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Decade-Plus of Disastrous Roster Decisions Continues

I’m not upset with the Yankees’ decisions involving the players from Friday’s deadline. I’m upset with the Yankees’ decisions involving those players during their time as Yankees.

On Friday night, after cleaning up the last of the 61 toys sprawled out across the living room floor and scrubbing every nook and cranny of a high chair that takes a daily beating, I sat down on the couch to relax and join my wife for her nightly viewing of a Hallmark Christmas movie, which always seem to star Candace Cameron (who is forever cool). Then I remembered it was the deadline for 40-man roster decisions.

I wish I hadn’t remembered because all the news of the Yankees’ decisions did was ruin my Friday night. Not because I was upset with their decision to move on from Clint Frazier, Tyler Wade, Nick Nelson or Rougned Odor, but because of everything that had happened involving those four players up until they were no longer Yankees.


Odor was designated for assignment. Odor should have never been a Yankee, but the Yankees decided to go into a season with Aaron Hicks, Brett Gardner, Jay Bruce, Mike Tauchman and Mike Ford as their only left-handed hitters. Hicks lasted 32 games, Gardner found his way into 140 games with a .689 OPS, Bruce was so bad he retired two weeks into the season rather than get released when Luke Voit returned, Tauchman was traded before the end of April and the Yankees were so done with Ford they willingly traded him to the Rays.

The Yankees didn’t care that Odor has been a .202 hitter over his last 2,005 plate appearances. They didn’t care that the eventual 102-loss Rangers were fine with paying him $27 million to not play for them. Odor was a left-handed batter. Better yet, he would cost the Yankees nothing. Odor would be free and the only thing billionaire Hal Steinbrenner likes more than cheap players are free players.

Odor’s very presence on the Yankees represented everything wrong with the team under this Steinbrenner. Rather than put the best possible roster together to compete for a championship, the Yankees under this Steinbrenner have content with putting together a roster that will do enough to get by. It’s why the team has won the AL East once since 2012, why it has suffered wild-card and ALDS exits in three of the last four years and why the last time it even appeared in the World Series was 12 years ago.

With each three pitch-strikeout and 0-for-4, Michael Kay would opine on YES about Odor’s lack of production as if he was supposed to be Marcus Semien and not a guy with. a.234/.289/.433 career batting line.

“Odor hasn’t hit with the consistency that you’d expect” Kay said on May 27 with Odor batting .160/.269/.333 On June 4, Kay mentioned again that Odor wasn’t hitting to expectations and on July 20 called him “valuable.”

The only value Odor brought to the Yankees was his dugout enthusiasm and celebrations, something I would be happy to do for nothing to be part of the 26-man roster. The Yankees somehow never found a better option than Odor from April 6 (when they acquired him) through the end of the season, and with the season literally on the line in the wild-card game against the Red Sox, Odor even got two at-bats in the game, striking out on three pitches in his first one and being late on what became a lazy flyout in his second.

The Yankees got what they paid for in Odor: nothing, which is what a .202/.286/.379 batting line is worth.


Nelson was traded to the Phillies. It would seem impossible that one player or pitcher could appear in so few games in a season and have such a significant impact on the team’s success, or lack thereof. Nelson only appeared in 11 games for the 2021 Yankees, but he single-handedly lost them a handful of games.

On Opening Day (April 1), Nelson (who had no business being on the Opening Day roster after his 2020 in the majors), was called upon to start the 10th inning of a 2-2 games against the Blue Jays. A divisional game against the Yankees direct competition for the division. Two pitches into Nelson’s season, annual All-Animosity Team member Randal Grichuk doubled in the automatic runner from second. The Yankees went on to lose in what was a very early foreshadowing of the miserable season to come. (In the bottom of the 10th, Hicks struck out on three pitches in what ended up being the last competitive at-bat of the Yankees’ season, Giancarlo Stanton struck out on three pitches and Gleyber Torres struck out on five pitches. Three outs, all strikeouts, on 11 pitches.)

Eight days later, in the first meeting of the season with the Rays, the Yankees led 4-2 in Tampa in the bottom of the third before Corey Kluber ran out of gas the way a pitcher who had thrown 36 2/3 innings over the last two years would seemingly do after making his first start in a rotation in two years. Boone let Kluber allow a run and load the bases with one out before deciding Kluber wasn’t going to magically find “it” after needing 62 pitches to get seven outs. So in came Nelson with the bases loaded and one out and the Yankees clinging to a one-run lead.

