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Yankees Podcast: Season Comes Down to This Weekend

Andrew Rotondi of Bronx Pinstripes joins me to talk about the state of the Yankees, which isn’t very good right now.

The Yankees were rained out on Thursday and now will play a doubleheader on Friday against the Orioles. With Gerrit Cole in Game 1 and Masahiro Tanaka in Game 2, the Yankees need to sweep a doubleheader for the first time this season. The Yankees need to win at least three out of four against the Orioles this weekend.

Andrew Rotondi of Bronx Pinstripes joined me to talk about the state of the Yankees, which isn’t good right now.

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Yankees Thoughts: Deivi Garcia Is Yankees’ Best Pitcher

The Yankees finally won a game. All it took was a 21-year-old starting pitcher who hadn’t appeared in a major league game 12 days ago to prevent the team from falling under .500 for the first time this season.

The Yankees finally won a game. All it took was a 21-year-old starting pitcher who hadn’t appeared in a major league game 12 days ago to prevent the team from falling under .500 for the first time this season.

Last season, I wrote the Off Day Dreaming blogs on every off day, but this season there aren’t many off days. There aren’t many games. So instead, I have decided to use the Off Day Dreaming format following each series. Yankees Thoughts will be posted after each series this season.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. After benching Gary Sanchez didn’t work to end the Yankees’ losing streak and Brian Cashman traveling with the team didn’t work to end the Yankees’ losing streak and a team meeting didn’t work to end the Yankees’ losing streak, it ended up being Deivi Garcia that did work to end the Yankees’ losing streak. Garcia is the Yankees’ best pitcher. That’s not an exaggeration. Right now, he’s the team’s best pitcher. It’s certainly not Gerrit Cole, who has lost three straight starts and has allowed more home run than any other pitcher in the league. You could make a case for Masahiro Tanaka, but he only just started to give the Yankees any length in his starters. And obviously it’s not Jordan Montgomery, J.A. Happ or Michael King.

Aside from watching DJ LeMahieu try to win a batting title, Luke Voit become one of the best hitters in baseball and Clint Frazier finally put his entire game together, Garcia has been the only other part of the Yankees worth watching this season, and he’s only made three starts. In 17 2/3 innings, he has struck out 18 against just two walks and has looked every bit as good as I hoped he would if he ever made it to the Yankees without getting traded first.

If the Yankees reach the postseason (again I can’t believe not making it is a possibiliy), Garcia has to get the ball in Game 3 (if the Yankees are able to reach a third game of the postseason). Cole will get the ball for Game 1 and Tanaka for Game 2, but there’s no other option in Game 3. Screw James Paxton if he comes back. I don’t want him anywhere near the mound in the postseason. He wasn’t good before he got hurt and now he’s being rushed back and will at best could be an opener. No thank you. Montgomery hasn’t been nearly good enough, and Happ and King would be lucky to even be on the postseason roster.

I knew I would be excited to see a new Yankees pitcher pitch every five days in 2020, I just thought it was going to be Cole, not Garcia.

2. Aaron Boone’s genius plan to bench Sanchez didn’t fix the Yankees’ problems, stop their losing streak or help Sanchez. The Yankees benched Sanchez for two games, scapegoating him for their issues, and they still went 0-2 as part of their five-game losing streak. Since Sanchez has come back, he’s gone 0-for-7 with a walk. It’s almost as if sitting on the bench and not getting at-bats doesn’t help a former star player break out of a horrendous slump. Who could have known?

Like everyone, I wish I knew what was wrong with Sanchez other than the fact he clearly can’t catch up to middle-middle fastballs or recognize a breaking ball. If Sanchez had always hit like this, it would be easy to chalk it up as a typical catcher who can’t hit since almost all of them can’t hit. But everyone knows Sanchez can hit, or used to be able to hit. He hit 53 home runs in 175 games over 2016 and 2017, batting .284/.354/.568. After a rough 2018 regular season (.697 OPS), he single-handedly won the only game of the 2018 ALDS that the Yankees won with a two-home run performance. Last season, he struggled to hit for average (.232) and get on base (.316), but he still managed an .841 OPS with 34 home runs. I don’t know that we’ll ever see 2016-17 Sanchez again, but can we at least get 2019 Sanchez?

