Yankees Thoughts: Season-Opening Rotation Makes No Sense

Yankees have set their rotation in a nonsensical way to start the season

There will be Yankees baseball this week. It might be on Friday instead of Thursday because of the weather, but there will be Yankees baseball this week.

Here are 10 thoughts on the Yankees.

1. The rotation is set. It’s poorly set, but it’s set. It will be Gerrit Cole, followed by Corey Kluber and Domingo German. Not only did the Yankees keep scumbag German through his actions, his suspension and the public backlash and criticism, but he’s now the No. 3 starter to open the season rather than the expected No. 5 starter! Yankees baseball!

The Yankees claim they want to bring Jameson Taillon along slowly, which makes no sense, considering he has barely pitched in two years and will be pitching on April 7 rather than April 4. A whole three-day difference! The Yankees are so ridiculous, it’s sickening. They truly believe they can prevent injuries, yet they set the all-time single-season record for players placed on the injured list in 2019 and followed that up with an injury-filled 2020 and have followed that up by losing Zack Britton, Justin Wilson and Luke Voit for the start of 2021.

2. The Yankees’ six-game rotation to open the season is:

Thursday, Apr. 1 vs. Toronto: Gerrit Cole
Saturday, Apr. 3 vs. Toronto : Corey Kluber
Sunday, Apr. 4 vs. Toronto: Domingo German
Monday, Apr. 5 vs. Baltimore: Jordan Montgomery
Tuesday, Apr. 6 vs. Baltimore: Gerrit Cole
Wednesday, Apr. 7 vs. Baltimore: Jameson Taillon

Every game against the Blue Jays and Rays is a big deal. They are the Yankees’ divisional competition. Games against them will be the difference between playing in a one-game playoff or not. Whether it’s April 4 or September 4, or Game 3 or Game 130 they should be treated the same. Unfortunately, that viewpoint isn’t shared by the team I root for.

3. “With Jamo, we feel like he’s in such a good spot physically,” Aaron Boone said. “We just want to be mindful of building these guys up properly.”

Boone rarely makes sense, and that answers as to why Taillon is pitching in the sixth game of the season makes no sense at all.

“I’m totally on board with it,” Taillon said. “We’ve discussed not putting a hard innings limit on me.”

Of course Taillon says he’s on board with it. What else is he going to say? “I completely disagree with the idiotic strategy my new team is implementing.” That’s what he should have said, but I don’t expect Taillon to go full J.A. Happ on us before he has even pitched a real game for his new team.

4. If Taillon doesn’t think there’s a hard innings limit on him, he must not be the brightest bulb. The Yankees have the hardest of innings limits on him, whether or not they have told him or will ever tell him. I mean they’re holding him back three days because they think that will make a difference in protecting a two-time Tommy John recipient. The only thing that can protect Taillon’s right elbow is to never throw a baseball. Like any pitcher, Taillon can get hurt any time he throws a baseball overhand. The strategy should be to get as much out of him as you can before he potentially breaks down again. Not try to pitch him the least amount possible.

5. Deivi Garcia lost the competition to be the fifth starter, though it was only a competition in name since he was never going to win it, no matter how well he pitched in spring training.

“We continue to be really excited about Deivi and the strides that he’s continued to make in his craft,” Boone said. “The message to him that I tried to convey was, ‘Stay ready, we’re going to need you. You’re going to be a big part of this. Make sure you’re handling your business down there as far as putting yourself in line to be the guy we go to.”

Boone is so excited about Garcia that he only wanted him to pitch the first inning of Game 2 of the 2020 ALDS before going to Happ to ruin the season. What Boone should have said was:

“The message to him that I tried to convey was, ‘Listen, it’s nothing you did, we kept German despite being a scumbag, so we have to have him on the major league roster or it will look even worse that we kept someone who did what German did.”

6. After losing Britton and Wilson, spring training wouldn’t have been complete without the Yankees losing an expected everyday starter before Opening Day. Voit will begin the season on the injured list after tearing the meniscus in his left knee and needing surgery. As of Saturday, Voit was expected to perform no baseball activities for three weeks and then rejoin the Yankees in May. That seems like a very generous timeline given the Yankees’ handling of injuries since the start of 2019.

Voit has been a sneaky injured player as a Yankee. All the attention (and rightfully so) goes to the injuries suffered by Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Hicks, but Voit has also had his issues. In 2019, he got hurt unnecessarily going for two in London against the Red Sox and was hitting .280/.393/.509 at the time. He missed two weeks, came back for two-and-a-half weeks and then missed a month. For the last month of 2019, he hit .200/.319/.338 and was left off the postseason roster. Now he’s going to miss at least one month of this season and most likely closer to two (or even more) months.

7. The Voit injury opened the door for Jay Bruce to make the team and play first base every day. Bruce will now have at least a month of real games to prove he isn’t finished as a major leaguer. He will give the Yankees some lineup balance as a left-handed hitter and maybe the magic of putting on the pinstripes will do for Bruce what it has done for so many other former star players trying to save their career. I want Bruce and Dietrich on the team over Mike Tauchman and Tyler Wade, but apparently that wasn’t going to happen if Voit didn’t get hurt. There’s still a chance Wade won’t make the Opening Day roster though I think that chance is small. Like as small as Boone not batting Hicks third in the lineup.

8. With Voit out and Bruce in, this is the lineup I would use:

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

This is the lineup Boone will use:

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

9. Unfortunately, Hicks is going to bat third. Boone already said that weeks ago. The Yankees think Hicks is Bernie Williams, so he’s going to continue to be treated like he’s Number 51, and not a guy with a .734 career OPS. And it would be very Boone to bat Bruce ahead of Torres, Frazier and Sanchez. For Bruce to go from not making the team before Voit’s injury to batting ahead of those three is exactly the kind of decision Boone makes. We’re talking about the same manager who would use Miguel Andujar to pinch hit in the ninth inning of a game with the game on the line in 2020 and then send him down after the game, and the same manager who used Mike Ford as a pinch hitter in a postseason elimination game instead of Frazier or Sanchez. The same Ford who wasn’t good enough to be on the major league roster in September.

10. This is it. The last Yankees Thoughts of spring training. The next Yankees Thoughts will be a week from today after the Yankees have played their first three games and first series of 2021. The weather doesn’t look promising for Thursday, but if there’s Yankees baseball on Thursday, it will be 174 days since their 2020 season-ending loss to the Rays in Game 5 of the ALDS. I’m ready for what should be a seventh-month grind to begin. Yankees Thoughts will be posted after each of the Yankees’ 52 regular-season series in 2021 and after each postseason game.


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