Nelson fell behind on Joey Wendle with a first-pitch ball the same way he had to Grichuk on Opening Day. The next pitch was clobbered to left by Wendle for a two-run double, and the Rays took the lead. The next inning with it still a one-run game, Nelson put the game out of reach by allowing four runs on three hits, a walk and a hit by pitch.

One week later, the Rays were in the Bronx. After deciding Kluber and Jameson Taillon (who had combined to start 15 games in 2019 and 2020) would be all the starting pitching the Yankees would need to add for 2021, in the 13th game of 2021, they were without a starting pitcher for a divisional game against the Rays. (I really should have stopped watching the 2021 Yankees in April. We all should have.) So the Yankees gave the ball to Nelson to serve as an “opener.”

The only thing Nelson opened were the floodgates. After allowing six baserunners and four earned runs in 1 2/3 innings against the Rays the prior week, Nelson was somehow worse this time. He walked Austin Meadows to lead off the game and then threw his patented first-pitch ball to Randy Arozarena. The Rays had runners on second and third and no outs. Nelson got ahead of Brandon Lowe 0-2 before allowing a two-run double to right-center. Nelson was able to give the Yankees one inning of work, allowing four baserunners and two earned runs, needing 30 pitches to record three outs.

Five days later, on April 21, Nelson was somehow still a Yankee and Boone hadn’t seen enough. Trailing 1-0 in the fifth inning against the Braves, Boone went to Nelson with the bases loaded and one out. Nelson walked in a run on four pitches.

Four days after that, Nelson was still in the majors, “earning” a major-league salary, collecting major-league service time, getting a major-league meal stipend on the road and living the luxurious life as a New York Yankee. The Yankees were trying to right their 9-11 start to the season and had a chance to pull off a four-game sweep in Cleveland. Trailing 4-3 entering the bottom of the fifth (after Taillon was allowed to completely erase a 3-0 lead), Boone went to Nelson to hold the deficit at one run with the Yankees still having four innings of at-bats remaining. Nelson went two innings, allowed three earned runs on four hits and a walk and threw two wild pitches. The Yankee went on to lose and Nelson was finally sent down.

Nelson only had to go a month without living the good life. He was called on out of the Yankees’ bullpen on May 30 to throw two innings in the final game of the embarrassing three-game sweep at the hands of the Tigers in Detroit. Three days later, Nelson was asked to keep a four-run deficit to the Rays from growing any larger. After 44 pitches from Nelson, the Rays led by eight runs.

Nelson was sent down again and after putting 25 runners on base in 12 innings and allowing 14 earned runs, I thought that would be the end of him as a Yankee. I was wrong. Nelson throws hard, and even if he doesn’t know where it’s going, his velocity was apparently going to give him endless opportunities with the Yankees..

On July 7, 34 days after his last appearance, the Yankees were inexplicably going to use Nelson as an opener agin. An unbelievable decision in a season full of unbelievable decisions. Nelson didn’t even make it through the first inning. He hit a batter and walked three, including walking in a run. It took him 32 pitches to get two outs.

Two weeks later, on July 21, the Yankees used Asher Wojciechowski as their staring pitching and had Odor batting third, Gary Sanchez fourth, Torres fifth, Gardner sixth, Greg Allen seventh, Wade eighth and Estevan Florial ninth. It looked like a mid-March lineup in Dunedin. Instead it was the 94th game of the regular season, and this wild makeshift lineup had a 5-2 lead over the Phillies after seven innings.

Boone called on Zack Britton for the eighth and when it was evident he didn’t have it, Boone let him keep going. He let Britton load the bases with one out. And like he had done multiples times earlier in the season, Boone went to Nelson with the bases loaded. Three batters later, the game was tied after Nelson allowed a single, walked in a run and threw a wild pitch to make it 5-5. Miraculously, the Yankees would win in the 10th.

Nearly three weeks later, Nelson appeared in what would be his final game as a Yankee and went out in Nelson style: allowing a run, walking two and needing 26 pitches to get through a single inning of work.

In two seasons as a Yankee, Nelson appeared in 22 games and pitched to this line: 35 IP, 35 H, 29 R, 25 ER, 27 BB, 40 K, 4 HR, 6.43 ERA, 1.771 WHIP.