3. You might never see an inning as bad as the sixth inning on Monday from the Yankees ever again. The Yankees had a four-run lead and all of their “elite” relievers completely rested.

Chad Green entered for the sixth, and for the third time in two weeks, he didn’t have it. After two walks, a single and a Voit error, the Blue Jays had cut the Yankees’ lead to 6-3 and had the bases loaded and one out. Boone pulled Green and turned to Adam Ottavino, and he didn’t have it either. Ottavino faced six batters and didn’t retire any of them. Three singles, two walks and a grand slam later against Ottavino and the Blue Jays had a 12-6 lead in what was a 10-run inning.

Green and Ottavino combined to produce this line: 0.1 IP, 5 H, 10 R, 9 ER, 4 BB, 0 K, 1 HR. The Blue Jays didn’t swing-and-miss at any of their 58 pitches.

4. I was scared the Yankees were going to blow their lead on Wednesday night as well, but thankfully, Zack Britton and Aroldis Chapman managed to pitch a scoreless eighth and ninth respectively to end the five-game losing streak. I don’t trust anyone in the Yankees’ bullpen right now, but if I had to give my Level of Trust Rankings on a scale of 1-10, this would be it:

Zack Britton: 7.1
Chad Green: 6.4
Aroldis Chapman: 5.8
Adam Ottavino: 3.7

That’s it. No one else is even good enough to make this list. I purposely didn’t put Clarke Schmidt as an option because he’s not a reliever and doesn’t belong coming out of the bullpen.

5. I guess Schmidt (the Yankees’ top pitching prospect) is now the mop-up man on this awful team? That’s how Schmidt was used in his second career appearance, asked to clean up the mess left by Green and Ottavino. Rather than let Schmidt start, which is basically all he has known as a professional pitcher, the Yankees would rather continue to start Happ, who should have run out of chances to start a long, long, long time ago, or King who isn’t any good, having allowed eight earned runs in 10 2/3 innings as a starter and never going more than four innings and giving the team length.

You would think by now the Yankees’ rotation would include both Garcia and Schmidt, but nope. The Yankees want to continue to pitch Happ because of money owed and want to continue to let King start because of … I have no idea why they want to continue to let King start. Maybe at some point this season Schmidt will get to show why he’s the top-ranked pitching prospect in the organization and even higher than Garcia. I just hope it’s not too late before he’s given that chance.

6. Mike Tauchman can’t play anymore. He just can’t. For as good as Tauchman was last season for six weeks, he’s been that bad this season, looking every bit like the player the Rockies gave up on. He has a .647 OPS and five extra-base hits (all doubles) in 95 plate appearances. I have the same amount of home runs as Tauchman this season. On top of his lack of production, his baseball IQ is horrible as he frequently makes awful decisions on the bases and at the plate, whether he’s trying to advance a base on balls in front of him or swinging at 3-1 pitches high and away after the pitcher walked the previous three batters.

I’m sick of seeing Tauchman in the lineup. The only way he should play is if one of Frazier, Aaron Hicks or Brett Gardner is injured.

7. This should be the Yankees’ lineup every night with their current roster:

DJ LeMahieu, 3B
Luke Voit, 1B
Gleyber Torres, SS
Clint Frazier, RF
Miguel Andujar, DH
Aaron Hicks, CF
Gary Sanchez, C
Brett Gardner, LF
Thairo Estrada (preferably)/Tyler Wade, 2B

Unfortunately, Boone would never allow for five right-handed hitters in a row at the top of the lineup, and he would never allow for three of the last four hitters potentially being left-handed. He certainly wouldn’t hit two lefties back-to-back if Gardner were eighth and Wade were playing and ninth. But that’s what the lineup should be.

