play a series is still intact more than five months later.

The last game the Yankees played and the next game the Yankees play will come against the team that humiliated them in that postseason game ( a game that was over four batters into the bottom of the first). The roster that wasn’t good enough to win the last game will likely be the same roster that plays the next game. As of now, it will be worse.


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