I’m not mad at Nelson. I don’t dislike Nelson. The same way I don’t dislike any of these players. He sucks, but he didn’t asked to be drafted in the fourth round, he didn’t offer himself a contact, he didn’t put himself on the roster and he didn’t put himself in high-leverage situations. He’s not to blame for all of those Yankees losses or for why the wild-card game was played in Boston or for why the Yankees’ division chances were over before the summer solstice even if it was his performance which had an enormous hand in it all.


Wade was designated for assignment. The Yankees desperately wanted Wade to be their Ben Zobrist. They kept telling us that for six-plus years. They wanted it so badly that for five years they allowed him to spend time on the roster, rolling over ground balls to the right side and running into outs on the bases the way one would when playing a video game after pressing the wrong button controlling the runner.

Wade hit .212/.298/.307 as a Yankee and the only two people who believed in him outside of his own family seemed to be John Sterling and Cashman. The first would praise him on the radio whenever he did something to help the team win (so maybe a handful of times a season) saying how great he could be if given a chance and the second unfortunately decides who gets to be a Yankee.

Wade eventually played every position other than pitcher, catcher and first base, and proved to be valuable defensively. But valuable defensive players grow on trees like hard-throwing right-handed relievers with no control (yes, like Nelson). Wade essentially stepping into the batter’s box without a bat 491 times was always going to hold him back from achieving everyday player status.

The Cashman defenders (who are hanging their hat on one championship in the last 21 years) and the Wade supporters (if such a group of people exist) will tell you Wade never got the everyday at-bats needed to be successful. No, he was never handed a job outright, but every single time an injury meant regular playing time and at-bats for Wade, he failed. Enough was enough long ago for most yankees fans. Enough wasn’t enough for the decision makers until Nov. 19, 2021.


Frazier was designated for assignment. The Yankees had a chance to acquire Gerrit Cole before the 2018 season, but they weren’t willing to part with Frazier. Cole went on to swing the 2019 ALCS with a Game 3 win over the Yankees the same way Cliff Lee did 11 years ago when Cashman wouldn’t part with Eduardo Nunez in a trade for Lee. Less than four years after not wanting to trade Nunez for Lee, the Yankees let Nunez go for nothing. Less than four years after not wanting to trade Frazier for Cole, the Yankees let Frazier go for nothing.

The fifth overall pick in the 2013 draft and headliner of the return the Yankees acquired for Andrew Miller back in 2016 is gone. For nothing. Not even a fringe minor leaguer. Not even a player to be named later. Not even cash considerations. Not even a bucket of balls. Nothing.

Sure, Frazier could go unclaimed (unlikely), and if not, he could be assigned to the minors and remain with the organization. But Frazier has the option to reject the assignment and become a free agent, which he would undoubtedly do. Why would he want to remain with an organization that has jerked him around for the last five years, especially one in which a path to becoming an everyday player is once again blocked? There’s a better chance Aaron Hicks doesn’t spend a day on the injured list in 2022 than there is that Frazier is a Yankee in 2022.

I really, really, really wanted Frazier to work out in New York. I thought he should have been the Yankees’ designated hitter over the combination of Chase Headley and Jacoby Ellsbury in the 2017 postseason (combined 7-for-39 with 13 strikeouts and three walks). His 2018 season was essentially lost to injuries. In 2019, he and his .806 OPS were passed over for Mike Tauchman. In 2020, he joined DJ LeMahieu and Luke Voit to carry the Yankees’ offense in the shortened season, while Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton didn’t play and while Gary Sanchez and Gleyber Torres might as well have not played, only to be screwed over by Aaron Boone in the playoffs as the Yankees manager started Brett Gardner over Frazier in five of the team’s seven playoff games.

2021 was supposed to be different. Frazier had emerged as an everyday player for the Yankees after his 2020 and Boone said as much on the first day of spring training, calling Frazier the team’s starting left fielder. A few days later, Gardner re-signed with the Yankees and in the third game of the season, Gardner was starting in left field.

Frazier’s poor performance from inconsistent playing time this past season coupled with another lost year due to unknown injuries led to his removal from the 40-man roster. Here’s to Frazier getting healthy and becoming an everyday star somewhere where he’s given an actual chance to play.


I’m not upset with the Yankees’ decisions involving the players from Friday’s deadline. I’m upset with the Yankees’ decisions involving those players during their time as Yankees.