8. If the Yankees ever get healthy, this is what the lineup should always be:

DJ LeMahieu, 2B
Aaron Judge, RF
Gleyber Torres, SS
Luke Voit, 1B
Giancarlo Stanton, DH
Clint Frazier, LF
Aaron Hicks, CF
Gio Urshela, 3B
Gary Sanchez, C

9. The Yankees were once 16-6. Now they’re 22-21. They were once in first place in the AL East. Now they’re in third place. They were once the 1-seed in the AL playoffs. Now they’re the 8-seed. The Yankees have fallen apart this season to the point that I’m watching the Orioles’ and Tigers’ scores as much as I’m watching the Yankees. I said the Orioles and Tigers! Do you know ridiculous that is? The Orioles lost 108 games last season and the Tigers lost 114, and somehow a year later, the 103-win Yankees are playing at their level. It’s disgusting.

10. I didn’t think a four-game series in September against the Orioles would be a crucial series for the postseason, but here we are as if it’s 2012. There’s 17 games left, and the Yankees need to win all of them. Had they played with urgency earlier in the season when they were OK with giving away games in Philadelphia and Tampa, they wouldn’t be hanging on to dear life for the final postseason berth in the AL. But the Yankees chose to treat a 60-game season like a 162-game season and the injuries piled up in this 60-game season like they did in last year’s 162-game season and the “Next Man Up” mantra was greatly exposed.

The Yankees have to find a way to hold off the Orioles and Tigers and simultaneously get healthy over the next 20 days. The current team should be good enough to win enough to remain in a postseason spot until the everyday lineup is available. The current team, however, isn’t good enough to compete in October, and if the Yankees don’t get healthy and don’t get Judge and Urshela back (I gave up on Stanton coming back long ago), they aren’t going anywhere in the postseason.

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Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New episodes after every game throughout the season.

***

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: Yankees Finally Win and Scott Proctor

Former Yankees reliever Scott Proctor joins me to talk about his baseball career and time with the Yankees.

The Yankees finally won a game. Deivi Garcia led the way, and in the 43rd game of the season, Gleyber Torres decided to show up with a home run, double and four RBIs. The Yankees now have a chance to officially get back on track with a four-game series at home against the Orioles.

At the 6:06 mark, former Yankees reliever Scott Proctor joins me to talk about his baseball career and time with the Yankees.

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Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New episodes after every game throughout the season.

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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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If This Wasn’t the Lowest Point of the Yankees’ Season, I Don’t Want to Know What Is

Monday ended up being another failed attempt by the Yankees to turn their season around. Maybe Tuesday will be the day the Yankees turn their season around. Maybe they won’t turn it around.

I thought the Yankees might have turned their season around when they won three straight against the Mets. But that was followed by losing to the Rays. Then I thought the Yankees might have turned their season around when they finally beat the Rays. But that was followed by another loss to the Rays. Then I thought the Yankees might have turned their season around when they won the first game of a doubleheader against the Orioles. But that was followed by three straight losses to the Orioles.

When Luke Voit and Aaron Hicks went back-to-back on Monday night against the Blue Jays, I thought, “This is when the Yankees turn their season around.” And when the Yankees led 6-2 after five, and after Jonathan Holder of all pitchers was able to pitch a scoreless inning, I knew this was the game the Yankees would turn their season around. They had a four-run lead and their “elite” relievers were fully rested and ready in Adam Ottavino, Chad Green, Zack Britton and Aroldis Chapman. The game was set up perfectly for them to win and not even Aaron Boone could screw it up.

Green entered for the sixth, and for the third time in two weeks, he didn’t have it. After two walks, a single and a Voit error, the Blue Jays had cut the Yankees’ lead to 6-3 and had the bases loaded and one out. Boone pulled Green and turned to Ottavino, and he didn’t have it either. Ottavino faced six batters and didn’t retire any of them. Three singles, two walks and a grand slam later against Ottavino and the Blue Jays had a 12-6 lead in what was a 10-run inning. Green and Ottavino combined to produce this line: 0.1 IP, 5 H, 10 R, 9 ER, 4 BB, 0 K, 1 HR. The Blue Jays didn’t swing-and-miss at any of their 58 pitches.

To Boone’s credit, the Yankees didn’t lose because of him on Monday night, which isn’t something you can often say. But his evaluation of the game and his team continues to be a major cause for concern. Boone was asked after the game about Ottavino’s performance, and he answered the question in typical Boone fashion, saying, “I thought his stuff was actually good.” Boone thought a pitcher who allowed six earned runs without retiring a batter had “good stuff” the same way he said he saw “good things” from the Yankees this past week after losses to the Rays, Mets and Orioles.