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Yankees Thoughts: Will Hal Steinbrenner Spend His Father’s Money?

The Yankees are trending in the wrong direction, while the rest of the division trends up around them. That can be reversed over the next few months, and all it will cost is money.

The Yankees’ season has been over for more than four weeks. It feels like it’s been four months.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. It feels like the offseason is almost over when it has only just begun starting today. The Braves and Astros were playing baseball yesterday. The Yankees last played 29 days ago. It’s almost comical how long it’s been since the Yankees were embarrassed in their unsurprising wild-card loss.

I know I’m in the minority, but I wanted the Astros to win the World Series. I wanted them to win the World Series because the Braves winning only gives the Yankees’ front office another reason to not build the best team possible because the Braves weren’t even close to the best team in baseball. In fact, they were the worst team in the postseason in the 10-team postseason with 88 regular-season wins, didn’t get over .500 until August and struggled until the very end of the season to put away an awful NL East. Both the Blue Jays (92) and Mariners (90) had more wins than the Braves this season and all they have to show for their regular-season success is … nothing.

2. Jorge Soler winning World Series MVP was unlikely sums up the Braves’ postseason. Sure, Soler led the league with 48 home runs in 2019 after never hitting more than 12 in a season, but that was also the same season Brett Gardner hit 28, Ketel Marte hit 32 and Gleyber Torres hit 38. Home run totals in 2019 were a joke. Soler hit .300/.391/.800 with three home runs and six RBIs in the World Series and his at-bats made him as feared as Mike Trout, rather than the .192/.288/.370 hitter he was in 94 games for the Royals this season. Soler wasn’t the only Brave to play well above his talent level.

Joc Pederson was really bad in 73 games for the Cubs (.230/.300/.718) and nothing special in 64 games with the Braves (.249/.325/.428) this season. Then he went on to hit two home runs with five RBIs against the Brewers in the NLDS and a home run and four RBIs against the Dodgers in the NLCS.

Eddie Rosario has a career .309 on-base percentage. This season with the Indians and Braves, he hit .259/.305/.435 in 111 games. Somehow, against the Dodgers’ pitching (of all teams), he hit .560/.607/1.040 with a double, a triple, three home runs and nine RBIs in just six games.

Two years ago, Travis d’Arnaud was released by the Mets. Over the last week, he hit two home runs with an .875 OPS in the World Series.

3. Even without Ronald Acuna since July 10, the Braves are now World Series champions. It makes little sense. Very little sense. I thought they would lose to the Brewers, possibly get swept by the Dodgers and have serious trouble with the Astros. They eliminated the Brewers in four games, could have eliminated the Dodgers in five and should have done the same to the Astros. It was a remarkable  run for a franchise that hadn’t won a championship since the Yankees’ dynasty destroyed whatever dynasty the Braves thought they might have.

Now the Yankees will spend the next nearly five months preparing to try to do what the Braves just did and what the Yankees haven’t done since Eric Hinske and Jerry Hairston Jr. were on the team.

4. I’m still not over the Yankees’ decision to bring back Aaron Boone. I won’t be over it until the team wins a championship with him as manager and I don’t know if that’s possible given how exceedingly inept he is at implementing simple baseball logic into his in-game decisions. But the Yankees can at least make me somewhat happy by going out and acting like the Yankees in free agency. That means either making a blockbuster trade or trades, or signing big-name free agents. I truly fear the Yankees will decide to “run it back” once again with a team that wasn’t good enough in 2018, 2019, 2020 or 2021 thinking it will somehow be different in 2022. It won’t be. Not with the same roster.

5. Want to make fans happy? Sign Carlos Correa, Freddie Freeman, Max Scherzer and Robbie Ray. That would send a message to the fan base. That would go a long way toward negating whatever nonsensical decisions Boone has planned for 2022 (and 2023 and 2024 and the option for 2025!). I don’t expect the Yankees to sign any of those three. Instead, I can see a one-year stopgap at shortstop, a reunion with Anthony Rizzo at best and rather than signing Scherzer and Ray, they will spread out the money on a few underwhelming arms they think they can be the ones to unlock (like Jon Gray who they have always been in love with). Whatever they decide from a pitching standpoint, their starting pitching depth needs to be deeper in 2022 than it was in 2021 when they used Nick Nelson as an opener against the Rays in the 10th game of the season because they didn’t have another option.

6. If the Yankees acted like the Yankees and took back the payroll crown and did sign those four, they could “run it back” with the rest of their roster and I would be fine it.

Lineup
Aaron Judge, RF
Freddie Freeman, 1B
Giancarlo Stanton, DH
Carlo Correa, SS
Joey Gallo, LF
DJ LeMahieu, 3B
Aaron Hicks, CF
Gleyber Torres, 2B
Gary Sanchez, C

Bench
Gio Urshela
Brett Gardner
Kyle Higashioka
Tyler Wade

Rotation
Gerrit Cole
Max Scherzer
Luis Severino
Robbie Ray
Jordan Montgomery

Bullpen
Aroldis Chapman
Jonathan Loaisiga
Clay Holmes
Chad Green
Nestor Cortes
Michael King
Wandy Peralta
Albert Abreu

Yeah, that 26-man roster will do.

If you’re worried about the cost of that team, don’t be. It’s not your money. The Steinbrenners could do that and a ridiculous amount more than that and still be fine financially and swimming in their billions. But there’s about as good a chance at that 26-man roster happening as there is the Yankees scoring a run on the contact play.

7. Here will be the actual 2022 Opening Day roster:

Lineup
DJ LeMahieu, 1B
Aaron Judge, RF
Aaron Hicks, CF
Giancarlo Stanton, DH
Joey Gallo, LF
Gleyber Torres, 2B
Gio Urhsela, 3B
Andrelton Simmons, SS
Kyle Higashioka, C

Bench
Austin Romine
Brett Gardner
Tyler Wade
Someone who can play 1B

Rotation
Gerrit Cole
Luis Severino
Jordan Montgomery
Jon Gray
Nestor Cortes

Bullpen
Aroldis Chapman
Jonathan Loaisiga
Clay Holmes
Chad Green
Nestor Cortes
Michael King
Wandy Peralta
Albert Abreu

(Both rosters don’t include Jameson Taillon since he won’t be ready by Opening Day.)

8. The first roster’s ceiling is a championship. The second’s is an ALDS exit, and that might even be a stretch. But considering Brian Cashman referred to the 2021 Yankees as a “postseason contender” (a team that came in third place in their division and in fifth place in the AL and had a postseason consisting of nine miserable innings) in his end-of-the-season press conference, an ALDS exit will be treated like a championship within the organization.

9. In all likelihood, the Yankees aren’t going to take on another long-term, big-money contract, which means no Correa or Corey Seager. It means bargain bin shopping for a team that just did that prior to last season. Add in a potential (regrettable) long-term deal for Judge after 2022, and it’s hard to envision the Yankees acting like the Yankees this winter. (Unfortunately for Judge, he was finally healthy and had a full season of his ability one year too early.)

10. The Yankees are trending in the wrong direction, while the rest of the division trends up around them. That can be reversed over the next few months, and all it will cost is money. The one thing the Yankees make more of than any other team in the league.


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Yankees Should Regret James Paxton Trade

The Yankees’ pre-2019 trade for James paxton didn’t work out the same way nearly every Brian Cashman trade for starting pitching hasn’t worked out.

Nearly three years ago at the 2018 trade deadline, I called James Paxton “blah” and in the same category as Chris Archer and Michael Fulmer. They were all pitchers I didn’t think were worth the Yankees trading for since they wouldn’t really make the team that much better and certainly weren’t worth giving up high-end prospects for. It was hard to find anyone who shared my perspective.

The allure of Paxton’s raw stuff and ceiling to be among the game’s best when he was on is what made him attractive to the Yankees and most Yankees fans, the way A.J. Burnett likely had. The problem is Paxton was the left-handed version of Burnett: unhittable when consistent, but rarely consistent. I referred to him as “blah” because of that inconsistency combined with his lengthy injury-riddled past. I agreed when Paxton was on, he was one as dominant as anyone in the league, but he was rarely on in consecutive starts or for any reasonable stretch of time.

Paxton was “blah” as a Yankee. He came to the team having never pitched more than 160 1/3 innings in a season (2018), and he fell under that mark in 2019 with 150 2/3 innings after spending a month on the injured list early in the season with a knee injury. After putting together an impressive second-half run to emerge as the Yankees’ top healthy starter, he hurt his back in his final regular-season game of 2019, and then was shaky in the ALDS (three earned runs in 4 2/3 innings) and couldn’t give any length in the ALCS (8 1/3 innings over two starts). The back injury lingered until February 2020 when he underwent surgery to resolve it. Once he returned when the season started in late July, his velocity had disappeared, and he turned in one quality start in five attempts before being shut down with a 6.64 ERA, effectively ending his Yankees tenure.