The Yankees moved on from Joe Girardi, claiming he was too tense and it made the clubhouse and players tense. Boone was hired for his communication and coddling skills and his ability to be everyone’s friend rather than their manager, but his buddy-buddy, everything-is-sunshine-and-rainbows, Southern California approach has done nothing other than make losing acceptable. If you think a team that was once 10 games over .500 and is now one game over .500 has done any “good things” of late, and if you think a pitcher who allowed six earned runs without retiring a batter had “good stuff,” then you clearly find losing acceptable. Brett Gardner is the only Yankee who has been part of a championship team. The rest of the team has never won anything. All they know is losing, and their manager, who has also never won anything, has made losing tolerable.

When I think about this season, I think about looking for something to do on March 26 when the Yankees were supposed to open 2020 in Baltimore. I think about the four months of baseball in spring and summer that were canceled, leaving me to watch re-runs of Everybody Loves Raymond and King of Queens every night on TV Land. Back then, I would have agreed to watch Nick Swisher’s postseason at-bats on a three-hour loop every day if it meant real, meaningful baseball would return. Now I wish I was back to watching Ray Romano and Kevin James every night instead of real, meaningful baseball. I’m very close to going back to that time and substituting YES with TV Land each night.

This season has been painful to watch in the way the 2013 season was. The lineups featuring Lyle Overbay, Jayson Nix, Vernon Wells, David Adams and Reid Brignac have only slightly been upgraded by the lineups featuring Tyler Wade, Mike Tauchman, Mike Ford, Erik Kratz and Jordy Mercer. The days of replacment players like Tauchman, Ford and Cameron Maybin playing at an All-Star level are gone. Injuries have forced Season 2 of “Next Man Up” and it’s been a flop as Tauchman has looked like a player the Rockies gave up on, Ford’s lost power has him slugging .282 and Wade has managed to remain a major leaguer despite a .189 average and .550 OPS in 306 career plate appearances.

The Yankees chose to do nothing at the trade deadline. They chose not to upgrade the offense, instead hoping Gleyber Torres, Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton would get healthy. They chose not to upgrade the rotation, hoping Jordan Montgomery would show some level of consistency and that maybe J.A. Happ could turn back the clock for a month. They chose not to upgrade the bullpen, hoping what was expected to be the team’s strength would in fact be that. So far the only thing that has worked out is that Torres has returned. Judge and Stanton are still nowhere close to returning. Montgomery has lost two games since the deadline, recording two outs in one and 10 in the other. Happ lost his only start since the deadline, blowing a four-run lead to the Mets. Instead of becoming the team’s biggest strength, the bullpen has become the team’s biggest weakness. The Yankees have lost seven of nine since the deadline with the bullpen losing four of those games, capped off by Monday’s disgusting performance.

Monday ended up being another failed attempt by the Yankees to turn their season around. The team is now one game over .500, which was unthinkable three weeks ago when they were 16-6. They are two games behind the Blue Jays for second place in the AL East and they only have a one-game lead in the loss column on the Orioles for the eighth and final postseason spot. The Orioles! The eighth and final postseason spot! Maybe Tuesday will be the day the Yankees turn their season around. They’re running out of days and games and chances to turn it around. Maybe they won’t turn it around.

After Monday’s loss, Boone said the Yankees will continue to “say the right things.” No Yankees fan wants to hear the right things. They want to see the right things. They want to see wins. Something this team no longer gives them.

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Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New episodes after every game throughout the season.

***

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: Orioles Latest to Embarrass Yankees

The Yankees’ season continues to get worse as they are now in eighth in the AL, barely in a postseason spot.

Entering this weekend, the Yankees had a 19-game winning streak against the lowly Orioles. That streak reached 20 games after Friday’s win in the first game of the doubleheader, but after that, the Yankees lost three straight to the rebuilding Orioles. The Yankees’ season continues to get worse as they are now in eighth in the AL, barely in a postseason spot.

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Subscribe to the Keefe To The City Podcast. New episodes after every game throughout the season.

***

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

Read More