Paxton’s time with the Yankees was a letdown, and all my fears of trading for him came to fruition. To his credit, with the Yankees, he was exactly who he had been his entire career. There were no surprises. He ended up on the injured list in both seasons with the Yankees, the same way he had in every season with the Mariners, he was at times great, mostly OK,  and mainly inconsistent. There were flashes of brilliance like in early 2019 against the Red Sox and Royals and in the second half of that season, but there were too many uninspiring, disappointing performances from a guy the Yankees sacrificed their top pitching prospect for, and a guy who was supposed to slot behind Luis Severino in the Yankees’ rotation.

That top pitching prospect the Yankees traded away to acquire Paxton was Justus Sheffield. The same 22-year-old Sheffield current and former Yankees raved about during spring training in 2018. Sheffield never started a game for the Yankees, making only three relief appearances in 2018, and then had mixed results in seven starts and eight games for the 2019 Mariners. But in 2020 and now 24, Sheffield broke out with a 3.58 ERA and 3.17 FIP across 10 starts for the Mariners. He had become the kind of starter the 2020 Yankees could have used in the ALDS to survive the Rays, instead they had Paxton, who had been shut down long before October with his latest injury on Aug. 20.

The Yankees made the move for Paxton recognizing their “window” at the time of the deal, choosing the veteran Paxton over the unknown Sheffield to help put them over the top. It didn’t work out like nearly every Brian Cashman trade for starting pitching hasn’t worked out and Paxton became the latest name in a long list of starter’s names who didn’t work out in New York.

In 2021, Sheffield will be in the same Mariners’ rotation as Paxton after the team brought Paxton back on a one-year deal this past week. The same way the Yankees traded Justin Wilson after 2015 in exchange for Chad Green and Luis Cessa, and now have all three, the Yankees were clearly on the losing end of the Paxton-Sheffield trade. It’s now easy to say the Mariners won the deal. It was a blowout win for the Mariners, a team that hasn’t done much winning in any regard since 2001. The Mariners received a package headline by Sheffield, didn’t have to pay Paxton the $21.075 million the Yankees did for 34 inconsistent regular-season starts, three postseason starts of varying success and two injury-plagued seasons.



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Yankees Thoughts: Offseason Almost Over

A week from today, Yankees spring training will already be in its second day and baseball will be back. The grind of the offseason is nearly over.

A week from now spring training will have begun. That’s a beautiful sentence to write. Yankees baseball is nearly here.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. We did it. Well, we have almost done it. This is the last Yankees Thoughts of the offseason. A week from today, Yankees spring training will already be in its second day and baseball will be back. The grind of the offseason is nearly over, and now it’s time to focus on the next eight months (it better be eight-plus months) of Yankees baseball.

2. Again, the only move left to make for the Yankees (to stay under the luxury tax, which they blatantly want to) is to bring back Brett Gardner, but that doesn’t seem imminent. I still won’t believe Gardner won’t be a Yankee again until he’s not announced on Opening Day, though there has reportedly been no negotiations between Gardner and the Yankees. Gardner’s agent claims the Yankees said they would discuss yet another re-signing of their longest-tenured player once they took care of their more important offseason business. That business has been taken care of for a while. DJ LeMahieu was re-signed. Corey Kluber was signed. Jameson Taillon was traded for. Adam Ottavino was traded. Masahiro Tanaka left the league. Darren O’Day was signed. There’s nothing else for the Yankees to do at this point, and that makes it odd that Gardner and the only team he has ever known aren’t even talking.

3. I have never wanted Gardner back so much. I didn’t want him back after 2018. I wanted the Yankees to sign Michael Brantley. Gardner had lost his starting job to Andrew McCutchen and was coming off the worst year of his career. The Yankees still brought him back. Following 2019, he was undoubtedly coming back whether or not I wanted him after he posted a career-high 28 home runs with the super baseball. Now I want him back because I’m petrified of Mike Tauchman or Greg Allen becoming everyday players once Aaron Judge and Aaron Hicks inevitably land on the injured list. It would be very Yankees for the team to not bring Gardner back the one time they actually need him.

4. There will be a lot made about Gary Sanchez’s every waking moment in spring training, but my focus will be solely on the pitching staff. The Yankees’ entire pitching staff aside from Gerrit Cole has dealt with serious injuries the last two years and anytime they are doing anything related to pitching, it could mean a season-ending injury. Any bullpen session, any fielding practice, any jogging, any anything, and I will be watching it as intently as I would watch The Weather Channel growing up when I had a paper due and there was potential for snow and a snow day to buy me an extra day.

5. I have spent the last three-plus months watching my wife open deliveries to our home from her father full of Dodgers World Champions gear. Sweatshirts, T-shirts, you name it, we have it. The Dodgers won the World Series and still decided to pay Trevor Bauer a ridiculous $40 million to pitch for them in 2021. Brian Cashman thought the Yankees would have the highest payroll in the league, but he was wrong, and wrong by a lot. The team the Yankees should be operating like will have the highest payroll. The team that combines player development with their financial might to put together the best possible roster.

6. I didn’t want the Yankees to sign Bauer. Not because of the money. I didn’t want the Yankees to sign a 30-year-old with one great full season to his name (2018) and then a great 11 starts (2020). Bauer had a 4.30 ERA (4.06 FIP) from 2014 through 2017. Then he had that awesome 2018 (2.21 ERA and 2.44 FIP) and a 4.48 ERA and 4.34 FIP in 2019 before his Cy Young 2020. Maybe he finally figured it out for good last season in Cincinnati, or maybe it was just the equivalent of a spectacular one-third of a normal season (which is what it was). I also didn’t want him on the team because of his past with Cole, whether it’s settled or not. The Dodgers have the best rotation in baseball. Dodgers fans think they just signed a sure-thing, though Bauer is anything but a sure-thing.

7. I just wanted the Yankees to do more this offseason. They supposedly didn’t counter an offer by Cleveland for a Francisco Lindor trade. It would have been nice if they had acquired Lindor and Carlos Carrasco. I guess they felt re-signing LeMahieu would be enough, and that maybe Gleyber Torres would show up in shape this season and be able to make routine plays at shortstop. It also means they really believe in Gio Urshela to maintain his 2019 and 2020, and the same for Luke Voit. It means they believe their right-handed, one-dimensional (aside from LeMahieu) lineup can finally come through in October after failing miserably to do so the last two Octobers.

8. I wanted them to do more with their pitching. Why not re-sign Tanaka, sign Kluber, trade for Taillon, keep Ottavino and sign O’Day? None of those moves were tied to each other, and they could have all of those pitchers on their 2021 roster, if not for the imaginary salary cap. Instead, get ready for a steady diet of Michael King, Nick Nelson, Luis Cessa, Jonathan Loaisiga and maybe even a little Tyler Lyons and Nestor Cortes this season.

9. It’s unfortunate the Yankees cut payroll by $50 million for the second time in three years when they could have gone all out to make themselves the clear favorite in the American League. Forget the league, they might not even be the favorite in their division. I’m very worried about both the Blue Jays and Rays, and all Yankees fans should be. The Yankees’ starting pitching isn’t exactly exuding confidence when it comes to health, the bullpen isn’t what it once was and the lineup is the same lineup that failed in October in both 2019 and 2020. Add in a manager that has shown no signs of progress or development after three seasons, and you can see why I’m nervous about the 2021 season.

10. That doesn’t mean I’m not excited for baseball to be back. I’m as excited as I am every year at this time. It’s just hard to see how the Yankees don’t have the same injury problems they had last year and the year before when they have retained all their injury-prone players and then added more injury-riddled pasts to their roster. There will be plenty of time to bring up the Yankees’ roster failures if the team fails, but this is the team Yankees fans have been given to root for this season. For now, baseball is about to be back and that’s all that matters. For now.


Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New episodes every Monday and Thursday during the offseason.


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

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Yankees Podcast: Less Than a Week to Go

Spring training is about to begin, and the Yankees’ health will be the focal point in 2021 after the last two seasons.

The Yankees’ 2021 officially begins next Wednesday in Tampa, and the health of the team will be the focal point of the season. The Yankees will need a lot to go right with this roster to win a championship, and it all centers around avoiding injuries.


Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New episodes every Monday and Thursday during the offseason.


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

Read More